C
C & O Canal, 71:38–39
C. A. Smith (steam schooner), 37:13, 124:12
C. A. Thayer (three-masted lumber schooner), 4:26, 4:28, 5:28, 8:12–13, 18:37, 22:12, 22:13, 22:40, 25:8, 29:31, 30:34–35, 38:11, 46:15, 65:6, 66:25, 70:38, 71:7, 72:12, 107:36, 107:36, 113:38–39, 120:40, 133:24, 145:43, 146:6, 148:28, 153:50, 154:55
(pictures), 4:29, 8:13, 72:26, 113:38, 133:24, 148:29, 153:50, 154:55
rebuilding of stern, 4:29
C. L. Churchill (tugboat), 163:52
C. Plath Navigation, 108:9
C. Vibbard (Hudson River dayliner), 6:22
C. W. Lawrence (revenue cutter), 168:14–17, 168:15
C. W. Willey (keel schooner), 180:34, 180:34
Cabby (wooden barge), 34:23, 55:11
cabin boys, 153:44
Cabot, John (Giovanni Caboto), 75:34, 80:9, 143:16, 147:5
Cabot, Ned, 130:41
Cabot, Sebastian, 66:18
Cabot, USS (renamed Dedalo) (CVL 28; light aircraft carrier), 50:34, 51:36, 59:35, 72:34, 72:34, 73:5, 73:17, 74:35, 76:36, 76:36, 80:36, 96:32, 97, 4
cabotage, 160:28–29
Cabrillo, Juan Rodriquez, 109:2, 167:38, 175:24
Cabrillo lighthouse, 146:24–25
Cabrillo National Monument, 109:2
Cabrillo National Monument Foundation, 109:2
Caccavale, Susan, 147:14–16
Cadamosto (ex-Veri Amici; ex-Raffaela Madre; renamed Orietta) (motorship, former brigantine), 3:8
Caddell, John B., 176:11
Caddell Dry Dock & Repair Co., 49:35, 126:46–47, 176:11–12, 177:10, 177:10, 178:8, 180:12, 181:9
Cadwallader, Richard M. Jr., 169:53
Cahill, Patrick, 150:10–14, 150:10
Cahill, William A.
“Escape from Charleston: A Union Soldier and the Demise of the Blockade Runner Celt,” 166:34–38
Cahoone, John, 139:13
Caillebotte, Gustave (artist), 145:0, 145:27, 145:29
Caio Duilio (battleship), 56:14
caique, 18:24–25
Cairo, USS (Civil War gunboat), 12:27, 15:53, 19:22, 22:41, 105:24, 179:10
Cakir, Mehmet, 68:20
Cal Maritime Ocean Initiative (CMOI), 154:30–33
Calabretta, Fred
“A Navy Segregated by Ship, Jim Graham and the Story of USS Mason, DE-529,” 118:10–13
“The Work of Captain George Comer—Whaling and Anthropology in the Arctic,” 123:18–22
Caladan Oceanic, 175:50
Calbuco (full-rigged ship), 67:5
Calder, William M. 169:14
Caldwell, Benjamin, 98:10
Caldwell, Robert Cary, 74:38
Caleb W. Jones, 86:26
Caledonia (British private armed vessel), 136:11, 144:15, 144:16, 144:17
Caledonia (Cunard liner), 95:11
Caledonia (paddle steamship), 3:30, 64:33, 144:48
Calera, 1:17
California (barquentine), 3:6
California Art Club, 175:25
California (ex-Zodiac) (schooner), 86:3
California (sidewheel steamer), 88:13–14, 90:34
California (transatlantic liner), 65:20
California, SS (steamship), 130:16
California Academy of Sciences, 67:8–9
California Clippers, 38:9–10, 88:11–12
“California Dreaming––Riding the Waves of Surf Art,” 175:24–31
California Galaxy (container vessel), 69:37
California Gold Rush, 38:9, 38:14, 38:20, 88:36, 102:29–31, 117:23, 137:22–25, 143:30, 149:20–24, 154:40, 179:18
California Maritime Academy, 10:20, 78:2, 81:4, 126:10, 154:30–33, 157:27, 163:43
California Shipping Co., 1:9
“California Ships Dreaming: Follow the Star!” 8:10–11
Californian (revenue cutter reproduction; sail training ship), 28:32, 30:22, 30:23, 30:34, 32:32–33, 32:43, 33:33, 38:31, 38:31, 41:32, 53:42, 54:39, 61:38, 79:25, 79:26, 88:36, 106:36, 106:36, 107:35, 109:4, 115:34, 118:0, 120:16, 120:16, 120:19, 120:19, 125:54, 128:15, 141:44, 156:46, 163:47, 165:38, 167:38, 168:16
Californian (topsail schooner), 168:14, 170:50
Californian Challenge program, 107:35
“Californian’s First Year,” 38:31
Calin, Dean, 179:55
Call, Ada Cyrus, 130:15, 130:16
Call, Samuel J., 166:20–21, 166:21
“A Call to Accountability” 30:7
Callach (sailing ketch), 18:47
Callaghan, William M., 112:16
Callahan, Michael, 119:8, 119:8
Callao (Peruvian barque), 15:40, 15:42, 89:8–9
Calliope (steam launch), 18:42, 18:42, 35:38
Callo, Joseph F., 64:9, 172:7, 172:13, 172:13, 176:12–13, 176:12–13, 177:10, 180:10, 180:12–13, 180:13, 181:8–9, 181:8
“Battle of the Nile: Europe at Crossroads,” 85:30–34
“Battle off Flamborough Head: A Pivotal Victory for American Independence,” 115:8–11
“Discovering Bermuda’s Maritime History,” 95:29
“History is in the Air at Sagres,” 80:30–31
“HM Schooner Pickle: a Little Vessel of Colossal Importance,” 163:34–35
“Nelson at Santa Cruz: A Minor Battle of Major Importance,” 79:19–21
“Nelson: Man and Myth,” 71:30–31
“The Spanish-American War: The US Changes Course,” 86:16–19
“Trafalgar: In Nelson’s Own Words,” 110:10–13
“Trafalgar’s Last Chapter—HMS Pickle’s Moment in History, 132:38–39
“Window on the Royal Navy,” 76:30–31
Calmar Nyckel. See Kalmar Nyckel
Calonne (French privateer frigate), 90:15, 180:21
Calvert Marine Museum (CMM; Solomons, MD), 8:28, 15:50, 17:36, 19:40, 20:40, 22:38–39, 23:23, 24:30, 25:46, 31:56, 33:35, 51:19, 51:19, 67:36, 77:40, 80:36, 110:36, 113:35, 130:38, 150:54, 162:7, 182:53–54
Calypso (Cousteau’s ship), 89:41, 103:36, 156:52
Calypso, HMS (renamed HMS Briton) (barque), 2:12, 3:13, 42:17
Calypso, USCG cutter (renamed M/V Circle Line XI), 100:3
Camas Meadows (tanker), 130:31–32
Cambria (deep-draft schooner), 3:30, 26:28, 34:22, 34:24, 98:23–24
figurehead, 101:17
Cambria (yacht), 89:26, 116:20
Cambridge (trawler), 101:11
Camden (sloop), 98:12
Camden (tanker), 114:3
Camden, New Jersey, 144:34–35
Camden Shipyard and Maritime Museum, 144:35–37
“The Camera’s Coast,” 105:33
Camilla (packet ship), 150:29
Camões (brig), 101:15
Camogli Naval Museum, 27:37
Camp Carabelle, 167:5
Camp Gordon Johnson, 167:5
“The Campaign for Sea History,” 73:7
“Campaign for the Maritime Alliance,” 45:6–7
Campbell, George, 4:20, 6:10–11, 28:29, 49:34, 53:26–27
“On Looking Back,”, 9:3
“Of Transom Sterns, Beam Trawls and Pinkies,” 41:23
“A Sublime Satisfaction,” 7:34–36
Campbell, Hugh George, 153:32–36, 154:5
Campbell, Ian, 9:7
“Can the United States be Saved?” 147:14–16
Canadian Cadet Movement, 28:32, 28:34
Canadian Coast Guard (CCG), 77:38, 77:40, 139:31, 139:31
Canadian Maritime Discovery Centre, 107:35
Canadian Museum of History, 166:26–27
Canadian Star, 29:8
canal boats, 8:26, 43:32, 111:21–23, 166:34, 166:34
replicas, 95:36
Canal Society of New Jersey, 24:30
Canandaigua, USS (warship), 76:34–35, 158:20–21
Canarias (cruiser), 10:43
Canberra, 30:9
Cangarda (steam yacht), 117:38, 121:42, 121:42, 182:18
Canning (tug), 3:30, 25:18, 25:47
Cannon, John W., 43:13
cannons
given by Jacob Gibson, 143:10–11, 143:10, 143:12
from Mardi Gras shipwreck, 142:28
Canoe Carving House (Seattle), 182:52–53, 182:52
“‘The Canoe is Our Garden’: A Report on the Project Sponsored by the National Society to Build and Sail a Traditional Tami Canoe,” 30:38–39
canoes, 21:30, 61:0, 68:30, 102:19. See also kayaks; log canoes
Adney collection of Native American canoe models, 96:37
asamat canoe, 43:29
in the Caribbean, 27:47
dugout canoes, 30:32–33, 61:16, 61:19, 61:20–22, 177:44, 181:54, 181:54
Hawaiian, 73:38
Hudson’s Bay Company, 99:19
Indonesian outrigger (jukung), 43:29, 43:30
Karaphuna canoes, 27:47
kora-kora (war canoe), 102:19
Maori war canoe, 43:29
Native American, 99:18–21
New Zealand war canoe, 83:13
Northwest Indian, 61:20–22
outrigger, 36:24, 43:29–30, 83:14
Polynesian voyaging, 17:25, 70:30–31, 74:35, 81:32, 81:32, 84:12, 84:40–42, 157:40, 157:40, 157:40, 157:42, 158:4, 158:4
six-hour, 105:24
tatala (seagoing fishing canoe), 162:47, 162:4
Canonicus, USS, 166:37
Canright, Stephen
“A San Francisco Bay Felucca Reborn,” 51:14
Canton (whaling barque), 16:47, 123:18–19
Cap Arcona (German liner), 103:3
Cap Pilar (barquentine), 2:34, 32:36
Cap San Diego, 99:36
Cap Trafalgar (German liner), 95:12
Cape & Islands Maritime Research Association, 118:42
Cape Ann fisheries, 82:20–21
Cape Ann Historical Association, 76:28
Cape Ann Light, 142:49
Cape Ann Museum, 105:33, 142:49–50
Cape Ann School, 135:32
Cape Breton, HMCS (ex-HMS Flamborough Head) (Canadian Victory ship), 72:34, 72:34, 75:3, 100:45, 100:45
Cape Carter, USCB cutter, 63:23
Cape Cod Canal, 147:10–13, 147:12–17, 147:36, 148:5
map, 147:10–11
Cape Cod Lighthouse, 62:36
Cape Cod Maritime Festival, 118:42
Cape Cod Maritime Museum (CCMM), 83:43, 121:40, 134:30, 156:39, 159:30–32
Cape Cod National Seashore, 135:42
Cape Cod shipwrecks, 147:10–11, 147:13
Cape Eagle (Canadian schooner), 9:28–29
Cape Elizabeth lighthouse, 63:0
Cape Fear, SS (ex-Espania; ex-Austral Lightning), 136:40, 138:5–6
Cape Florida Light, 152:32–34, 152:33, 152:34
Cape Hatteras Lighthouse, 85:55, 88:39, 100:46
Cape Henlopen Lighthouse, 96:37
Cape Henlopen, R/V, 9:12
Cape Henry, battle of, 132:22–26
Cape Horn Island, 126:6
“A Cape Horn Odyssey,” 18:57–63
Cape Horn Pigeon (whaling ship), 174:21, 174:22
“The Cape Horn Road”
Part I, “The Ships and Men That Made the World’s Most Difficult Passage by Sea,” 70:11–14
Part II: “How the Sails of the Square-rigged Ship Got their Names,” 71:10–12, 155:18–21
Part III, Mediterranean Origins, 72:13–15
Part IV, “Frogs Round a Pond: The Mediterranean World, 450 BC–1450 AD,” 73:9–13
Part V, “Confronting the Wild Atlantic,” 75:12–15
Part VI, “Castled Ships in Northern Seas,” 76:8–11
Part VII, “Portugal Opens the Ocean Doorway to a Wider World,” 77:14–17
Part VIII, “Columbus Opens the Americas to the World,” 78:8–11
Part IX, “Spain Charges Ahead—Around the World!” 79:8–11, 79:33
Part X, “Francis Drake Sails for Freedom,” 80:8–11
Part XI, “In the Wake of the Golden Hind,” 81:12–15
Part XII, “The River That Led Around the World”, 82:6–9
Part XIII, “Captain Cook Offers the World a New Picture of Itself,” 83:11–18
Part XIV, “How the Races of Mankind Came Together in the Immense Mixing Bowl of the Pacific”, 84:10–15
Part XV, “Britain Keeps the Sea,” 85:8–13
Part XVI, “Columbia, the Gem of the Ocean! ,” 86:8–13
