S
“S. Francis Smitheman,” 52:26–29
S. Gildersleeve, 36:16
S. J. Waring (merchant schooner), 93:34–36, 93:35
S-5 (submarine), 158:31
Sabel, Frederick L., 1:31
Sabina (steamboat), 146:48
Sabine (frigate), 103:16
Sabino (ex-Tourist) (coal burning passenger steamboat), 2:31, 2:32, 5:11, 5:6, 5:28, 10:13, 11:8, 27:38, 36:36, 96:20, 96:20, 103:36, 130:9, 143:23, 151:44, 151:44, 152:26, 155:53–54, 155:54, 159:46–47
Sable, Fred, 94:6
Sabre, 5:21, 18:17, 18:18–19, 38:30
Sachs, Charles Ira
“Trade Cards: Lost Art of the Sail/Steam Era,” 40:28–29
Sacred Cod (superstition), 101:29–30
Sadie (sloop), 14:13
Safe, Mike, 179:55
Safe Harbor Oxford, 180:34
SAFE Port Act, 118:38
safety issues, 122:10–11, 123:6, 123:8–10
Saffer, Dorothy, 182:53
Saffer, Ken, 182:53
Safford, Jeffrey, 169:13
Sag Harbor, SS, 102:4
“The Saga of the Arctic Schooner Bowdoin,” 40:24–25
Saga Siglar (Viking knarr replica) , 34:38, 58:36, 64:34, 64:34
Sagadahoc (freighter), 36:3, 36:4
Sagafjord (Cunard liner), 95:13
Sagamore (ex-Diane Chris; ex-Handel), 40:2–3, 42:35
Sagamore (steamer), 168:16
“Sagas from Smalls Lighthouse,” 165:34–37
Saginaw, USS (two-masted brig), 106:36, 112:8–11, 112:9, 125:17, 127:24
Sagres (ex-Santo Andre; ex-Rickmer Rickmers; ex-Max; ex-Flores) (sail training ship; three-masted full-rigged ship, re-rigged as a barque), 2:10, 4:12, 5:20, 12:41, 26:29, 28:40, 29:31, 32:21, 37:33, 45:18–20, 45:18–19, 52:23, 52:23, 77:37, 91:12
Sagres I, 70:21
Sagres II /Sagres III (ex-Albert Leo Schlageter; ex-Gunabara) (three-masted barque), 2:12, 4:11, 5:14, 26:29, 33:28, 38:30, 39:34, 40:11, 52:24, 52:24, 52:46, 55:34, 56:31, 56:31, 58:30, 62:25, 70:23, 94:28, 135:16, 135:16, 135:17, 135:22, 135:22
Saguin, 12:36
“Sail, Martha’s Vineyard,” 84:43
Sail ’89, 50:34
Sail Adventure In Learning, Inc. (SAIL), 53:6
SAIL Amsterdam, 55:34, 56:30–31, 57:35
“Sail Amsterdam 1990,” 56:30–31
Sail and Life Training Society (SALTS), 40:26–27, 79:23
Sail Boston (2017), 159:18–19, 159:23
Sail Cargo Inc., 180:5
Sail Education Association (SEA), 4:17, 4:35
“Sail Martha’s Vineyard,” 63:9
Sail Nauticus, 155:50
“Sail On, Columbus!” 63:12–15
“Sail, Steam, and Stealth at the Independence Seaport Museum,” 170:26–27
“Sail to Steam in the Nineteenth Century,” 134:22
Sail Toronto (1994), 69:34
Sail Training, 44:20, 45:39, 46:36, 47:11, 49:30–31, 57:4, 62:36, 66:6, 84:36–38
on the Bill of Rights, 50:32–33
on the Black Pearl, 50:31
in East Harlem, 57:19
future of, 70:20–23
history, 57:12–14
“A New Bark Built in 1906,” 48:16–17
and the Portuguese experience, 45:18–20
on the Spirit of Massachusetts, 49:30–31
“Square Riggery,” 52:30–33
Western Union, 39:32–33
“Sail Training: A Movement Comes of Age,” 57:15–18
“Sail Training Aboard Spirit of Massachusetts,” 49:30–31
“Sail Training Aboard the Bill of Rights,” 50:32–33
“Sail Training and the Portuguese Experience,” 45:18–20
Sail Training Association (STA), 57:0, 57:11, 70:22–23
Europe 1980, 19:35
Tall Ships Races 1994, 71:40
“Sail Training Association and the Schooners Foundation,” 57:11
Sail Training Association (Britain), 85:54
Sail Training International, 104:40, 138:44, 182:38
sail training maneuvers
box hauling, 52:33
heaving-to, 52:32
recovery of man overboard, 52:32–33
tacking ship, 52:30–31
wearing ship (gybing), 52:31–32
“Sail Training Ship Kruzenshtern and the Legacy of the Laeisz Company,” 89:30–32
“Sail Training: The Next Century,” 70:20–23
“Sail Training, USA,” 4:17
“Sail Training with SALTS,” 40:26–27
Sailability (racing sloop), 92:22
SailCargo, Inc., 164:52
“Sailing Backward into the Azores,” 12:54–55
Sailing Barge Association, 34:22
“Sailing Canal Boat General Butler. And Her Survivors,” 52:12–13
“Sailing Craft of the Caribbees: I,” 30:32–33
“Sailing Craft of the Caribbees: II,” 31:46–48
Sailing Education Association of Sheboygan, 168:46
“Sailing for All: Joe Lee and American’s First Public Community Sailing Program,” 130:20–25
“Sailing in Sea Cloud,” 28:4
“Sailing in the Last Pacific Lumber Schooners with the Likes of Matt Peasley,” 22:18–19
sailing language. See nautical jargon
Sailing Museum (Newport, RI), 178:53
Sailing.org, 168:46
“Sailing Reproductions of Historic Ships,” 17:25–26
Sailing School Vessels Act, 27:14, 30:34, 31:52
“Sailing Shenandoah,” 42:15
“Sailing the Sharkish Seas: The 19th-Century Whaleman’s Experience with the Most Feard Ocean Predators” (McCauley), 164:38–42
“Sailing to Freedom: Maritime Dimensions of the Underground Railroad,” 175:20–23, 180:51
“Sailing with the Last Sailors”
Part I, 35:32–34
Part II, 36:24–26
Sailmaker, Isaac, 12:45
“Sailmaker James Forten,” 116:16–17
“Sailmakers in the Nineteenth Century,” 109:20
“Sailor, Spy, Swashbuckler, Dentist! The Improbable Life of Henry Parr,” 152:22–25
sailor talk. See nautical jargon
sailors
burial at sea, 124:18
cabin boys, 153:44
of the Era of Discovery, 55:14–15
on the Great Lakes, 169:33
impressment of, 150:21–22, 150:23, 153:24
sailor speech, 179:46
shanghaiing, 160:29
stranded in foreign ports, 153:24–31
and tattoos, 127:34
“Sailors and Slaves: USS Constellation and the TransAtlantic Slave Trade,” 132:10–14
Sailors for the Sea, Inc., 129:4, 129:24–25, 130:41, 132:40, 164:11
“Sailors in Distress: The Origins of the First Federal Healthcare Legislation,” 153:24–31
Sailors’ Snug Harbor (SSH), 73:31, 125:22–25, 147:43, 177:10, 178:8
Sailors Union of the Pacific (SUP), 75:36, 121:11
“The Sailor’s Wife Ashore,” 85:42–45
Sailors with disABILITIES, 168:46
construction of, 52:5
rigging, 42:22–23, 52:30–33, 77:34–35, 110:21, 142:40
sailcloth manufacturing, 147:24
sailmakers and sailmaking, 53:6, 109:32–33, 111:10–13, 142:40, 147:24–28
on schooner barges, 29:31
solar-powered, 128:44
Viking, 157:25
Sails Over Ice and Sea––The Life and Times of the Schooner Ernestina-Morrissey (documentary), 163:14, 168:9, 180:4, 180:9
Sail250 New York, 180:4, 180:8, 180:9
Saint Brendan Project, 43:33
Saint Brendan’s Voyage, 75:14
Saint Gaudens, Augustus (sculptor), 40:34
Saint John, SS (renamed USS Antaeus; renamed USS Rescue) (steamship), 119:6
Saint John’s light vessel LV-84, 82:34
Saint Joseph (Gloucester trawler), 82:21
Saint Mary’s College of California, 138:44
Saint Nicholas the Wonder Worker (ex-Pirate) (floating church), 72:4
Saint Patrick (Galway hooker), 38:33
Saint-Memin (artist), 15:56
Saints March (video), 169:37
Salazar, Ken, 130:44
Salem, USS (heavy cruiser), 65:38, 66:26, 72:34, 72:34, 79:37, 111:4, 148:28
Salem Maritime National Historic Park/Site, 58:39, 65:40
Salinas, USS (tanker), 87:36
Salisbury, HMS, 172:32
Salisbury Sound, USS (seaplane tender), 91:22
Salley, George, 39:33
Sallie E. Ludlam (schooner), 50:7
Sallie L, Bramble (bugeye), 49:35, 62:34
Sally (sloop), 81:39
Sally Ride, R/V, 155:52
Salm, Alexander, 5:22
Salmon, Robert (artist), 15:55, 75:26
Salmon, HMS, 110:17
salt horse, 173:39
“Salt Pork and Peasoup,” 7:44–45
Saltonstall, Dudley, 103:15
Salty Dog (catboat), 23:23, 25:45
“A Salty Play in Three Acts: ‘The Watch On the Wheel,’” 44:20–21
Saltzman, Judy (artist), 171:39
Salutation (steam tug/tow), 8:14
Salute (minesweeper), 14:48, 14:48
Salvage Chief, M/V (ex-LSM 380), 162:22–27, 162:22, 162:23, 162:25, 162:26, 162:27, 163:6
Salvage Chief Foundation, 162:27
salvagers, 39:15
Salve Regina University, 149:42
Salvesen, George, 87:41
Sam (ex-Friedrich; renamed Merry) (ketch, formerly topsail schooner), 3:8
Samaria (Cunard liner), 65:20, 74:5
Samoa (sloop), 144:44
Samoylovich, Rudolf, 177:14
Sampson, William T., 86:18, 155:32, 155:32, 155:32, 155:33, 155:36
Sampson, USS (destroyer), 56:45
Samson (Dutch ship), 41:24
Samson (full-rigged ship), 128:15
Samson (steam tugboat), 13:41, 19:11, 25:17, 77:36, 78:16, 78:17, 79:3
Samuel A. Guilds (ex-Captain Collier) (tugboat), 70:39
Samuel B. Roberts (destroyer escort), 71:16, 71:18
Samuel Chase, SS (Liberty ship), 11:21
Samuel D. Ingham, USCGC (Coast Guard cutter), 73:17
“Samuel Eliot Morison: He Stood for Things Too Important for the World to Lose,” 113:26–30
Samuel K. Barlow, SS (Liberty ship), 88:34
Samuel Plimsoll, 20:46
Samuels, Samuel “Bully,” 102:41
“Sailing Backward into the Azores,” 12:54–55
San Agustín, 99:28
San Agustin (Spanish galleon), 179:15
San Andres (Spanish plate ship), 181:14, 181:16
San Antonio (amphibious transport), 116:39, 116:39
San Antonio (Magellan’s ship), 79:11
San Carlos (sailing ship), 61:32, 140:28
San Cristo de Maracaibo (galleon), 177:22
San Diego (Manila galleon), 68:36
