Planking the Schooner Ardelle Video From GDTimes 1000

You can read the story about the Ardelle at The Gloucester Times website here

Chickity Check It! Boatbuilding With Burnham

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Check out the "live" progess of the Ardelle at Burnham Boatbuiling or Charters at Schooner Ardelle

Boatbuilding with Burnham written by Laurie Fullerton

My Photo

Harold Burnham
Essex, Massachusetts, United States
Harold Burnham bears a family name that is virtually synonymous with Essex, the birthplace of approximately 4,000 schooners. He is the 28th Burnham to operate a shipyard in Essex since 1819, Growing up in a family of shipbuilders and a town where shipbuilding is a tradition handed down over the generations, Harold has learned the standards of the past and traditional techniques. Harold Burnham has carved out a place in history as a master boat designer, shipwright and sailmaker. Like his ancestors before him, Harold has a holistic approach to vessel design, construction and operation which makes him uniquely efficient. In addition to holding a bachelor’s degree in maritime transportation and fisheries from the Massachusetts Maritime Academy, he draws upon extensive experience at sea, and of course, techniques learned in the famous shipyards of Essex. The author of this blog is Laurie Fullerton. Go to http://www.burnhamboatbuilding.com for a look at Harold’s website.

Deck Prisms

In the days before electricity, light below a vessel’s deck was limited to candles, oil and kerosene lamps. A clever solution for the light problem was the deck prism. Laid flush into the deck, the prism point drew light down below decks.

I set this reproduction on a light box and shot on the same plane as the base. This was submitted for my 365 Project.

ARDELLE Week 20

FLASH…FLASH…FLASH

Thought to have been washed out to sea during the Christmas storm, the scary clown mascot of the Schooner Ardelle has apparently been found, rescued and returned to his watch. He looks a little worse for his adventure, but that may be because his new perch can’t be very comfortable.

In other Ardelle news, framing is now completed. Planking is next.

Things To Do- Researching Alone at Sea, an illustrated talk with author John Morris

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Researching Alone at Sea, an illustrated talk with author John Morris

The Cape Ann Museum is pleased to present Researching Alone at Sea, an illustrated talk with author and Gloucester native John Morris on Saturday, January 15 at 3:00 p.m. Morris will be discussing how a personal journey to learn more about his ancestors led him to the Cape Ann Museum Archives. This program is free and open to the public. Reservations are required. For reservations please call 978-283-0455, x11.

John N. Morris’s grandfather, Steve Olsson, was a Gloucester doryman who disappeared at sea without a trace in 1935. Olsson and his dorymate lost contact with their schooner and were never seen again. Morris set out on a quest to discover what might have happened to his grandfather and what a doryman’s life was like. The result—after ten years of exhaustive research and dozens of interviews—is the most complete and authoritative history of the Gloucester fishing industry ever written. This epic highlights life at sea, life at home, and the industry that connected them, growing and then fading over more than 300 years. Alone at Sea is illustrated with over seventy period photographs and maps, many of which came from the Cape Ann Museum archives.

John N. Morris, Ph.D., is the grandson of one of the last Gloucester dorymen lost at sea. A native of Gloucester himself, John is descended from a line of fishermen going back to the seventeenth century. His father was a fish cutter, his mother a fish packer. Director Emeritus of the Institute for Aging Research at Hebrew Senior Life in Boston, a Harvard-affiliated hospital and research program, John has published widely in his field. A board member of the group preserving one of the last surviving Gloucester schooners, Adventure, he now lives in Tyngsboro, Massachusetts.

Funding for this program was made possible through a grant from the Massachusetts Cultural Council, which promotes excellence, access, education and diversity in the arts, humanities and interpretive sciences, in order to improve the quality of life for all Massachusetts residents and to contribute to the economic vitality of our communities.

The Cape Ann Museum is located at 27 Pleasant Street in Gloucester. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., and Sundays from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. The Museum is closed during the month of February, on Mondays, and on major holidays. Admission is $8.00 adults, $6.00 Cape Ann residents, seniors and students. Children under 12 and Museum members are free. Admission for Cape Ann residents is free during the month of January. The Museum is wheelchair accessible. For more information please call: (978) 283-0455. Additional information can be found online at www.capeannmuseum.org

Wanna Buy A Boat? The Lettie G Howard Is For Sale

Brian Luster (Marty’s Son) writes-

Hey, Joey! It looks like the Seaport Museum in New York is trying to sell the Lettie G. Howard. This might be the chance to repatriate her to Gloucester. I’m sure someone up there would like to buy her.

Seaport Museum May Look to Sell Off Historic Schooner
Read more: http://www.dnainfo.com/20101224/downtown/seaport-museum-may-look-sell-off-historic-schooner#ixzz19UnVm8Hx

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Many people around here say that if there is a Schooner that most represents Gloucester’s schooner history that is still floating it would be The Lettie G.  Forgive my terrible memory because I can’t remember why or who told me that but I know I’ve heard it several times.  Perhaps some of the GMG readers who know could chime in with a comment on this post.