Part XVII, “America Begins to Change the Atlantic World, Led by a Powerful ‘X’ Factor in New York’s Way of Doing Things,” 87:11–16
Part XVIII, “The American Clipper Makes Tracks on the Cape Horn Road—Pursued by the Bear Cub of the Ocean-Going Steamship,” 88:9–15
Part XIX, “Steamships Take Over the North Atlantic, Driving the Sailing Ship into Increasingly Remote Trades,” 89:8–12
Part XX, “The Voyage Is Toward Freedom,” 90:9–12
Part XXI, “Here.All Men Mattered”, 91:9–13
Envoy, “A Message to the Future about What These Cape Horn Sailors Did and the Echoing Consequences of Their Sailing”, 92:9–11
Cape Horn sailing ships, 155:19–20
Cape Horners World Congress, 29:22–23, 64:38, 64:39
Cape Lookout Shoals lightship, 161:41
Cape May (ex-Del-Mar-Va), 11:8
Cape Museum of Fine Arts, 96:26
Cape Romain (tugboat), 25:29
Cape Spencer (motorship), 15:41–42
Cape St. Vincent, Battle of, 80:31
Cape Verde packet ships, 8:19–21, 9:27–30
“Cape Verde Packet Trade”
Part 1, 8:19–21
Part II, 9:27–30
Cape Wind, 146:43–44
Capella, SS (Military Sealift Command Ship), 160:31
Capitan Miranda (three-masted staysail schooner), 40:11, 42:30, 45:34, 55:34, 56:31, 62:25, 63:36, 71:38, 73:32, 94:28
Capitana (barquentine), 9:30, 113:28
Capitol (Boston sailing ship), 149:20, 149:21
Capiz, Steve (artist), 16:45
Caplin, Mrtimer, 167:25
Cappellini, Luigi
“Felice Manin: A Ligurian Trader of the Nineteenth Century,” 40:16–19
Capps, Lee, 158:29–30
Capricorn (British barque), 22:36, 25:43
Capt. James Cook (ex-E. F. Zwicker) (Gloucester schooner), 6:6
“Capt. McDonald of Moshulu on His 99th Birthday,” 15:52
Capt. Steven L. Bennett (container ship), 158:15
Captain, HMS (Nelson’s ship-of-the-line), 56:27, 63:5, 79:19, 80:31
“Captain Bob Bartlett’s “Little Morrissey,” 23:46–47
Captain Collier (renamed Samuel A. Guilds) (tugboat), 70:39
Captain Conner (wooden tug), 89:41
Captain Cook (pilot steamer), 32:37, 161:32, 161:33
Captain Cook III (pilot vessel), 23:27
“Captain Cook’s Calamari,” 157:36–37
“Captain Cook’s Endeavour,” 74:30–31
Captain Edward H. Adams (Piscataqua River gundalow), 18:42, 20:38, 23:21, 25:47
“A Captain from Cape Cod,” 75:8–11
Captain H. A. Downing (self-propelled double-hulled tanker), 84:9
“Captain James Cook, RN, FRS; An Appreciation of the Man and His Voyages,” 11:12–16
Captain John Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail, 118:24, 118:30
Captain John Smith Four Hundred Project, 107:28, 118:4, 118:24, 118:29, 118:30, 119:7, 120:36
Captain Meriwether Lewis (sidewheel dredge), 39:36, 60:17
“Captain Peter Strickland of New England: Trader and Consul in West Africa, 1864–1905,” 114:32–35
“Captain Philip Weems: Refining Navigation,” 108:8–9
Captain Philips (film), 143:42–43
“Captain Quick Loses His Temper—and a Mast—Towing Under the Brooklyn Bridge in 1915,” 28:46–47
Captain Scott (now Shabab Oman) (three-masted barquentine), 3:6, 10:29, 15:50, 40:11, 62:25, 80:17
Captain Visger (yacht/tour boat), 172:23
“Captains and Their Ladies,” 152:36–39
“Captains Cooper and Roys: Long Island Whalers Known ‘Round the World,” 168:18–22
Captain’s Legacy Society, 169:56, 177:49
“Capturing the Moment,” 93:24–27
Captyannis, SS (freighter), 162:24
Capua, James (artist), 16:45
car ferries, 29:5
Car of Neptune (Hudson River steamer), 10:10
Carabobo, 14:5
Caraibe (French container ship), 29:35
Iberian, 40:7
Caraviello, Chris, 169:38
Card, USNS, 140:10–11, 140:10, 140:12, 140:13
Carden, John, 134:14, 135:10–14
Cardenas Bay, Battle of, 157:18–20
Cardin, Benjamin, 163:10, 163:10, 168:54
Cardinal O’Connell, USNS (cargo ship), 112:16
Cardozo, Joe, 55:7
Cardy, Peter, 138:44
careening, 160:45
Careers in the Marine and Maritime Field
aquaculturist, 168:42
author-illustrator, 183:56–57
charter captain, 157:35
coastal and marine geologist, 130:35
college professor, coastal and marine geography, 151:38
cultural resource manager, 134:37
deck officer, US Merchant Marine, 163:42
lab owner, 168:42
lobsterman, 155:42–43
marina manager, 149:37
marine artist, 127:38–39
marine biologist, 123:39, 168:42, 180:46
marine filmmaker, 144:43
marine geochemist, 182:40–41
marine geographer, 140:33
marine insurance agent, 160:44
marine patrol officer, 131:31
marine photographer, 129:27
marine salvors, 125:41
marine science teacher, 165:38–39
maritime archaeologist, 125:40–41
maritime historian, 124:38
maritime lawyer, 128:39
maritime museum executive director, 177:40
maritime museum librarian, 132:35
meteorologist, 170:46–47
musician 1st class, US Navy, 172:44
NOAA Commissioned Officer Corps, 126:37
nautical archaeologists, 112:23
oceanographer, 170:46–47
oceanographic engineering technician, 135:35
physical scientist, 148:47
professional ocean racer, 152:44–45
sculptor, 162:38–39
shark biologist, 180:46
ship’s rigger, 142:41
shipwright, 161:42
treasure hunters, 125:41
tugboat captain, 176:42–43
United States Navy deck seaman, 139:35
US Coast Guard Public Affairs Chief, 173:36
whale biologist, 165:38–39
whale watch videographer, 138:33
writer, 154:44
yacht charter broker, 147:37
Carey, June (artist), 97:26
Carey, Roland (author), 14:40–41
cargo tonnage, 58:11
cargo vessels, 28:3
Cariad (pilot cutter), 14:63, 33:10, 93:6, 100:35
Caribbean Monk Seal, 137:32–33
“Caribbean Reef Octopus,” 174:44–45
Caribbean sailing craft, 30:32–33, 31:46–48
Caribee (gaff schooner), 3:6, 125:5, 142:5
Caribia (ex-Caronia; liner), 20:29, 95:13
Caribou, SS, 158:31
Carina, 131:29
“Carl Evers,” 31:18–22
Carl Gustaf (king of Sweden), 27:21
Carl Vinson, 30:9
Carleton (schooner), 53:30, 53:31, 104:37, 117:18–19, 117:18
Carleton of Whitby (18th-century English vessel), 83:52
Carlisle, Rodney P., 169:5, 169:12
Carlsen, Kurt, 167:14, 167:15–16, 167:16
Carlson, Konrad “Snooze,” 140:12
Carlton, James, 167:9
Carlton (American ship), 62:16
Carmania (Cunard liner), 65:21, 95:12, 144:48
Carmany, George W. III, 148:18–19, 148:39, 148:39, 152:10, 153:8–9, 153:8–9, 156:11, 156:11, 157:8, 161:10, 161:10, 161:11, 165:8–9, 165:9, 168:10, 169:8, 169:9, 172:10, 172:13, 173:11, 176:10
Carmany, Judy, 153:8
Carmel, Matthew, 156:8
Carmen Flores (three masted schooner [pailebot]), 91:38
Carmick, USS (destroyer), 167:24
Carnation, USS, 63:5
Carnival Fantasy (cruise ship), 172:38
Carnival Spirit, 138:43, 138:43
Carolan, Michael (author)
“Packet Ship Patrick Henry,” 176:34–37
Carolan, Michael (1844–1906), 176:34, 176:34, 176:35, 176:37
Caroline, HMS (light cruiser), 3:29, 12:28
Caroline Rose (Gloucester schooner), 6:6
Carondolet (barque), 15:52
Caronia (now Caribia; liner), 20:29, 95:13
Carousel (yawl), 171:10
Carpaccio, Vittore (artist), 53:0
Carpathia (Cunard steamship), 95:12, 122:22, 122:23, 138:13–16, 138:15, 139:6, 144:48, 171:13
Carpenter, E. Clare
“Forty Years a Riverman,” 43:18–19
Carplaka (Hog Islander ship), 15:5
Carr, Archie, 180:49
Carr, Arnold, 107:19
Carr, Frank G. G., 7:16–18, 9:1, 9:1, 14:63, 16:9, 19:18, 19:18, 20:33, 33:11, 34:36, 44:24, 46:14, 54:12, 57:20, 58:4, 59:36, 60:8, 60:9, 69:38, 83:51, 93:6, 100:35, 100:39
interview, 48:35
intro. to “The Thames Barge,” 34:21
Ship Trust Activities Report for 1987, 46:38
World Ship Trust report (1984), 34:36–37
Carr, Henry (artist), 147:31
Carr, J. Revell, 68:6, 78:26, 85:51, 95:5, 95:5, 96:13, 96:17, 96:19–20, 96:19, 96:20
“The Time is Now: For the Ships, for Maritime Preservation throughout the Country,” 34:3
Carrajat, Mary Alice, 86:32
Carreño, Bartolomé, 181:15
Carriage of Goods by Sea Act, 179:36
Carrick, HMS (ex-City of Adelaide) (clipper ship), 2:7, 11:31, 58:39, 62:36, 72:36, 76:38, 94:37–38, 94:38, 121:6, 121:6, 145:56, 145:56
Carrie B. Welles (fishing schooner), 5:28
Carrie Ladd (steamboat), 179:20
Carroll, Daniel, 153:26
Carroll, Tom
“SS Nobska,” 108:32
Carruthers, Bruce
“The Value of Sail Training for Adults,” 85:24–26
“Carrying the Age of Sail Forward in the Barque Picton Castle,” 109:24–28
Carson Mansion, 21:27
cartel ships, 175:17
Carter, Aaron, 152:32–34
Carter, Elizabeth, 152:37
Carter, James, 122:13
Carter, James Earl “Jimmy,” 170:36
Carter, John Swain, 23:21, 108:40
“Contemporary Marine Art: A Juried exhibition by the American Society of Marine Artists at the Peabody Museum of Salem,” 21:36–38
Carter Hall, USS (amphibious dock landing ship), 164:15
Carthaginian (ex-Wandia) (schooner brig), 17:27, 21:34
Cartier, Jacques, 172:31
Carton, Geoffrey, 149:14–17
“Echoes of World War I—Chemical Warfare Materials on the Atlantic Coast,” 133:14–18
“Explosives (see note C): The Unusual End of the Robert Louis Stevenson,” 149:14–17, 179:4
Cartwright, Edmund, 161:25
Carus, Edward, 181:22, 182:5, 182:5
Carver, Jesse T., 9:8–9, 10:14–16
Carysford, HMS, 39:15
Carysfort, HM (destroyer), 71:33
Carysfort light, 39:16
Casanova, Peter, 160:33
Casbrillo, Juan Rodriguez, 156:46
Casca (sternwheel steamboat), 3:31
Casco (two-masted schooner), 22:31
Casco, USCGC (WAV/P-370), 176:6
“The Case for the Privateer Rapid,” 142:24–28
Casey, Joe, 172:41
Cash, Sarah, 169:38
Cashier (schooner), 97:36, 97:36
Cashman, David, 46:6
Casino Aztar (aka City of Evansville; renamed Tropicana Evansville; renamed Riverboat Louis Armstrong), 161:55–56
Casket (sloop), 175:22
Caspian Sea, 180:47
Casserley, Tāne, 182:8
“Iron from the Deep: USS Monitor,” 108:24–27
Cassidy, Jim, 167:39
Cassin, USS (destroyer DD-43), 99:9
Cassin Young, USS (destroyer, DD–793), 5:32, 14:4, 14:7, 15:5, 19:23, 73:17
Castelli, Marc (artist), 132:0, 132:28–32, 140:36, 154:0, 161:50–51, 176:40, 178:17, 182:13
“Exploring the Chesapeake Bay with Captain John Smith: 1608 and 2007,” 118:24–30
Castilian (packet ship), 75:0, 75:28
Castilla, 94:12
“Castled Ships in Northern Seas,” 76:8–11
Castleton. See Skaregrom (ex–Castleton; ex-Svalen) (Norwegian full-rigger)
Catalina, PBY (“flying boat”), 155:29, 155:29