San Diego Maritime Museum, 1:31–32, 8:29, 16:37, 21:34, 64:35, 73:38, 75:21, 89:41, 94:37, 98:30, 98:36, 102:38, 107:35. See also Maritime Museum of San Diego
“Treasures of the Manila Galleons,” 99:28–29
San Esteban (Spanish plate ship), 181:14–15, 181:17, 181:19–20, 181:19, 181:20
San Felipe (Spanish galleon), 48:24
San Francisco, CA, 38:9–11
San Francisco Bay, 117:22, 117:22, 168:16–17, 168:16
“San Francisco Bay Felucca Reborn,” 51:14
“San Francisco Bay Tug Boating,” 10:22–23
San Francisco Maritime Museum, 4:19, 4:26–29, 4:30, 5:24, 5:33, 8:29, 142:11, 142:13, 155:10. See also San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park
San Francisco Maritime Museum Association, 8:12
San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park (SFMNHP), 2:31, 63:37, 77:38, 91:25–26, 100:42, 113:38, 115:32, 120:40, 131:39, 142:11, 155:10, 159:39, 159:44. See also San Francisco Maritime Museum
J. Porter Shaw Library, 92:55
“The San Francisco Renaissance,” 8:12–13
San Francisco Ship Model Gallery, 38:29, 38:33
San Giorgio (renamed Ebe) (brigantine), 3:6–7, 3:7
San Jacinto, USN, 126:5
San Jacinto Battleground State Historic Site, 167:52
San Jose, USNS (combat stores ship), 112:18
San Juan, 122:23
San Juan, Puerto Rico, as OpSail 2000 official port, 91:15–16
San Juan Bay, 170:32
San Martín, José de, 164:19
San Martín (Medina Sidonia’s flagship), 48:23, 48:23, 48:25, 48:29
San Mateo (Spanish galleon), 48:24
San Mateo, SS (steam ferryboat), 2:31, 12:36, 22:41, 25:8, 58:38, 64:36–37
San Nicolas (prison ship), 146:19
San Pablo (Spanish flagship), 59:20
San Pedro (shipwrecked galleon), 48:25, 70:39, 138:36–37, 138:37
San Pedro (wrecking scow), 130:17
San Salvador (Cabrillo’s ship) (caravel or galleon), 48:24, 64:35, 109:2, 146:41, 150:51, 152:48, 153:52, 154:6, 154:51, 156:46
launching of, 154:6
San Salvador (aka La Capitana) (replica of Cabrillo’s ship), 60:38, 129:44, 129:44, 135:44, 135:44, 136:6, 141:44, 141:44, 146:41, 148:53, 152:48, 153:52, 154:51, 167:38–40
“San Salvador––Setting a Course for the 16th Century,” 167:38–40
Sanctuary, USS (hospital ship, AH–17), 69:37, 171:26
Sand Key Lighthouse, 39:16
Sandall, Philippa
“Ship’s Cat,” 176:44–45, 177:6
“A Sandbagger for All Seasons,” 36:8–9
Sandel, Nate, 182:8
Sandell, Val (artist), 159:4, 172:35, 172:35
Sanders, Chris, 176:53
Sanders, Harry, 167:24
Sandford, James, 142:25–26
Sands, Benjamin, 120:32–33
Sandwich (French privateer), 81:39
Sandy (log canoe), 32:11
Sandy Hook Pilots, 144:31
Sankaty Head Lighthouse, 62:36, 71:7
Sanli (sponge boat), 68:19
Sans Pareil (Brixham trawler), 30:22
Sansinena (oil tanker), 162:25
Santa (shrimp boat), 8:28
Santa Anna, Antonio López de, 174:29, 174:29
Santa Barbara Maritime Museum, 107:30–32, 107:30–31, 140:43, 142:44, 146:42, 169:54
“Santa Barbara Maritime Museum: Council of American Maritime Museums Profile,” 107:30–32
Santa Caterina do Monte Sinai (carrack), 45:12
Santa Clara, shipwrecks, 153:48
Santa Cruz, Battle of, 79:19–21
Santa Cruz, Marquis of, 48:22
Santa Cruz Islands, Battle of the, 166:50
Santa Margarita, 107:23
Santa Maria (Columbus’s flagship nao), 50:31, 54:21–22, 55:14, 55:17–18, 55:20, 56:16, 59:13, 63:12, 78:11, 149:47
(pictures), 54:21
loss of, 59:14
readying for voyage, 56:20
Santa Maria (Columbus’s nao reproduction), 5:15, 8:17, 10:26, 17:25, 17:26, 17:27, 17:28, 53:11, 57:16, 63:38, 65:39, 70:39, 84:54
(pictures), 17:28, 55:17, 56:17, 56:19, 56:20
Santa Maria, (Columbus’s ship replica in Columbus, Ohio), 58:34
Santa Maria (shrimp boat), 105:38, 125:51
Santa Maria (steamer), 63:22
Santa María de Yciar, 181:14–15, 181:17, 181:19–20
Santa Monica (hulk, former barquentine), 3:9
Santa Rita (freighter), 23:44–45, 26:3
Santa Rosa (liner), 16:21
Santa Rosa (Spanish brig), 139:10
Santa Saturnia (Spanish schooner), 61:32, 61:33
Santamaria, Dawn, 140:48
Santee, USS (aircraft carrier), 71:16
Santee (frigate), 103:16
Santiago (Magellan’s caravel), 61:46, 79:11, 85:16, 88:17
Santiago de Cuba, USS, 176:16
Santiago de Cuba, naval battle of, 31:9, 86:18–19, 100:15, 155:36–37
Santo Andre (ex-Sagres, ex-Flores, ex-Max, ex-Rickmer Rickmers) (barque), 2:10, 4:12, 5:20, 12:41, 26:29, 28:40, 29:31, 32:21, 37:33, 45:18–20, 45:18–19, 52:23, 52:23, 77:37, 91:12
Santo Spirito and Santa Maria di Loreto (galleon), 172:49
São José Paquete d’Africa (slave ship), 156:26–29, 156:26
Sapelo Island Research Foundation, 154:35
Sappho (schooner), 8:27, 78:25
Sappho (whaler), 126:28
Sarah (catboat replica), 121:40, 121:40
Sarah (merchant vessel), 99:30
Sarah Elizabeth Banks (ex-Fire King), 135:6
Sarah Maria, 50:19
Sarah Warren (barque), 14:40
Saratoga, Battle of, 98:11
Saratoga (flagship), 148:21, 148:22, 148:23–24
Saratoga, SS (renamed USNS Mercy, AH-4), 171:23–24, 171:24
Saratoga, USS (aircraft carrier), 94:21, 92:53, 116:37, 116:37, 118:38–39, 137:12, 138:26, 144:35, 178:28, 178:30–31
Saratoga, USS (training ship), 13:6
last voyage of, 19:36–37, 19:36–37
Sarbanes, John, 183:67, 183:69
Sargasso Sea, 180:47
Sargeant, Charles II, 76:39
Sarsi, USS, 18:60
Sassacus (whaleship), 30:9, 51:5
Satellite, USS, 162:19
Satsuma class ships (Japan), 31:9
Saturn (tugboat), 44:35
Saugerties (steamboat), 9:32, 80:27
Saunders, Judson, 10:27, 10:27
Saunders, Richard, 22:39
Sausalito, 150:11
Savage, Augusta, 169:36
Savage, Henry, 157:19
Savage, Teackle, 181:37
Savage-Blue, Karen (artist), 181:40
Savannah (1818, steam/sail hybrid), 9:35, 11:33, 47:6, 62:34, 64:13, 87:14
Savannah (frigate), 103:16
Savannah (nuclear -powered submarine), 98:39
Savannah, NS (nuclear-powered cargo ship), 70:38, 73:4, 84:25, 133:21, 139:9, 141:41
Save America’s Treasures, 136:42, 181:51
Save Falls of Clyde, 160:48
Save Falls of Clyde––International, 166:52
“Save Historic Wrecks,” 50:11
Save Huntington’s Lighthouse Group, 74:36
Save Ontario Shipwrecks (SOS), 52:10, 153:19
“Save Our History” grant, 121:40
Save Our Seaport (SOS), 135:42, 136:5–6, 136:9, 137:5–6, 146:43
Save our Seas Foundation, 4:35
Save Our Ships Campaign, Inc., 73:35
Save the Falls of Clyde—International, 157:47, 164:53
Save the Wapama Committee, 81:4
Savilco (freighter), 44:42
“Saving the American Schooner,” 4:33–35
“Saving the Last New York City Oyster Barge in Fair Haven, Connecticut,” 107:13
“Saving the Nobska,” 52:39
Savoya (barkentine), 9:28
Sawtelle, Jean, 162:33
Sawtelle, Joseph, 162:33
Sawyer, William D.
“Last of the Libertys,” 35:28
Saxe, Herbert K.
“Sailing Canal Boat General Butler. And Her Survivors,” 52:12–13
“Valcour: An Unlikely Naval Encounter,” 53:29–32
“Say Again? A Look at Nautical Jargon,” 162:36–37
Saxifrage (renamed HMS President; sloop), 12:28
Sayle, Charles F. Sr., 11:30, 34:13, 42:14, 49:25–26, 71:39
“New England Schooners,” 49:35
“Schooner Life,” 42:12–14
SC-48 (convoy), 87:36
Scaffidi, Anthony, 163:21
Scammel (US revenue cutter), 122:27, 153:32, 153:35
“‘Scanning the Foaming Deep Before’: John W. Mason, Shipcarver,” 96:22–25
Scanpenn, SS, 52:3
Scarano, Richard, 119:8, 122:13, 128:11, 161:10
Scarborough, 170:5
Scarlett O’Hara (yacht), 154:34
Scepter (Swedish warship), 170:50
Sceptre (yacht), 118:5
Schacht, Harro, 155:26–30, 155:27
Schack, Nina, 41:36
Schaefer, Nancy, 148:18–19
Schaefer, Rudolph J. III “Rudie,” 30:40, 147:7
Schafer, Howard (artist), 97:27
Schantz, Augustus A. “Gus,” 169:30, 169:30, 169:33, 169:34
Scharnhorn (steam yacht), 18:46, 33:32, 33:32
Scharnhorst (German battlecruiser), 12:28, 27:8, 64:47, 97:39
Schatz, Norbert, 134:43
Schaumberg, Ned, 180:55
“‘[T]hey saile incomparably well’––Reconsidering Indigenous Maritime Aggression in Colonial New England,” 178:36–39
Schaut, Jim, 97:13–14
Scheel, Conrad, 22:9
Scheelenkuhlen (tugboat), 25:19
Scheer (German cruiser), 62:15, 66:11
Scheffer, Ulrik, 153:39, 153:39
Schenck (destroyer), 143:27, 143:28
Schenectady (tanker), 11:21
Scherman Zwicker, 32:42
Schertler, Jean
“The Nation Welcomes the Danmark,” 36:22–23
Scheuing, Richard W. “Dick,” 68:6, 69:8, 69:30, 74:6, 74:6, 76:5, 76:5, 76:39, 87:41
“It Looked Like Every Ship in the World Was Coming,” 69:22–23, 69:42
Schlech, Barbara, 14:15
Schlech, Walter F. Jr. “Wally,” 6:1, 35:26, 35:26
Schlecht, Richard (artist), 160:0
Schlemmer, Maximillian, 180:31
Schley, Winfield Scott, 86:19, 121:17, 121:18, 155:32, 155:36–37
Schlossbach, (Lt. Commander), 101:11
Schmidt, Ernie, 76:14
Schmidt, Sue, 90:21
Schneider, Andy “Hollywood,” 90:21
Schneider, Charles, 116:4
Schneider, Michael J.
