Hornet was an 1851 extreme clipper in the San Francisco trade, famous for its race with Flying Cloud.

History
United States
NameHornet
OwnerChamberlain & Phelps, New York.
OrderedWestervelt & MacKay, New York City
LaunchedJune 20, 1851
FateBurned and sank 3 May 1866
General characteristics
Class and typeExtreme clipper
Tons burthen1426 tons
Length207 ft.
Beam40 ft.
Draft22 ft.[1]

Race with Flying Cloud

edit

Hornet had a two-day head start on Flying Cloud in their famous 1853 race. She left New York City for San Francisco, California on April 26, 1853, with Flying Cloud departing two days later.

After the roughly 15,000-nautical mile (27,780-km) voyage around Cape Horn, both ships arrived in San Francisco harbor 106 days later at almost the same time, with Hornet sailing in just 45 minutes ahead of Flying Cloud.

Loss

edit
 

In 1866, Hornet left New York City bound for San Francisco under Captain Josiah A. Mitchell with a cargo of candles, case oil, and oil in barrels. During the voyage, she caught fire and sank in the Pacific Ocean on May 3, 1866. The crew left the ship in three open lifeboats. The captain′s boat reached Hawaii after 43 days at sea on June 15, 1866, with 14 survivors aboard, but the two other boats disappeared.[2] Mark Twain, on the islands as a special correspondent from the Sacramento Daily Union, interviewed several of the survivors and filed the first extensive report.[3]

Images

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Crothers, William L. (1997). The American-Built Clipper Ship, 1850-1856: Characteristics, Construction, Details. Camden, ME: International Marine. pp. xvii. ISBN 978-0-07-014501-6.
  2. ^ Bruzelius, Lars (1996-01-02). "Clipper Ships: "Hornet" (1851)". Hornet. The Maritime History Virtual Archives. Retrieved June 7, 2010.
  3. ^ Scharnhorst, Gary (2015). "Notes and Documents: Mark Twain Reports the Hornet Disaster". American Literary Realism. 47 (3): 272–276. doi:10.5406/amerlitereal.47.3.0272. JSTOR 10.5406/amerlitereal.47.3.0272. S2CID 160282313.

Further reading

edit