Here are many posts in the past with video and pictures of the Lettie G while she was here in Gloucester

Second Mate Jarod Of The Lettie G Howard With His 15 Lbs of Vaseline

Posted on September 5, 2008 by Joey C

If you would like to know why any second mate would need 15 lbs of Vaseline you can click this link for the video explanation taken on the docks at The Maritime Heritage Center

 

Gloucester Perspectives- Kathy Dwyer From The Lettie G

Posted on September 3, 2008 by Joey C

Kathy Dwyer from The Lettie G Schooner talks about Gloucester.

Chickity Check It! Bowsprite: A New York Harbor Sketchbook

Posted on May 14, 2009 by Joey C

Click this picture to visit Bowsprite Blog
Click this picture to visit Bowsprite Blog

http://bowsprite.wordpress.com/

I know it’s from *blech* New York, but this blog has some fantastic photos, watercolors and stories from *blech* New York harbor.  Well worth a look.  If you are a schooner lover it’s a must visit.

Hedre’s a funny post about “Fishing Boats”- http://bowsprite.wordpress.com/2009/05/01/fishing-boats/

There’s also some beautiful watercolors of the Lettie G- http://bowsprite.wordpress.com/2009/04/19/the-schooners-of-new-york-harbor/

The author lists the Lettie G as the “Schooner Howard G. Lettie”.

I always thought it was the Lettie G Howard, goes to show how much I know about these boats.

For my posts on schooners including the Lettie G when she was in Gloucester click this text

Schooner LETTIE G. HOWARD May be Looking for a New Home

 

Former Gloucester Fishing Schooner Lettie G. Howard

Rumor has it that the Lettie G. Howard, the Essex built 1893
 schooner berthed at the Seaport Museum New York (formerly South Street Seaport Museum)) in New York City is for sale. The 125 foot Lettie G.
operated from Gloucester during her first eight years
and spent many years plying the coastal waters of the Yucatan Penninsula. She was sold to the South Street Seaport Museum in 1968, declared a National Historic Landmark in 1988, restored in 1993 and is certified as a training and working museum ship. She stopped running her east coast educational voyages in
2008.

Wouldn’t it be nice to bring the Lettie G. home to Gloucester as an addition to our growing fleet of historic educational vessels? 

 

Gloucester Schooner Festival Video from Jim Merchant

Short Documentary of the 25th Anniversary Gloucester Schooner Festival from Jim Merchant. After some footage of the welcome parties, the parade of lights and fireworks the bulk of the film features many beautiful schooners as they sail past the Dogbar Breakwater. No less than three of the schooners were built by Harold Burnham of Essex who himself skippered a fourth, the schooner Maine. The film features music by Allison Crowe, Amelie, Arctic, Lonah, Raindog, Fluydo, Misery and Silence is Sexy. All music is licensed through creative commons. I am also putting out this film under creative commons Noncommercial – No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. creativecommons.org/​licenses/​by-nc-nd/​3.0/​us/ Enjoy!

Mimi Braverman Guided Tour Sunday December 5th

Clipper Ship "Flying Cloud"

Clipper Ship "Flying Cloud" by H. Boucher 1915
Photo Courtesy MFA

Join in the Excitement of the New MFA

Local resident and noted MFA lecturer Mimi Braverman will lead a guided tour of the decorative arts, furniture and maritime galleries, drawing parallels between the collections at the MFA and those at Beauport, the Sargent House, the Cape Ann Museum and other Gloucester attractions.

Sunday, December 5, 2010 1:00PM -2:30 PM

Meet at West Entrance opposite Garage

Price Per Person $125  Tickets must be purchased in advance

Tickets at www.sargenthouse.org

Questions:  Call 978-281-5801

Fulfilling a Legacy – The Essex Shipbuilding Museum Video By Barry O’Brien

Barry Writes-

The Essex Shipbuilding Museum is located on the grounds of the A.D. Story Shipyard. In this small village of Essex, MA, in the basin of the Essex River, more than 4,000 wooden ships were built. The American fishing schooner was invented here. I created this video to help raise money to interpret, educate and preserve the proud New England history of Essex. I hoped to summarize the the story of the Essex shipwrights and mission of the museum.

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Barry O’Brien Gertrude L. Thebaud Video

Barry O’Brien writes-

This is part of a unique museum exhibit at the Essex Shipbuilding Museum in Essex, MA. I produced this video using photographs from the Museum’s collection, video I shot of archived issues Gloucester Times Newspapers, kindly made available by the Sawyer Public Library, and one 16mm newsreel. My goal was to bring the history of the Thebaud alive for children and adults, as well using only the assets stored away in the Museum’s collection.

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