|
| History |
United States |
| Name | Challenger |
| Owner | W. & F.H. Whittemore, Boston; later, Samuel G. Reed & Co. |
| Builder | Robert E. Jackson, East Boston, MA |
| Launched | 1853 |
| Notes | Collided with Roswell Sprague in a gale at Bremerhaven, October 1861 |
Peru |
| Owner | N. Larco, agent for the Peruvian Government |
| Acquired | 1863 |
| Renamed | Camille Cavour |
| Fate | Abandoned off the coast of Mexico, October 1875, en route from Port Discovery to Peru, after damage during a gale. Camille Cavour's wreck drifted ashore at Manzanillo. |
| Notes | Coolie ship in the guano trade |
| General characteristics |
| Class & type | Extreme clipper, designed by Samuel Hartt Pook |
| Tons burthen | 1334 tons |
| Length | 206 ft (63 m) |
| Beam | 38 ft 4 in (11.68 m) |
| Draft | 23 ft (7.0 m)[1][2] |
Challenger was an extreme clipper ship built in East Boston in 1853. She sailed in the San Francisco trade, and later in the guano trade in Peru.
Voyages
Between 1854 and 1863, Challenger made two voyages from Boston to San Francisco, in 112 and 134 days, and five voyages from New York to San Francisco, in 115 to 133 days.
In 1861, she "collided with the ship Roswell Sprague in a gale in the roadstead of Bremerhaven".[1]
Guano trade and shipwreck
In 1863, Challenger was sold to the Peruvian Government, and renamed Camille Cavour. She was "used in the transport of Chinese coolies to the guano islands".
In 1875, she was "damaged in a gale on voyage from Port Discovery to Peru and was abandoned off the coast of Mexico. The wreck drifted ashore at Manzanillo."[1]
References
- ^ a b c Bruzelius, Lars (1998). "Sailing Ships: "'Challenger'" (1853)". The Maritime History Virtual Archives. Retrieved April 11, 2010.
- ^
Cutler, Carl C. (1930). Greyhounds of the sea; The story of the American clipper ship. New York: Halcyon House. p. 425. OCLC 610444.
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- Baltimore Clipper
- Extreme clipper
- Medium clipper
- List of clippers
- List of people who sailed on clipper ships
- Clipper route
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| 1840s | |
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| 1850โ1852 | |
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| 1853โ1859 | |
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| 1860s |
- Ambassador
- Ariel
- City of Adelaide
- Coonatto
- Cornwallis
- Cremorne
- Cutty Sark
- Fiery Cross
- Flying Spur
- Fusi Yama
- Kaisow
- Glory of the Seas
- Golden Spur
- Great Australia
- John R. Worcester
- Lahloo
- Lammermuir
- Leander
- Miako
- Norman Court
- Osaka
- Queen of Nations
- Seminole
- Serica
- Sir Lancelot
- South Australian
- Taeping
- Taitsing
- The Murray
- Thermopylae
- Sobraon
- Windhover
- Wylo
- Yatala
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| 1870โ1890s | |
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| Modern | |
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| Related |
- Alfred Bulltop Stormalong
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Shipwrecks and maritime incidents in 1861 |
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| Shipwrecks |
- 20 Feb: Enchantress
- 5 Mar: Monarch
- 8 Apr: Witchcraft
- 20 Apr: USS Columbus, USS Delaware, USS Germantown, USS Merrimack, USS Pennsylvania, USS Plymouth, USS Raritan
- 21 Apr: USS Columbia, USS Dolphin, USS New York
- 1 Jun: Lord Hungerford
- 4 Jun: Canadian
- 3 Jul: Victory
- 28 Jul: Petrel
- 2 Aug: Stag Hound
- 3 Aug: HMS Driver
- 18 Aug: Jefferson Davis
- 1 Oct: Infernal
- 5 Oct: CSS Venus
- 11 Oct: USS South Wind
- 5 Nov: Prony
- 7 Nov: CSS Winslow
- 10 Nov: Keystone State
- 14 Nov: SMS Amazone
- 23 Nov: CSS Tuscarora
- 5 Dec: USS Phoenix
- 8 Dec: USS Cossack, USS Peter Demill, USS South America
- 19-20 Dec: USS Amazon, USS Garland, USS Rebecca Sims, USS Tenedos
- 20 Dec: USS American, USS Archer, USS Herald, USS L. C. Richmond, USS Leonidas
- 21 Dec: USS Kensington
- 29 Dec: HMS Conqueror
- December (unknown date): USS Lewis, USS Maria Theresa, USS Robin Hood
- Unknown date: Glentanner
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| Other incidents |
- 9 Jan: HMS Cossack
- 15 Jan: Anna Paulowna
- 4 Mar: Marco Polo
- 12 Mar: Black Prince
- 20-21 Apr: Nightingale
- 24 Apr: Defence
- 25 Apr: Syren
- 4 May: HMS Victor Emmanuel
- 13-14 May: North Star
- 19 May: USS Baltimore
- 10 Jun: HMS Hydra
- 6 Jul: HMS Aboukir
- August (unknown date): HMS Hecate, HMS Imperieuse
- 22 Oct: HMS Virago
- 8 Nov: Trent (Trent Affair)
- Unknown date: , Surprise
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1860  1862 |