Catalina, SS (ferry), 95:38, 106:19, 106:19
Catalpa (whaleship), 117:13, 117:13, 169:18, 169:18, 169:20–22, 169:20, 169:21, 170:5
“Catalpa Incident, The: An American Whaler Getaway Vessel and Australia’s Most Daring Prison Break,” 169:18–22
Catanzaro, Brittany, 128:29
Catawissa (renamed New York; renamed Tankmaster No. 1) (steam tugboat), 3:33, 25:18, 25:25, 61:39, 76:36, 77:32–33, 77:32–33, 78:26, 79:37, 82:4, 119:39
“Catawissa: Last Deepwater Steam Tug on the East Coast,” 77:32–33
catboats, 171:32–35, 171:32–35
Catesby Jones, Thomas ap, 99:17, 137:15, 140:28, 141:10, 141:10
Catherine (schooner), 168:16
Cathkit (three-masted scow schooner), 3:31
Catlin, USS (ex-USS George Washington), 69:30, 104:12, 112:17, 117:5–6. 119:6, 161:21, 161:22
cats (aboard ships), 176:44–45
Catskill (ferry), 4:21
Catskill (freighter), 40:3
Catskill (steamer), 10:10
Catskill, USS, 176:17
Causten, James H., 113:19
Cavalier (fishing schooner model), 49:36, 49:37
Cavalier (Indian-header), 49:15
Cavalier, HMS (destroyer), 3:29, 12:28, 23:21, 26:29, 31:53, 42:36
Cavalier Trust, 23:21
Cavalla, USS (submarine), 5:30, 12:28, 73:17, 118:5–6, 118:6
Cavanaugh, Les, 131:9
Caviare. See Lettie G. Howard (ex-Caviare; renamed Mystic C.) (Gloucester fishing schooner)
Cayuga (gunboat), 36:15, 36:16
Cecelski, David
“The Last Daughter of Davis Ridge,” 98:15–18
“The Waterman’s Song,” 98:14
Cecil P. Stewart (four-masted barquentine), 15:40
Cecilia Sudden (four-masted schooner), 38:47
Cedric (White Star liner), 65:20
Ceiba (schooner), 164:52
“Celebrating 100 years of the Cape Cod Canal,” 147:10–13
“A Celebration of Clippers,” 88:24–26
“A Celebration of the Life and Art of Oswald Brett, Seafarer and Marine Painter,” 161:30–34
Celestial Empire. See China, SS
celestial sphere, 120:23
Celia (steam schooner), 79:14
Celine, MV (Ro-Ro), 163:43
Celt (steamer; blockade runner), 166:34–38
Celtic (White Star liner), 65:20
Cemologos (steam catamaran warship), 87:14
“A Centennial of American Destroyers,” 100:15–18
Center, S., 166:37
Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts (CASVA), 141:31
Center for American Marine Art, 180:4, 180:8
Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping, 183:26
Center for Ocean Sciences Education Excellence (COSEE), 154:30
Center for the Great Lakes/La Centre des Grands Lacs, 39:36
Center for the Study of Global Slavery, 179:8, 179:8
Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice (CSSJ), 174:51–52
Center for Traditional Louisiana Boat Building, 51:16, 145:48
Center for Wooden Boats (Seattle, WA), 17:36, 19:41, 20:40, 23:24, 51:11, 51:23, 75:34, 95:40
Central America, SS (ex-George Law) (steamship), 52:10, 63:37, 64:26–30, 65:4, 65:37, 68:16, 126:6
Centre International de la Mer, 43:39
Centurion (dreadnought), 69:17, 69:18–19, 69:19
Centurion (ex-Aegean, ex-Beegie) (brigantine), 3:6, 37:33
Centurion, HMS, 175:17
Centurion replica, 8:17
“Century of the Jones Act, A,” 169:12–16
Cerberus (frigate), 91:5
Cerberus, HMS (coast defense battleship), 3:29, 12:27, 65:34, 137:20
Cerberus, HMVS (ironclad), 73:36, 73:36, 83:51
Cerchinoe, Angelo
“Round the World and Home Again,” 90:37–38
Ceres (seized in the Quasi-War), 113:18
Cerino, Christopher
“Exploring the Chesapeake Bay with Captain John Smith: 1608 and 2007,” 118:24–30
Cerisch, Karl, 29:23
Cervantes (freighter), 8:7–8
Cervera y Topete, Pascual, 86:18–19, 155:32, 155:32, 155:36
Cervia (ex-Empire) (tugboat), 25:18
Cesenatico Maritime Museum, 33:32
Cessell, G.W., 166:37
C’est La Vie (ex-Governor Stone) (two-masted Gulf cargo schooner), 165:32
CG-2327 (USCG double-cabin picket boat), 169:43–45
CG 36500 (motor lifeboat), 23:21–22
CGR-812 (Coast Guard Reserve Craft) (ex-Roseway), 54:33, 181:47, 181:47
Chaffinch, USS (minesweeper), 68:12
Chalk, Ernest, 35:17
Challenge (clipper ship), 6:11, 13:44, 19:32, 54:25, 168:17, 168:17
Challenge (Great Lakes lumber schooner replica), 28:34
Challenge (steam tug), 3:30, 25:18, 26:28, 69:37
“The Challenge of History,” 61:7
Challenged Sailors of San Diego, 168:46
Challenger (clipper ship), 163:38
Challenger (space shuttle), 50:14, 144:42
Challenger, HMS (research vessel), 144:42, 144:42
“Challenging, Beautiful, Noble Ships.,” 72:10
Chalupa (San Salvador ship’s boat replica), 64:35
Chamberlain, Trevor (artist), 67:28–29
Chamberlin, Arthur R. Jr., 44:2, 45:5
Chameleon, CSS (ex-Atlanta; ex-CSS Tallahassee; ex-CSS Olustee) (Confederate twin-engine steamer), 151:34–37, 151:34, 151:36
Champigny (ex-Fennia) (four-masted barque), 2:8, 4:30, 8:13, 11:29, 12:36, 13:38, 15:13, 16:17, 38:13, 46:7, 70:14, 93:15
Champion (tugboat), 47:0
Champion of the Seas (passenger cruise ship), 47:11
Champlain, Samuel de, 66:18
Champlain (transatlantic liner), 65:20, 65:20
Champlain Canal, 52:13
Champlain Naval Squadron, 83:55
Champlin, Henry, 36:11, 36:11, 50:17, 55:7
Champney, Benjamin (artist), 150:29
Chance (privateer), 59:26
Chancellor, John (artist), 33:37
Chancellor, Rita
“Life Aboard the Viper,” 54:46–47
Chancellor Livingston (Hudson River steamer), 4:19, 10:9
Chandler’s Wharf Museum, 23:23
“The Changing Face of Boston Harbor,” 24:18–19
Chanick, Even, 122:47
Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary, 179:17
Channel Wreck, 39:19
Chantier (Byrd’s supply ship on 1926 polar expedition), 177:12
Chanty/chantey, see sea chanteys
chanteymen, 172:45. See also sea chanteys
“The Chanty Movement in Europe,” 46:42–43
Chapel of the Four Chaplains, 65:18
Chapelle, Howard I., 3:23–28, 29:5, 31:58, 36:8, 88:10, 88:14–15, 117:29, 125:20, 154:26, 159:20, 168:56,
Chaplin, James C., 162:19
Chapman, Af, 97:20–22
Chapman, Jonathan, 122:24–25
Charal, 66:25
Charcot, Jean-Baptiste, 177:13
Charette, George, 155:35
Chariot of Fame (clipper), 88:13, 183:36, 183:36–37
Charity Ann (hard-chine tug), 27:38
Charles (HRH the Prince of Wales), 23:7, 31:53
Charles I (king of England), 82:8
Charles II (king of England), 81:27, 82:8, 83:17, 115:26, 115:26
Charles II (king of Spain), 177:18
Charles V (king of Spain), 105:9
Charles A. McAllister, SS, 43:4
Charles and Henry (whaler), 99:15, 99:16
Charles Ausburne, USS (destroyer), 100:17
Charles B. Kenney (tow barge), 72:21, 72:22
Charles Biggs (lifeboat), 52:11
Charles Carroll, SS, 105:2
Charles Cooper (half clipper/packet ship), 2:7, 2:31, 3:3, 4:40–41, 5:1, 7:25, 13:38, 13:40, 13:41, 13:42, 14:32, 14:33, 16:35, 18:14, 20:26, 21:31, 26:9, 26:12, 34:36, 40:33, 50:17, 61:38, 76:38, 77:36
(pictures), 4:38, 4:41, 4:48, 4:49, 5:3, 5:38, 13:40, 20:27, 76:38, 78:17
returning to Boston, 5:38–39
sailing from Calcutta, 4:48–49
stabilization of, 20:26–27
stern decoration, 13:40
“The Charles Cooper Returns to Boston,” 5:38–39
“The Charles Cooper Sets Out from Calcutta, 1861,” Part One, 4:48–49
“The Charles Cooper Stabilized,” 20:26–27
Charles D. McAllister (tugboat), 21:15
Charles Dennis, 145:24
Charles Drew (whaling ship), 174:24
Charles E. Moody, 15:52
Charles F. Adams, USS (destroyer), 94:21, 176:55, 181:49
Charles F. Gordon (ex-J. O. Webster; ex-Oliver H. Perry; ex- and renamed as J. T. Wing), 47:24–25, 47:24–25, 48:5
Charles G. Rice (Cape Verde packet), 8:19
Charles H. Cugle (renamed SS Sturgis) (Liberty ship), 11:22, 34:37
Charles Hebard, SS, 183:25
Charles J. Kershaw (steamer), 183:23–25
Charles L. Jeffrey (Cape Verde schooner), 9:28
Charles P. Stickney (schooner), 174:43
Charles Park Dedication Festival, 75:4
Charles Point Council Lecture Series, 150:4, 150:6
Charles R. Spencer (passenger and cargo steamer), 176:24–26, 176:25, 176:26
Charles Racine (barque), 3:32
“Charles Robert Patterson: The Sailorman’s Painter,” 30:12–16
Charles S. Zimmerman (ex-Mount Vernon; renamed City of Delaware) (steamer), 10:13, 11:8, 13:47, 161:21, 161:22
Charles Thomson (whaling ship), 51:5
Charles W. Morgan (New Bedford whaleship), 2:12, 4:19, 5:6, 5:7, 5:8–11, 5:28, 8:22, 10:26, 12:38, 17:25, 20:31, 21:3, 22:38, 24:29, 30:40, 32:42–43, 42:36, 48:5, 48:39, 50:17, 52:29, 58:38, 60:4, 60:10–12, 60:34, 68:6, 72:20–21, 84:28–29, 84:29, 96:13, 96:15, 96:19, 98:3, 112:38, 114:38, 116:39–40, 125:15, 125:51, 126:28, 129:40, 134:40, 137:40, 139:48, 142:52, 142:54, 143:4, 143:20–24, 146:4, 146:11–12, 147:13, 147:44, 148:9, 148:10, 148:28, 148:34–35, 148:36, 148:51, 150:5, 150:6, 159:9, 166:12, 179:40, 182:19, 183:11
(pictures), 2:14, 5:6, 5:11, 12:13, 46:13, 59:9, 60:11–12, 96:0, 96:18, 96:19, 96:47, 116:40, 125:51, 128:9, 129:40, 132:41, 134:16, 134:18–19, 134:20–21, 137:40, 143:0, 143:20–25, 143:39, 144:38–40, 146:11, 147:8, 147:26, 148:9, 148:29, 148:34–36, 149:0, 149:28, 176:53, 178:10
adventures of, 96:46–47
construction of whaleboat for, 145:56
launch of, 144:38–40
main cabin, 74:22
new sails for, 147:24–28
plans for sails, 147:25
relaunching of, 143:25
rescue of the Sunbeam, 150:31–32
restoration and maintenance of, 96:16–17, 96:18, 134:16–21, 159:22, 176:53, 176:55
sails for, 147:24–28
scan of lower hold, 134:20
voyage to historic ports, 147:44
“Charles W. Morgan Under Sail in Distant Seas,” 96:46–47
Charles W. Wooster, USAT, 177:28
Charles Whittemore, USS (four-masted schooner), 90:29–31, 90:29–31
Charleston, South Carolina, 166:14, 166:36, 166:36, 166:38
Charleston Maritime Festival, 64:31
Charlestown (ex-Boston) (frigate), 14:52–53, 14:53, 61:25, 103:13, 103:14, 103:15, 103:15, 103:16, 105:11
Charlestown Navy Yard, 96:34, 103:37
Charlie B. (Gloucester schooner), 6:6
Charlotta (tender), 98:8
Charlotte (tugboat), 79:37
Charlotte, USS (submarine), 117:30
Charlotte Dundas (steam tugboat), 25:15, 64:13, 64:13
Charlotte Rhodes (ex-Meta Jan, ex-Eva) (three-masted topsail schooner), 3:6
Charlton, Warwick, 171:21
Charm (tugboat), 9:34
Charrney, Theodore S.
