P
P. E. Havens (canal schooner), 111:22
P. F. Martin (seagoing tug), 161:41
P-38 Lightning fighters, 160:33–34, 160:34
Pace, Peter, 180:39
Pacer (D-6 container ship), 12:30
Pacific (Collins Line paddle steamer), 64:17, 67:36, 89:10, 154:40–41, 157:6
Pacific, MS (aka Pacific Princess; aka The Love Boat) (cruise ship), 103:36, 144:51, 144:51
Pacific (US Mail steamship), 165:12, 165:12
Pacific Battleship Center (PBC), 139:42
Pacific Fleet Submarine Memorial Association, 181:51
Pacific Grace (sail training schooner), 91:37
Pacific Heritage Tour (PHT), 167:38
Pacific Mail Steamship Company (PMSS), 88:14, 117:24, 124:19
Pacific Northwest Maritime Historical Society, 23:24
Pacific Petrel (sail training barque), 28:32, 28:34, 30:34
Pacific Princess (aka Pacific; aka The Love Boat) (cruise ship), 103:36, 144:51, 144:51
Pacific Queen. See Balclutha (ex-Pacific Queen; ex-Star of Alaska) (Cape Horn square rigger)
Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument, 126:40–41
Pacific Steam Schooner Foundation, 83:42, 117:28
Pacific Swift (topsail schooner), 79:23
Pacific War (Chile-Bolivia-Peru), 94:16–17
Pacifica (ex-Louise), 22:12
“Pack Your Seabag and Come Along!” 59:37
Packard, Arthur, 10:26
Packer, Dorothy
“Report from the Falklands,” 78:16–17
“Packet Ship Patrick Henry,” 176:34–37
Pactolus (Downeaster), 72:21, 72:22
Paddack, Ichabod, 172:17
Paddle Steamer Preservation Society, 3:30
Paddle to Seattle, 53:4
Padgett, John, 134:4
Padilla, Agustín Dávila, 181:16, 181:17
Padilla, Alberto
“How We Sail the Libertad,” 22:34–35
Padre Island National Seashore, 181:19, 181:20
Padua (renamed Kruzenshtern) (four-masted barque), 2:8, 4:11, 4:11, 5:12, 5:15, 5:20, 5:21, 18:59, 18:61, 26:29, 38:30, 48:5, 48:16, 52:3, 52:23, 52:23, 52:46, 52:47, 54:5, 56:31, 62:34, 63:34, 63:35, 63:35, 67:36, 69:5, 70:23, 71:40, 75:16–17, 80:18, 83:50, 89:30–32, 89:31, 156:18, 159:29
Pagamenos, Nikos, 15:15, 15:17–18, 15:17
Paggiotta, Wendy, 167:8, 176:4, 180:8
Paige, David Abbey (artist), 125:31
Paine, Charles, 158:23
Paine, Lincoln P., 154:13–14, 154:13, 172:4, 172:5, 179:4
“Admiral Sir Isaac Coffin, Loyalist and Patriot,” 42:30–31
“Bring Home the Vicar!” 38:12–16
“The Discovery of the Columbia River Recorded,” 43:20–21
“Educational Uses of Sail Training Vessels Conference,” 42:32
“The Gosnold Voyage of 1602: An Introduction,” 42:8–10
“Operation Sail 1986/Salute to Liberty,” 40:10–11
“Schooner Struck: Sail Training on the Malcolm Miller,” 45:40–43
“Seaport Experience,” 45:45
paint
anti-fouling, 159:34
dazzle, 98:32
wartime, 98:32–33
Painter, Dennis, 108:6
“Painting History with Artist Patrick O’Brien,” 138:28–31
Pakenham, Edward, 141:10, 141:11, 141:12, 141:13
Palacios (ex-Diana) (destroyer), 31:2
Palinuro (ex-Commandant-Louis-Richard) (barquentine), 3:8, 16:17
Pallada (square rigger), 62:21, 62:22
Pallas (frigate), 115:8, 115:9
Palley, Reese
“Gloucester Ships and Fishermen, the Art of Thomas Hoyne,” 112:30–34
Palm Beach Maritime Academy, 143:8
Palm Beach Maritime Museum, 143:8
Palmer, Bernice, 138:12–13, 138:15–16
Palmer, Frances F. (artist), 74:24–26
Palmetto State (ironclad), 120:28–29
Palmore, Lexie Palmer (artist), 43:15, 54:27
Palou, Joana, 48:14
Pamir (four-masted barque), 5:5, 5:22, 8:26, 18:0, 18:60, 18:61, 18:63, 19:10, 20:44, 46:8–9, 46:8, 48:5, 64:39, 93:17, 93:18, 135:22, 135:22
Pampanito (submarine, SS 383), 5:28, 12:28, 38:11, 65:38, 73:17, 89:41, 99:36
Pamperin, David L.
“The Wooden Ship Era Opens at Manitowoc,” 29:29
Pan Kraft (freighter/tanker), 62:15, 64:4
Panama (tugboat), 9:18, 36:15–16
Panama, SS, 171:24
Panama Canal, 12:6, 86:19, 111:39, 147:10, 147:12, 147:36, 147:45, 147:46, 148:5, 148:5, 148:12–16, 148:14–15, 149:5, 152:56
construction of, 148:18–19
Panama Canal Act (1912), 169:32
Panama Canal locks, 156:50–51
Panamax ships, 114:11, 148:14–15
Pan-American Security Zone, 104:8
Pan-American Steamship Company, 114:9
Pandora, HMS (sloop), 21:29, 121:0, 121:20–21, 121:21, 121:22–25, 125:5
Panella, Giovanni
“Lateen Sail Through the Golden Gate,” 102:32–35
Pankakoski, SS (ex-W. W. Atterbury; ex-Conemaugh)), 81:3
Pansing, Fred (artist), 9:34, 37:25
Panther (sealing barque), 104:25
Panton, Henry Gibson, 166:47
Panuco, SS (ex-Atlantic Sun) (tanker), 79:3
Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument, 125:14–19, 179:16–17, 179:16, 179:17, 180:33, 180:33
Paper Nautilus, 164:46–47, 164:46–47
Papp, Linda, 169:8
Papp, Robert J. Jr., 80:39, 87:5, 103:5, 113:6, 132:8, 132:8, 135:8, 135:8, 136:31, 136:31, 137:8, 137:8, 139:8, 141:8, 141:9, 143:29, 153:8–9, 153:9, 155:14, 161:10, 161:10, 163:10, 163:10, 167:8, 167:9, 167:12, 168:13, 169:8, 169:9, 169:9, 171:11, 172:13, 173:11, 174:9
“Awakening the Next Watch: Sail Training Aboartd USCG Bark Eagle,” 84:36–38
Pappas, Jonathan, 63:8, 66:6, 84:35
Para World Sailing, 168:46
Paradise, MS (Carnival ship), 87:41
Paragon (Hudson River steamer), 10:6
Parchim (Finnish ship), 2:21–22, 3:14, 3:20, 3:21
Parent, Yves (artist), 38:29
Paris (liner), 20:29
Park, Steven, 136:7
Parker, Alexander, 154:33
“We Know Ocean! Improving Ocean Literacy at Cal Maritime,” 154:30–33
Parker (Captain), 167:15
Parker, Christine L.
