Edward J. Lawrence
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| History | |
|---|---|
| United States | |
| Name | Edward J. Lawrence |
| Namesake | Edward Jones Lawrence |
| Builder | Percy & Small Shipyard |
| Launched | April 2, 1908 |
| In service | 1908 |
| Out of service | 1925 |
| Homeport | Portland, Maine |
| Fate | Sunk on December 27, 1925 |
| General characteristics | |
| Type | Schooner |
| Tonnage | 3,350 GRT |
| Length | 320.2 ft (97.6 m) |
| Beam | 50 ft (15 m) |
| Depth of hold | 29 ft (8.8 m) |
| Installed power | Donkey engine for shipboard auxiliary functions |
| Propulsion | Sail |
| Sail plan | Six-masted gaff-rig with foresails |
Edward J. Lawrence was an American wooden six-masted schooner launched in 1908 by the Percy & Small Shipyard in Bath, Maine. Edward J. Lawrence was the last survivor of ten six-masted schooners built between 1900 and 1909, with the ship consumed by flames in 1925 while moored off Portland, Maine, as thousands of spectators took in the spectacle according to a report at the time.
Built for the Portland-based fleet operator J.S. Winslow Co.[1] and named for a Maine philanthropist who made his fortune from cotton and lumber mills,[2] Edward J. Lawrence was the fourth largest schooner built by Percy & Small as ranked by gross tonnage, after Wyoming, the largest wooden ship ever built;[3] Edward B. Winslow, launched the same year as Edward J. Lawrence; and Eleanor A. Percy.[4]
Like other Percy & Small schooners, Edward J. Lawrence was designed to capitalize on coal trade between ports of the East Coast of the United States,[5] with the wood schooners relatively inexpensive to build and operate compared to steamships. But the extreme length of the six-masted schooners subjected hulls to stresses in rough seas, compromising seams and caulking as hulls flexed along their lengths. [6]
Percy & Small equipped the schooners it built with steam-powered donkey engines to operate bilge pumps and hoist the heavy sails up masts.
As the case with other six-masted schooners built in Maine, Edward J. Lawrence saw limited service during World War I with transatlantic voyages carrying military or supply cargoes.