“Chicago Harbor a Century Ago,” 47:12–15
Charter, Julius, 63:23
“Charts That Tell a Story: Captain ‘Tiger’ Allen’s Nautical Charts,” 145:20–24
Chase, Chris, 180:50
Chase, Daniel C., 166:38
Chase, Harry W., 35:14–16, 35:18
Chase, John, 99:17
Chase, Nathan, 178:30
Chase (barque), 114:6
Chaser, 18:17, 18:18–19, 38:30
Chasseur (Baltimore clipper, nicknamed “Pride of Baltimore”), 15:36, 15:36–38, 16:6, 59:26, 59:26, 59:27, 172:41
Chatauqua Bell (steamboat), 31:58
Château-Renault, Conde de (François Louis de Rousselet), 177:18–20, 177:21, 177:22
Chateaugay (renamed Mount Washington) (steamer), 10:13
Chatelain (destroyer escort), 37:4
Chatham, HM (brig), 61:17, 61:32–33, 61:32, 64:36, 75:16, 88:17, 88:17–18, 88:18, 148:53
Chatham Naval Dockyard, 32:41, 34:37
Chattahootchee, CSS (Civil war gunboat), 97:40, 133:24, 133:24
Chatterton, E. Keble
“Down Channel in the Vivette,” 57:47
“Through Holland in the Vivette,” 82:46–47
Chaudiere, HMCS (destroyer), 61:39
Chaumont, Thérése de, 152:37
Chauncey, Isaac, 45:4, 136:10, 137:11, 138:23–24, 138:23, 144:14
Chauncey, USS (destroyer), 99:9, 109:4
Chauncey M. Depew (ex-Rangeley; steamer), 10:13, 11:19, 11:19
Chauncey Vibbard (Hudson River steamer), 10:6
Chautauqua Belle (steamboat), 37:38
Chautauqua Lake Historic Vessels (CLHV), 63:36
Chaveau, Jacques, 96:13
Chavez, Devan, 182:51
Chee, Cheng-Khee, 137:34–37
Cheektowaga (renamed Progress No 9) (steam tug/tow converted to diesel), 8:14
Cheers (racing proa), 33:14, 100:38
Cheetham, Henry R. “Harry,” 138:14–16
Cheevers, James W., 130:8, 130:8, 132:8, 132:8, 139:8
Chelsea (ex-Kilmarnock; ex-Eleanor Bolling; renamed Vamar) (tramp steamer), 138:36, 138:36
Chelsea Piers, 20:29
“The Chelsea Piers: Echoing with Departed Glory of the Great Liners,” 20:29
Cherokee, USS, 49:5
Cherpak, Evelyn M., 157:32–33
“Joseph K. Taussig’s Welcome to the US Navy: Three Wars in Three Years,” 125:42–45
Cherub, HMS (British warship), 136:13, 137:10–11
Chesapeake (renamed Retribution) (passenger steamship), 152:22–24, 152:23
Chesapeake, US lightship, 5:28, 19:22, 73:36, 88:31
Chesapeake, USS (frigate), 85:0, 85:36–37, 85:36, 87:15, 103:16, 105:11, 107:14, 110:29, 110:30, 114:27, 114:28–29, 114:28, 114:29, 114:30, 115:3, 116:12, 118:16, 129:18, 136:13, 136:13, 136:14, 139: 20, 153:36, 174:11, 175:44
Chesapeake Bay, 14:9, 14:10–12, 132:0, 134:6–7, 150:0, 183:69
African American oystermen, 10:26
decorative carvings on dredge boats, 86:24–27
maritime museums, 14:12
and the War of 1812, 181:35
watermen of, 132:28–32
Chesapeake Bay, Battle of, 138:28
Chesapeake Bay Flotilla, 147:18–22
Chesapeake Bay Foundation, 162:11, 163:10
“Chesapeake Bay Log Canoes: from Dugout to Racing Yacht,” 32:10–11
Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum (CBMM), 1:31, 14:10–11, 14:13, 18:44, 19:40, 21:32, 24:30, 25:43, 25:46, 30:42, 31:56, 46:44, 51:37, 53:43, 67:36, 70:39, 73:36, 74:41, 78:26, 94:39–40, 113:36, 115:2, 115:2, 115:34, 116:4, 122:16–19, 126:44, 133:46, 135:42, 137:43–44, 140:43, 142:50, 143:12, 143:40, 143:42, 143:42, 151:46, 153:56, 153:56, 154:27, 163:46, 165:42, 166:51, 168:6, 177:38, 178:13–14, 179:8, 180:34, 183:70, 183:70
art exhibits, 83:43, 156:39, 175:36, 181:22
Shipwright Apprentice Program, 178:52
“Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum,” 122:16–19
Chesapeake Bay Skipjack Fleet, 102:36
Chesapeake Heritage Conservation Foundation, 72:10
Chesapeake Mill, 107:14
Chesapeake’s Revenge, 141:19
Chester A. Congdon (freighter), 47:31
Chevalier, Godfrey de Courcelles, 178:27, 178:27, 178:28
chevaux de frise, 98:8, 98:10, 98:13, 158:35
Chevrieux, Marcus De
“Rediscovering the Pacific Trade: The Maritime Paintings of David Thimgan,” 72:24–26
Chevron Mississippi (supertanker), 130:6
“Chicago Harbor a Century Ago,” 47:12–15
Chicago-Mackinac race, 47:9, 47:10
Chicago’s Christmas Tree Ship, 169:46. See also Rouse Simmons
Chicora (ironclad), 120:28–29
Chief Gadao, SS (Matson container vessel), 119:37
Chief Joseph, SS (renamed Hai Chang; Liberty ship), 11:22
Chief Wawatam (carferry), 7:25, 22:41, 25:34, 47:44–45, 101:34
Chief Warrant and Warrant Officers Association (CWOA), 162:10
“Chief Wawatam Must Be Saved,” 47:44–45
Chikuma (Japanese carrier), 102:9, 102:12
Child, James Kelly, 36:15
Child, Thomas, 36:15
Child, Warren, 178:31
Chili (whaleship), 123:36
Chillicothe (ex-Gamecock, ex-Arnoldus Vinnen, ex-Alsterkamp, ex-Flowtow) (hulk, former full-rigged ship), 2:7
Chin Pu (Chinese barque), 39:44, 52:16
China, SS (ex-Celestial Empire) (transPacific passenger steamer), 13:44, 21:18–21, 38:6, 88:14, 90:3
clipper card, 40:28
China Clipper Society, 28:42
China Cloud (full-rigged ship), 21:29
china patterns, 64:32–33
China Pier Park, 180:8
Chincha Islands, 163:37–40, 164:6
Chinese Exclusion Act, 178:43
Chinese junks. See junks
Chinese seafaring, 77:17, 84:13–15
Chinese sturgeon, 48:38
Chinook salmon, 139:36–37
Chipchase, ST, 33:32
Chippawa, Battle of, 137:11
Chippewa (ex-Rogers City; ex-Dolomite) (tugboat), 25:28, 26:30
Chippewa, USS, 138:25
Chirikor (ex-Lurline; steamer), 14:35, 14:37
Choate, Alan G., 55:7, 64:9, 68:6, 83:6
Choctaw (steamer), 183:25
Chong, Hiu Lai (artist), 150:45
Choren, Zugmunt, 62:21–22, 62:21, 63:34
Chr. Knudsen, 56:44
Chriestiena (sloop), 77:28
Chris-Craft company, 77:22
Christeen (oyster sloop), 53:39, 55:7, 55:7, 59:35, 60:17
“Christeen Finds Friendly Berth,” 53:39
Christeen Oyster Sloop Preservation Corporation, 89:40
Christian, Ada, 152:17
Christian, Claudene, 141:33, 182:25
Christian, Fletcher, 42:16, 85:8–9, 121:34
Christian Radich (full-rigged Norwegian school ship), 2:10, 4:13, 5:4, 6:12, 6:29, 8:1, 18:18–19, 37:33, 38:30, 39:34, 40:10, 40:11, 42:29, 52:22, 52:22, 52:47, 62:27, 70:21, 83:50, 172:38
weathering a hurricane, 5:16–17
Christian Radich II, 56:31
Christian Venturer, 18:18–19
Christman, Steve
“Revenue Cutter Californian Nears Her Launch Date,” 32:32–33
“Christmas Aboard the Bark Kaiulani, 1941,” 5:35–37
“Christmas at Antofagasta,” 75:45–47
“Christmas Eve 1917: The Time I Saw Sims,” 34:25
“Christmas in the Fo’c’sle,” 15:66–67
“Christmas Tree Schooner Rouse Simmons,” 46:40–41
Christmas Tree ships, 46:40–41, 113:22
Christopher (British ship), 101:22
Christopher (Drake’s pinnace), 80:10
Christopher Columbus Quincentenary Commission (New York State), 59:4
Christopher Newport, SS (Liberty ship), 11:21, 62:15
Christophoros (renamed Elissa; ex-Fjeld; ex-Gustav; ex-Achaios; ex-Pioneer) (barque). See Elissa
chronology, 108:10
chronometers, 42:16–17, 42:17, 66:18, 66:22–23, 120:23
Chrysanthemumm, HMS (sloop), 12:28
Chub, HMS, 137:12
Chubb (gunboat sloop), 148:21, 148:22
Chucuito (ex-Yavari) (semi-diesel motorship), 39:36, 41:6–8, 41:6, 41:8, 42:35, 43:5, 46:38, 84:57, 98:36
Chungshan (Chinese cruiser), 83:52
Church, Albert Cook, 147:25
Church, Frederic Edwin (artist), 37:24, 125:29
Church, Julia
“John Mecray: A Celebration of Life, Art, and Yachting,” 164:22–26
Churchill, Winston, 76:9–10, 87:34–35, 101:7–9, 103:10, 104:8, 104:9, 171:18, 171:19, 171:19, 183:20
Ciabatti, Enrico, 100:41
Ciampi, Elgin, 179:12
Cibro Philadelphia (fuel barge), 33:18
cigar ships, 53:43
Cimbria (passenger liner), 67:46–47, 67:46
Cimbria (Penobscot River steamboat), 67:47
“Cimbria—Ship of War?” 67:46–47
Cincinnati (renamed USS Covington) (CTF ship), 161:21
Cinque (Singbe Pieh, African from La Amistad), 71:20–21, 71:22, 97:16
Ciolfi, Kathleen
“Echoes of World War I—Chemical Warfare Materials on the Atlantic Coast,” 133:14–18
“Explosives (see note C): The Unusual End of the Robert Louis Stevenson,” 149:14–17, 179:4
Circassian (British full-rigged ship), 2:29
Circle Line XI, M/V (ex-USCG cutter Calypso), 100:3
Circle Line Sightseeing Tours, 130:30
Cisne Branco (ex-Ondine) (Brazilian sail training ship), 29:26, 33:33, 38:30, 94:28, 94:28, 94:29
Cito (ex-Volo; ex-Dana; ex-Turo; renamed New Endeavour) (three-masted topsail schooner), 3:8, 3:10, 4:18, 10:21
Citta di Milano, SS (cable ship), 177:14
City of Adelaide (ex-Carrick) (wool clipper), 2:7, 11:31, 58:39, 62:36, 72:36, 76:38, 94:37–38, 94:38, 121:6, 121:6, 145:56, 145:56
City of Alpena, 47:19
City of Amsterdam (clipper replica), 83:48
City of Austin (hulk, former five-masted barquentine), 3:6
City of Bath (schoooner), 5:5, 5:32
City of Bayville, 36:3