“Master Builder: As His Baltimore Clipper Pride Returns from the West Coast, Melbourne Smith Will Launch Two New Historic Schooners Next Spring; But the Big Challenge Lies Ahead,” 30:22–23
“Wm. Gilkerson’s Ten-Year Quest for The Ships of John Paul Jones,” 45:26–28
Parker, Ed (artist), 178:17
Parker, Hyde Jr., 98:8–9
Parker, John, 1:8
Parker, Josiah, 153:30
Parker, Timothy, 36:13
Parker (whaleship), 106:36, 125:14, 125:18, 127:25
Parker Evans (renamed Marlhill), 16:49
Parkhurst, Violet (artist), 38:29
Parkinson, Sydney, 83:11–12, 83:13, 83:14–15, 83:16, 83:17
Parks, Polly, 158:13
Parks Canada, 159:40, 166:26–27
Parkwright, John IV, 180:23
Parma (four-masted barque, Flying P liner), 18:58, 32:17, 32:18, 32:19, 32:19, 32:26, 33:46, 70:13, 91:11, 172:45, 181:10
Parnes, Stuart, 122:19
Parr, Henry Albert, 152:22–25, 152:22
Parr, M. R. C., 34:36
Parracombe, SS (steamer), 92:45–48
Parrot (longboat), 19:39
parrots, 133:40–41
Parry, Oliver Hazard, 128:8
Parry, William Edward, 156:32
Parsons, Jeffrey, 122:49
Parsons, Mark C. (artist), 112:35
Parsons, Usher, 144:15, 144:16
Pascoe Archaeology, 170:52
Pass Christian Lighthouse Society, 96:37
Pass of Balmaha (renamed Seeadler) (full-rigged ship), 86:4
“A Passage to Exeter,” 33:12–14, 100:36–38
Passaic, USS (ironclad), 120:0
Passat (four-masted barque), 2:8, 5:15, 8:26, 10:31, 16:47, 18:57–59, 18:60–61, 18:58–60, 20:44, 25:33, 26:3, 44:20–21, 77:37, 93:15, 93:18, 150:6, 156:18, 159:29
Passat (replica), 103:37
Passenger Vessel Act, 78:6–7
Passmore, George, 121:24
PAST Foundation, 108:38–39, 169:50
Past Perfect software, 159:39
Pastora (Spanish brig), 173:22–23
Pastron, Allen G.
“General Harrison: Portrait of a Gold Rush Storeship,” 102:29–31
“The Pastry War,” 174:26–29
Patapsco (schooner), 181:38
Pathfinder, HMS (brig/brigantine, training ship), 3:8, 5:22, 29:30, 69:34, 74:9
Patience, MV (steam ferry), 159:38
Patmore, Amy Florence, 171:24
Patria (ex-Hussar V; ex-Sea Cloud; ex-Angelita; renamed Antarna) (yacht), 2:11, 2:12, 4:18, 16:34, 19:39, 31:3, 38:36–37, 39:6, 89:36–37, 89:36–37, 90:3, 114:3, 131:16–20, 131:16–20, 133:6, 155:6
Patria (ex-Suzanne Vinnen; renamed Piombino) (motorship, former five–masted topsail schooner), 3:9
Patrice McAllister (tugboat), 21:0, 21:10
Patricia (1938 diesel buoy tender), 18:46
Patricia (log canoe), 132:31
Patrick Henry, SS (Liberty ship), 11:20–21, 12:10, 35:28, 60:36
Patrick Henry (packet ship), 176:34–37, 176:34
Patrick Henry, USS (nuclear submarine), 35:26
Patriot, USRC 181:36
Patriots Point Naval and Maritime Museum, 34:38, 148:53, 148:55, 175:54–55, 180:51–52
“The Patrols of Germany’s Captain Hans Georg Hess,” 105:18–19
Patten, Joshua, 154:6
Patten, Mary, 40:33
Patten, Mary Ann, 153:6, 153:6, 154:6
Patterson, Ariel, 165:44
Patterson, Charles Robert (artist), 27:30, 29:39, 30:4, 30:12–17, 30:15, 114:12–16, 114:14, 116:5–6
Patterson, Donald W. (artist), 104:0
Patterson, Thomas J., 27:30, 29:39, 30:0, 30:4, 30:12–17, 30:15, 46:16–17, 69:20, 70:7, 73:6, 81:4, 81:4, 85:7, 88:0, 101:33, 114:0, 114:12–16, 114:14, 116:5–6, 117:28
“How the O’Brien Returned to the D-Day Beaches,” 104:12
Patterson, William A., 98:11, 152:5
Patterson (Coast Survey ship), 120:35
Patuxent Naval Air Station, 166:30
Patuxent Small Craft Guild, 22:38–39, 51:19
Paul and Linda Kahn Foundation, 111:38
Paul Jones (packet), 88:10
Paul Jones (schooner), 175:16
Paul Jones (tug), 16:25
Paul Jones (US privateer), 139:11
Paul McGehee Gallery, 31:23
Paul Palmer (five-masted schooner), 139:26–27
Pauline Carroll (steamboat), 92:50
Paulsen, Hap, 4:20
Pault, Beloner, 175:18
Pavy, Octave, 121:16
Pawlowski, Jan (artist), 149:28
Pawnee, USS (steam sloop of war), 156:20, 156:20, 162:18, 162:19
Payne, C. N., 21:19–20
Payne, Edgar (artist), 175:25
Payne, John, 158:19
Paysour, Fleur, 156:26–29
PBY Catalina, 155:29
PC-1264 (patrol boat), 118:10
Peabody Essex Museum (PEM), 75:22, 80:36, 86:28, 109:34, 115:4–5, 118:40, 124:35, 125:29, 125:32–33, 135:32, 138:8, 145:26–30, 169:36–37, 169:52, 169:52, 175:36–37, 181:40. See also Peabody Museum of Salem, MA
Peabody Museum of Salem, MA, 12:37, 16:34, 17:10, 17:35, 25:45, 29:30, 46:44, 62:37. See also Peabody Essex Museum
Peace (barquentine), 69:5, 65:39
Peace Establishment Act, 103:16
Peacock, HMS (later USS Peacock) (sloop-of-war), 61:46, 114:27–28, 114:27, 129:19, 137:10, 137:10, 148:21, 164:18, 164:18, 164:20
Peake, William, 114:27
Peale, Titian Ramsay (artist), 175:36
Pearce, Norman, 46:12
Pearl (frigate), 98:10
Pearl (whaleship), 125:15, 125:16, 127:23, 127:25
Pearl Express, MV, 176:46
Pearl Harbor, 69:8, 69:9, 87:37, 91:12, 104:7, 104:8, 104:9, 166:28, 178:32
Pearl Harbor anniversary, 59:34
pearling dhows. See dhows
Pears, Charles (artist), 147:32
Pearson, Don (modelmaker), 54:35
Pearson, Fred S., 50:7
Pearson, Richard, 115:8, 115:9, 115:10–11
Peary, Josephine, 144:36
Peary, Robert E., 57:34, 117:30, 117:34–37, 117:37, 144:36, 151:10–11, 155:38, 156:33, 173:30–31, 175:43, 175:43
Pease, Valentine, 99:16
Peasley, Ralph “Matt,” 22:9, 22:9, 22:18
Peckham, Mark
“Remnants of Working Sail on the Hudson,” 77:27–30
Pecos (oiler), 178:32
Pecquet, John Baptist, 153:24
“‘A Peculiar Note of Romance’: The Heritage of the Hudson River Steamer,” 10:6–8
Peder Most (ex-Prince Louis II; ex-Nette S.; renamed Bel Espoir.) (three-masted topsail schooner), 3:5–6, 84:27
Pedersen, Adolph Cornelius, 121:10, 121:13, 121:13
Pedersen, Adolph Eric, 121:10
