Boston Nautical Heritage Group Plugs Gloucester Schooner Festival

This from Barry Nickerson, Founder of The Boston Nautical Heritage Group-

to subscribe to his newsletter check out the site

Labor Day finally arrived.  While most of the summer has been on rain delay, the weather forecast is for a cool, clear, dry and hopefully breezy weekend.  Is it enough to hold us through till next spring…. ?

After many years of trial & tribulation, we should return to our normal publication schedule next week.  The Gloucester Schooner Race is a favorite event, and felt compelled to plug it.  While the website will start to come together later this fall, we do have 2 images from past schooner races…..  www.BostonNautical.com We have a book about the Fishermen’s Races & Gloucester in the works..

PASS THE WORD
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25th annual Gloucester Schooner Festival, Gloucester, MA   Saturday Sept. 6 – Sunday Sept. 7
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This is an event that should not be missed !

For centuries, Gloucester and Cape Ann fed the world by building, outfitting and crewing thousands of wooden schooners that sailed out in all weather to catch cod off the Northeast Coast.  The waterfront was lined with shipbuilders and the services that supported the vessels and crews.  Sailmakers, riggers and others competed with fish drying shacks and fish houses for space, all bent on harvesting the sea as often as possible, and turning boats around as quickly as possible for maximum return.

Skippers knew that the freshest fish brought the best price, so once the holds were full, they bent on all sails and made for port, often competing with other vessels to make it home first, regardless of season and weather.  It’s entirely possible that a friendly wager or 2 was made on what Captain would bring his vessel home first…

In 1920 a group of Halifax, NS businessmen offered a challenge to the fishermen of Gloucester to a race, and the Gloucestermen responded with a victory aboard a 14 year old vessel hastily prepared after 2 months at sea, with a Captain that had never sailed aboard the vessel.  She was the ESPERANTO, hence the name of the trophy awarded to the winning vessel in the larger schooner class, the Esperanto Cup.  The series of races that took place in the following years drew more interest than the America’s Cup. New England publisher David R. Godine published a book about the International Fishermen’s Races, and it’s a great resource.  http://www.godine.com/isbn.asp?isbn=1567923135

Today, the Gloucester Schooner Festival is recognized throughout the world as a significant historical events, and Captains bring their schooners from around North America & Bermuda to compete and pay tribute to a way of life often forgotten.

This year has special significance, as 2 icons of the Fisherman’s Series may come together at the Gloucester Maritime Heritage Center www.GloucesterMaritimeCenter.org 978.281.0470 on Saturday;

The Bluenose II, the faithful replica of the original Bluenose http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bluenosehttp://museum.gov.ns.ca/bluenose/index.htm will offer deck tours from 10 am to 5 pm on Saturday.  She’s the schooner on the Canadian dime, postage and license plates.  While she no longer “races”, she will likely sail the course on Sunday and shadow the fleet.  She’s impressive dockside, but underway, she’s simply magnificent.  The Nova Scotia archives has her rich history posted at http://www.gov.ns.ca/nsarm/virtual/bluenose/ch4.asp?SearchList1=4&Language=English

Recently acquired by the Gloucester Maritime Heritage Center is the Sir Thomas Lipton trophy – earned by the Gertrude L. Thebaud 79 years ago in a race with the pre-eminent Nova Scotia champion Bluenose – is back home and may possibly be on display.  You might consider a donation to the Gloucester Maritime Heritage Center help support this acquisition and future articles of Gloucester heritage.  In addition to the tours of Bluenose, the GMHC exhibits & aquarium are open free of charge from 10 am to 5 pm.  The address is 23 Harbor Loop, Gloucester, MA.

If you’d like to see the schooners underway on Sunday, there are 2 opportunities;

From the shore:
All competing schooners will parade out of the harbor from 09:00 to 10:30, past a reviewing stand by the Fisherman’s Monument on Stacy Blvd.  Famed Gloucester historians Joe Garland & Daisy Nell will broadcast a commentary on the history of the race and each vessel as they come past.  It’s a great way for the family to see these vessels under sail, and for free (Although it’s a good idea to have a fresh cup of coffee from Dunkin Donuts, the major sponsor, in hand.)   Get positioned early, and bring a lawn chair so you can cheer on the vessels.

From the sea:
Some of the competing vessels may have room for “extra hands” to come aboard for the race, pitch in hoisting and tuning sails and to experience racing aboard a schooner.  Schedules and available change right up to the morning of the race, so the best way to sign aboard available schooners is to call my cell at 781.249.4348.  It will be on 24/7, and we’ll know by Saturday evening what space may be available. If you do decide to come, bring an extra jacket, sweater, eye protection and a hat, pack a light lunch as well as a camera with extra film or memory cards.  It’s an experience you won’t forget and want to share!