City of Beaumont (renamed Buccaneer) (five-masted barquentine), 3:6, 26:10, 33:21, 51:35–36, 53:43, 72:34–35
City of Chester, SS (passenger steamer), 147:43, 147:43
City of Cleveland III, SS (passenger steamship), 169:32, 169:32, 169:33
“City of Columbus Plans for Quincentenary,” 58:34
City of Corpus Christi (ex-Corpus Christi), 30:10
City of Dallas (steamship), 36:16
City of Delaware (ex-Charles S. Zimmerman; renamed Mount Vernon) (steamer), 10:13, 11:8, 13:47, 161:21, 161:22
City of Detroit (liner), 21:35
City of Detroit II, 47:19
City of Detroit III, SS (passenger steamship), 168:51, 169:32
City of Edinburgh (ex-Frieda; ex-Sjoborgin; renamed William McCann) (sailing trawler), 19:41, 22:36
City of Evansville, 74:19
City of Evansville (aka Casino Aztar; renamed Tropicana Evansville; renamed Riverboat Louis Armstrong), 161:55–56
City of Everett (Great Lakes whaleback steamer), 22:25
City of Flint, SS (freighter), 159:10–14, 159:10, 159:14, 160:5
City of Fort Pierre, 43:7
City of Glasgow (steamship), 165:16
City of Hawkinsville (paddlewheel steamboat), 70:39, 138:38
City of Honolulu (ex-SS Friedrich der Grosse; ex-USS Huron) (CTF ship), 161:20, 161:22
City of Honolulu II (ex-USS Princess Mataoika) (CTF ship), 161:21, 161:22
City of Keansburg (Hudson River excursion steamer), 9:14, 10:8, 10:13, 13:4, 27:39, 27:39, 79:37, 79:37
City of Kingston (steamboat), 37:14
City of Lowell (Providence Steamer), 20:14
City of Midland (car ferry), 174:48
City of Milwaukee (car ferry), 67:4
City of Monroe (overnight packet), 43:10
City of Norwich, SS, 129:33
City of Papeete (barquentine), 22:10, 72:21, 117:24
City of Peking (screw steamer), 117:24
City of Philadelphia, 11:28
City of Pittsburgh (steam sternwheeler), 43:19
City of Pittsburgh (towboat), 43:10
City of Racine (steamer), 181:22, 181:22
City of Rayville, 36:4
City of Rome, clipper card, 40:28
City of Saint Louis (steamer), 57:29
City of Savannah, 65:31
City of Troy (Hudson River steamer), 10:10
City of Washington (steam liner), 84:24
City of Wilmington (ex-Bay Belle; now Dutchess; steamer), 10:13, 11:8
Ciudad de Inca (ex-Inca; renamed White Witch) (brig), 21:29, 28:42, 29:26
Civil War, 103:10. See also H. L. Hunley, CSS (Civil war submarine)
Andersonville, 166:35–36
Blanche affair, 157:32–33
blockade runners, 166:34
capture of the Celt 166:34–38
Harriet Lane (US revenue cutter), 163:18–19
at sea, 120:26–29
and the Union Navy, 156:20, 156:22–25
defense of the Potomac River, 162:17–20
US Coast Survey, 133:45
“The Civil War at Sea,” 120:26–29
Claire B. Follette (canal boat), 8:26
Clairton (steam towboat), 8:18
Clamagore, USS (submarine), 133:21, 167:49
Clamshell Alliance, 12:38
Clan Macleod (renamed James Craig) (three-masted barque), 2:8, 2:8, 2:28, 28:34, 29:31, 32:14, 39:6, 67:33, 76:7, 80:36, 83:25–27, 83:25–27, 83:37, 84:4, 94:37, 140:27, 161:33
Clan Shaw (steamer; turret ship), 22:4
Clancy, Eugene, 176:45
Clarastella (ex-Islamount; ex-Glenlee; renamed Galatea) (jubilee rigged barque), 2:8, 65:38, 66:25, 76:38, 96:13
Claremont (steam schooner), 124:12
Claremont Terminal, 65:14
Clark, Arthur H., 88:9
“A Clipper Sets Out on the Cape Horn Road,” 88:46–47
Clark, Charley, 131:9
Clark, Eugenie, 168:44–45, 168:44
Clark, Geoffrey E.
“Adolphus Greely and the Lady Franklin Bay Expedition, 1881–1884,” 121:14–18
Clark, Ian, 104:41
Clark, Martyn J.
“Sail Training with S.A.L.T.S.,” 40:26–27
Clark, Mary, remembrance of Karl Kortum, 80:15
Clark, Matthew, 160:41
Clark, William (artist), 12:47, 154:39
Clark, William Bell (historian), 180:21
Clarke, William (Captain USN), 166:28
Clarke, Dayton, 69:19
“Class Act—Sailing the Star of India,” 118:14–15
Class Afloat, 43:36–37
Classic Yacht Symposium (2006), 115:38
Claude V. Ricketts, USS (guided missile destroyer), 22:34, 100:16
Clausen, Carl, 181:18, 181:19, 181:20
Clausen, Randolph, 155:35
Claxton, Ed, 172:50
Clayton Ship Yard Museum, 16:34
Clean Water Act (1972), 164:33, 167:18
Clearwater (Hudson River sloop), 4:35, 5:15, 5:23, 5:33, 7:7, 7:11–12, 7:14, 8:18, 8:26, 9:17, 9:16, 10:8, 10:11, 10:28, 11:32, 11:34–35, 12:38, 13:31, 14:44, 15:53, 17:26, 17:28, 18:46, 20:4, 20:39, 20:42, 21:32, 22:38, 27:39, 32:43, 37:18, 37:20, 57:18, 73:32, 76:38, 103:5, 136:8, 136:43–44, 146:47, 147:6–7, 147:28, 150:4, 154:47–48, 157:45–46, 168:13
(pictures), 11:34, 23:5, 37:11, 146:47, 150:4, 154:48, 157:44, 161:51
construction of, 14:58
Clearway (steam dredger), 33:32
Cleasby, Robert, 52:39
Cleghorn, Archibald, 9:20, 91:24
Cleghorn, Isabella, 152:37–38
Cleghorn, Victoria Kaiulani (Hawaiian princess), 9:20, 9:21, 9:22, 86:17, 86:17, 91:24–25, 91:25, 142:10
Clement, Robert, 157:32
Cleopatra (brig), 36:15
Cleopatra’s Barge (yacht), 183:66–67
Clermont (aka North River Steamboat; Fulton’s steam prototype), 8:14, 10:6, 10:9, 13:4, 16:6, 17:27, 18:46, 58:22, 64:13, 64:13, 87:14, 88:13, 119:36, 134:22, 134:24, 163:0, 163:30–32, 179:30
plans for 3D digital model, 163:31
Clermont (aka North River Steamboat; replica), 8:17, 16:6, 17:26–27, 163:31
Clermont State Historic Site, 119:36
Cleveland, Benjamin, 96:47
Cleveland, Frances Preston (Mrs. Grover), 183:14
Cleveland, Grover, 183:14
Cleveland, SS (steamer), 131:3
“Cleveland Plague,” 173:33
Cleveland Underwater Explorers, 120:40
Cleveley, John Sr. (artist), 12:46, 60:24
Clever, Hugo, 83:42
Cliff Quay (steam coaster), 31:53
Clifford, Barry, 54:9, 54:9, 54:10, 149:47
Clingerman (ex-Perry; renamed W. P. Snyder) (tugboat), 5:29, 8, 14, 21:35, 25:18, 25:18, 43:41, 148:30
Clintock, Ralph, 173:20, 173:22, 173:23
Clinton, Henry, 98:13
Clio (brigantine), 59:0, 59:17
Clio (coasting sloop), 8:3
Clio (schoolship), 31:49
Clione (Down-East built schooner), 39:19
clipper cards, 40:28–29
“A Clipper Sets Out on the Cape Horn Road,” 88:46–47
clipper ships, 12:30–31, 78:2, 88:9–15, 136:26, 154:40
Baltimore clippers, 14:16–18
California clippers, 38:9–10, 88:11–12
clipper schooners, 49:11
Clothilde/Clotilde, 125:6–7, 126:5
Clotilda (slaveship), 168:48–49, 171:40, 179:52–53, 179:52, 179:53
Cloud, Christopher, 99:5
Clough, Benjamin, 105:16–17
Clyde (iron-hulled boat), 43:8
Clyde A. Phillips (ex-A. J. Meerwald, then later renamed A. J. Meerwald) (Delaware bay oyster schooner), 51:36–37, 52:40, 62:35, 70:39, 70:39, 76:36, 77:41, 92:12, 92:13, 92:14, 180:56–57, 180:57
Clyde B. Holmes (ex-John Wanamaker; steam tugboat/towboat), 8:14, 10:4, 25:18
“Clyde Puffer VIC 32,” 48:34
Clydebank (renamed Pinzon) (formerly lightship, refashioned as river barge), 20:19
Clymer, George, 153:26
Clymer, James Floyd (artist), 128:0
CMB 4 (torpedo boat), 12:28
CMB 103 (torpedo boat), 12:28
coal hulks, 40:21
Coalinga (ex-Laescocesa), 14:36
Coamo (US Army Transport), 122:23, 123:5
Coamo, SS (passenger ship), 130:26–29, 130:27, 130:28, 130:29
Coanwood (steamer), 65:30–31
Coast Guard. See US Coast Guard
Coast Guard, international, 139:31–33
Coast Guard Academy. See US Coast Guard Academy
Coast Guard Art Program (CoGAP), 63:28, 119:28
Coast Guard Aviation Association, 170:12–13
“Coast Guard Bicentennial”, 54:33
Coast Guard Foundation, 117:39
Coast Guard Heritage Museum (Cape Cod), 113:36
Coast Guard Museum, 62:37
Coast Guard National Museum, 104:38
“Coast Guard’s Extraordinary Eagle,” 58:30–32
“Coast Guardsman Robert Goldman and the Kamikaze Attack on LST-66,” 160:32–34
Coast Seamen’s Union, 117:24, 121:11
Coast Survey, 120:32–35
Coastal and Marine Geologist, 130:35
coastal defense, 158:34–37
“Coastal Defenses: Strategies and Innovation in Peace and War,” 158:34–37
Coastal Picket Patrol, 66:10
coastal survey, 151:22–26
Coastal Zone Management Act, 179:12
coasting schooners, 42:12–13
Coastweek, 36:35
Coates, John
“Reconstructing the Greek Trireme,” 37:36
Cobham, Bruce, 70:33
Cobia, USS (submarine), 5:30, 12:28, 40:35, 73:17, 81:44, 115:14, 115:16, 115:16, 163:13, 177:40, 177:40, 181:51, 181:51
Cochran, Robert, 153:32–33
Cochrane, Alexander, 137:13, 137:13, 137:15, 140:14, 141:10, 141:10
Cochrane, E. L., 67:10
Cockburn, George, 136:14, 137:11, 137:13, 137:14, 137:15, 140:14–15, 140:15, 140:17, 141:19, 147:21, 181:38
Cod, USS (submarine; SS-245), 12:28, 73:17, 148:29
Codd, Eliza, 171:35
codebooks, 106:26
codfish industry, 22:10–12. See also fishing industry
Coelho, Antonio, 8:19
Coffee, John, 141:11
coffee beans, 107:28
Coffey, William A.
