Sylph (pilot boat)

The Sylph was a 19th-century pilot boat first built in 1834, as a Boston yacht and pilot-boat for merchant and ship owner Robert Bennet Forbes. She won the first recorded American yacht race in 1835.[2] The second Sylph was built in 1878 for the Boston Pilots. She was in the Boston pilot service for twenty-three years.[3]

Pilot schooner Sylph No. 8., photograph by Nathaniel Stebbins.
History
US
Name: Sylph
Owner: A. Nash & Co., Joseph W. Colby
Builder: Keen's shipyard, Weymouth, Massachusetts
Launched: September 14, 1878
Out of service: June 01, 1901
Fate: Sold
General characteristics
Class and type: schooner
Tonnage: 61-tons TM[1]
Length: 71 ft 5 in (21.77 m)
Beam: 21 ft 0 in (6.40 m)
Depth: 7 ft 8 in (2.34 m)
Propulsion: Sail

Construction and service

The Boston pilot-boat Sylph, No. 8, was launched on September 14, 1878 from Keen's shipyard in North Weymouth, Massachusetts. The shipyard was founded by Nathaniel Porter Keen who was a ship, yacht, and boat builder.[4]

The Sylph was commanded by Captain Joseph H. Wilson.[5][6]:p166 She was registered with the Record of American and Foreign Shipping from 1881 to 1898 to J. H. Wilson as master and to A. Nash & Co. as owners. She belonged to the port of Boston.[1]

On April 30, 1885, the pilot-boat Sylph, No. 8, was cruising off the Middle Bank, twenty-five miles east of Boston. Second boatkeeper, Charles Sands was swept away in a terrible storm.[7]

On May 23, 1896, the pilot-boat Sylph, No. 8, towed fishing sloop Main Girl of Gloucester. Captain Joseph W. Colby of the Sylph, picked up the fishing boat ten miles east of Highland Light as her rigging had fallen to pieces with no sail.[8]

On February 17, 1899, the pilot-boat Sylph, No. 8, arrived in the Boston port after being blown off shore by gales and not been heard from for over a week. Captain James H. Reid, Jr., of the America, No. 1, spotted her forty miles outside the Boston Light, and reported the news.[9] In May of the same year, pilot-boat Sylph, No. 8, rescued the naphtha launch Tirzah, forty-five miles southeast of the Boston Light. Captain Joseph Colby, of the Sylph towed the boat into Boston.[10]

In November 1899, many transatlantic liners were used as supply ships during the South African wars, which caused some of the Boston pilot-boats to be placed out of commission. Captain Colby of the pilot-boat Sylph, and the pilot-boat Minerva were moved to East Boston.[11]

End of service

Sylph pilot boat with all her sails.

When the Boston pilots reorganized down to five boats, the pilot-boat Sylph was sold out of service on June 01, 1901, to Captain Burgess of the Metropolitan coal company.[3] She had been in the Boston pilot service for twenty-three years.[6]:p166 She was owned and commanded by Captain Joseph Colby, one of the best known Boston pilots.[12]

Lawlor's Sylph pilot-boat

The Boston fishing schooner Sylph was built in 1865 from a half-model by Dennison J. Lawlor. On May 22, 1865), Meg McManus (Aunt of Thomas F. McManus) and Kate Leonard, christened the new schooner Sylph at her launch at Bucks Wharf in Chelsea, Massachusetts. She was 55.8 feet long with a beam of 17.5 feet and 30.24 tons.

On November 9, 1883, she sank in a winter storm on Georges Bank with all hands.[13][14][15]

Earlier Sylph pilot-boats

There are earlier boats named Sylph. The pilot-boat Sylph owned by China merchant and ship owner Captain Robert Bennet Forbes. She was built in Boston in 1834 by Whitmore & Holbrook shipyard for John Perkins Cushing. Forbes supervised her construction of the schooner.[3]

According to Samuel Eliot Morison, the Sylph won the first recorded American yacht race[2] on August 3, 1835. The race was held at Martha's Vineyard and sponsored by the Southern Massachusetts Yacht Racing Association, between the ninety-two foot yacht Wave, owned by John Cox Stevens and the sixty-foot yacht Sylph. The race started off Vineyard Sound, then around Block Island and finished off Naushon Island.[16] William Carlton Fowler took charge of the pilot-boat Sylph,[6] and skippered the Sylph at the 1835 yacht race.[3]

The Sylph was a pilot boat in the Boston Harbor between 1836 and 1837 and then sold to the New Jersey Sandy Hook Pilots in October, 1837. She was lost in the winter of 1851 with all hands during a blizzard off Barnegat, New Jersey.[3]

See also

References

  1. "Record of American and Foreign Shipping 1881". Mystic Seaport Museum. New York. Retrieved 2020-10-11.
  2. Garland, Joseph E. (1989). The Eastern Yacht Club, A History from 1870 to 1985 (PDF). www.easternyc.org. Marblehead, Massachusetts: Down East Books. Retrieved 2020-10-12.
  3. Eastman, Ralph M. (1956). Pilots and pilot boats of Boston Harbor. Boston, Massachusetts: Second Bank-State Street Trust Company. p. 29-31.
  4. "Shilbuilding by Robert F. Sullivan" (PDF). www.weymouth.ma.us. Weymouth, Massachusetts. Retrieved 2020-10-12.
  5. "Quincy". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. 16 Sep 1878. p. 2. Retrieved 2020-10-12.
  6. Cunliffe, Tom (2001). Pilots, The World Of Pilotage Under Sail and Oar. Brooklin, Maine: WoodenBoat. ISBN 9780937822692.:p150
  7. "Sands Swept Overboard". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusett. 30 Apr 1885. p. 8. Retrieved 2020-10-12.
  8. "Fishing Sloop Picked Up". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusett. 20 May 1896. p. 8. Retrieved 2020-10-12.
  9. "Pilot Boat Sylph in, After Being Blown Off Shore". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusett. 17 Feb 1899. p. 11. Retrieved 2020-10-12.
  10. "Pilot Boat No. 8 Picks Up the Launch Tirzah". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusett. 8 May 1899. p. 11. Retrieved 2020-10-12.
  11. "Pilot Boats Affected by Withdrawal of Vessels for Transports". Boston, Massachusetts. 13 Nov 1899. p. 10. Retrieved 2020-11-02 via Newspapers.com.
  12. "Water Front Items". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusett. 3 Jun 1901. p. 8. Retrieved 2020-10-12.
  13. "Fishing Schooner, 1865, Builder's Half-Model, Sylph". U.S. Government Printing Office. 1859. p. 201. Retrieved 2020-10-26.
  14. Dunne, W. M. P.; Patrick, William Matthew (1934). Thomas F. McManus and the American fishing schooners: an Irish-American success story. Mystic, Conn., Mystic Seaport Museum.
  15. "Half Model of Fishing Schooner "Sylph"". Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 2020-10-26.
  16. "SM Sailing, Its History". www.southernmasssailing.com. Massachusett. Retrieved 2020-10-12.
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