“The Three Lives of the John W. Brown,” 104:13
Schock, Edson Burr, 182:37
Schock, Edson Irwin, 182:37
Schomburg Center for Black Research and Culture, 169:36
“The Schooner American Eagle,” 49:22
“The Schooner Berta Puts to Sea,” 13:13
Schooner Bluenose Foundation, 140:43
Schooner Bowdoin Association, 40:25, 155:40
Schooner Ernestina Commission, 57:39, 97:6, 106:16, 119:40
“Schooner Ernestina: History Under Sail,” 46:22–24
Schooner Ernestina-Morrissey Association, Inc. (SEMA), 149:44, 151:14, 158:44–45, 159:46, 168:8, 172:42
Schooner Harvey Gamage Foundation, 78:26, 87:5, 93:38
Schooner Incorporated, 7:12, 12:38, 14:44, 15:50, 20:39, 23:22
“Schooner Life,” 42:12–14
“Schooner Lucerne: Lessons From a Great Lakes Shipwreck,” 106:6–9
“Schooner Roseway: Sailing a New Course in the 21st Century,” 163:22–27
Schooner School, 23:22
“Schooner Sherman Zwicker; Making the Transition from Sail to Power on the Grand Banks,” 150:36–40
“Schooner Struck: Sail Training on the Malcolm Miller,” 45:40–43
“Schooner Sultana: Building an 19th Century Reproduction for the 21st Century,” 107:8–10
Schooner Virginia Project, 101:34, 101:36
“Schooner Wawona,” 106:18
“The Schooner Yacht Coronet,” 89:19–21
schooners, 13:0, 49:13, 89:34–35, 154:45
Biloxi, 45:33
clipper, 49:11
fore-and-aft vs. square rigged, 1:8–9, 4:5
Fredonia-model, 49:15, 49:30–31
Gloucester, 6:4–6, 49:11–12, 78:14–15
Grand Banks fishing, 150:36–40
Indian-headers, 49:15
lumber, 22:18–19
New England, 49:35
Pacific steam, 83:40–42, 117:28
prairie, 103:35
sail-assisted schooner barge, 29:31
“Schooners, Schooners Everywhere,” 92:12–14
Schooners Foundation, 38:36, 38:38, 44:20, 57:11
“Schooners of the Northwest,” 72:28–29
“Schooners Old and New,” 11:30
Schoonmaker, James Marinus II “Ding,” 168:4, 168:11–12, 168:11, 168:12, 169:9, 169:9
Schoonmaker, Treecie, 168:12, 169:9, 169:9
Schoonmaker Center, 168:11
Schorpioen (ironclad ramship), 2:33, 12:27, 77:41
Schouten, Willem, 82:6–7
Schrader, Mark, 129:25, 129:25
Schrader, Stephanie
“Beyond the Light: Identity and Place in 19th-Century Danish Art,” 182:46–48
Schrantz, Ladd, 154:36
Schreiner, Richard, 50:23
Schuenemann, Herman, 46:40–41, 113:22, 169:46, 169:46
Schulschiff Deutschland (full-rigged ship), 2:12
Schulte, Matthew, 154:8, 154:8
Schultz, Karl L., 179:54
Schumacher, E. G. (artist), 44:26–27
Schuman, Hans, 29:23
Schumer, Charles “Chuck,” 170:18, 172:9, 180:17
Schuster, Shanna, 173:42
Schutt, (Captain), 61:12
Schuyler, George L., 97:8, 97:9, 143:30–32
Schuyler, Philip, 103:13, 143:30
Schuyler, Robert, 143:30–32
Schwab, Charles, 158:30, 169:13
Schwanfelder, Evan, 182:57
Schwartz, George, 172:6
Schwemmer, Robert V., 109:4, 109:4
“Oregon’s Mystery Shipwreck—Uncovering Coos Bay’s Historic Past,” 124:11–13
Scibinico, Mark, 160:20, 160:21–22
Scoresby, William, 156:32, 156:33
Scorpion (Foxtrot-class submarine), 80:36
Scorpion (naval cutter), 147:19, 147:20, 147:21
Scotch Cap (tugboat), 31:57
Scotia (paddler), 90:3
Scott, Andrew, 111:13
Scott, Arden (artist), 122:28–31, 122:29, 128:4
Scott, Gabe, 111:7
Scott, H. F. Morin, 39:33, 53:43
“Aboard a ‘Handy Little Yacht,’”, 56:29
“Jolie Brise Wins TransAtlantic Race,” 95:34
“The Loss of the Brig Maria Assumpta,” 85:49–50
“A New Bark Built in 1906,” 48:16–17
“Rigging a Sail Training Ship for the Indian Navy,” 77:34–35
“Square Riggery,” 52:30–33
Scott, Henry (artist), 29:38
Scott, James Hutchinson, 157:19
Scott, Meredith A., “Saving the Nobska,” 52:39
Scott, Nicole, 63:8, 66:6, 84:35
Scott, Peter, 52:40
Scott, Richard J.
“Ireland’s Last Merchant Sailing Ship,” 60:46–47
Scott, Robert Falcon, 151:11, 172:33, 173:30, 175:43
Discovery expedition, 142:30, 173:32, 173:32
Terra Nova expedition, 142:30–31
Scott, Samuel, 12:45
“To the Ends of the Earth: Painting the Polar Landscape,” 125:28–33
Scott, Winfield, 130:14, 137:11, 158:34
Scott Kennedy Gallery, 60:32
Scott Polar Research Institute, 22:36
Scottish Maritime Museum, 176:55
Scottish Maritime Museum Trust, 31:53
Scott’s Anaconda Plan, 158:34
Scourge, USS (schooner), 8:24, 19:38, 22:26, 22:37–38, 28:34, 138:23
Scoville, Dan, 173:24–25, 173:24
scows, melon (watermelon), 4:23
scrimshaw, 76:28, 77:24–25, 87:26, 87:26, 91:21, 102:23, 128:19, 135:42, 151:42, 166:8, 172:20
scrimshaw canes, 31:58
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, 25:4, 155:52
Scripps Marine Laboratory, 25:4
SCUBA diving, 174:46
sculptors, 162:38–39
Scythia (Cunard liner), 65:20
“S • O • S,” 134:26–29
Sea Alarm (ex-Empire Ash; ex-Flying Fulmar) (tugboat), 25:18
“S.E.A. and the History of Ocean Plastic Research,” 182:30–35
sea animals
abalone, 177:41–43
albatross, 180:31–32
barnacles, 116:34–35, 159:34, 160:47
birds, 180:30–33
blue marlins, 148:48–49
Caribbean monk seals, 137:32–33
Chinese sturgeon, 48:38
Chinook salmon, 139:36–37
cowry snails, 183:58–60
cyamids, 160:46–47
dinoflagellates, 125:39
dolphin fish (mahi mahi), 119:24–25, 169:48
dusky dolphins, 182:42–44
electric ray, 168:44–45, 168:45
flying fish, 132:36–37, 169:48
Galapagos tortoise, 131:32–33
giant squid, 166:48–49
grampus (Risso’s dolphin), 130:36–37
Great Frigate Bird, 180:31
green turtle, 180:48–49
halibut, 128:40
horseshoe crabs, 143:36–37
Juan Fernández spiny lobster, 134:38–39
sharks, 147:38–39
killer whales, 123:37
krill, 127:37
leopard electric ray, 168:44–45, 168:45
lobsters, 126:38–39, 155:42–43
shrimp, 156:42–43
Maldives tuna, 183:58–60
marlins, 148:48–49
New Zealand sea lion, 170:48–49, 170:48–49
oarfish, 150:48–49
octopus, 174:44–45
octopus squid, 157:36–37
orcas, 178:48–50
Paper Nautilus, 164:46–47
pilot fish, 163:44–45
Portuguese Man-of-War, 122:40
pyrosomes, 171:36–37
sea cows, 140:34–35
sea crawfish, 134:38–39
sea cucumbers, 117:33
sea jellies, 122:30
sea lions, 159:36–37
sea monsters, 150:24–27
sea otters, 145:40–41
sea snakes, 124:43
sharks, 147:38–39, 164:38–42, 165:5–6
ship “worm” clams, 152:46–47
silver king (Giant Tarpon), 172:46–47, 172:46–47
sperm whales, 123:37, 128:16–20, 129:6
Steller’s sea cow, 140:34–35
swordfish, 153:46–47, 154:42–43
teredo worms (shipworms, teredo navalis), 152:46–47, 159:34, 181:20
walrus, 175:40–42
white shrimp, 156:43
white sturgeon, 146:35–37
See also whales
sea birds
blue-eyed shags, 121:36
brown pelicans, 155:44–45
flightless cormorant, 142:42–43
frigatebirds, 129:28–29
goney birds, 136:36–37
great auks, 151:40–41
parrots, 133:40–41
spectacled cormorant, 141:36–37
See also guano
Sea Bob (ex-Governor Stone) (two-masted Gulf cargo schooner), 165:32
“Sea Canary,” 158:38–40
sea chanteys, 4:42, 5:34, 29:20, 48:39, 51:33, 88:46–47, 145:34, 152:31, 172:45, 174:53–54, 179:55, 181:6
Arab, 89:17
“Dead Horse Halyard Shanty,” 173:37, 173:37
“Golden Vanity,” 77:10–2, 78:2–3
of the Great Lakes, 47:26–27
See also music, maritime
sea clocks, 153:13–14, 153:13–14
Sea Cloud (cruise ship), 50:34, 59:37
Sea Cloud II, 155:6
Sea Cloud (square-rigger), 28:4, 53:42, 57:29, 72:10, 117:29, 178:55
model, 73:18
Sea Cloud (yacht) (ex-Hussar V; ex-Patria; ex-Angelita; ex-Antarna), 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, 165:24
Sea Cloud Cruises (SCC), 178:55, 178:55
Sea Cloud II (square-rigged sailing vessel), 178:55
Sea Cloud Spirit (square-rigged sailing vessel), 178:55
“Sea Cloud’s Nine Lives,” 131:16–20
Sea Comber (trawler), 57:30
sea cows, 140:34–35
sea crawfish, 134:38–39
sea cucumbers, 117:33
Sea Day, 4:42
Sea Education Association (SEA), 12:37, 24:29, 46:36, 47:11, 48:31, 69:41, 70:6, 78:4, 80:38–39, 12:37, 152:18, 164:16, 165:9, 169:24, 169:25, 172:43, 174:54–55, 182:31–32, 182:34, 183:56, 183:56
Sea Education Program, 105:38
Sea Flower, 103:26
Sea Foam, 72:0
Sea Fox (tugbotat), 10:23, 10:23
Sea Goddess (Cunard liner), 95:13
“Sea History & the Cause We Serve,” 93:6–7
“Sea History for Kids”
“For I Knew a Ship from Stem to stern,” 181:42
“Sea History in a Brooklyn Cemetery,” 144:28–33
Sea History magazine, 93:6–7, 155:4, 155:13–14
35th anniversary, 125:20–21
50th anniversary, 179:4
new website, 164:4–5
searchable index, 164:4
Sea History Press, 45:35
Sea History Today, 180:9
Sea History’s Guide to Maritime Programs and Cultural Sites––New York Region, 164:4
sea jellies, 122:40
sea language. See nautical jargon