“Down to the Sea—On Stamps,” 59:30–31
Coffin, Benjamin, 172:21
Coffin, Byron, 49:35
Coffin, Elizabeth R. (artist), 42:0
Coffin, Frederick, 127:23
Coffin, Isaac, 31:49, 42:30–31, 42:31, 86:13, 150:29
Coffin, Tristram, 172:16
Coffin School, 86:13
Coggeshall, George, 142:26
cogs, 76:11
Cohen, Bill, 68:7
Cohn, Arthur B.
“Lake Champlain Maritime Museum: A Council of American Maritime Museums Profile,” 111:18–20
“Lake Champlain’s Sailing Canal Boats,” 111:21–23
“Sailing Canal Boat General Butler. And Her Survivors,” 52:12–13
Cohn, Susan, 10:25
coils of line, 147:0
Col. James M. Schoonmaker, SS (renamed SS Willis B. Boyer) (ore carrier/freighter), 49:5, 121:44, 147:43–44, 148:30
Col. John E. Baxter (renamed Fishers Island), 11:8
Colberg Boat Works, 181:50
Colcord, Lincoln, 108:14–16, 113:26, 160:5–6
“Cold Spring Harbor Whaling,” 18:41
Cold Spring Harbor Whaling Museum, 76:36, 18:41
Cold Spring Navy, 43:23
Cold Spring Whaling Company, 18:41
Cold War Gallery, 129:42
Cold War Museum, 98:38
Cole, Merle T., 166:30
Cole, USS (destroyer), 100:18, 154:45, 164:15
Coleman, Cady, 160:21
Coleman, E. C.
“A Nelson Memorandum Poinpoints the Start of the Trafalgar Campaign,” 104:29–30
Coleman, Elihu, 172:16
Coleman, Isaac, 172:16
Coleman, James J. Jr., 148:38, 148:38, 167:12, 167:12
Coleman, John B., 99:15
Coles, Thomas, 151:22–26
college professor, coastal and marine geography, 151:38
Collingwood, Cuthbert, 132:38, 163:35
Collingwood Museum (Ontario), 80:36
Collins, Charles S., 171:35
Collins, Edward Knight, 31:58, 64:17, 89:10, 143:32, 154:39, 154:39
Collins, George J., 139:8
Collins, John, 152:51
Collins, Joseph W., 49:15
Collins, Marshall, 161:21
Collins Line, 89:10, 90:3, 95:12, 154:39, 154:40, 154:41
“Collision in the Narrows: the 1917 Halifax Harbor Explosion,” 160:14–18
Collyer, Thomas, 10:6
Colman, Samuel (artist), 37:24
Cologne class frigates, 30:10
Colonel de Villebois Mareuil (French barque), 61:46
Colonel George Armistead (schooner), 173:22–23
Colonial (tugboat), 11:19
Colonial Maritime Association (CMA), 46:39, 64:38. See also Council of Colonization Period Ships
Colorado (steamship), 124:19
Colorado Historical Society, 172:22
“Colors of the Night! Nocturne Painting with Louis Stephen Gadal,” 146:22–26
Colt, Caldwell, 182:17
Colt, Samuel, 141:20
Colton, J. Ferrell, 61:12
Columbia (brigantine replica), longboat replica for, 64:36
Columbia (expedition ship), 33:38
Columbia (full-rigged ship replica), 8:18
Columbia (Gloucester fishing schooner), 6:6, 49:11, 78:14–15, 107:0, 107:18
Columbia (Gray’s ship), 57:36, 86:0, 88:16, 88:18
Columbia (Gloucester fishing schooner replica), 8:18, 11:30, 160:10–11, 160:11, 161:10
Columbia (round-the-world voyage), 87:12
Columbia (salt Banker), 6:3
Columbia (schooner), 5:32, 158:24, 183:62
Columbia (space shuttle), 144:42
Columbia (square-rigged ship), 144:42
Columbia (steamship), 64:33, 81:44, 144:48, 144:52, 144:52
Columbia (Vancouver’s sloop), 88:17–18, 98:24
Columbia (yacht), 89:26, 116:21, 116:22, 122:21, 122:22
Columbia, M/V, 76:2
Columbia, SS (excursion steamer), 80:36, 95:11, 141:41, 149:40–41, 149:40–41, 150:5, 152:48, 152:48, 154:4, 154:4, 154:47, 154:47, 164:50
“Columbia, the Gem of the Ocean!” 86:8–13
Columbia Eagle, MSTS (steamship), 32:43
Columbia I (frigate), 103:16
Columbia II (frigate), 103:16
Columbia lightship (WLV–604), 5:29, 20:40, 25:47, 101:34, 180:50–51, 180:50
Columbia Rediviva, 43:20, 45:31, 45:34, 61:16, 61:32, 61:32, 79:23, 86:11, 86:12, 103:10
Columbia River, 43:20–21
Columbia River Maritime Museum (Astoria, OR), 20:40, 25:47, 61:46, 75:34, 81:44, 84:54, 96:37, 101:34, 106:2, 113:35, 127:45, 180:50, 182:28
Columbian Queen (steamboat), 102:38
Columbus, Christopher, 53:4, 53:7, 53:16–19, 53:17, 56:4
burial place of, 105:25
finding ships for the voyage, 54:18–22
letter written by, 155:54–55
meeting with Native Americans, 58:12–14, 59:13–14
mermaids sighted by, 68:44
modern understanding of, 63:13–14
navigation by, 56:18–19, 66:20
scurvy among the crew, 172:30
setting sail, 55:16–18
and shipworms, 152:46–47
subsequent voyages of, 63:12–13
voyage home, 62:10–11
Columbus, SS (passenger liner), 67:12, 71:4–5
Columbus (sidewheeler), 64:37
Columbus caravel replicas, 53:4, 53:11, 57:39, 65:39, 70:39. See also Niña (caravel; Columbus’s ship replica); Pinta (caravel; Columbus’s ship replica); Santa Maria (Columbus’s nao reproduction)
Columbus Discovery Group, 68:16
“Columbus Opens the Americas to the World,” 78:8–11
Columbus Quincentenary, 59:10
maritime exhibits, 61:37
Columbus Quincentenary Commission, 53:4
“Columbus Rediscovered”
“In Quest of Ships for the Voyage,” 54:18–22
“The Sailors of the Era of Discovery,” 55:14–15
Columbus-America Discovery Group, 64:26, 64:28
Colvin, Tom, 51:16
Colwell, John, 121:15
Comanche (Coast Guard cutter), 65:18
Combi Docks, 159:29
Combi Lift, 159:28–29
Comee, Fred T.
“Last Days of the Coriolanus,” 39:23–26
Comer, George, 123:18–22, 123:22
Comet (British sloop), 59:26
Comet (clipper), 88:13
Comet (replica steamboat), 17:28
Comet (schooner), 142:25
Comfort, USNS (hospital ship), 112:17, 161:8
Comfort, USNS (AH-3; ex-SS Havana; renamed Yucatán; renamed Agwileon; renamed Shamrock)), 171:23–25, 171:23–24
Comfort, USNS (T-AH-20; ex-Rose City), 171:22, 171:26–27
Comfort, USS (AH-6), 171:25–26, 171:25
Commandant-Louis-Richard (renamed Palinuro) (barquentine), 3:8, 16:17
Commander, M/V (ferry), 37:19, 37:20, 75:19, 76:2, 103:5, 155:15, 156:13, 168:4, 168:12, 168:12
“Commander Alan John Villiers DSC, FRGS, D.LITT,” 32:14–22
“Commentary on John Prentiss Benson Paintings,” 106:31–32
Commerce (brig), 36:15
Commerce (SL-7 container ship), 12:30
Commission on Marine Science, Engineering and Resources (“Stratton Commission”), 179:12
Commitment of Principle, 112:29
Committee for the Preservation of the Kaiulani, 142:12
Commodore (lumber schooner), 22:18, 22:19
Commodore Barney (gunboat), 158:36
Commodore Barry (US revenue cutter), 139:10–11
Commodore Explorer (ex-Jet Services), 66:25, 70:40
Commodore Morris (whaleship), 81:29, 169:24–28, 169:25
Commonwealth (sidewheeler), 20:10, 21:2
Commonwealth, SS (steamer), 10:10, 12:26
Commonwealth War Graves Commission, 144:31
Communauté (Bantry Bay gig), 103:31
Community Boat Club, 130:21, 131:4
Community Boating, Inc., 130:24–25
Community Boatworks of the Hudson Valley, 138:4
Community Maritime Park (Pensacola), 117:38
“Community Rebuilds Shipyard,” 53:39
Compagnie Maritime Belge, 64:33
compass, magnetic, 137:30–31
Compass Rose, 137:30
Compeer (schooner), 114:13
competitive rowing, 133:50
Compton Castle (paddle steamer), 3:30
Comrade (Humber keel), 17:20–21, 17:35, 27:37
Comstock, Henry T., 36:16
Comte de Grasse, 30:9
Concepcion (Magellan’s ship), 79:11, 79:33
Conception, MV (dive boat), 179:33–36, 179:33, 179:36
Concer, Pyrrhus, 168:18–19
Concord (steamer), 20:10, 20:14
Concord, USS (three-masted sloop-of-war, 162:16
Concord (warship), 42:8–10, 152:34
Concordia (Canadian sail training barquentine), 63:35, 78:28
Concretia (renamed Onaygorah) (barquentine), 26:31
Condell, Carlos, 94:16–17
Condock V (heavy lift ship), 150:34–35
Conemaugh (ex-Atlas; ex-Lornty) (square-rigger remnant; oil barge), 2:7–8, 3:13, 26:10
Conemaugh (ex-W. W. Atterbury; renamed SS Pankakoski), 81:3
Conestoga (steam tug), 77:32
Confederate Naval Historical Society, 53:43, 68:33
“Confederate Prize Crew Meets Its Match in William Tillman,” 93:34–36
“Confederate Submarine H. L. Hunley: First in History to Sink an Enemy Ship in Wartime,” 158:16–21
Conference on Sail Training and Tall Ships, 45th (2017), 160:8
Confiance, HMS (frigate) 137:12, 138:26, 148:21, 148:22, 148:23–24
Confidence (US Coast Guard Cutter), 149:15
Conflict (brig), 143:11
Congress, USS (frigate), 98:11, 98:12, 98:13, 103:14, 103:16, 135:11, 141:14, 151:35, 174:55
Congress (galley), 53:30, 53:31, 117:16, 117:17, 117:18
Congress (privateer), 59:26
“Congress Supports Marine Heritage Amendments!” 155:24–25
Congressional Maritime Caucus, 142:52
Congressional Record, 164:48
Connecticut (gundelo), 53:30
Connecticut (packet ship), 36:16
Connecticut, USS, 36:16, 39:28, 41:4
Connecticut Afro-American Historical Society, 72:39
Connecticut Maritime Association, 123:12
Connecticut River, 36:28–30, 36:45–47
Connecticut River Foundation, 8:28, 25:47, 32:43, 36:10, 36:19
Connecticut River Museum, 50:17, 53:39, 107:2, 133:45, 133:45
Connecticut River Steamboat Foundation, 27:39
Conner, Dennis, 116:22, 180:11, 180:11
Connert, Christina, 164:53
Connolly, James B.