Pedro Gorino, 172:47
Pegase, HMS (prison hospital ship), 175:18
Pegasus (steam tug/tow), 8:14, 80:3, 142:8, 150:39
Pegasus (wooden brigantine with schooner rig), 17:17
Peggy (merchant vessel), 116:11
Peggy Stewart (brigantine), 14:14–15, 14:14, 16:6
Peggy Stewart (replica tobacco brig), 30:22
Peirce, George L., 61:36
Pekarcik, Cara, 165:38–39, 165:38–39
Pekin, HMS. See Peking
Peking (ex-HMS Pekin, ex-Arethusa II, renamed Peking), (four-masted barque), 2:7, 3:13, 4:7, 4:11, 4:20, 4:30, 4:43, 5:4, 5:10, 5:15, 5:23, 5:29, 6:3, 7:14, 10:26, 11:29, 12:2, 13:12, 13:17, 13:19, 13:23, 14:33, 15:48, 15:51, 16:11, 16:47, 18:59, 18:61, 19:17, 30:8, 34:8, 46:42, 48:5, 49:7, 49:8, 50:6, 56:4, 58:5, 70:13, 70:14, 74:5, 74:6, 78:4, 117:44, 130:6, 135:22, 136:6, 142:8, 145:9, 148:29, 154:4, 155:13, 155:18, 164:11, 173:40, 180:12
(pictures), 3:13, 3:39, 4:19, 7:42–43, 13:12, 19:31, 46:42, 89:9, 136:8, 136:9, 150:6, 154:53, 156:16–18, 159:28–29, 173:40
return to Germany, 154:53, 155:56, 156:16–18, 158:47, 159:28–29
rounding Cape Horn, 7:42–44
“Peking Battles Cape Horn,” 7:42–44
“A Peking Hand Salutes His Ship,” 46:42
“Peking is Homeward Bound,” 156:16–18
Pelagic, 126:6
Pelican (renamed Golden Hind) (Drake’s ship), 3:13, 12:27, 15:25, 15:25, 15:26–27, 20:34, 38:3, 61:26, 70:12, 70:12, 80:8, 80:10–11, 80:11, 80:12, 81:12, 82:6, 97:16, 106:10–11, 106:10, 119:12, 119:14, 122:7, 143:14, 143:15, 143:16, 143:17–18, 143:17
Pelican, USS (ASR-12), 175:33
Pellew, Edward, 145:35–36, 145:35
Pelly, Clem, 131:9
Peluso, A. J. Jr.
“James & John Bard: See the Past and Know That It Was Once Thus,” 80:24–27
“The Marine Art of Frances F. Palmer,” 74:24–26
“Marine Artists of New York,” 9:32–35
Peluso, Tony, 78:25
Pembroke, 177:20
Pen Duick (yacht), 180:23
Penang (barque), 93:18, 181:10
Pendelton, John, 95:21
Pendergrast, Mark
“Sail Training Aboard Spirit of Massachusetts,” 49:30–31
Pendleton, Elizabeth, 130:35
Pendleton (oil tanker), 23:21
Penegar, Scott, 162:38–39
Penelope (British cruiser), 30:8, 65:16
Penguin, USS, 162:18–19
Penix, Derek, 179:29
Penmar, SS, 143:27
Penn, William, 84:22
Pennoyer, Paul, 63:8, 64:9, 70:6, 79:4
“Reviving a Tradition—in East Harlem!” 57:19
Penn’s Landing, Philadelphia, 84:25, 85:22, 175:9, 176:8
Pennsylvania (packet ship), 7:35–36
Pennsylvania, USS, 176:4
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PAFA), 135:28–30, 135:30
Penobscot Marine Museum (PMM) (Searsport, ME), 21:30, 25:45, 77:41, 83:43, 85:51, 101:36, 132:46, 134:31, 135:47, 146:48, 149:42–43, 163:39
Pensacola, USS, 156:21, 156:21
Pensacola Maritime Preservation Society, 75:33
Pentangelo, John
“Sailors and Slaves: USS Constellation and the TransAtlantic Slave Trade,” 132:10–14
Pentland Firth, HMS (trawler), 68:12
People to People Health Foundation, 172:6
Pepe, Peter, 142:54
Pepys, Samuel, 115:26–27, 135:24–27
perahu (prahu) jaring (Madura island fishing boat), 43:29
Percey, Rebecca
“General Harrison: Portrait of a Gold Rush Storeship,” 102:29–31
Perch, USS (submarine), 158:48
Percy & Small Shipyard, 1:32–33, 103:37, 155:40
Pere Marquette 19 (ferry), 182:5
Pere Marquette Shipping Company, 174:48
Pereire (renamed Lancing) (four-masted full-rigged ship), 25:3, 124:30–33, 124:30–33
“‘The Perennial Struggle to Become What We Are Capable of Becoming,’” 28:6–7
Perepelitza, Dan (artist), 16:49
Perez, Juan, 61:32
“Perilous Waters for Historic Ships,” 133:20–24
Perit, Pelatiah, 144:28
Perkins, David E., 118:42
Perkins, James, 146:48
Perla Del Caribe (container ship), 161:8
Permenter, George, 63:23
Perón, François Auguste, 171:36
Perreira, Maria, 8:21
Perry (ex-Clingerman; renamed W. P. Snyder) (tugboat), 5:29, 8, 14, 21:35, 25:18, 25:18, 43:41, 148:30
Perry, Marion, 82:23
Perry, Matthew C., 140:28
Perry, Oliver Hazard, 45:4, 48:37, 79:13, 136:11, 138:24–25, 138:31, 145:55, 164:18, 164:18
(pictures), 136:11, 138:24, 144:13, 145:55
at the Battle of Lake Erie, 144:14–15, 144:17–19, 172:51
Perry, Whit, 170:4, 171:19, 172:39
Perseus (three-masted topsail schooner), 3:8–9
Perseus (brig), 177:13
Perseverance (Great Lakes wooden schooner replica), 17:28, 61:38, 70:40
Perseverance (pinky schooner), 33:34, 51:39
Pershing, John J. “Black Jack,” 105:2, 158:29, 165:43, 170:23, 171:23
Persia (Cunard Line iron steamer), 89:10, 89:11
Persian (schooner), 61:39
Persian Gulf, 180:47
Persian ships, 73:10
Person, Naomi (author), 18:21
personal flotation devices (PFDs), 164:45, 165:6
Personne, Romagean (artist), 170:44
“Perspective on the Battle of the Atlantic,” 69:9
Perth Amboy (tugboat), 29:31
Peru (German ship), 10:23
Pet (punt), 53:6
Peter I “the Great” (tsar of Russia), 82:9, 84:44
Peter Crary (steamboat), 80:26
Peter G. Washington (Coast Survey brig), 120:32
Peter Rickmers (steel sailing ship), 6:38
“Peter Rindlisbacher, Sailor and Master of Marine Art, Takes on the Battle of Lake Erie,” 144:20–22
Peter Stuyvesant (Hudson River steam ferry), 5:29, 10:10, 10:13, 11:34, 11:34, 13:47
Peter von Danzig, 75:17, 95:34
Peters, Christian Gottlieb, 134:7
Peters, Paula, 179:45
Peters, Scott, 135:44
Petersen, Ludolf, 35:22
Peterson, Charles (artist), 101:0, 101:24–26
Peterson, John E. C. (artist), 89:0
Peterson (destroyer), 85:22
Pétion, Alexandre Sabès, 164:19
petite goelette, 21:30
Petofi (sidewheeler), 26:29
Petrel (Coast Survey schooner), 120:32
Petrel (cutter), 157:16
Petrel (ocean-racing yawl), 7:13, 7:14
Petrel, M/V, 175:50
Petrich, Martin Sr., 180:50
Petrie, Donald A.
