Rigged model of the PS 'Savannah'
- Made:
- 1957-1959 in Corlears Hook, Elizabeth and Morristown
- manufacturer:
- Daniel Dod
- maker:
- Harold J. Cook
Rigged model, scale 1:48, of the PS 'Savannah' (1818), the first steam ship to cross the Atlantic, with extra collapsable paddle wheel and American flag on wooden base, model by Harold J. Cook, Washington DC, American, 1957-1959.
Model (scale 1:48). The first steamship to cross the Atlantic (or indeed any ocean). She was built by Francis Fickett, of Corlears Hook, New York; engined by Stephen Vail of the Speedwell Iron Works, Morristown New Jersey, with a boiler provided by Daniel Dod of Elizabeth, New Jersey. Originally intended for the sail packet service to Le Havre, France, she was bought before completion by the Savannah Steam Ship Company and adapted for auxiliary steam propulsion. The hull was carvel-built, and she carried three tall masts, and had 32 berths for passengers. Her 15.25 ft diameter paddle-wheels were made collapsible, each having ten radial arms which could be folded up like a fan and taken on deck when not in use. The ‘Savannah’ was wrecked off Long Island, New York, in 1821.
Details
- Category:
- Water Transport
- Object Number:
- 1959-307
- Measurements:
-
overall: 820 mm x 1070 mm x 297 mm,
crate: 1300 mm x 590 mm x 1800 mm, 50 kg
- type:
- marine engineering, merchant ships, steamships, cargo ships and paddle steamers
- credit:
- Newcomen Society in North America