“Wesley Marrs Sets His Stays’l,” 49:46–47
Connor, Vida Lee, 181:17–18, 181:17
Conquérant, 132:23, 132:25, 132:26
Conrad, Dennis
“John Paul Jones, the Ranger and the Value of the Continental Navy,” 100:9–13
Conrad, Joseph, 72:13, 91:13, 96:11, 144:28, 162:31
Conrad, Judy
“The Steamship Central America and Her Era,” 64:26–30
Conrad (Cape Verde schooner), 5:8, 9:30
“The Conrad at Mystic,” 32:25
Conservation and Reinvestment Act (CARA), 96:15
Conservation International, 159:8
Consolation, USS (renamed SS Hope), 171:25, 172:7
Consolidated Aircraft Corporation PBYs, 178:32
Constellation, USS (frigate), 2:12, 5:5, 5:9, 5:16, 5:29, 7:31, 10:26, 12:14, 12:27, 12:36, 14:4, 18:42, 23:23, 24:13, 28:31, 65:4, 68:24, 69:26, 70:38, 71:7, 71:35–36, 73:35, 74:35, 77:3, 78:26, 80:36, 81:37, 81:39, 81:44, 84:2, 84:22, 84:29, 88:31–32, 89:35, 90:39, 91:37, 94:20, 96:15, 103:16, 105:11, 107:34, 110:38, 112:12, 112:14, 113:17–18, 114:27, 116:11, 116:12, 116:13, 119:39, 128:12–13, 129:5, 129:17, 133:6, 133:22, 135:39, 136:14, 141:14, 146:20, 147:5, 148:27, 153:36, 168:35, 168:37, 181:35, 181:36
(pictures), 3:23, 18:43, 68:25, 70:38, 81:39, 83:49, 91:37, 110:38, 113:18, 123:12, 128:14, 129:17, 132:10, 132:13, 132:14, 133:9, 135:38, 35:39, 138:30, 148:27, 168:37
captain’s cabin, 102:36
figureheads, 81:28–29
rebuilding of, 3:23–8
restoration of, 4:8
restoration of anchor, 178:55–56, 178:56
at the 1926 sesquicentennial celebration, 3:28
and the US Navy African Squadron, 132:10–14
wheel of, 83:49
“The Constellation and Her Rebuilding,” 3:23–28
Constitution, USS (frigate, “Old Ironsides”), 2:12, 4:28, 5:29, 6:16, 10:26, 12:27, 13:44, 13:53, 14:52, 15:48, 17:35, 19:22–23, 19:38, 20:38, 24:3, 24:11, 24:12–14, 24:18, 30:8, 38:13, 44:2, 44:4, 44:11–13, 44:14–16, 45:4, 45:34, 46:4, 59:33, 63:38, 72:8, 76:37, 76:38, 83:19, 84:6, 87:15, 97:34–35, 105:11, 120:22, 123:9, 124:35, 129:18, 129:19, 130:5, 133:10, 133:22, 133:37, 134:6, 134:13, 134:14, 135:6, 135:11–12, 136:44, 139:34, 143:6, 144:51, 144:53, 147:5, 147:41, 148:9, 148:21, 148:26, 150:20, 153:34, 153:36, 153:56, 154:5, 159:34, 160:6, 167:33–34, 167:33, 167:34, 170:15, 172:39, 175:44, 175:47, 178:4, 178:51, 182:11
(pictures), 14:52, 24:12–14, 15:48, 17:19, 24:0, 24:18, 44:0, 44:11, 44:12, 44:15, 45:6, 69:24–25, 69:28, 82:30, 83:0, 97:35, 99:23, 99:24, 103:8, 120:5, 120:10–11, 120:22, 126:31, 133:12, 134:0, 138:34–35, 139:35, 141:0, 141:15, 142:38, 143:6, 146:21, 148:44, 150:17, 151:28–32, 153:0, 153:56, 170:14, 178:51
after 1815, 151:28–32
artifacts from, 39:30
battle with Guerrière, 134:12–13
battling HMS Cyane and HMS Levant, 150:16–18
building of, 24:13
command at sea, 24:14
construction and restoration, 69:24–26
correspondence related to, 174:55
crew of, 138:34–35
dry dock repairs, 139:42
figureheads, 139:24–25
Independence Day turnaround sail, 120:10–11
life at sea, 24:13–14
as a living symbol, 24:14
maiden voyage myth, 169:40–41
museum, 17:19
origins of, 142:36–38
preservation of, 24:14
in the quasi war with France, 44:13
rebuilding of, 15:16
recoppering, 159:16–17
repair and restoration, 81:40–41
restoration of, 144:35
restoration of copper sheathing, 159:16–17
rigging, 142:40
under sail, 82:30–31
and the war of 1812, 44:13, 141:14–16, 181:35
Constitution Museum, 4:35
“Constitution’s Most Challenging Fight and the Battle of New Orleans—A Look at the Final Battles of the War of 1812,” 141:10–16
“The Container Revolution,” 114:8–11
container shipping, 114:8–11, 114:20, 115:4, 116:6, 163:43, 164:55
Conte di Cavour (Italian battleship), 56:13
Conte di Savoia (Italian ocean liner), 64:6, 95:13
“Contemporary Marine Art: A Juried exhibition by the American Society of Marine Artists at the Peabody Museum of Salem,” 21:36–38
Contest, HMS (brig), 142:25
Continental Marine Committee, 98:12
Convention on the Law of the Sea, 125:52
Convention on the Protection of Underwater Cultural Heritage, 72:36, 100:42
“Convoy Catastrophe: The Destruction of PQ-17 to North Russia in July, 1942,” 62:14–16
Convoys (WWII), 35:0, 66:0, 66:13–14
Convoy ’94, 65:37, 68:4, 68:6, 69:20–21, 69:30, 70:4
Convoy 119, 118:10
HX-354, 68:4
HX 355, 69:4
NY 119, 101:2–3
ON-24, 87:36
PQ-17, 62:14–16, 64:4, 66:11, 92:2–3
PQ-18, 62:16
SC-48, 87:36
XH-156, 87:34
Conway, HMS, 73:25
Conyngham, Anne, 152:38
Conyngham, Gustavus, 152:38, 152:38
Conyngham, USS (destroyer), 161:20
Cook (schooner), 4:18
Cook, Arthur, 178:31
Cook, Frederick, 117:36, 144:36, 173:30, 175:43, 176:45
Cook, George, 103:15
Cook, James, 11:10, 11:12–16, 42:16, 74:30, 81:19, 81:33, 83:11–18, 83:11, 84:11, 85:37, 85:39, 86:8–9, 88:16, 144:42, 153:15, 153:15, 157:36–37, 172:32, 173:31
in New Zealand, 83:15–16
second voyage, 83:16–17
in Tahiti, 83:14–15
third voyage, 83:17
Cook, William J., 96:13
“Captain Philip Weems: Refining Navigation,” 108:8–10
Cooke, John, 143:17
Cooke, R., 166:30
Cooling, B. Franklin
“Olympia: Queen of the Pacific,” 94:9–11
Coombs, Linda, 179:45
Coontz, Robert E., 165:43
Cooper, Arthur, 172:20, 172:21
Cooper, Harry
“The Patrols of Germany’s Captain Hans Georg Hess,” 105:18–19
“A View from the Bow Torpedo Room,” 67:12–14
Cooper, Joseph Walter, 18:63
Cooper, Kirk, 131:29
Cooper, Laura (artist), 153:42, 170:14, 170:16, 172:34, 172:35, 174:12, 178:19, 182:14
Cooper, Lucy, 172:21
Cooper, Mercator, 168:18–20, 168:18
Cooper-Hewitt Museum, 16:34, 40:30
Coos Art Museum, 105:30, 110:38, 114:18, 115:32, 121:46, 125:36, 127:34, 133:32, 145:32, 153:42, 156:39, 158:26, 163:33, 168:40, 176:40
Annual Maritime Art Exhibition, 139:40
Coos Bay shipwreck, 124:11–13
Coos Historical and Maritime Center (Coos, OR), 138:42
Copeland, Peter
“Columbus Rediscovered: The Sailors of the Era of Discovery,” 55:14–15
“Seaman Remembers South Street 100 Years Ago,” 28:17–19
Copeland, Robert W., 71:18
Copeland Maritime Center, 183:71
Copenhagen, SS (British steamship), 70:39
Copernicus (yacht), 162:33
Copes, Jan M
“The Niagara Lives!” 48:37
Copiapó (transport), 94:17
Copley, John Singleton (artist), 15:55, 15:56
“Copper Bottomed—USS Constitution Restoration 2015–17,” 159:16–17
copper sheathing, 132:22, 132:23, 132:26, 159:16–17, 159:34
Coppermine Expedition, 166:22
Coquette (barque), 154:40
Cora (Baltimore clipper; slave ship), 132:12–13, 132:13
Cora Cressey, 4:33
coracles, 43:32–33
Coral (schooner), 42:13
Coral Sea, USS (aircraft carrier), 59:33, 62:34, 66:25, 119:37
Coralarium (art installation), 164:54–55
Corbet, Michael, 166:46–47
Corbett, Jack, 103:46–48
Corbin, Gawin, 181:37
Cordell Bank National Marine Sanctuary, 142:50, 142:52
Corderie Royale, 43:39
Cordingly, David
“The Art of Willliam Van de Velde the Younger,” 34:28–33
Corinthian (Gorton-Pew schooner), 49:15
Coriolan IV (Maxi yacht), 180:23
Coriolanus (iron barque), 9:27, 9:27, 39:23–26, 39:24–26, 41:3–4, 41:3
Corish, Joe (artist), 29:38
Cormack, Malcolm (author), 12:44–47
Corminelli, Tom, 168:9
Cormorant (replica Boston pilot schooner), 12:39
Cormorant (trawler), 101:11
cormorants, 121:36
Cornè, Michele Felice, 139:23, 175:36
Cornelia (schooner/sloop/barge), 50:40
Cornelia (yacht), 70:26
Cornelia B. Windiate (three-masted schooner), 121:35, 121:35
Cornell, John V., 9:32
Cornwallis, Charles, 132:26
Cornwallis, SS (merchant ship), 176:5–6
Coronet (schooner yacht), 8:21, 9:30, 12:7, 18:26–27, 18:26, 50:7, 71:35, 71:35, 72:9, 76:24, 89:19–21, 89:19–21, 89:28, 89:28, 97:30, 109:34–35, 109:35, 117:38, 117:38, 121:42, 156:11, 164:24, 164:24, 164:25, 164:25, 182:16–19, 182:16–18, 183:7–9, 183:8–9
model, 97:30–32
Coronet Restoration Partners, 182:18
Corpus Christi (renamed City of Corpus Christi), 30:10
Corpus Christi Museum of Science and History, 181:20
Correia e Sliva, José Ulisses, 182:20
Corry, USS, 167:23
Corsair (steam yacht), 89:27
corsairs, 127:36. See also piracy and pirates
Corse, Hope Koseff
“Drawn to the Water,” 135:28–30
Corsicana (now Kennebec), 157:6
Corso, Frank P. (artist), 93:0, 93:24–27
Corwin, SS, 178:21
Corwin, USS (Coast Survey steam vessel), 120:32, 150:40
Corwith Cramer, SSV (brigantine; sail training ship), 46:36, 47:11, 62:21, 70:23, 78:4, 162:47, 164:16, 164:16, 172:43, 174:54–55, 182:32
Cory, USS (destroyer), 69:13
Cosby, Bill, 55:34
Coscia, Anthony, 115:6
COSCO, 128:44
Cosco Busan, MV, 127:45–46, 127:45, 140:29–30
COSCO Shipping Panama (ex-Andronikos), 156:50, 156:50
Cosme, Erika
“The Catalpa Incident: An American Whaler Getaway Vessel and Australia’s Most Daring Prison Break,” 169:18–22
Cossons, Neil, 31:56
Costa, Didac, 174:47
Costa, John, 9:29–30
Cotgrave, Isaac, 165:19
Cottam, Harold Thomas “Harry”, 138:13, 139:6
Cottesmore, HMS, 74:35
Cottineau, Denis Nicolas, 115:9
Cottoneva (ex-Frank D. Stout), 38:18–19
Coughlin, Pamela, 90:21
Coughlin, William P.