“The Prize Game,” 90:14, 90:16
“Petrol for the Navy PTs,” 59:44–47
Pew Oceans Commission, 154:30
Pewabic (shipwreck), 179:14
Peyron, Bruno, 116:41
Pfeiffer, John, 56:34
Pfister, Arthur, 126:16, 126:18
Phaeton (steamer), 174:27
Pharos of Alexandria, 77:40
Phelan, Claire, 120:8
Phemius, SS, 51:5
Philadelphia
as OpSail 2000 port city, 84:22–25
shipbuilding in, 84:23–24, 89:12
Philadelphia, USS (frigate), 5:4, 5:28, 12:27, 35:41, 44:14, 53:30, 53:31, 53:33, 59:32, 67:32, 85:3–4, 103:16, 105:0, 105:11, 105:11, 105:12, 114:26, 116:10, 116:10, 116:11, 116:12, 117:15, 117:17, 117:18, 129:17, 129:17, 135:13, 140:27, 148:21, 148:30, 167:33
model, 83:55
Philadelphia II (1776 gunboat replica), 53:33, 53:33, 59:32, 59:32, 116:37, 116:37, 117:15, 150:54
Philadelphia Maritime Museum, 8:29, 9:16, 15:50, 21:32, 24:30, 65:36, 69:38, 71:36, 73:36, 84:26. See also Independence Seaport Museum
Philadelphia Naval Shipyard, 76:37
Philadelphia project, 53:33
Philadelphia Ship Model Society, 25:43
Philadelphia Ship Preservation Guild, 32:43, 170:8, 175:4, 175:9, 176:9
Philadelphia Story (film), 163:6, 163:6
Philbrick, Nathaniel, 108:4, 108:4, 112:7, 112:7, 113:6, 113:6, 160:8, 160:8, 161:14, 161:14, 168:47, 172:18, 173:11
Philip (HRH the Duke of Edinburgh), 19:17, 19:17, 19:18, 20:32, 21:10, 28:29, 34:8, 34:9, 34:10, 34:36, 36:33, 38:16, 41:6, 54:12, 80:4, 100:35, 136:8, 145:9
Philip II (king of Spain), 48:22, 48:22
Philip VI (king of France), 101:20, 101:22
Philip E. Lake (Gloucester schooner), 6:6
“Philip Haemo de Thorneycroft Teuscher and His Hopes for the National Maritime Historical Society,” 130:12–13
Philip of Anjou, 177:18, 177:20, 177:22
Philippine Insurrection, 125:43–44
Philips, Rex (artist), 35:0, 35:39
Philipse, Frederick, 37:18–19, 58:21
Phillip, Arthur, 67:31
Phillips, Ann, 182:57
Phillips, Carla Rahn, 167:39
Phillips, Clyde A., 180:57
Phillips, George F., 155:35
Phillips, Isaac, 113:17–18
Phillips, John, 165:34
Phillips, Raymond E.
