Caprice (pilot boat)

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NameCaprice
OwnerEugene Sullivan and Peter McEnry
OperatorGeorge. H. Sisco
BuilderBrown & Lovell, Boston, Massachusetts
Caprice
Pilot boat Caprice, No. 15.
History
United States
NameCaprice
OwnerEugene Sullivan and Peter McEnry
OperatorGeorge. H. Sisco
BuilderBrown & Lovell, Boston, Massachusetts
LaunchedApril 10, 1871
Decommissioned1891
HomeportNew York
FateSold
General characteristics
Class & typeSchooner
Tonnage70-tons TM
Length80 ft 0 in (24.38 m)
Beam20 ft 3 in (6.17 m)
Depth9 ft 0 in (2.74 m)
Propulsionsails
Sail planSchooner-rigged

The Caprice was a 19th-century Sandy Hook pilot boat built in 1871 by Brown & Lovell in East Boston, Massachusetts for Peter McEnany and other New York pilots. In 1876, she was run down and sank, off Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, by the steamship New Orleans. She was raised and was one of the pilot boats that survived the Great Blizzard of 1888. The Caprice was last reported sailing off the coast of New York in 1891.

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References

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