Clara Clarita
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- 1864: Leonard Jerome
- 1865: Pacific Mail SSC
- 1870: New York Harbor Protective Co.
- 1873: Fox Island & Rockland SBC
- 1880s: Knickerbocker Steam Towage Co.
- 1890s: Boston Towing Company
Clara Clarita after conversion to a passenger steamer, c. 1870 | |
| History | |
|---|---|
| Namesake | Leonard Jerome's wife and/or daughter |
| Owner |
|
| Builder | Lawrence & Foulks (Brooklyn, NY) |
| Cost | $125,000 |
| Launched | 1863 |
| Completed | July 1864 |
| In service | 1864–1908 |
| Refit | |
| Identification | Official No. 4873 |
| Honors and awards |
|
| Fate | Abandoned, 1908 |
| General characteristics | |
| Type |
|
| Tonnage | 125 GRT; 62 NRT |
| Length |
|
| Beam | 22 ft 8 in (6.91 m) |
| Depth of hold | 9 ft (2.7 m) |
| Installed power |
|
| Propulsion |
|
| Sail plan | Originally two-masted schooner |
| Crew | 10 (merchant service) |
| Armament | 1864: 2 × 12-pounder (5.4 kg) Wiard steel boat-howitzers |
Clara Clarita was a fast screw steamer originally built as a luxury steam yacht for New York City financier Leonard Jerome (grandfather of British Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill). On her trial trip, Clara Clarita's original engine proved so ineffective it was removed before the vessel entered service and replaced by machinery from a different supplier. Jerome sold the yacht after only a short time and she was converted into a towboat, becoming the fastest such vessel in New York Harbor, before being converted into a fireboat in the same locality.
In the 1870s, Clara Clarita underwent a third conversion, into a passenger steamer, in which role she set an all-time speed record for a steamer on Penobscot Bay. Her final conversion was into an oceangoing tug, some time after which her crew and captain were presented with a heroism award for a rescue at sea. The vessel was abandoned in 1908 after a long and varied 44-year career.
Interior
Clara Clarita was built for Leonard Jerome in 1864 at Williamsburg, New York by Lawrence & Foulks,[1] a company with a reputation for building fast and elegant steamers.[2] Her construction was supervised throughout by W. W. Vanderbilt, Chief Engineer of the Pacific Mail Steamship Company.[1] The vessel was named after Leonard Jerome's wife Clara and/or his daughter Clarita, also known as Clara.
Clara Clarita's frames and outer planking were of white oak, the latter 2+1⁄2 in (64 mm) inches thick. The cabin hatches and combings above deck were mahogany, "plainly but beautifully finished".[1] The vessel was 120 feet (37 m) in length along the keel, and 130 feet (40 m) on deck, with a beam of 22 feet (6.7 m) and hold depth of 10 feet (3.0 m). She had a high bow, two raking masts, schooner-rigged, and a single raked smokestack. For protection, she was armed with two steel 12-pounder (5.4 kg) Wiard boat howitzers with brass carriages.[1] Overall, she was described as a vessel "of an exquisite model, every graceful line proclaiming her speed."[3]
Clara Clarita's interior was designed by one of America's leading ship joiners, William Rowland,[4] the "Lorenzo Ghiberti" of his trade.[5] Below deck, the steamer contained sleeping berths, two cabins, one forward and one aft, a pantry and "a dainty little wash-room aft".[1] The panelwork in the after cabin was white with "faint pink tints"[1] and gold highlights, while the forward cabin was "handsomely furnished".[1] The berths were fringed with green silk curtains lined with canary-yellow satin, and a black walnut beaufet held the silverware.[1]
In her memoirs, Jerome's daughter Jennie (later Lady Randolph Churchill and the mother of Sir Winston Churchill) recalled the "dismay" on her mother's face when she first saw the ship's extravagant velvet and silver fittings, installed as a result of the free rein extended by Jerome to the upholsterer.[6] Total cost of the vessel was $125,000 (equivalent to $2,400,000 in 2024).[7]
Original engine controversy
While Clara Clarita was under construction, Jerome was persuaded by a number of acquaintances to avail himself of the services of E. N. Dickerson, a prominent patent lawyer with some novel engineering ideas. Impressed by Dickerson's claim that he could adapt an ordinary land engine to power Clara Clarita, saving both space and weight at no cost in performance, Jerome decided to hire him.[4][8]

For the adaptation, Dickerson purchased a $5,000, 50-horsepower (37 kW) stationary horizontal engine, with a 16-inch (410 mm) cylinder and 36-inch (910 mm) stroke, built by the Fishkill Landing Machine Works.[9] Dickerson took eight months to adapt the engine to the yacht, at an overall cost of $16,178.08. On Clara Clarita's trial trip, Dickerson's engine adaptation proved a complete failure. After Dickerson failed to return to rectify the problems, Jerome hired two qualified engineers, who, after another trial, agreed that the machinery was unfit for service.[8]
Because Dickerson was also known for his vocal criticism of the Chief of the US Navy's Bureau of Steam Engineering, Benjamin Isherwood, whose warship engine designs for the ongoing Civil War Dickerson claimed were slow and inefficient,[10][11] the failure of Clara Clarita's engine soon came to public attention. After Dickerson was perceived to be attempting to shift the blame to others for the failure of his engine adaptation in a letter to The New York Times, his claims were rebuffed in the pages of the Times by several parties, including Jerome himself.[8] Jerome described Clara Clarita's initial trial trip in the following terms:
We started from the Continental Works down the river. The day was fine, everything was in order, the model of the boat was pronounced perfection, and we started off with flying colors. Her machinery alone remained to be tried. To the best of my recollection we made one mile and a quarter in just two hours and a half. It was ... a brief if not a pleasant trip, to all on board—including myself—especially considering that I had waited eight months for the adaptation of this machinery. I could have had fifty engines built during this time notwithstanding the "Government pressure". We should have proceeded further down the river, but at Corlear's Hook we were driven back—by the tide.[8]
Jerome's account, including his cited average speed of only 0.5 miles per hour (0.43 kn; 0.80 km/h), was corroborated by two further letters to the Times, from E. Riggs and Clara Clarita's commander, Captain Alex Smith.[4] In his response, also published in the Times, Dickerson did not deny the abysmal performance of his engine adaptation, confining his comments instead to a denial of the charge that he had lied in his previous letter.[10] The spectacular failure of the engine was not lost on Dickerson's enemies in the Navy Department, some of whom quickly published a satirical piece on him entitled Uncle Samuel's Whistle And What It Costs.[12] The piece was later reproduced in Frank M. Bennett's book The Steam Navy of the United States.[13]
Re-engine
After the failure of Dickerson's engine, Jerome went to a leading marine engineering firm, the Novelty Iron Works of New York, for a replacement. The Novelty Works supplied a pair of single-cylinder, inverted direct-acting engines with 22-inch (560 mm) bore and stroke, designed by J. V. Holmes and built under the supervision of W. W. Vanderbilt. The engines, described as "beautiful specimens of workmanship",[1] were made more compact by the use of the engines' frame as the surface condenser, while the air-pump gearing was arranged to balance the moving parts. The engines operated a single four-bladed iron screw propeller, with a diameter of 9 feet (2.7 m) and pitch of 13 feet (4.0 m).[1]
In a new trial trip on 28 July 1864, the engines attained a rate of 96 rpm, equivalent to about 12 miles per hour (10 kn; 19 km/h), while maintaining a "remarkably smooth and regular" action.[1] It was noted however that the engines could be expected to "run much faster" in future.[1]