“Bite of the Devil––Scourge of the Long-Distance Sea Voyager,” 172:30–33
Phillips, Richard, 178:39
Phillips, Stephen B., 153:50, 153:50, 154:10, 154:10, 155:8, 155:8
Phillipson, Antony, 168:52
Philly Shipyard, Inc., 164:55, 178:57
Phoebe (steam launch), 103:36
Phoebe, HMS (British cruiser), 65:16, 129:19, 136:13, 137:10–11
Phoenician (sailing barge), 34:21
Phoenician seafaring, 73:10, 75:12
Phoenix (fireboat), 175:44
Phoenix (steamship), 70:5, 97:7
Phoenix, HMS (frigate), 5:15, 6:22, 11:8, 17:34, 21:2, 98:8, 98:9, 98:11
photoblogs, 113:33
photogrammetry, 15:46
Photography Club of Long Island, 147:45
phytoplankton, 169:27
Piccolo, Anthony
“Women of the Deep: A Light History of the Mermaid,” 68:44–46
Pickens, Harriet Ida, 178:40, 178:40
Pickering, Timothy, 113:16, 113:17, 113:17, 122:24, 128:12, 153:28–29, 174:55
Pickering (US revenue cutter), 122:4, 122:24–27, 153:34, 153:35, 153:52
Pickle, HMS (topsail schooner), 120:45, 132:38–39, 133:5–6, 140:22, 144:56, 144:56, 156:55, 163:34–35, 163:34, 168:52, 168:52, 172:55
Pickle Night Dinner, 120:45, 132:39, 135:47, 136:48, 138:44, 139:47, 163:35, 167:54, 168:52, 172:13, 172:55
Pico, Anthony, 135:44
Picton Castle (ex-Dolmar) (sail-training barque), 68:34, 73:40–41, 84:53, 89:2, 90:37–38, 92:3, 93:31–32, 96:37, 103:37, 109:24–28, 111:14–17, 115:36, 118:4, 120:43–44, 122:10–11, 123:8–10, 127:43, 137:46, 138:44, 144:54, 144:56, 152:19, 154:46, 157:28–29, 161:46–49, 162:8, 163:21, 163:21, 163:28, 164:11, 166:45, 168:6, 169:56, 177:6, 177:8, 177:46
(pictures), 68:34, 85:53, 90:37–38, 92:3, 108:18, 108:19, 109:0, 109:24–28, 120:43, 122:10–11, 138:44, 157:29, 157:31, 169:56, 177:46
as UNESCO “Year of the Ocean” flagship, 90:37–38
Picton Castle’s Bosun School, 157:28–31, 177:46
Pictou, HMS, 169:41
pieces of eight, 149:36
Piedade, Alfredo, 39:25–26
Piedaniel, A. M., 31:43
Piedras Balcas Light Station, 62:36
Pieh, Singbe (Cinque; African from La Amistad), 71:20–21, 71:22, 97:16, 97:16
Pier 46 (San Francisco), 10:23
Pier A clock tower, 89:6
Pierce, Thomas, 88:18
Pierhead art, 75:21
Pierre Radisson (CCG polar icebreaker), 139:31
Pierson, Helene, 144:36
Pieter A. Koertz (ex-Bandi; ex-Elizabeth Bandi; renamed Seute Deern) (barque), 2:14, 2:31, 4:7, 4:34, 4:34, 58:5, 77:37
Piez, Charles, 169:13
pigs, 120:24
Pil (patrol boat), 30:10
Pilgrim (brig) (Dana’s ship), 71:11, 87:18, 121:10, 155:20, 171:40–41, 171:41
Pilgrim (ex-Joal) (replica of Dana’s ship; brig, former schooner), 3:9, 17:29, 21:34, 30:35, 72:10–12, 73:4, 82:36, 87:18–21, 89:2–3, 146:23
Pilgrim (Gloucester schooner), 6:4, 6:6
Pilgrim (privateer), 59:26
Pilgrim (1883 sidewheel steamer), 10:9, 20:9
Pilgrim Hall, 172:6
Pilgrim John Howland Society, 99:36
Pilgrim of Newport (replica brig), 25:46
Pilling, Ronald
“David Stodder—Shipbuilder and Patriot in Post-Revolutionary Baltimore,” 128:12–15
Pillsbury, John Elliott, 120:33, 120:34
Pillsbury, USS (destroyer escort), 35:41, 37:4, 68:5
Pilot (pilot boat), 40:11, 60:16, 94:37, 102:38, 102:38, 120:16, 120:19
Pilot (ex-Star Pilot; renamed Highlander Sea) (Gloucester schooner), 79:24, 79:25, 79:26, 93:13, 103:36, 103:36, 163:22–23
pilot fish, 163:44–45
Pim, James Edwin, 176:37
Pim, Jonathan, 176:37
Pinckney, Thomas, 153:29
Pincus, Alex, 182:18–19
Pincus, Miles, 182:18–19
Pine Bluff Victory, SS, 162:22
Piney Point Lighthouse Museum and Park, 74:10
pinisi, 36:24–25, 36:24, 43:29–30
Pinkney, William, 99:5
Pinta (caravel; Columbus’s ship), 20:31, 54:20, 54:22, 55:14, 55:18, 55:20, 56:21, 59:14, 62:10–11, 78:11
repairing the rudder, 56:16–17
Pinta (caravel; Columbus’s ship replica), 8:17, 17:26, 53:11, 56:20, 55:17, 63:38, 70:39, 84:54
readying for voyage, 56:20
Pinzón, Martin Alonso, 55:17, 56:16, 56:18, 56:21, 59:13, 59:14, 62:11
Pinzón, Vicente Yañez, 55:17, 59:13
Pinzon (ex-Clydebank) (lightship; now river barge), 20:19
Piombino (ex-Patria, ex-Suzanne Vinnen) (motorship, former five-masted topsail schooner), 3:9
Pioneer (D-6 container ship), 12:30
Pioneer (now Elissa; ex-Fjeld; ex-Gustav; ex-Christophoros; ex-Achaios). See Elissa
Pioneer (privateer), 75:33
Pioneer (schooner), 4:18, 4:20, 4:21, 5:5, 5:29, 7:0, 7:12, 7:14, 9:17, 13:12, 14:5, 14:44, 26:10, 40:11, 57:16, 57:17, 57:18, 81:11, 84:24, 89:35, 145:9, 154:53, 155:13, 156:46
restoration of, 15:18
Pioneer (tugboat), 21:32
Pioneer, CSS (submarine), 12:28, 158:16
Pioneer Contender, SS, 140:13
Pioneer Line, 154:39
Pioneer Marine School, 7:32, 23:23, 136:9
Pique, 16:45
Piquet, Pancho, 173:14
piracy and pirates, 120:44, 127:4, 127:18–21, 127:36, 128:6–7, 135:42
in the colonies, 178:36, 178:38–39
corsairs, 127:36
pieces of eight, 149:36
pirate training, 144:53–54
privateering, 173:20–23
Pirata (schooner), 39:33
Pirate (renamed Saint Nicholas the Wonder Worker) (Volga steam tug), 72:4
Pirate Queen (ex-Governor Stone) (two-masted Gulf cargo schooner), 165:32
Pirsig, Maynard, 173:12
Pirsig, Nancy James, 173:13–15
Pirsig, Robert, 173:12–19, 173:13, 173:15, 173:17–19
Pirsig, Ted, 173:14–15
Pirsig, Wendy, 173:16–17, 173:17, 173:18
Pisagua (four-masted barque), 89:30
Piscataqua Gundalow Project, 12:37, 14:43–44, 18:42, 20:37–38
Piscataque (renamed Delaware), 124:19
Pisces II (submarine), 100:46
Pitot, F. M., 113:17
Pitt Packet (brig), 166:46–47
Pittsburgh Steamship Company, 169:33, 169:54