“The Boston Harbor Tugboat Muster,” 44:35
“Down to the Sea with Irving Johnson,” 49:7–9
Coulter, Willilam Alexander (artist), 22:29–31, 113:34, 115:32
Council of American Maritime Museums (CAMM), 4:1, 4:8, 5:10, 8:22, 51:6–7, 63:39, 64:38, 106:2, 107:2, 113:2, 125:20, 126:6, 143:4, 151:4, 179:53–54, 180:34
2009 conference, 126:40
2018 conference, 163:13
CAMM guidelines, 51:6–7
Council of American Master Mariners, 77:4
Council of Colonization Period Ships, 42:36, 44:36, 45:32, 46:38. See also Colonial Maritime Association
“The Council of Colonization Period Ships,” 45:32
Counter, S. Allen, 117:37
Countess Fiona (motor vessel), 33:32
Countess of Scarborough, HMS, 115:8, 115:9, 115:11
County of Inverness, 124:6
County of Kinross (four-masted full-rigged ship), 20:19, 122:7
County of Linlithgow, 124:6
County of Peebles (renamed Muñoz Gamero) (full-rigged ship), 2:8, 3:39, 68:5, 122:7, 124:6
County of Roxburgh (four-masted full-rigged ship), 13:39, 68:5, 68:5, 124:6
Courageous (yacht), 16:49, 116:22, 128:28, 164:23
Courier, USCG, 147:41
Courtney, Joseph D., 182:11, 182:11, 183:4
Cousteau, Jacques, 156:52
Couture, Darcie, 168:42, 168:42
Couture, Scott, 131:31
Covadonga (corvette), 94:16–17
Cove Point Lighthouse, 113:35
Coventry (Royal Navy ship), 26:28
COVID-19 pandemic, 171:23, 171:27, 171:38, 171:42, 172:9, 172:38–43, 175:4
Covington (steam tug), 64:22
Covington, USS (ex-Cincinnati) (CTF ship), 161:21
Cowan, Ernie, 63:36
Cowpens, USS (aircraft carrier), 33:24
Cowtie, Agnes, 85:43–44
Cox, Greg, 135:44
Cox, Matt, 169:12
Cox, R. E., 167:30
Cox, Samuel J., 150:50, 150:52, 175:44
Coxere, Edward “Ned,” 85:42–43
“An Adventure By Sea,” 34:46–47
Coya (steamer), 41:6
Coykendall, Samuel D., 37:14
Coyote (steamer), 158:30
Cozzens, Frederick Schiller, 9:35
Crab Claw Restaurant, 183:70
Crabtree, August (modelmaker), 1:10–11, 72:39–40
Cramer, Corwith Jr. “Cory,” 5:22, 29:25, 31:3, 32:3, 174:54, 182:32
Cranston, Robert, 169:18, 169:20–22
Craw Keys (renamed Keizan Maru) (Japanese freighter), 22:23
Crawford (cutter), 157:16
Crawford, R. C., 47:26
Crealock, W. I. B., 95:21
Creamer, Michael, 4:30–32, 13:43, 15:15, 15:15, 27:6
Crean, Tom, 142:30–33, 142:30, 142:31
Creesy, Eleanor, 143:35, 154:6
Creidne (brigantine), 20:30
Cremer, Peter-Erich, 35:24, 180:28, 180:29
Creole (three-masted schooner), 18:18–19, 28:30, 37:33, 180:23
Creoula (four-masted schooner), 26:29, 45:19, 45:20, 48:16, 71:40
Crepeau, Michelle, 176:51
Crescent (five-masted schooner), 15:52, 38:46
Cressy, Eleanor. See Creesy, Eleanor
CREST Collaborative, 159:23
Cricket (steam schooner), 26:3
crimping, 160:29
Crinkley (Captain), 35:18
Cristobal, SS (steamer), 148:5, 148:5
Cristobal Colon (Spanish cruiser), 125:43, 156:5
Cristoforo Colombo (full-rigged ship), 4:13, 27:37
“A Critical Supply Line,” 68:8–9
Croaker, USS (submarine), 12:28, 73:17, 175:52
Croatan wreck, 74:36
Crocker, Aubrey, 158:23
Crocker, R., 121:12
Crocker Land Expedition, 155:38
Crockett, Rigel, 111:26–27
“A Culture of Safety for Tall Ships,” 122:10–11
“Fair Wind and Plenty of It,” 111:14–17
Cromwell, Oliver, 82:8
Cronk, George S., 35:22
Cronkite, Walter, 16:11, 59:4, 59:9, 62:7, 64:9, 70:4, 84:35, 87:5, 87:5, 117:44, 128:10–11, 128:10–11, 172:10–11, 172:10, 172:12
“The Challenge of 1992,” 59:9
“The Challenge of History,” 61:7
“To the Heroes of D-Day,” 70:16
tribute to Karl Kortum, 76:7
Crosby, Horace Manly, 51:12
Crosby Yacht, 51:12–13
Crosline (ferryboat), 5:29
Cross, Harriet, 168:47
Cross, Roy (artist), 14:50–53
Cross, Terry, 113:6
Cross Rip (lightship), 5:30, 54:32
Crossan, Thomas Morrow, 176:15–16, 176:16
“Crossing the Pond in Eagle,” 136:20–22, 24
Crowell, John T., 101:11
Crowell, Samuel, 61:32
Crowfoot, Betsy
“Santa Barbara Maritime Museum: Council of American Maritime Museums Profile,” 107:30–32
Crowley, Thomas B., 166:13
Crowley, Thomas B. Jr., 167:8
Crowley, Thomas C. Sr., 10:22, 23, 72:40
Crowley Maritime Industries, 10:23, 161:8
Crown Princess, 148:16
Crowninshield, B. B., 182:53
Crowninshield, George
“History of Sail Training Races: Part I,” 37:33
“History of Sail Training Races: Part II,” 38:30
Crowninshield, George Jr., 183:66–67, 183:66
“A Cruise into the Chesapeake’s Rich Past,” 14:10–12
“The Cruise of the Conrad: The Road Home,” 81:53–55
“The Cruise of the Ookuwatee,” 55:22–23
“The Cruise of the Tallahassee: The Confederacy’s Last Great Raid on Union Shipping,” 151:34–37
Cruiser and Transport Force (CTF), 161:18–22
Cruiser Olympia Association, 171:6
cruisers, ABCD, 103:10
Cruising Club (sloop), 6:3, 7:5
Crumlin-Pedersen, Ole, 153:18
Cruz, Oliveira, 9:28
Cryan, Steven (artist), 33:37
Crystal Bridges Museum of Modern Art, 175:36–37
Crystal Cruises, 154:49–50, 156:50
“The Crystal Project,” 101:10–13
Crystal Spray, 81:45
CSS Neuse Civil War Interpretive Center, 144:51
Cuauhtemoc (Mexican navy sail training ship), 26:30, 28:34, 39:34, 40:11, 54:15, 54:15, 62:21, 63:36, 71:38, 80:17
Cuba, Ten Years War, 86:16
Cuffe, Paul, 115:12–13, 115:12, 115:21, 179:40
Cuffe, William, 179:40
Cuffee, Paul, 10:27
Culberson, SS, 38:5
Culen, Matt, 169:51
Culgoa, USS (refrigerator ship), 125:45
Culloden, HMS (British shipwreck), 8:4, 79:19, 81:38
cultural landscapes, maritime, 153:19
cultural resource management (CRM), 52:8–9, 134:37, 153:19
“A Culture of Safety for Tall Ships,” 122:10–11
Culver, Christopher J., 161:10, 161:11, 165:8–9, 165:9, 168:13, 168:13, 169:8, 169:8, 169:9, 169:9, 172:10, 173:10
Cumberland (battleship), 85:45
Cumberland (frigate), 33:35, 103:16, 162:16
Cumberland (sidewheeler), 47:30–31
Cumberland, USS (Civil war shipwreck), 9:10, 68:14, 68:33, 72:36, 132:10, 171:13
Cummer Museum of Arts & Gardens, 81:30
Cumming, Graham, letter, 122:6
Cummings, William E. (artist), 152:40–43
Cunard, Samuel, 89:10, 95:12, 95:12, 144:48, 154:39
Cunard Line, 20:29, 55:33, 64:32–33, 95:11–13, 144:48
Cunningham, Andrew, 56:13, 56:14
Cummings, Benjamin, 174:22
Cunningham, Briggs, 116:22
Curacao (cruiser), 95:16
Curacio (renamed Independencia) (corvette), 164:20–21
“The Curious Case of Henry Hudson,” 129:22–23
curraghs (currachs), 23:23, 33:13, 43:33, 100:37, 100:37
current mines, 156:22
Currier, USS (destroyer escort), 116:6
Currier and Ives Navy (lithograph collection), 40:30
Currituck Maritime Museum, 176:50–51, 176:51
Curry, John 165:32
Curry, Patrick, 90:20, 90:21, 90:22
Curry, William, 136:27
Curtin, Susan, 166:13, 167:8, 167:8, 167:9, 169:10, 174:9
Curtis, Brett, 103:5
Curtis, Muriel
“The Dream of a People: Building a Basque Fishing Trainera,” 85:46–47
letter, 18:21
“Sail Training Aboard the Bill of Rights,” 50:32–33
Cuse, Robert, 10:41–42
Cussler, Clive, 30:40, 31:54, 34:38, 75:33, 99:5, 99:5, 132:9, 133:9, 133:9, 149:8, 158:16, 158:21, 171:13, 171:13
Custer, Jack
“Snagboats of the Mississippi,” 74:12–13
Custom House (London), 176:20, 176:20
Custom House (Yorktown), 176:22
Custom House Maritime Museum, 174:48, 177:50
Customs Enforcement Act (1763), 176:21
Cutchin, Nathaniel, 157:19
Cutler, Carl C., 46:13, 72:20–21, 72:20, 96:16, 95:18
Cutter I (Niagara’s rescue boat), 126:26
Cutter II (Niagara’s rescue boat), 126:24, 126:26
“Cutterman Frank Newcomb and the Rescue of the USS Winslow,” 157:16–20, 179:4
“Cutterman Hugh George Campbell: Master and Commander of Super-Cutter Eagle and Forgotten Hero of the Quasi War,” 153:32–36
cutters, 139:34
Cutty Sark (ex-Ferreira) (China clipper), 2:8, 3:29, 5:9, 7:17, 8:11, 11:31, 13:38, 13:40, 13:44, 14:33, 14:43, 19:17, 20:32, 46:14, 48:35, 52:36, 60:8, 61:39, 96:35, 101:16, 111:35, 120:12–14, 122:46, 145:46, 150:6, 175:49–50, 175:49, 179:54–55
(pictures), 32:37, 120:12–14, 122:46, 179:55
figurehead, 176:46, 176:46, 176:48
model, 54:35
Cutty Sark Foundation, 96:35
“Cutty Sark in Flames,” 120:12–14
Cutty Sark Society, 34:36
Cutty Sark Tall Ships Races, 73:33, 77:36, 79:2–3, 81:45, 104:40
1990, 56:29
1997, 83:50
1998, 84:53
Cutty Sark Trust, 120:13–14, 125:51
Cuttyhunk (ferryboat), 166:8
Cuvier, Georges, 164:41
Cuz I (catamaran diving support vessel), 28:34
cyamids, 160:46–47
Cyane, HMS (renamed USS Cyane), 141:15, 141:16, 148:44, 150:17, 150:18, 169:41
Cyclops (collier), 178:26
Cygnet, 126:33
Cymric (three-masted schooner), 60:46
Cynthia (schooner), 121:30
Cynthia Olson (transport ship), 35:12, 36:3, 36:4
Cypress, USCGC (buoy tender), 139:29
Cyrus J. K. Curtis, SS (Liberty ship), 35:46
Cystic Fibrosis Crusader (trimaran), 31:53
Czarina (schooner), 22:12