“Sea Letter: Aboard the US Coast Guard Bark Eagle at Sea, June 1980,” 18:8–9
Sea Lion, 42:22–23, 42:22–23, 45:32
Sea Lion (16th century merchant ship replica), 31:58, 37:4, 37:38, 63:36
sea lions, 159:36–37
sea monsters, 150:24–27
Sea Museums Council, 4:1, 125:20, 155:13
“Sea Music at Mystic,” 51:33
Sea Nymph (ex-Molly; now Syrene; brigantine), 8:26, 153:39–40, 159:40
sea otters, 145:40–41
“The Sea People of Exeter,” 33:10–11, 100:34–35
“Sea Power as Soft Power: American Merchant Ships and Post-War Refugees,” 177:24–29
sea rogues, 127:36
Sea Rover (tugboat), 10:23, 10:23
Sea Serpent (clipper ship), 130:17
sea serpents, oarfish, 150:48–49
Sea Shadow (experimental ship), 104:36
sea shanties. See sea chanteys
sea snakes, 124:43
sea songs. See sea chanteys
Sea Sparkle, 125:39
Sea Trek Foundation, 95:36, 95:38
Sea Venture (Jamestown ship), 95:31
Sea Witch (clipper ship), 12:30, 13:19–21, 13:31, 14:7, 14:8, 14:18, 15:4, 30:23, 64:17, 88:11, 89:3, 104:32, 104:33, 105:3, 145:5, 156:8, 174:38, 180:10
(pictures), 13:19, 13:20, 88:24, 104:33, 145:5, 163:47, 174:38
builder’s half-model, 13:21
compared to Great American II, 104:35
sail plan, 13:20
Sea Witch (clipper ship replica), 38:33, 53:42, 163:47
Sea Witch (tugboat), 10:23, 10:23
Sea Wolf (Caribbean monk seal), 137:32–33
Sea Wolf (ex-Siele; renamed Aquamarine), 66:5
Sea Wolf (tugboat), 20:46
“The Sea World of Christopher Blossom,” 82:26–28
Seabird (shipwreck), 56:34–35
Seabird (steamer), 68:14
Seabourn Legend (cruise liner), 80:22
Seabourn liners (Cunard), 95:13
Seabourn Spirit (luxury cruise ship), 127:20
SeaBritain 2005, 109:34
Seaconnet (renamed Welles) (Gloucesterman), 42:12
SEACOR Marine, 161:8
Seafarers International Union, 11:2
seafaring
American, 86:9–13, 87:11–16, 89:9–10, 89:12, 103:8–11
Arabian, 89:14–17
in Boston, MA, 86:10–11
British, 75:13–14, 76:8–10, 80:8–11, 85:8–13, 86:8–9, 89:10, 89:12
British (under James Cook), 83:11–18
Byzantine, 73:12
Dutch, 82:6–9
Greek merchant marine, 35:4
history of, 90:9–10. See also The Cape Horn Road
Northern European, 76:10–11
Polynesian, 29:14–15, 84:11–15
Portuguese, 77:15–17, 78:3, 81:13
Roman, 75:12–13
Spanish, 79:8–11, 79:33, 81:13
Venetian, 75:12–13
Seafaring Education and Maritime Archaeological Heritage Program (Salem State University), 169:50
“Seafaring Men I Have Known,” 2:29–30
Seahorse (frigate), 104:29
Seahorse (Nelson’s ship), 79:19
Sea-Land Comet, M/V, 121:39
Sea-Land container ships, 16:21, 140:12–13
SL-7, 12:30–31, 13:6, 16:21, 18:45, 18:45, 65:33
Sea-Land Galloway (SL-7), 12:31, 18:45
Sea-Land McClean (SL-7), 18:45
Sea-Land Trade (SL-7), 12:30–31, 13:6, 16:21, 18:45, 18:45, 65:33
“A Seaman Remembers South Street 100 Years Ago,” 28:17–19
Seaman’s Act of 1915, 169:32
Seaman’s Bank Collection, 56:35, 164:11
Seamen’s Act, 121:13
Seamen’s Bank for Savings, 60:32
Seamen’s Church Institute of New York and New Jersey (SCI), 38:35, 63:39, 69:32, 71:35, 99:13, 121:39, 144:24
Navigation and Marine Engineering School, 144:24–27
Seamen’s Monument (Evergreens Cemetery), 144:29
Seamen’s Recognition Day, 35:4, 35:12–13, 36:3
“Seamen’s Recognition Day,” 35:12–13
SEAmester, 107:34, 115:34, 127:41
Seaplane Harbor, 169:4
Seaport Experience, 7:31
“Discovering Bermuda’s Maritime History,” 95:29
“From Out of the Past: Under Sail in the Caribbean,” 76:20
“Pack Your Seabag and Come Along!” 59:37
Exploring Maritime Sydney, 67:31–33
maritime Britain by Train, 48:10–11
maritime travel in the Netherlands, 63:30–31
New York City, 47:32–33
passenger shipping, 45:45
Provincetown (Cape Cod), 46:32–33
Saybrook, Connecticut, 44:9
waterside inns, 43:35
Of Whaleships and Taverns, 60:34
Seaport Museum, 13:12, 136:8–9, 147:7
Search and Rescue Optimal Planning System (SAROPS), 178:22
“The Search for Captain Healy’s Cutter Bear,” 178:20–24
“The Search for Longitude and the Prime Meridian,” 66:18–21
“The Search for the Bonhomme Richard,” 12:25–26
“The Search for the Etruscan Wreck of Giglio Island,” 67:16–20
“Search for the Golden Dolphin” (interactive computer adventure), 90:2
“The Search for the Slaveship Clotilda,” 168:48–49
“The Search for the Spirit,” 85:36–39
“The Search for the Tall Ships,” 52:46–47
SEARCH, Inc., 164:55, 168:48, 179:38, 179:52–53, 179:52
Searchable Sea Literature, 180:55
“Searching for Amundsen: Louise Arner Boyd aboard the Hobby,” 177:12–17
Sears, Henry, 116:22
“Seasoned and Weather-stained: How the Charles W. Morgan Lives at Age 150,” 60:10–12
Seaton, W. B., 35:13
Seatrain Texas, SS, 65:15
Seattle, USS (cruiser), 161:20, 171:23
Seaver, Jeff (artist), 149:26
Seavey, Charles
“Discovering Sea History in the Detroit Publishing Co. Collection,” 172:22–29
“Essex Shipbuilding Museum: An experiment on the ways,” 183:30–31
“The Launch of Maine’s First Ship,” 180:44–45
Seawanhaka (commuter steamer), 17:37, 144:32
Seaward (periauger yacht), 110:25, 111:3
Sebastian, James, 63:23
Sebbe Als (Viking ship replica), 4:15–16, 4:15, 5:17, 8:17, 17:28
“The Second Captain: Silas Talbot of USS Constitution,” 81:37–39
Second Seminole War, 152:32–34
Sedov, Oleg, 89:31
Sedov (ex-Magdalene Vinnen; ex-Kommodore Johnsen) (sail training four-masted barque), 2:10, 2:13, 18:61, 26:29–30, 26:29, 52:3, 55:34, 56:29, 56:31, 62:0, 62:28, 63:35, 69:5, 70:23, 75:16, 75:17, 80:3
Seeadler (ex-Pass of Balmaha) (full-rigged ship), 86:4
Seeandbee (Great Lakes steamship), 44:36, 169:32
Seeburg, Gustav, 35:15
Seefalke (tugboat), 2:31, 25:19
Seeger, Pete, 7:11–12, 37:11, 125:21, 136:8, 147:6–7, 147:6, 154:48, 157:45, 175:8
letters from, 7:8, 87:2, 100:29
Seeger, Toshi, 157:45
Seele, Sara Lena, 134:43
Seguin (wooden towboat/tugboat), 1:33, 4:35, 5:28, 6:3, 8:14, 8:16, 11:30, 18:42, 25:26–27, 25:18, 25:27
“Seguin: She Towed the Henry B. Hyde, the Shenandoah and Our Own Kaiulani to Sea—and Outlived Them All,” 25:26–27
Segwun (lake steamboat), 5:30
Seifert, Betty, 35:7
Seine (British ship), 113:18
Sejaz Feliz (fishing schooner), 12:40, 12:40
Sekstan (barquentine), 3:9
Sekulich, Daniel
“New Libertalia: A Pirate Dream Comes True,” 127:18–21
Seldon, William A. (artist), 176:40
Selfridge, USS (DD-357), 175:32
Seligman, Peter, 157:48, 158:9, 159:8
Seligmann, Philip A., 158:9–10, 157:48, 148;9
Selis (Norwegian antisubmarine trawler), 101:11
Sellers, Steve, 133:44, 133:44
Selma Borries (schooner; renamed De Tukker), 178:52
Seminole (catboat), 171:33
Seminole (Down Easter), 25:37, 30:13
Seminole, USS, 162:19
Semler, Robert C. (artist), 108:36, 160:0
Semmes, James, 167:24
Semmes, USS (destroyer), 68:10, 68:12
Senateur Duhamel, HMS (trawler), 68:10, 68:10, 68:12
Senator (sidewheel steamer), 11:38
Senator John Warner Maritime Heritage Center, 181:48–49
Senator Lodge (Fredonia schooner), 49:15
Seneca, USCG cutter, 139:34, 169:44
sengokubune (Japanese junk), 43:31
Senna, Albertino J., 8:20
Senna, Joseph, 8:20
Sequoia (presidential yacht), 48:31, 161:54, 169:53–54, 169:53
Sequoia (schooner), 22:12
Serapis, HMS (British frigate), 11:31, 12:26, 15:50, 45:26, 86:9, 115:8–10, 115:8, 115:11, 115:11, 115:22
Serçe Liman wreck, 39:8, 39:9, 39:10
Serena (motor cruiser), 168:10
Serena (steamer), 13:39
Sergeant Floyd (tugboat), 25:18
Serpa Pinto (schooner), 9:28
Serres, Dominic (artist), 98:0
Servant, Richard, 181:37
Servia (steel ship), clipper card, 40:28
Şetan Deresi wreck, 39:9, 68:20
Seute Deern (ex-Pieter A. Koertz, ex-Bandi; ex-Elizabeth Bandi) (barque), 2:14, 2:31, 4:7, 4:34, 4:34, 58:5, 77:37
Seven Seas, 180:47
Seven Seas (ex-Abraham Rydberg; ex–Hawaiian Isles) (four-masted barque), 32:28, 41:2, 93:31, 114:12, 123:14–15, 123:14, 123:15, 124:6
Seven Seas Gallery, 112:35
Seven Seas Spray (British freighter), 54:31
Seventh Virginia re-enactment group, 152:6
Severin, Tim, 18:42, 21:29, 66:25–26, 69:37
Severn, HMS, 140:15
Severn Collier (motor barge), 32:41
Severson, John (artist), 175:25, 175:28
Sewall, Arthur, 9:20, 9:22, 9:22, 11:26
Sewall, Camilla Ashe, 11:26
Sewall, Edward Robinson, 121:11
Sewall, Emma Kaiulani, 11:26
Sewall, Harold Marsh, 11:26, 91:24, 142:10
Sewall, Joseph, 121:12
Seward, William H., 156:23
Sewell, Samuel, 153:29–30
sextants, 153:14–15
Seymour, Edward H., 125:44–45
Seymour, George, 38:12