Pittston (towboat), 37:14
Pixel (ROV), 178:23–24, 178:24
Pizarro, José Alfonso, 137:19
Pizarro, Oscar, 156:53
Plaater (armed schooner), 128:13
Placillia (four-masted barque), 89:30
PlanetSolar (solar powered catamaran), 145:38
“Planning the Restoration of the Battleship Texas,” 31:16
Plantagenet, HBMS, 141:19
Planter (cotton steamer), 91:28–29, 91:30, 166:34
plastic waste, 182:31–35, 182:32–33
Platina (Cape Verde schooner), 9:29
Platje, Maarten (artist), 167:32–36, 167:32–33, 169:6
Platt, William, 168:31
Plattsburgh Bay, Battle of, 137:13, 138:5, 138:26, 145:16, 145:16, 148:20–24
Platzer, Michael
“The Black Heritage in Seafaring: Where It’s To Be Found Today,” 10:26–27
“The Cape Verde Packet Trade, Part I,” 8:19–21
“The Cape Verde Packet Trade, Part II,” 9:27–30
“The Voyages of the Ernestina, ex-Effie M. Morrissey,” 7:20–21
Playfair (brigantine), 3:9, 29:30, 69:34, 164:30, 166:45
Pleione (schooner yacht), 5:6
“The Plight of the Chesapeake Mill,” 107:14
Plimoth Patuxet Museums, 179:55–56
Plimouth Plantation, 56:35, 99:36, 157:42, 168:47, 171:16–17, 171:21
Plimsoll, Samuel, 128:35
“Plotting the Fix—A Call for a National Consensus to Save Historic Ships and the Battle to Save Olympia,” 135:38–40
Plover (renamed Golden Plover; brigantine), 20:42
Plummer, Norman, 165:22
Plumper, HMS (brig), 139:11
Plunger (submarine), 95:19
Plus (barque), 32:17
Pluton, 156:5
Plym (tug), 78:16
Plymouth/Plimoth Colony, 170:29, 180:44
Plymouth (steamer), 20:10, 20:10, 20:11, 20:11, 20:14, 21:2
Plymouth (war sloop), 33:35
Poboronchook, Michael, 61:38
Pocahontas, 118:32
Pocahontas, USS (ex-SS Prinzess Irene; renamed SS Bremen) (ocean liner), 65:21, 65:25, 161:20, 161:22
Pocono (flagship), 17:33
podcasts, 113:33
poetry of the water’s edge, 138:40–41, 139:6
“A Poet’s Daughter at Sea: the ‘Wander Bird,’” 129:10–15
Pogoria (Polish three-masted barquentine), 20:30, 27:37, 43:36–37, 43:36–37, 48:16, 62:21, 69:34, 69:34, 75:17, 77:36, 108:18
Point Barrow (USCG cutter) 167:28
Point Judith lighthouse, 143:48
Point Reyes Lifeboat Station, 60:17
Point Sur Lighthouse, 145:48
Polar (sail training schooner), 45:19, 45:20
Polar 901 (oceangoing tug), 15:21
Polarbjor (trawler), 101:11
POLARCH (organization for polar archaeology), 8:24
Polaris (schooner), 15:22–23
Polaris (trawler), 101:12
Poling, Clark V., 65:18
Polk, James, 163:17
Polk, Sarah, 163:17
Polk (cutter), 168:17
Pollack, USS (atomic submarine), 144:35
Polland, Leon D., 3:23–28
Pollin, Jim, 10
Pollux (square–rigged schoolship), 3:13
Polly (brig), 153:34
Polly (now Machias Liberty) (sloop), 123:24, 123:26–27
Polly (schooner), 56:34
Polly (smack), 29:47
Polly Woodside (ex-Rona) (coal barge/barque), 2:10, 11:31, 17:34, 20:42, 23:27, 38:11, 39:6, 76:7
Polo, Marco, 84:14
Polson, Melissa, 178:4
Poltallach, 9:1
Polyphemus, HMS, 175:16, 175:18
Polynesian rat, see kiore
Polynesian seafaring, 29:14–15, 84:11–15
voyaging canoes, 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
Polynesian Voyaging Society (PVS), 70:30–31, 157:40
Polyphemus, HMS (ship-of-the-line), 139:11
Pomham Rocks Lighthouse, 177:50, 177:50
Pommern (ex-Mneme) (four-masted barque), 2:10, 5:15, 13:30, 18:61, 40:33, 48:5, 52:3, 93:18, 102:36, 102:36, 150:6, 156:18, 159:29, 169:4, 169:4
Pomone, HMS, 150:21
Pompée (ship-of-the-line), 56:27
Pompey, Edward J. 172:19–20
Ponape, 93:17
Ponce, SS (passenger ship), 122:20–23, 122:20
Ponce de León, Juan, 107:22
Ponce de Leon Inlet Lighthouse, 83:48
Ponce de Leon Light, 88:39
Pontchartrain (cutter), 139:28, 139:28
Pontes, John, 9:28
Pontiac, USS, 170:34
Poole harbor (England), 104:41
Poorman, Samuel, 33:35
Pope, Jennie Barnes, 172:11
Pope (destroyer escort), 37:4
Poplar Branch (steamer; turret ship), 22:4
Porcellis, Jan (artist), 56:23, 174:32
Porcupine (gunboat schooner), 144:16, 153:48–49, 153:48, 164:30
Porpoise, 19:30
Porritizi, Margaret, 155:13
Port Adelaide (Australia), 111:34
Port au Prince (British privateer), 64:6
Port Byron, 72:16–18
Port Columbus National Civil War Naval Museum, 97:39–40
Port Director, New York (PDNY), 65:14
Port Gallery Inn, 39:30
Port Johnson Historic Sailing Vessels, 46:38
Port Johnston Terminal, 65:14
Port Mobil, 42:4
Port of Ludington Maritime Museum, 160:51, 160:51
Port of New York, 17:43–45, 65:12–17. See also New York Harbor
Port of New York Historical Society, 84:57
Port of Oakland, 24:32
Port of Thessalonica, 146:14
Port Stanley (four-masted bark), 8:6
Porter, David Dixon, 107:23, 120:33, 129:16–20, 129:16, 134:14, 136:12, 137:10–11, 137:10, 140:17, 146:20, 146:20, 156:30, 162:17
Porter, Peter, 137:11
Porter, USS (destroyer), 161:20
Portland (Maine), as port for OpSail 2000, 92:41–43
Portland (steam sternwheel tug/tow boat), 8:14, 25:18, 59:35, 75:34, 76:36
Portland, SS (steamship), 81:44, 100:42, 100:42, 104:40, 107:0, 107:2, 107:16–18, 107:16–17, 107:18, 107:27, 108:2–3, 111:6–9, 111:6–9, 111:34, 139:26, 139:27, 179:14, 179:14
search for, 107:19–21
sonar images, 107:20–21
Portland Harbor Museum, 132:45
Portland Head lighthouse, 143:48
Portland lightship, 54:32
Portland Observatory, 145:48
Portmar, S. S., 4:20
Porto Rico Line, 130:26
Porto Rico, SS, 130:28
Portsmouth (lightship), 1:33
Portsmouth (NH) Ship Trust, 42:35
Portsmouth Harbor lighthouse, 143:48
Portsmouth Historic Dockyard, 170:53
