William Dawson Lawrence
William Dawson Lawrence (16 July 1817 – 8 December 1886) was a successful shipbuilder, businessman and politician. He built the William D. Lawrence, which is reported to be the largest wooden ship ever built in Canada.[1]
William Dawson Lawrence | |
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William D. Lawrence – Nova Scotia House of Assembly (1864) | |
Born | Gilford, District of Banbridge, County Down, Northern Ireland | 16 July 1817
Died | 8 December 1886 69) | (aged
Resting place | Oak Island Cemetery, Maitland, Hants County, Nova Scotia |
Occupation | Shipbuilder, Businessman, Politician |
Spouse(s) | Mary Hayes |
Parent(s) | William Dawson Lawrence and Mary Jane Lockhart |
In 1874, W.D. Lawrence's great ship was reported to have been the largest wooden sailing ship in the world.[2] The William D. Lawrence represents the pinnacle of W.D.'s career as a marine architect, businessman, and politician. He built the ship in Maitland, Hants County, Nova Scotia. The vessel was 263 feet long.
Renowned historian Frederick William Wallace writes,
- "It was a memorable event in Canadian ship-building annals when his big ship took the water, and had it been elsewhere but in a quiet little Nova Scotia town on the banks of the Shubenacadie River, there would have been a great furor, and Lawrence's genius and skill would have been proclaimed to the four corners of the earth."[3]
Ship builder
Lawrence began his ship building career at the John Chappell shipyard in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, where he designed his first ship (1849). He also worked at the Alexander Lyle shipyard in Dartmouth. Lawrence also had the opportunity to study in Boston under the great Nova Scotian ship builder Donald McKay.
He returned to Nova Scotia and built two vessels close to his childhood home in Maple Grove, Nova Scotia. Then Lawrence built six more vessels in the William D. Lawrence Shipyard opposite his home in Maitland, Hants County, Nova Scotia. Lawrence was very successful in business.
The three-year maiden voyage of the William D. Lawrence involved Lawrence being towed from Maitland to Saint John, New Brunswick. Upon the ship being fitted, Lawrence then traveled to Liverpool, England; Aden, British India (present day Yemen); Callao, Peru; Le Havre, France; St. John's, Newfoundland, and then returned home.
During his voyage he recorded the life of sailors at sea and in port. While at sea, Lawrence records events such as catching a shark. In terms of a sailors life in port, he recorded a significant amount of their lives being intimately linked with sex trade workers. Lawrence makes significant observations about the plight of women around the world.
Lawrence built eight vessels which were very profitable for him. The two last vessels he built, the Pegusus (1867) and the William D. Lawrence (1874) were the most profitable. From the first four years at sea, W.D. earned from the Pegusus a profit of $1.4 million.[4] From the first three years at sea, W.D. earned from the William D. Lawrence a profit of $1 million. After profiting from the vessel for five more years, W.D. sold the William D. Lawrence for $2.4 million. (big profit)
Politician
William D. Lawrence was elected to the 23rd General Assembly of Nova Scotia in 1863. He represented Hants County, Nova Scotia – North. He was elected on a platform that gave the right for every Nova Scotian to vote, not just property owners. Lawrence was also a great supporter of public education and saw it as a foundation for a healthy democracy. He joined Joseph Howe and the Anti-Confederation Party in fighting Charles Tupper's campaign to have Nova Scotia join Confederation. While confederation was passed on July 1, 1867, Lawrence, along with most other "Anti-Confederate" campaigners, was successful in the election of September 1867 in defeating the pro-Confederates. Joseph Howe also won his election as the federal representative for Hants County. Eventually, Joseph Howe left the Anti-Confederation campaign and ran successfully in a bi-election in Hants (1869). The following provincial election, Lawrence continued to support the Anti-Confederation campaign and lost the election (1871). Lawrence retired for seven years from politics to build the William D. Lawrence. He tried again to run for the nomination of the liberal party but was defeated (1878).
Writer
Along with writing about the maiden voyage of the William D. Lawrence, he also published articles in the provincial papers on the opposition he experienced in building the ship, capitalism and labour, and his trips to Bermuda in the winter months. In Lawrence's unpublished manuscript he also writes extensively about prostitution; differences among races of people; the supremacy of Christianity; the triumph of democracy over tyranny; and the success of capitalism. Lawrence's ideas about prostitution were largely influenced by Dr. William Sanger, one of the foremost researchers on prostitution during the Victorian Age. In Lawrence's travel writings he also wrote about visiting his birthplace of Lawrencetown, County Down, Ireland as well as hearing a sermon given by the famous Charles Haddon Spurgeon. He also writes about being mortified by a bullfight that he saw in Peru and enjoying the Masquerade ball he attended while in Paris.
Lawrence died in Maitland, Hants County, Nova Scotia at the age of 69.
Commemorations
In 1930, William D. Lawrence and his great ship were commemorated by the Bank of Nova Scotia, which placed a stone carving of the ship above the door of the head office building in Halifax, Nova Scotia (located on Hollis Street, directly across from Province House (Nova Scotia)). A monument dedicated to Lawrence's ship as a national historic treasure was erected on the grounds of his home (1967) and his home became a provincial museum site opening to the public on August 11, 1971. The ship has also been commemorated by the Canada Post with a postage stamp (1975) and the Royal Canadian Mint with a coin (2002). There are numerous ship portraits of the vessel. One portrait by E. Petit hangs in Government House (Nova Scotia). The most famous portrait is by Edouard-Marie Adam and belongs to the Musée national de la Marine, Paris, France.
References
- William Dawson Lawrence - Canadian Biography On Line
- William D. Lawrence - Maritime Museum of the Atlantic Info Sheet
- Archibald MacMechan. The Great Ship. Dalhousie Review. 1928.
- Joseph Schull William Larence and his wonderful windjammer. MacLean's Magazine. 28 September 1956.
- Joseph Schull. The Salt Water Men: Great Stories of Canada. 1956.
- David Stevens. W. D. Lawrence: The Man and the Ship. Lancelot Press. 1975.
Notes
- "William D. Lawrence" Maritime Museum of the Atlantic Frequently Asked Questions Archived 2013-05-15 at the Wayback Machine
- This claim is made by Frederick Wallace (1924) in his book Wooden Ships and Iron Men and Canada's national magazine Macleans (1957). There were larger wooden ships built before 1874, but they were no longer in operation. At the time, there was also a larger vessel from New York which is discounted as a sailing ship because it was converted from a steamer.
- Wooden Ships and Iron Men: The story of the square-rigged merchant marine of British North America, the ships, their builders and owners, and the men who sailed them, London : Hodder and Stoughton, 1924 (reprinted by White Lion (London) in 1973).
- The dollar amounts in this article have been converted to reflect inflation. The Statistics Canada Currency Converter was used to establish the conversion.