Seymour, Teddy, 178:48–51
Seys, John, 132:13
Sgt. George D. Keathley, USAT (coastal transport), 112:16
Shabab Oman (also Youth of Oman; ex-Captain Scott) (three-masted barquentine), 3:6, 10:29, 15:50, 40:11, 62:25, 80:17
Shackleton, Ernest, 177:14
Endurance expedition, 142:31–32, 173:32, 173:32, 179:41–43, 180:6
Nimrod expedition, 142:30, 174:54
Shackleton, Keith (artist), 35:38
Shackleton’s Gap, 142:33
Shade, Penn, 167:28
Shadow (renamed Bobby) (sandbagger), 4:21, 36:8–9, 36:8–9, 38:32, 51:39
Shadow (Gloucester schooner), 49:22
Shadow (sloop), 116:21, 180:40
“Shadow Voyage—Escape of German Liner SS Bremen,” 110:14–17
Shafter, William Rufus, 86:18–19, 155:33
Shah (iron steam frigate), 94:15–16, 94:19
Shakamaxon, 30:9
Shakespeare (packet), 89:10
Shaklee, Kim (artist), 133:32, 153:42, 178:18
shallop (replica of John Smith’s vessel), 114:36, 114:36, 118:29–30
Shamrock (British brig), 139:10, 139:10, 151:24
Shamrock (Gloucester fishing schooner), 178:19
Shamrock (ex-Havana; ex-Comfort; ex-Yucatán; ex-Agwileon), 171:23–25, 171:23–24
Shamrock (menhaden boat), 98:17
Shamrock (west country barge), 3:30
Shamrock (yacht), 98:24, 122:21, 122:22, 158:24, 164:26
Shamrock II, 98:24
Shamrock III (schooner), 98:24, 158:24
Shamrock IV, 98:24
Shamrock V (J-class yacht), 40:11, 45:34, 50:35, 53:11, 65:36, 66:31, 72:9, 72:9, 76:37, 98:24, 99:36, 164:25
“Shamrock V’s Wild Voyage Home,” 66:31
Shanghai, China, 18:32–34
Shanghai River, 65:0
shanghaiing, 160:29
Shanker, Albert, 99:13
Shannon (Gloucester schooner), 6:6
Shannon, HMS (frigate), 85:0, 85:36, 85:37, 107:14, 114:28–29, 114:29, 114:30, 115:3, 136:13, 136:13, 136:14
Shannon, John, 85:49
Shannon, Richard T. “Red,” 55:31, 72:10, 73:18, 155:6, 155:6
shanty See sea chanteys
shantyboats, 51:15
Shaplen, Robert, 48:38
Shark (Continental row galley), 98:12, 98:13
Shark (fishtug), 75:33
sharks, 147:38–39, 164:41, 165:5–6, 180:46
basking, 164:41
blue, 164:39
great white, 164:40, 164:41, 180:46, , 180:46
hammerhead, 164:41
mako, 164:38
and whaleships, 164:38–42
Sharon (whaleship), 105:15–17
Sharon Virginia (sail-assisted cargo schooner), 25:45
Sharp, B. Karl, 171:33, 171:33, 171:34
Sharp, Benjamin, 171:33, 171:34
Sharp, Jim, 40:25, 49:16, 95:8, 121:32, 121:33, 146:10, 146:13, 146:13, 155:40, 163:23
Sharp, Peter H., 122:13
sharpshooters, 49:14, 49:14, 49:15
Shasha, Mark, 169:38
Shaw, Daniel, 98:13
Shaw, USS (DD 68), 100:2–3
“‘She Floats!’ The Launch of the Charles W. Morgan,” 144:38–40
Shearer, David, 182:50
Shears, John, 179:41
Sheffield (whaleship), 168:20
Sheffield, HMS (cruiser), 24:3, 27:8, 30:8, 31:2
Sheldon Jackson, SS (Liberty ship), 65:5
Shell Castle Island, 151:22–25
Shellback Association, 72:47
Shelley, Percy Bysshe, 115:27, 115:27
Shelley Foss (tugboat), 176:43
Shenandoah (schooner), 180:23
Shenandoah (topsail schooner replica), 3:0, 3:9, 4:17, 4:18, 7:11, 8:18, 12:38, 17:28, 38:30, 20:39, 42:15, 42:15, 42:25, 54:37, 63:9, 122:10, 177:49
Shenandoah, CSS, 67:32, 74:21, 120:29, 138:30, 174:23
Shepard, Richard F., 35:12, 41:17
Sheperton (barque), 15:23
Shepherd King (schooner), 49:25, 183:30
Sherborne, MV (freighter), 167:15
Sherburne, USS (now USNS Range Sentinel) (troop ship), 71:37
Sheridan, Robert E., 9:10–12
Sheridan, USAT, 161:19
Sherman, Helen Wilson, 171:35
Sherman, William T., 156:24–25, 166:35, 170:34
Sherman tanks, 166:31
Sherman, USAT, 161:19
Sherman Zwicker (Grand Banks fishing schooner), 5:28, 6:6, 24:29, 150:36–40, 150:36–40, 151:6, 151:6, 151:47, 169:52–53, 169:53
“She’s Not a Model T!” 51:13
Shetlander (ex-Reaper) (herring drifter), 161:53–54, 161:54
Shieldhall, SS (sludge disposal ship), 48:33, 77:36
Shields, J.E., 22:12
Shilstone, Arthur (artist), 148:42
Shinnecock Lighthouse, 138:19
Shintoku Maru (motorship, former four-masted barquentine), 3:9
Ship Archaeology Museum (Ketelhaven), 63:30
“The Ship as a Museum,” 46:12–15
“The Ship Comes First!” 36:7
“A Ship Fiddler’s Tale,” 145:34–37
“A Ship in the Cellar,” 14:28
“‘The Ship Is Now Real and Beautiful,” 26:18–23
ship models. See model ships
ship names, 30:8–10
Danish, 30:10
German, 30:10
Norwegian, 30:10
“The Ship on the Roof of the World: The Yavari Project,” 41:6–8
“Ship Portraits: 150 Years of Ship’s China,” 64:32–33
Ship Press Chappel, 28:32
“The Ship Savers,” 15:13–14
“The Ship Savers: A Report on the Ship Trust Movement,” 19:17
“The Ship That Built a City,” 35:7–8
“The Ship That Ran Against Congress,” 10:41–43
“A Ship to Sail New Trade and Education Routes,” 54:13
Ship Trust, 3:3
Ship Trust Committee, 13:23–25, 13:45, 14:32, 28:29
Ship Trust of New York, 182:39
ship tunnel, 159:44
ship “worm” clams, 152:46–47
“A Ship, Youth, and the Sea: Black Pearl’s Role in American Sail Training,” 182:36–39
shipbuilding, 10:3, 174:20–25. See also Mystic Seaport; shipyards; shipwrights
along Rondout, 37:14–15
in Baltimore, 88:30–31
in Canada, 6:4–5
on the Connecticut River, 36:12–16
using copper sheathing, 132:22, 132:23, 132:26, 159:16–17, 159:34
design, 122:38
dry dock, 160:45
in Essex, Massachusetts, 49:14, 51:5, 159:19–20, 159:20, 159:22
history of, 40:6–7
iron vs. steel ships, 133:34–37, 134:5, 135:6
lignum vitae, 119:17, 119:22, 121:6
live oak trees, 114:38, 119:22
in Maine, 23:21
medieval, 48:14–15
Norwegian, 157:22–25
in Philadelphia, 84:23–24, 89:12
replicas of ship’s boats and dugout canoes, 61:19
during WWI, 158:18–32
shipcarving, 81:27–29
Shipcraft Guild, 10:29
ShipIndex.org, 164:4, 164:5, 170:28
Shipley, Ian, 90:21
Shipowner’s Limitation of Liability Act, 179:–33–36
Shipping Act of 1916, 169:13
ships
ancient, 72:13–15
ballast (iron bars), 156:27, 156:28
ballast (stones), 157:24, 157:25
barquentines, 122:7
vs. boats, 154:45
Cape Horn sailing ships, 155:19–20
cargo vessels, 28:3
cartel ships, 175:17
china depicting, 64:32–33
Christmas tree ships, 46:40–41, 113:22
cigar ships, 53:43
clipper ships, 12:30–31, 78:2, 88:9–15, 136:26, 154:40
containerships, 12:30–31, 13:6, 16:21, 18:45, 18:45, 65:33, 140:12–13
cutters, 139:34
design of, 122:38
designation of, 155:5
dogs aboard, 110:22
dory trawlers, 49:14, 57:17, 140:46
fjordsteamers, 64:46–47
flag-of-convenience, 77:9
Flying-P Liners, 89:30, 156:17, 156:18, 159:28–29
Greek, 70:39, 72:14–15, 73:10, 73:13
guns on, 156:21
hermaphrodite brigs, 63:5
Iberian caravels, 40:7
kraweel replica, 103:37
land ships, 103:35
Legacy ships, 104:2–3
lift vessels, 159:29
masts, 80:3
Mesopotamian, 72:13–14
Minoan, 72:14–15
names of sails, 71:10–12, 155:18–21
oyster dredges, 48:7–8
Persian, 73:10
pigs aboard, 120:24
postage stamps depicting, 59:30–31
rigging, 42:22–23, 77:34–35, 142:40
runaway vessels, 77:9
sail construction, 52:5
ships of the line, 31:8
snouw (snaauw), 177:36
square riggers vs. fore-and-aft schooners, 1:8–9, 4:5
tacking, 53:5
tonnage, gross vs. net, 58:10
triremes, 33:14, 33:32, 34:37, 37:36
See also battleships; boats; destroyers; frigates; model ships; sails; shipwrecks; steamships; submarines; whaleships
“Ships Afire At Sea,” 150:28–32
ship’s boys, 153:44
“Ships of Comfort and Mercy,” 171:22–27
“The Ships of James Edward Buttersworth,” 70:24–26
“The Ships of John Paul Jones,” 12:17–21
“The Ships of San Francisco: Ships Built the City, and Their Heritage Challenges the City Today,” 38:9–11
“Ships of the Irish Diaspora”
“The Dunbrody and the Spirit of Ireland,” 88:21–23
“The Jeanie Johnston: A Dream Rebuilt,” 88:20
“Ships of the San Francisco Gold Rush,” 90:34–35
Ships of the Sea Museum, 83:48
“Ships on the Shore,” research blog, 136:44
ship’s rigger, 142:41
ship’s ropes, 122:8
“The Ships That Brought Us So Far,” 1:34
Ships to be Recycled in the States (STORIS) Act, 149:8, 158:15
ships-in-bottles, 73:5
shipwreck tagging and archaeological management program (STAMP), 182:57
shipwrecks, 88:38, 111:21, 120:40, 146:40–41, 148:53, 158:47–48, 179:51–52, 179:52
1700s schooner, 22:39–40
Acadia (composite-built steamer), 60:39
Adirondack, USS (wwarship), 76:34–35
in the Aegean, 68:18–22
Alabama (Civil War raider), 68:14
Aland Islands, 149:42
America (steel steamer), 47:31
ancient Greek cargo ship, 67:36
in Antalya, 167:48
Anthony Wayne (side-wheeler), 120:43
Antikythera, 156:51–53
Atlanta (schooner-barge), 179:51