Portsmouth Naval Base Property Trust, 56:34
Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, 112:39
Portsmouth Naval Shipyard Museum, 1:33
Portuguese Initiative, 45:4, 45:12–13
“The Portuguese Initiative: Breakout into the Ocean World,” 45:12–13
Portuguese Man-of-War, 122:40
Portuguese seafaring, 45:0, 77:15–17, 78:3, 81:13
Portwey (tugboat), 25:18
Post, Francis, letters to his family, 109:8–11
Post, Marjorie Merriweather (Hutton), 73:18, 131:16–17, 131:19
Post, Ruth Barker, letters to her husband, 109:8–11
postage stamps
depicting lighthouses, 59:30–31, 143:48
depicting ships, 59:30–31, 121:4, 128:48
commemorating US Submarine Force, 92:53
Potomac (ex-Albany; renamed Ware River) (Day Line steamer), 10:7, 11:8, 16:6, 58:24
Potomac (frigate), 103:16
Potomac (presidential yacht), 24:32, 33:35, 60:17
Potomac Flotilla, 162:16–20, 162:18–19, 163:19
mines in, 156:22
Potosi (five-masted barque), 52:3, 91:12, 122:7
Potts, Rives, 108:6
Pouch, A. Timothy, 39:5, 39:5, 42:34, 155:13
endowment fund, 45:51
Pourquoi Pas? (three-masted barque; arctic exploration ship), 52:28, 52:29, 177:13
powder monkeys, 153:44
Powhatan, USS (CTF ship), 161:22
Powhattan, 165:16
Powlesland, Greg
“Art of the Figurehead,” 50:29
Poyntz, Thomas, 177:34
PQ-17 (Allied Convoy), 62:14–16, 64:4, 66:11, 92:2–3
PQ-18 (Allied convoy), 62:16
Pradith, Vitad, 148:47
Prados, Edward
“Al-Hami: A Desert Village Preserves Its Seafaring Past,” 89:14–17
Praeger Explorations in World Maritime History, 112:36
Prairie (destroyer tender), model, 44:40
Prat, Arturo, 94:16–17
Preble, Edward, 44:14–15, 44:14, 59:26, 105:13, 122:24–25, 122:26, 122:27, 129:18, 142:37, 174:55
Preble (sloop), 148:22
Preble, USS, 137:12
“Preindustrial Navigation at Expo ‘86,” 43:28–32
“Preserved in Amber: The 18th-Century Dockyard at Karlskrona, Sweden, 97:20–23
Preserver, USS (ARS 8), 178:41
“Preserving Our Fleet of Historic Naval Ships: The Continuing Challenge,” 94:20–21
“Preserving the Essence of Boats,” 51:18
President (frigate), 84:22, 116:12, 139:24
President (sidewheel riverboat), 38:33–34, 38:34, 133:21
President, HMS (ex-Saxifrage; sloop), 12:28
President, HMS (ex-HMS Gannet, ex-Mercury, renamed Gannet), 2:14, 3:29, 12:28, 65:34
President, SS (paddle-wheel steamer), 136:40, 165:16
President, USS (frigate; sister ship to USS Constitution), 14:52, 30:8, 44:12, 69:24, 103:9, 103:16, 134:13, 135:11, 150:20–21, 150:20, 151:5
President Grant, USS (renamed USAT Republic) (CTF ship), 161:21, 161:22
President Harding, SS, 164:34, 164:34
President Jackson, SS (American President Line), 105:6, 105:6
President Lincoln, USS (CTF ship), 161:21
President Roosevelt, SS, 17:9, 19:4, 19:4
President Warfield (renamed Exodus), 2:35, 44:36
Presidente Sarmiento (full-rigged ship), 2:12, 13:39
press gangs, 166:46–47, 166:47. See also impressment
Prestige (oil tanker), 133:28–29
Preston, Kari, 43:14
Preston (flagship), 123:24
Preussen (five-masted ship), 5:5, 8:26, 48:16, 49:8, 50:6, 52:3, 89:38, 122:7
Preussen II, 20:36
Prévost, George, 137:11, 137:11, 137:12–13, 145:16, 145:16, 148:20, 148:24
Price, Franklin H.
“Florida’s Underwater Archaeological Preserves: History Beneath the Waves,” 138:36–38
Price, Jack, 168:11
Price, Jeanne
“The Restoration of the China Cabin,” 38:6
Price, Jonathan, 151:22–26
Price, Morgan Samuel, 169:38
Price, Richard, 126:43
“The Price of Liberty” 41:12
Price-Anderson Nuclear Industries Indemnity Act, 179:4
Pricilla L. Ray (ex-Henry L. Peckham) (four-masted schooner), 42:5
Pride, Alfred M. “Mel,” 178:26, 178:31
Pride (Swan 44), 180:23
“Pride of Baltimore” (nickname for Baltimore clipper Chasseur), 15:36, 15:36–38, 16:6, 59:26, 59:26, 59:27, 172:41
Pride of Baltimore (1977 Baltimore clipper topsail schooner reproduction), 5:32, 7:31, 7:33, 8:17, 8:17, 8:18, 8:22, 8:22, 8:23, 8:26, 8:28, 10:26, 11:33, 13:20, 13:28, 14:0, 14:7, 14:9, 14:18, 14:18, 14:20, 14:24, 14:33, 14:33, 15:4, 15:36–38, 15:36, 16:6, 16:11, 17:26, 17:28, 23:28, 24:27–28, 27:37, 30:22–23, 33:33, 36:36, 41:2, 41:36–37, 41:37, 143:7, 163:52, 172:41
Pride of Baltimore II (Baltimore clipper topsail schooner reproduction,1988), 46:36, 47:11, 60:38, 63:35, 65:37, 73:33, 77:36, 88:31, 90:12, 90:13, 90:14, 94:29, 94:30, 94:30, 121:44, 128:15, 132:40, 137:5, 140:40, 140:40, 147:28, 161:43, 162:45, 162:45, 163:51–52, 163:51, 164:30, 166:45, 168:5, 172:4, 172:40–41, 172:40
Pride of Baltimore, Inc., 172:4
“Pride of Baltimore: To Teach as well as to Inspire,” 41:36–37
Pride of MANY (brig), 89:6
“Primary Research at Its Height: The Monumental Work of Ed Bosley on Gloucester Fishing Schooners,” 78:14–15
prime meridian, 66:18–21
Prince, Christopher, 98:9
Prince, HMS (ship-of-the-line miniature model), 56:23, 68:29
Prince de Neufchatel (American privateer), 16:49
Prince George (coastal steamer), 20:47
Prince Louis (ex-Lillebaelt, ex-Fano, ex-Astrea) (three-masted schooner), 3:9
Prince Louis II (ex-Nette S.; ex-Peder Most; renamed Bel Espoir.) (three-masted topsail schooner), 3:5–6, 84:27
Prince of Wales (renamed Sligo) (barquentine re-rigged as three-masted schooner), 92:11, 101:36
Prince with the Shallops (London ship), 103:26
Princess (steamboat), 74:24
Princess (venue yacht), 121:4, 122:12
Princess Anne (ex-New Jersey; now Greenport), 11:8
Princess Charlotte, HMS (frigate), 13:44
