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05_The_Survivor_the_wreck_and_p_11-13.pdf

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titleThe Survivor: The Wreck and Salvage of the Turret BellFind Similar by title
creatorTownshend, AdeleFind Similar by creator
subjectIsland MagazineFind Similar by subject
subjectPrince Edward Island MuseumFind Similar by subject
descriptionAs ships go, the Turret Bell was an ugly duckling. Her unattractiveness did not lay so much in her dimensions (2211 gross tons, with a length of 237 feet, and a beam of 40 feet), as in her appearance. She was, in fact, a freak of naval architecture, something called a whaleback steamer. The whaleback design had evolved on the Great Lakes in the 1890s. As the English marine magazine, Shipping Wonders of the World observes, the whaleback "was an extremely ugly ship, and looked as if she really were a whale as she lifted her almost cylindrical hull, with its blunt snout bow, out of the water. It was claimed that this hull would save forty per cent in fuel costs and sixty per cent in fuel, but at sea it was a failure and was scarcely more successful on the Great Lakes." The Turret Bell had shared in that failure. Launched from Newcastle-on-Tyne in 1894, she had been relegated by 1906 to coastal trading.Find Similar by description
publisherPrince Edward Island MuseumFind Similar by publisher
date1988Find Similar by date
typeDocumentFind Similar by type
formatapplication/pdfFind Similar by format
identifiervre:islemag-batch2-316Find Similar by identifier
source24Find Similar by source
languageen_USFind Similar by language
rightsPlease note that this material is being presented for the sole purpose of research and private study. Any other use requires the permission of the copyright holder(s), and questions regarding copyright are the responsibility of the user.Find Similar by rights

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