on the Australian coast, 16:19–20
in Baja California, 99:28–29
Barge 129 (whaleback vessel), 181:52, 181:52
Basque galleon, 109:34
bateaux, 70:39
Bay State, 153:54
Bear (USRC), 178:20–24
Birkenhead, 57:39
in the Black Sea, 159:40–41
Bodekull, 160:53–54
Breadalbane, 22:26
Britannic, 77:40
Brother Jonathan, 63:20, 90:39
Cairo, USS, 22:41
on Cape Cod, 147:10–11, 147:13
Celt, 166:38
Central America (paddlewheeler), 52:11, 64:26–30, 65:37, 68:16
Cerberus, HMVS (ironclad), 73:36
in the Channel Islands, 78:19–21
Channel wreck, 39:19
City of Hawkinsville (shipwrecked paddlewheeler), 70:39, 138:38
Clotilda (slaveship), 168:48–49, 171:40, 179:52–53
at Coos Bay, 124:11–13
Copenhagen, SS (British steamship), 70:39
Cornelia B. Windiate (three-masted schooner), 121:35
Croatan wreck, 74:36
Cromwellian warship, 81:45
CSS Alabama, 116:24
Culloden, HMS, 8:4, 79:19, 81:38
as cultural resources, 52:8–9
Cumberland, USS (Civil war shipwreck), 9:10, 68:14, 68:33, 72:36, 132:10
debate over salvage laws, 52:8–10
Denbigh, 85:54
Diana, 72:36
Dixie Arrow (oil tanker), 179:16
E. B. Allen, 179:14
in the East River, 106:37
El Cazador (Spanish ship), 68:36
El Faro, 153:54–55
Endeavour (Cook’s ship), 89:41, 102:38
Endurance (Shackleton’s ship), 179:41–43
Erebus, HMS, 149:42, 163:46, 163:46, 166:26–27, 166:26
in ErieQuest, 81:45
Etruria (steel freighter), 136:46
Exmouth, HMS, 100:44
Florida (wooden steamboat), 73:37
Florida, CSS, 68:14, 68:33, 72:36
Florida, USS, 72:36
in the Florida Keys, 39:19
in Florida’s underwater archaeological preserves, 70:39
Forward, 70:39
in the Fourni archipelago, 153:48
at French Frigate Shoals, 125:0
Gallinipper (schooner), 177:47
Gelidonya excavation, 8:24, 39:8, 39:10, 68:19, 167:48
General Butler (sailing canalboat), 52:12–13, 121:42, 179:49
German U-boat, 70:39–40
Gledstanes (whaler), 125:14, 125:17, 127:22–26
Glenlyon, 47:30
Gloucester (1654 warship), 180:52
of the Golden Gate, 33:35
Goldenhorn, 58:38
Grace Dieu, 153:48
in the Gulf of Mexico, 108:38–39, 153:20–21
H. L. Hunley, 75:33
Hamilton, USS (War of 1812 schooner), 22:26, 28:34
in the Hawaiian Islands (Northwestern), 125:0
Helena, USS, 166:50
Hermes (whaler), 125:16
Hiei (Japanese battleship), 166:50
Home (1843; Wisconsin shipwreck), 177:47
Hornet, USS (aircraft carrier), 166:50
Indianapolis, USS, 161:52, 163:65
in Indonesia, 158:47–48
Industry (whaler), 179:38–40, 179:39
Invincible, HMS, 170:51–52, 170:52, 179:46
Ironton, 183:23–26, 183:23, 183:27–28, 183:28
Islas de Aves, 91:38
of Isle Royale, 47:30–31
Jennie & Annie, 171:43, 171:43
Joffre (fishing vessel), 127:45
John Barry (Liberty ship), 52:11
Kas wreck, 46:45
Kate Dale, 124:48
Kublai Khan’s fleet, 23:27
La Salle, 145:48
La Vizcaina (Columbus fleet ship), 99:39
Lady Elgin, 56:34–35
in Lake Champlain, 37:39, 82:36, 94:40, 111:21
in Lake Erie, 94:39, 120:43, 173:24–28
in Lake George, 63:18–19, 70:39, 132:47, 140:45
in Lake Huron, 136:45–46, 183:22–29
in Lake Michigan, 98:41
in Lake Ontario, 8:24
Lamartine (granite schooner), 140:45, 140:48
Land Tortoise (radeau), 84:57, 89:41
in landfills, 153:22
Lexington, USS, 163:54, 166:50
Lomellina, 62:37
Lucerne (schooner), 106:6–9
Lucinda Van Valkenburg, 179:15
Lusitania, 72:36
Macaw, USS, 113:37
Madraque de Giens, 57:20, 100:39
in Mallows Bay, 149:42
Maple Leaf, 117:6
“Mardi Gras,” 142:24–28
and marine archaeology, 153:16–22
in the Marine Protected Area of Portofino (Italy), 172:48–49
Mary Rose (battleship), 23:6–13, 100:39
Massachusetts, USS (battleship), 70:39
medieval, 153:48
in the Mediterranean, 39:8–10, 84:5
M. F. Merrich (schooner), 136:46
in the Mississippi River, 62:36–37
Molasses Reef wreck, 61:37
Monitor, USS (Civil War ironclad), 44:33, 68:35, 98:41, 108:24–27, 108:0, 08:39, 116:24–25, 117:6, 153:17, 153:18, 179:12, 179:12, 179:14
Montebello, SS (tanker), 137:40
“Mortar Wreck,” 180:54, 180:56, 180:56
mystery whaler at French Frigate Shoals, 125:19
in National Marine Sanctuaries, 179:13–14
New Orleans, 179:14
in New York Harbor, 4:23, 7:24
at Newcomb Hollow Beach, 124:10, 124:14–15
Northwestern (deep water), 153:20
Nuestra Señora de Atocha, 107:23
NW68 (shipwreck site), 180:56
NW96 (shipwreck site), 180:56
O. J. Walker (schooner), 179:49
off the coast of Oman, 161:53
Ohio, 183:22, 183:23, 183;24–26, 183:29
Ontario, HMS (snow brig), 173:24–28
Oosterland, 57:39
Pandora, HMS, 121:25
Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument, 125:14–19
Parker (whaler), 106:36, 125:14, 125:18
Pearl (whaleship), 125:15, 125:16
Persian (schooner), 61:39
Pewabic, 179:14
Pharos of Alexandria, 77:40
plunder of, 15:30–31
in Port Louis Marina (Grenada), 126:44
Portland, SS (steamer), 104:40, 179:14
protection for, 67:34
Robinson Landing, 163:48
Queen Anne’s Revenge, 96:15, 111:36, 145:52, 145:54, 156:29
Rapid, 142:24–28
Republic, SS (sidewheel steamer), 106:36
Rockaway (two-masted schooner), 77:23
Roman “sewn ship,” 171:40
Roman wreck (Devil’s point), 100:39–40
Rosinco (luxury yacht), 98:41
Rouse Simmons (three-masted schooner), 89:4, 120:40, 169:47, 169:47
Royal Anne, 69:37
Saginaw, USS (warship), 106:36, 112:11
San Agustin (Spanish galleon), 179:15
San Diego (Manila galleon), 68:36
San Esteban (Spanish plate ship), 181:14
San Pedro (galleon), 48:25, 70:39, 138:36–37, 138:37
Santa Clara, 153:48
Santa Margarita, 107:23
Santa Maria, 149:47
São José Paquete d’Africa (slave ship), 156:26–29, 156:27–28
Scourge, USS (War of 1812 schooner), 22:26, 28:34
Seabird, 56:34–35
in the seaport of Cadiz, 36:32
Serçe Liman, 39:8, 39:9, 39:10
of slave ships, 156:26–29, 178:12–13
Somers (brig), 75:31–32
Spanish galleon in Pensacola Bay, 68:17, 75:33
in St. Augustine, 163:50, 163:50
in the Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary, 139:26–27, 139:27
on Sullivan’s Island, 166:37
Sussex, 104:41
in Taiwan, 149:47
Tecumseh, USS, 72:36
Terror, HMS, 163:46, 166:26–27
Three Brothers, 80:38
Titanic, 116:41, 153:17, 153:20, 153:21
Tulip, USS (Civil War tug and gunboat), 73:37
Tusitala (Civil War ironclad), 168:48
Two Brothers, 134:40, 134:40, 179:16
U-352 (German submarine), 153:22
U-853 (German submarine), 175:32–35, 175:34–35
U-1105 (German submarine), 74:10
Uluburun shipwreck, 68:0, 119:36, 167:48
Urca de Lima (Spanish galleon), 70:39, 138:36
Vicar of Bray, 162:34–35
in the Vistula River, 170:54–55
Walter B. Allen (schooner), 153:53, 179:cover, 179:15
Ward, USS, 163:54
Warren Sawyer, 182:56–57
Whydah excavation, 51:7, 68:16, 156:29
Winfield Scott, 58:38, 130:14–18
in Wisconsin, 98:41
Wreck MM, 94:40
Yongala (liner), 23:27
Yorktown Shipwreck 44Y088, 53:9
Zuytdorp (Dutch shipwreck), 24:32
“The Shipwrecks of Isle Royale,” 47:30–31
shipwrights, 161:42
Shipyard Infrastructure Optimization Program (STOP), 170:56
shipyards. See also shipbuilding
18th-century, 68:17
Barbour Boatworks, 109:13
Blohm & Voss Shipyard 135:16, 135:22–23
Bollinger Shipyards, 157:13
Brookfield Boatbuilding Institute, 36:35
Camden Shipyard and Maritime Museum, 144:35–37
Center for Wooden Boats (Seattle, WA), 17:36, 19:41, 20:40, 23:24, 51:11, 51:23, 75:34, 95:40
Community Boatworks of the Hudson Valley, 138:4
Connecticut River Museum, 50:17, 53:39, 107:2, 133:45, 133:45
Henry B. DuPont Preservation Shipyard, 49:20, 96:16
Hodgdon Brothers Shipyard, 155:39
Howard Shipyard, 74:19
Ingalls Shipbuilding, 160:29
Jeffboat, Inc., 74:19
Lowell’s Boat Shop, 60:17, 65:36, 65:40, 77:41, 93:25, 159:22, 161:56
Mathis Shipbuilding Company, 144:35
Naval Shipyard (Brooklyn), 65:15–16, 65:16
Percy & Small Shipyard, 1:32–33, 103:37, 155:40
Philadelphia Naval Shipyard, 76:37
Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, 1:33, 112:39
Rockport Apprenticeshop, 27:37, 28:6–7, 29:2, 33:34, 51:4, 51:29, 52:5, 56:35, 64:38, 103:30
Stewart Shipyard, 68:17
Sun Shipbuilding Company, 158:30
Superior Shipbuilding Conpamy, 158:28
Thames River Shipyard, 14:44
Washburn & Doughty Shipyard, 124:46
Washington Navy Yard, 156:22–23, 156:24, 156:25
Woodenboat Apprenticeship, 20:39
Shirkey, Robert, 8:23
Shirley Blanche (schooner), 21:32
Shoesmith, James
“Bowdoin: A Model from the Real Thing,” 34:17
Shoesmith, Kenneth (artist), 65:0, 73:0, 73:24–26
Shomette, Donald G.