Princess Elizabeth (barque), 59:37
Princess Elizabeth (paddle steamer), 3:30
“Princess Kaiulani” (R. L. Stevenson), 9:21
Princess Marguerite (steam turbine coastal liner), 58:38, 62:34
Princess Mataoika, USS (renamed City of Honolulu II) (CTF ship), 161:21, 161:22
Princess Royal (miodel), 77:19
Princess Taiping (Chinese junk), 126:44, 126:44
Princeton (aircraft carrier), 72:5
Princeton (light cruiser), 73:5
Princeton, USS (screw frigate), 64:16, 103:10, 176:4, 177:8
Princeton Victory, 88:34
Principia (motor launch), 85:21
Principia (passenger vessel), 71:36
Principia (yacht), 69:38
Prindle, Tom
“Re-opening the Doors of History at Erie House,” 72:16–18
“Tugboat Urger: Ancient Mariner of the Barge Canal,” 58:7–8
Pringle, J. R. P., 99:8, 99:10
Pringle, Thomas, 53:30, 117:16, 117:19
Prins Hendrick Maritime Museum (Rotterdam), 63:30
Prinz Eitel Friedrich (renamed USS DeKalb), 161:18, 161:21, 161:22
Prinz Waldemar (German steamer), 52:16
Prinzess Eitel Friedrich. See Dar Pomorza (ex-Prinzess Eitel Friedrich) (Polish full-rigged sail training ship)
Prinzess Irene, SS (renamed USS Pocohontas) (ocean liner), 65:21, 65:25, 161:20, 161:22
Prinzessin Victoria Luise, SS (cruise ship), 172:29
Priscilla (oyster schooner/sloop), 5:29, 5:32, 7:32, 18:42, 24:29, 50:17, 89:27, 93:9–10
Priscilla (sidewheeler), 10:10, 20:10, 20:10, 20:11–12, 20:12, 20:14, 20:14, 21:2, 21:31
Priscilla Dailey (canal boat), 8:26
prison ships, 116:16, 116:16, 165:18–20, 165:18, 175:17–18, 175:19
Pritchard, David, 154:24, 180:34
Pritzker Military Library Oral History Project, 141:44, 141:46
privateering, 59:26, 59:26–27, 90:14, 90:16, 180:18–21
Priwall (barque), 8:26, 18:59, 52:3, 89:30, 89:31
“The Prize Game,” 90:14, 90:16
Prize Papers database, 165:42
“Probing the Mysteries of the Jones Act”
Part 1, 159:24–27
Part 2, 160:28–31
Proceedings (Naval Institute magazine), 9:13
Proctor, Henry, 136:11–12
Proctor, Thorndike, 149:20–22
Proctor Academy Ocean Classroom, 163:26
professional ocean racer, 152:44–45
Professor Koch (renamed Don Juan V) (river barge), 20:19
Progress (whaling barque), 74:4
“Progress in the Defence Dig,” 12:35
Progress No. 9 (ex-Cheektowaga) (steam tug/tow converted to diesel), 8:14
Prohibition, 169:42–45
Project City Kids, 64:9
Project Experiment, 87:28, 87:30
Project Gutenberg, 158:50
Project HOPE, 172:6–7
Project Lakewell, 28:34
Project Liberty Committee, 11:33
Project Liberty Ship Inc. (PLS), 38:32, 41:12–14, 95:28, 169:50, 170:6, 180:17
Project Mayflower, 171:21
Project Sail, 57:19
Project Sea Witch, 13:19–21, 14:8, 15:4
“Project Sea Witch,” 13:19–21
Project Shiphunt, 136:45–46
Promenade Gallery, 73:28
“A Proper Yarn: a Letter from Lincoln Colcord, 1921,” 108:14–16
Prospector (Concordia circumnavigator), 73:36
Prosper (schooner), 39:44
Prosperity (three-masted schooner), 128:15
Protection of Wrecks Act (Britain), 39:11, 58:36
Protector, USS (ex-Warren P. Marks) (Liberty ship), 34:37
Proteus (arctic steam-wheeler), 121:14, 121:15–16, 121:16
Protex (harbor ferry), 67:32
Prothero, Douglas, 178:55
Prothero, Stewart, 95:21
“A Proud Legacy—USS Constitution after 1815,” 151:28–32
Providence (gundelo), 53:30
Providence (steamboat), 20:13, 20:13
Providence (ex-Katy) (John Paul Jones’s topsail sloop), 7:33, 12:17–19, 12:17, 14:43, 14:51, 14:51, 15:48, 18:21, 19:35, 20:30, 21:2, 21:31, 21:42, 25:3, 26:3, 34:27, 34:27, 45:26, 57:36, 63:35, 67:34, 77:36, 87:6, 100:9, 103:5, 103:15, 103:16, 147:6, 168:56, 179:7
Providence II (sloop-of-war replica), 4:35, 5:32, 8:17, 8:18, 8:26, 10:26, 12:22–24, 13:34, 17:26, 17:26, 17:28, 23:28, 50:17, 73:32, 150:50, 150:50, 165:5, 165:5, 168:55–56, 168:55, 181:48-49, 181:48
plans, 12:23
Providence Maritime Heritage Foundation, 181:48
“The Providence Sails Again,” 12:22–24
Provident (trawler), 3:30
Provincetown (Cape Cod), 46:32–33
Provincetown (ex-District of Columbia) (steamer), 10:13, 11:8
Provincetown Center for Coastal Studies (PCCS), 116:38
Prudence (gaff-rigged schooner), 20:39
Prudence, M/V (coastal steam ferry), 135:46–47, 135:47, 159:39, 159:38
Prudent (British warship), 132:25, 132:26
Pruesse, Ulrich Hans Wolfgang “Uli,” 110:7, 116:42
PT boats, Inc., 108:38
PT-109 (PT boat), 104:38–39
PT-199 (PT boat), 167:23
PTF-17 (patrol boat), 175:52
Ptolemy, 66:18–19
Publc Works of Art Project (PWAP), 128:22–25
Puckett, Randy (sculptor), 46:28
Puerto Rico Educational and Scientific Founcation, 59:33
Puffin, USS (fishing boat/minesweeper), 142:16
Puget, Peter, 61:32–33
“‘Pull-Together’: The Queenstown Naval Command of World War I,” 99:7–10
Pulver, Raymond “Wes,” 140:40, 140:40
Puncher, HMS, 54:38
Purdy, David, “Moscoco’s Ships,” 134:32–35
Puritan (Gloucester schooner), 6:4, 6:6, 121:31, 158:0, 158:23
Puritan (steamer), 10:10, 20:0, 21:2
Puritan (yacht), 74:28, 76:26, 89:27, 116:21
Purrington, Caleb, 164:52
Pursuit, ESS (commercial fishing vessel), 133:18, 133:18
Purvis, Heather, 176:4
Pushbach, Hans, 159:11, 159:13, 159:13
Putman, Tyler, 170:8, 175:9, 176:9, 176:9
Putnam, David, 105:27
Putnam, George R., 63:22
Putnam, Israel, 98:11
Putnam, Jack
“Melville’s Seafaring Days,” 99:15–17
Pyrenees (renamed Manga Reva) (four-masted barque), 21:13, 21:15
Pyron, Tim, 113:38
pyrosomes, 171:36–37
Pyrrhus Concer Action Committee, 168:19
Pythagoras, 66:18