Beyond the schooner race, there’s a lot to see & do in Gloucester.  Here are some favorites;

– If you are on the waterfront, take a short stroll up to Bodin Historic Photo at 82 Main St. in Gloucester, 978.283.2524 and catch a glimpse of what Gloucester was like….back then.  Photographer Fred Bodin displays and sells prints from his collection of over 9,000 glass and film negatives that he has rescued from barns, garages and attics, preserving the images forever. Fred hand prints, sepia tones, and frames each photograph himself, using archival museum quality materials. Subjects include beaches, hotels, landscapes, people, and the famous sailing schooners of New England. http://www.bodinhistoricphoto.com/

– If in search of a good book, you might ask Greg Gibson about his selection of historical maritime books, charts & manuscripts at the Ten pound Island Book Company, www.tenpound.com Greg has a great selection, and his shop is open Labor Day weekend.  He periodically publishes an online catalog of his inventory, and signing aboard for his newsletter is easy & worthwhile. The shop will be open all weekend from 12 to 5, and the address is 77 Langsford St., Gloucester, MA, 978 282 4569.

– Be sure to visit the Essex Shipbuilding Museum http://www.essexshipbuildingmuseum.com in Essex where many great schooners were born, and where great schooners continue to be built….and just down the street from Woodman’s, the birthplace of the fried clam http://www.woodmans.com The Museum is at 66 Main Street in Essex, MA 978.768.7541.  Woodman’s is just down the street..just follow your nose.

– Want to be fascinated ?  Visit the Cape Ann Museum at 27 Pleasant St. in downtown Gloucester. http://www.capeannhistoricalmuseum.org

Here are some additional links about the history of fishing in Gloucester, Bluenose and the International Fishermen’s Cup;

http://www.downtosea.com
http://openlibrary.org/b/OL12237059M/Caught-in-Irons

Thanks for being aboard, and we hope to sail with you soon.  Enjoy the weekend, and travel safe.

Fair winds,

Barry L. Nickerson, President & Founder
BOSTON NAUTICAL HERITAGE GROUP
PO Box 379
Stoughton, MA 02072-0379
978.283.0455

Shore-side fun for festival visitors

By Gail McCarthy
Staff WriterGloucester Daily Times

The Gloucester Maritime Heritage Center, now in its 10th year, has created a special day for land-bound visitors to the Schooner Festival.

Landlubbers will have a smorgasbord of activities to choose from during its seventh Heritage Day this Saturday.

“We’re pleased that we can participate to provide more land-based activities, for families in particular, because there are lots of wonderful things to see, but for many of them you have to be on the water. So the Heritage Day allows us to give exposure to many things,” center director Harriet Webster said.

The center’s exhibits and aquarium will be open free of charge throughout the day, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Canada’s Bluenose II will be berthed at the center from tomorrow through Monday and will offer free public deck tours Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and at other times to be decided throughout the weekend. Other vessels docked at the center and available for dockside viewing include the Roseway, the Pride of Baltimore and the Unicorn.

Read more here.

Local Firefighter brings Band to Harbor Loop

The Harbor Loop concert last night had been rescheduled from earlier in the summer. Hoodoo Revelator rocked the hill in the final concert of the season.

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Mike Chipperini, a Gloucester firefighter, wailed on the harmonica with the rest of the band as they played the blues,  J. Geils,  the Stones, and more.

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Holly Harris, from Boston radio station WBOS, emceed all night adding to the full-moon entertainment. The concert was sponsored by the Dog Bar and Mahoney Insurance.

We say a sad good-bye to the end of the summer concerts, but there’s always next year!

A big thank you to Morgan Huke of Cape Ann Concerts and all the others who made these concerts possible.

Spirit Of Massachusetts Mast

I wonder how old these masts are and where the lumber came from and also where it was cut and formed for a mast.

To find out more about the Spirit Of Massachusetts and the OceanClassroom click this text

Spirit Of Massachusetts Mast, originally uploaded by captjoe06.

Signs Taped To The Ground All Around The Spirit Of Massachusetts Masts
Signs Taped To The Ground All Around The Spirit Of Massachusetts' Masts
Mate Working On Spirit Of Massachusetts Mast
Mate Working On Spirit Of Massachusetts Mast

Destino’s Flowerboxes

You find beauty in the most unlikely of places in Gloucester.  As I pulled in to a parking spot in Destino’s parking lot I noticed some really beautiful flower boxes.  Kudos to them!

Destino’s Flowerboxes, originally uploaded by captjoe06.