“Infernal Machines: Submarine and Torpedo Warfare in the War of 1812,” 141:18–22
“Tidal Wave: The Greatest Ship Launch in History,” 158:28–32, 179:4
Shooting Star (clipper ship), 75:10, 161:44–45
Shore Village Lighthouse Museum, 74:36
Shore Village Museum, 33:34
shore whaling, 2:30
Shorey, William T., 51:5
Short, Dave, 163:24
Short, Kevin (artist), 175:24, 175:29–30, 175:30, 175:31
Short, Philip, 156:53
Shortland, Thomas, 165:19
Shoshone, USNS, 136:38, 136:38
Shovell, Cloudesley, 150:46, 150:46, 153:12
Showboat (yacht), 33:18
Shreve, Henry Miller, 40:35, 44:36, 64:13–14, 74:12
shrimp industry, 156:42–43. See also fishing industry
Shrubb, R. E. Arnold
“What’s In a Name: A Tour Through the Actual Practices of How Warships Get Their Names,” 30:8–10
Shtandart (Russian frigate), 84:44
Shtandart (Russian frigate replica), 84:44–45
Shturman (barquentine), 3:9
Shuldham (tender), 98:8
Sicamous (sternwheel lake steamer), 5:30
Sicard, Montgomery, 112:9
Sicilien, USAT (Army freighter), 101:11, 101:12
side-lever engine, 64:16
Siebert, William H., 175:22
Siege of Boston, 123:24–27
Siele (renamed Sea Wolf; renamed Aquamarine), 66:5
“Siempre Preparado: US Revenue Cutter Algonquin in Puerto Rico, 1902–1917,” 170:30–32
Sienkiewicz, Joe, 170:46–47, 170:46–47
Sierra Club, 2:4
Sightseer XII (ex-Argo) (passenger ship), 130:30–33, 130:30, 130:31
Sigler, Mia
“When We See Whales: Transcribing Captain Lawrence’s Logbook,” 169:24–28
“Sign on With Me Said John Paul Jones,” 100:28
Sigsbee, Charles D., 120:33, 120:34, 120:35, 120:35, 144:30
Sigsbee (dredge boat), 86:26
Sigyn (three-masted barque), 2:10, 76:38
Silas Bent, USNS (deep-water survey ship), 149:17
Silent Maid, 132:8
“The Silent Service Comes of Age” 95:18–19
Silentworld Foundation, 183:69
Siley, James, 166:47
Sills, David L.
“The Strange Story of the Fouled Anchor,” 96:29–30
Silva, Anna, 166:41
Silva, Francis (artist), 37:23
Silva, Frank, 8:20
Silva, Jack, 84:26
Silva, Jose, 8:19
“Silver Clipper” (Barbour inboard runabout), 109:13, 109:13
Silver Heel (log canoe), 32:11, 154:27, 154:27
Silver Star (steamer), 36:16
Silver Sword, 92:2–3
Silversides, USS (submarine), 5:28, 12:28, 73:17
Simkins, Peter
“HMS Belfast: A Fighting Ship Preserved,” 27:8–10
Simmons, Bill, 97:14
Simmons, Furnifold M., 169:14
Simon Bolivar (Venezuelan sail training barque), 19:35, 22:36, 22:38, 25:53, 28:34, 29:26, 33:33, 38:30, 39:34, 40:11, 42:28, 52:22, 52:22, 54:15, 54:15, 62:21, 63:36, 71:38, 73:32, 94:30, 94:30
Simone, Robert J. (artist), 168:40
Simosi, Aggeliki, 156:53
Simper, Robert
“Old Gaffers Live Forever,” 29:46–47
Simpkins, Talmage E.
“NMHS Projects: A Task That Has To Be Done,” 47:6
Simpson, Asa, 117:24
Simpson, MacKinnon
“Holding Out Hope for the Falls of Clyde,” 123:41–43
“At Home in Hawaii: Falls of Clyde,” 81:34–35
“A Maritime Center for the Hawaiian Islands,” 81:32–33
Simpson, Tucker, 152:51
Simpson, USS (guided missile frigate), 153:56, 153:56
Sims, William Sowden, 31:62, 34:25, 99:8, 99:8, 99:9, 99:10, 106:4–7, 161:20, 170:35, 170:35
Singer, Edgar, 158:16–17
Singer’s Secret Service Corps, 158:16–17
Singh, Krit, 161:42
Singing Swan (barge), 34:22
“Sinking Highlights Foreign-flag Abuses,” 77:9
“The Sinking of USS Hartford,” 176:28–33
Sinn Fein (Cal 40), 131:29
Sinnott, Jim, 10:23
Sint Paulus Bekeering (Dutch ship), 174:34
Sir David Attenborough, RSS (polar research vessel), 155:48–49, 155:49
Sir Edward Hawke (schooner), 14:51
“Sir Francis Drake Revived,” 15:25
Sir James Clark Ross (steamer), 32:16
Sir Walter Scott (screw steamer), 33:32
Sir William Walker (steam coaster), 31:53
Sir Winston Churchill (sail training ship; three-masted topsail schooner), 3:9, 4:11, 4:17, 5:4, 5:15, 5:23, 6:12, 6:29, 17:47, 37:33, 38:36, 44:20, 47:4, 48:17, 57:11, 70:22, 71:40, 95:34
Sirius (barquentine), 3:9
Sirius (schooner), 26:29
Sirius (steamship), 88:13
Sirius (tugboat), 148:34
Sirius, HMS (replica flagship of first Australian migration fleet, full-rigged ship), 12:36, 31:58
Sirius Star (tanker), 127:21, 127:21
Sirota, Susan
“San Salvador––Setting a Course for the 16th Century,” 167:38–40
Sisley, Alfred (artist), 145:27
Sisters Under Sail, 140:48
Sjoborgin (ex-Frieda; ex-City of Edinburgh; renamed William McCann) (sailing trawler), 19:41, 22:36
Skaregrøm (ex-Castleton; ex-Svalen) (Norwegian full-rigger), 1:12, 2:16, 3:14, 15:41
arrival in England, 3:18–22
Captain Horka’s log, part 1, 1:12–30
Captain Horka’s log, part 2, 2:16–26
Captain Horka’s log, conclusion, 3:14–22
crossing the equator, 2:22–26
photo of the crew, 1:12
voyage around Cape Horn, 1:13–30
“Skaregrøm Log: A journal kept by Captain Archie Horka”
Part 1, 1:12–30
Part 2, 2:16–26
conclusion, 3:14–22
Skärva, 97:23
Skate, USS (submarine), 173:31, 173:31
Skelly, Francis W., 4:43
Skemp, Robert (artist), 16:49, 20:44, 33:37, 48:38
Skenesborough Museum, 53:29
“Sketches from a Voyage to Nova Scotia in the Wianno Senior Whisper,” 51:47–48
Skibar, Robert, 94:5
Skilligolee (Gloucester schooner), 6:6
“Skills Transfer,” 13:28–31
Skinner, Carlton, 131:18
Skinner, John, 140:17
Skinner, Joseph, 164:20–21
Skipjack Nautical Wares & Marine Gallery (Portsmouth, VA), 121:46, 122:32, 122:32, 125:36, 135:32
Skipjack Norfolk, 57:36
Skipjack Restoration Project, 102:36
skipjacks, 10:26, 102:36, 127:38, 133:5, 166:16, 166:17
“The Skipper and the Eagle: The Voyage Begins!” 86:45–47
Skipwith, Rulwar, 153:27
Skolinna (Norwegian submarine), 30:10
Skomal, Greg, 180:46
Skouras, Spyros, 35:13
“The SL-7: Going the way of the Clipper Ship?” 18:45
“The SL-7: Sea-Land’s Clipper Ship,” 12:30–31
Slackwater Tugboat Company, 10:23
Slaggie Family Foundation, 143:46
Slanche, Shirley, 21:32
Slater, USS (destroyer escort), 65:38, 67:35, 67:35, 73:17, 89:41, 94:21, 114:36, 114:36, 115:18, 116:6, 148:29, 148:51, 148:51, 150:4, 150:4, 173:41–42, 173:42, 180:12
Slaughter, James, 158:18
Slaughter, John, 158:18
slave trade, 90:9, 132:10–14, 143:48, 148:27, 164:51, 165:22–23
Slave Wrecks Project, 156:27, 156:28, 168:48, 178:12–13, 179:8
“Slave-ship Wrecked off Cape Town,” 156:26–29
SlaveVoyages.org, 164:51
Sledge, John S.
“The Battle of Vigo Bay: Fire and Silver on the Spanish Coast,” 177:32–36
“The Pastry War,” 174:26–29
Sleipner (corvette), 30:10
Slieve Roe, 20:46
Sligo (ex-Prince of Wales) (barquentine re-rigged as three-masted schooner), 101:36
Slippen (Scilly gig), 18:10, 18:10
Slocum, Joshua, 6:2, 8:4, 72:38, 73:20–23, 81:45, 86:18, 91:21, 115:28, 115:28, 125:38, 174:47, 182:42
Slocum, Victor, 8:4
Slocum (ferryboat), 14:39, 14:39, 144:31
Slocum Societies, 24:31, 73:23
“Sloop Experiment Leads the Hudson out into the Wider World,” 87:28–32
“Sloop Providence at Yorktown,” 23:28
Slotnick, Howard, 63:35, 85:6, 87:5, 89:31, 89:32, 97:6, 97:6, 99:5, 102:6, 103:5, 103:6, 113:6, 113:6, 117:44, 125:20, 139:8, 141:8, 144:8, 148:39, 148:39, 154:12, 154:15, 155:11, 162:11, 163:10, 164:13, 165:8, 166:13, 168:13, 169:4, 169:8, 169:9, 170:13, 171:10–11, 171:10, 171:11, 172:7, 172:13, 177:4, 180:8, 180:9
Small, Trevor, 180:54
Small Craft Curator’s Conference, 48:31. See also Museum Small Craft Association
Small Ships Society (Vancouver), 20:42
Smalls, Robert, 91:28–30, 91:28, 134:47, 134:47
Smalls Lighthouse, 165:34–37, 165:35–37, 166:5
Smally, Frederick, 174:21
Smiley, E. Forbes III, 113:37
Smit, Marleen
“Willem van de Velde & Son, a Retrospective,” 177:32–36
Smith, Alexander, 42:16
Smith, Angus, 158:19
Smith, Bradford, 85:6, 85:7, 95:28, 107:6, 113:6, 121:8
Smith, C. Fox (poet), 43:4
Smith, Charles P., 17:37
Smith, Christine Parker
“Californian’s First Year,” 38:31
“An Incredible Hulk: The Storeship Globe,” 38:20
Smith, David (musician), 172:44, 172:44
Smith, David (scrimshander), 46:28, 91:21
Smith, Gemma, 156:51, 156:51, 156:53
Smith, H. C. Bowen, 115:6
Smith, James, 178:47
Smith, Jean, 27:28, 52:40, 123:12, 123:12
Smith, John, 162:34
Smith, John (captain of Young Spartan), 173:20, 173:22
Smith, John (explorer), 25:42, 76:38, 107:28, 111:34, 118:24
commemoration of 400th anniversary, 118:29–30
explorations of Chesapeake Bay, 118:24–28
impact of his voyages, 118:28–29
at Jamestown Colony, 118:24
mermaids sighted by, 68:45
and Pocahontas, 118:32
reenactment of the voyage, 118:30
Smith, John D.
“Sinking Highlights Foreign-flag Abuses,” 77:9
Smith, Jonathan Bacon, 130:41, 130:41
Smith, Joseph B. (artist), 174:41, 174:41
Smith, Joshua M.
