Roseway
Roseway under partial sail
History
NameRoseway
Owner
  • Harold Hathaway (1925–1941)
  • Boston Pilots (1941–1942)
  • Coast Guard Reserve (1942–1945)
  • Boston Pilots (1945–1972)
  • A Boston syndicate (1972–1974)
  • Jim Sharp, Orvil Young (1974–1987)
  • World Ocean School (2002–present)
OperatorWorld Ocean School
BuilderJohn F. James & Son
Launched24 November 1925
HomeportBoston, MA and Christiansted, St Croix, USVI
Identification
NameCGR-812
AcquiredMay 1942
FateReturned to Boston Pilots November 1945
General characteristics
Length
  • 137 ft (42 m) LOA
  • 112 ft (34 m) on deck
  • 90 ft (27 m) LWL
Beam25 ft (7.6 m)
Draft13 ft (4.0 m)
PropulsionSail, 400 hp (300 kW) diesel engine
Sail planGaff-rigged schooner, 5,600 sq ft (520 m2) total sail
NotesHull material: Wood (white oak, native pine, Douglas fir)
LocationSeasonally Boston, Massachusetts or St. Croix, USVI
Built1925
ArchitectJohn F. James & Son
Architectural styleGaff-rigged wooden schooner
NRHP reference No.97001278
Significant dates
Added to NRHP25 September 1997
Designated NHL25 September 1997[1]

Roseway is a wooden gaff-rigged schooner launched on 24 November 1925 in Essex, Massachusetts. She is currently operated by World Ocean School, a non-profit educational organization based in Boston, Massachusetts, and is normally operated out of Boston, Massachusetts and Saint Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands. She was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1997 as the only known surviving example of a fishing schooner built specifically with racing competition as an objective.[2] In 1941, Roseway was purchased by the Boston Pilot's Association to serve as a pilot boat for Boston Harbor, as a replacement for the pilot-boat Northern Light, which was sold to the United States Army for war service.

History

Roseway in Boston Harbor, 2006

Roseway was built in 1925 for Harold Hathaway of Taunton, Massachusetts at the John F. James & Son shipyard in Essex. Hathaway's intention was to build a boat that might beat the Canadians in the international fisherman's races popular at that time; to that end, Roseway was impeccably maintained and used only occasionally as a fishing boat.[3]

Roseway sank at Wolfville, Nova Scotia, Canada, on 14 September 1926,[4] but she was raised and repaired.

In 1941, Roseway was purchased by the Boston Pilot's Association to serve as a pilot boat for Boston Harbor, as a replacement for the pilot-boat Northern Light, No. 3, which was sold to the United States Army for war service.[5][6] Following the attack on Pearl Harbor later that year, mines and anti-submarine netting were installed to protect the Port of Boston, and all lighted navigational aids were extinguished. Roseway was fitted with a .50 caliber machine gun for service with the Coast Guard Reserve as patrol vessel as CGR-812. She continued her piloting duties in this challenging environment, for which service her pilots were awarded a bronze plaque from the Coast Guard at the end of the war.[3]

Roseway continued to serve as a pilot vessel until the early 1970s, at which point she and San Francisco's Zodiac were the only pilot schooners still in service in the United States.[7][3] She was then sold and converted into a passenger vessel for the tourist trade. Roseway changed hands several times in the ensuing decades, operating primarily out of Camden, Maine and the US Virgin Islands. In 1997, she was listed as a National Historic Landmark. Roseway, at that time, retained between eighty and ninety percent of her original hull fabric and was badly in need of repairs.[1] In 1998 she took one group of Hurricane Island Outward Bound School students aboard, and sailed from Hurricane Island, ME to Gloucester, MA and back, as a trial for potentially becoming part of the sailing program, which never came to fruition, and then she remained docked in Rockland, Maine until she was repossessed by the First National Bank of Damariscotta, which in 2002 donated the vessel to the newly founded World Ocean School.

Following two years of restoration in Boothbay Harbor, Roseway again set sail in 2005. She currently serves as the platform for the World Ocean School, which offers various educational programs in St. Croix and the northeastern United States.

See also

Citations

  1. 1 2 "Roseway (schooner)". National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Archived from the original on 23 September 2010. Retrieved 25 March 2008.
  2. "NHL nomination for Roseway (schooner)". National Park Service. Retrieved 23 February 2015.
  3. 1 2 3 "History of the Schooner Roseway". Retrieved 11 September 2012.
  4. "Casualty reports". The Times. No. 44377. London. 15 September 1926. col B, p. 23.
  5. Eastman, Ralph M. (1956). Pilots and pilot boats of Boston Harbor. Boston, Massachusetts: Second Bank-State Street Trust Company. p. 78.
  6. "Roseway (Schooner) - NPGallery - National Park Service". United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service. p. 10. Retrieved 17 December 2020.
  7. Cunliffe, Tom; Osler, Adrian (2001). Pilots. The World of Pilotage under Sail and Oar. Vol. 1. Pilot Schooners of North America and Great Britain. Wooden Boat Publications. pp. 137, 240. ISBN 978-0-937822-69-2.

References

42°21′18″N 71°02′38″W / 42.3549°N 71.0438°W / 42.3549; -71.0438

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