“Sea Power as Soft Power: American Merchant Ships and Post-War Refugees,” 177:24–29
Smith, Junius, 64:14
Smith, Robert, Lord of Kelvin, 169:54
Smith, Luther, 36:15
Smith, Melbourne, 30:22–23, 30:22, 53:42, 56:35, 156:8, 163:47, 163:47
“The Baltimore Clipper,” 14:16–18
“Getting Historic Ships Off a Lee Shore: A Better Approach for the 21st Century,” 111:32
“Project Sea Witch,” 13:19–21
“The Remarkable Life of a Tosa Fisherman,” 79:12–13
Smith, Philip Chadwick Foster, 17:35, 99:39
Smith, Samuel, 140:17, 153:30, 169:20
Smith, Sheli O.
“Ronson Ship,” 28:20–22
“The Ronson Ship Finds a Good Home,” 37:34–35
“The Ship That Built a City,” 35:7–8
Smith, Thomas Harlock, 105:16–17
Smith, Thomas Perrin, 143:11
Smith, Tim Denis, 164:51
Smith, W. Wikoff, 84:26
Smith, Walter, 35:17
Smith, Walter Bedell, 69:12
Smith, William, 111:13
Smith, William Loughton, 153:24–26, 153:26, 153:28
Smith Gallery, 31:23, 35:35, 37:27, 38:29, 40:30, 42:26, 49:29, 52:25
Smith Point. (tugboat), 25:0, 25:46
Smitheman, Gladys Marie, 52:26–29
Smitheman, S. Francis (artist), 52:26–29
Smithsonian Institution/Museum, 92:54, 156:33, 163:36, 163:38, 178:13, 179:54
Kaiulani model contest, 1:6–7
National Museum of African American History & Culture (NMAAHC), 156:27, 156:29
National Museum of American History, 118:42
National Museum of Natural History, AnthroNotes, 130:44
World War II exhibit, 73:4, 73:8
“The Smithsonian, the US Navy, and Aquatic Avian Excrement,” 163:36–40, 164:6, 179:4
“SMS Königsberg at Pangani, 1914,” 141:24–28
Smuggler (clipper schooner), 49:14
“Smuggler’s Blues: The Coast Guard Debut in the War on Drugs,” 167, 28–31
Smyth, Alexander, 134:12
Smyth, Davi, 166:43
snagboats, 74:12–13
“Snagboats of the Mississippi,” 74:12–13
Snark (replica of Jack London’s boat), 51:5
Snediker, Quentin, 85:7, 111:2, 121:8, 132:41, 132:41, 133:8, 143:20–21, 143:20, 144:38, 144:40, 159:9, 171:19, 173:11, 175:4
Sniffen, Harold, 1:33, 79:38, 79:38
Snow, Mari Anne
“Sailing for All: Joe Lee and American’s First Public Community Sailing Program,” 130:20–25
Snow, Ralph Lin, 5:22, 5:23, 8:23
Snow Squall (clipper ship), 4:36, 4:37–39, 4:38–39, 7:25, 13:38, 13:40, 13:41, 13:54, 14:33, 18:14, 21:3, 25:42, 25:43, 27:38, 29:30, 31:53, 34:36, 38:16, 38:32, 42:35, 45:34, 46:38, 54:38, 76:36, 162:30
Snow Squall Project, 38:32
Snowberry, HMCS, 66:10
Snowe, Olympia, 96:15
Snowflake (motorship, former topsail schooner), 3:9–10
Snug Harbor, 29:17, 29:18–20, 125:22–25
Snug Harbor Cultural Center & Botanical Center, 16:37, 27:38, 28:31, 29:31, 59:23, 177:10, 178:8
Snyder, Kim (artist), 142:44
Snyder, USS (destroyer escort), 116:6
“So Close to Home: U-boats in the Gulf of Mexico,” 155:26–30
“So Old a Ship: Twilight of the Arab Dhow,” 154:16–20
“So You want To Be a Deckhand?” 76:16–18
Sobraon (clipper), 32:37, 48:30
Société Nautique de Saint-Tropez, 180:24, 180:26
Society for Historical Archaeology (SHA), 50:11, 51:6, 51:7
Society for Nautical Research, 48:33
Society for Seamen’s Children, 42:34
“Society for Seamen’s Children,” 42:34
Society for Spritsail Barge Research, 34:22
Society for the History of Discoveries, 48:31
Society for the History of Navy Medicine, 133:44, 158:12
Society for the Preservation of Long Island Antiquities, 50:16
Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities, 105:33
Society for the Preservation of the Historic WWII Contribution of the Workers of the Todd-Bath Iron & South Portland Shipbuilding Corporation, 25:45
Society of Friends (Quakers), 115:12–13
Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers (SNAME), 80:39, 115:34, 118:40
Society of Professional Sailing Ship Masters (SPSSM), 130:43–44
Socony 8 (steam tug), 76:13
Socony 14 (tugboat), 44:35
Sofia (schooner), 24:27
“All Hands on Deck: Storms, Turmoil, and a Rompin’ Good Sail Aboard the Tall Ship Rose,” 182:22–27
“La Nioulargue, a.k.a. Les Voiles de Saint Tropez,” 180:22–26
Sohar (Arab dhow replica), 18:42, 21:29
Sojourner Truth (Hudson River ferry sloop), 14:46, 18:46, 22:38, 20:42, 23:25, 11:34–35, 37:18, 82:40, 97:18
Solace (USN hospital ship), 125:45, 171:24
Solace (pleasure wherry), 31:53
Solander, Daniel Charles, 83:13, 83:14
Solano (schooner), 38:47
solar power, 128:44
Solar Sal (solar powered tour boat), 166:54
Soldwedel, Kipp, 6:13
Soleil (car ferry), 178:56, 178:56
Solide, 61:32
Solitaire, 121:11
solo sailing, 125:38
Solomons Island (Maryland), 166:28–32
Solon Turman, SS, 136:40
Som (barque), 1:14
Somali (British cruiser), 62:15
Somali Marines, 127:21
Somalia, 127:18–21
Sombrero Key Lighthouse, 39:15
“Some Well Loved Scenes,” 25:32–34
Somers, Richard, 76:40, 105:12, 116:11
Somers (brig), 60:17, 75:31–32, 75:31, 75:32, 76:40
Somers, USS (DD-301), 76:40
Somers, USS (DD-381), 76:40
Somers (gunboat), 144:16
Somers (Lake Erie schooner), 76:40
Somerscales, Thomas (artist), 52:25
Somerset, Bobby, 47:8
Somerset (brigantine), 183:48, 183:48–50, 183:50
Somerset (oyster boat), 86:26
Somerset, SAS (ex-HMS Barcross) (boom defense vessel), 57:39
Somerset (schooner, Civil War era), 162:18
Somerset, USS, 127:44
Sommer, Annalise, 129:15, 168:54
Sommer, Harold, 129:15, 168:54
Sommer, Helmut, 175:32
Sommers, Anna, 130:6
Sommers, Harold, 130:6
Songs of Ships and Sailors (Gosbee and Lane), 181:6
Sonja (galleass), 6:30
Sonja (schooner), 3:13
Sonny (yacht), 164:26
Sonoma, USS (gunboat), 136:28, 166:38
Sonora (Pacific Mail steamship), 64:27
Sonora (schooner), 61:17, 88:17
Sons and Daughters of Pioneer Rivermen, 11:35, 43:41
Sons and Daughters of US Merchant Marine Veterans, 35:12
Sons and Daughters of US Merchant Marine Veterans World War 2, 29:2
Sooman, Alma, 8:13
Sophie (brig-sloop), 85:40
Sophie Christenson (four-masted schooner), 22:12, 22:13, 38:45
Sophocles, 102:24
Sopwith, Thomas, 50:34, 50:35, 98:25
Søren Larsen (hermaphrodite brig), 25:43, 32:41, 62:18–19, 62:18–19, 62:20, 95:34, 100:31, 100:31, 100:32–33
Sorensen, David
“The Indomitable Mr. Pepys,” 135:24–27
Sorensen, Peter
“The Art of Naval Miniatures,” 90:32–33
Sorio, Cesare, 129:8, 156:10, 156:12, 156:12, 157:8, 157:8
Sorio, Margherita, 161:10
Sørlandet (Norwegian full-rigged sail training ship), 2:12, 3:13, 4:13, 6:29, 16:34, 20:30, 21:2, 21:29, 21:43, 27:13, 29:26, 32:3, 35:30, 35:31, 37:33, 40:11, 42:28, 70:21, 83:50, 136:9, 172:38
Sorlien, Peter C.
“ASMA’s Second Annual Exhibition,” 16:45–49
“Fred Freeman: In Pursuit of the Deeper Satisfactions in the Truth,” 27:32–34
“RSMA Exhibition at Mystic Seaport,” 25:36–37
Sorset, Scott, 179:38–39
Soryu (Japanese aircraft carrier), 102:11, 102:12
“S.O.S. for the Nantucket Lightship / LV-112,” 126:12–15
Sotero (sailing lighter), 33:11, 100:35
Sotiriou, Alexandros, 156:53
Soto, Jerry (artist), 166:0
Sotwing (dipping lug), 36:32
Souls at Sea (film), 142:11
Sound Experience, 142:34–35
Sound School, 29:2
Sousa, Henrique Teixeira de, 8:21
Sousa, John, 8:20
Sousa, Manny, 33:33
South African Heritage Resources Agency, 156:27
South African Maritime Museum, 57:36, 57:39
South American (passenger steamship), 169:32
“South Britain Remembers D-Day,” 70:18–19
South Carolina Maritime Foundation (SCMF), 138:47
South Carolina Olympia Committee (SCOC), 144:12–13
South Carolina (US revenue cutter), 153:32–33
South Carolina, USS (battleship), 31:9
South Carolina II (US revenue cutter), 153:33
South Coast (steam schooner), 79:14
South Dakota, USS (battleship), 65:16, 105:27
South Esk (steam drifter), 92:20
South Haven lighthouse, 68:36
South Seaman (whaler), 125:19
South Street, New York City, 6:0, 28:17–19, 176:37
“South Street Receives a Schooner, 30 Years Ago,” 81:10–11
South Street Seaport, 35:4, 68:36, 69:32, 146:43, 180:5
South Street Seaport Museum (SSSM; New York), 2:31, 3:13, 4:7, 4:19, 7:32, 13:17, 13:38, 15:51, 17:36, 19:39, 20:17, 21:32, 24:29, 26:9, 33:35, 38:11, 44:36, 49:12, 50:17, 56:34, 56:35, 60:32, 70:14, 72:8, 99:34, 108:38, 114:18, 119:41, 124:8, 136:5–6, 136:8–9, 137:5–6, 144:6, 146:43, 149:7, 155:10–11, 155:12–13, 155:56, 156:13, 156:16, 161:50, 164:11, 164:13, 179:57. See also Seaport Museum
preserved ships at, 5:29
restoration of Wavertree, 155:22–23
Southampton, USS, 140:28
Southampton African American Museum, 168:19
Southampton Rock, 140:28
Southby-Tailyour, Ewen, 40:2
Southeast Light, 59:33–34
Southern Belle (barque), 93:15, 93:16
Southern Cross (ex-Rover) (steam yacht), 5:3, 16:49
Southern Ocean, 180:47
“Southern Ocean” expedition, 156:30
Southern Ocean Racing Conference, 47:10
Southgate. See Wavertree (ex-Don Ariano N, ex-Southgate) (full-rigged ship)
Southworth, Nathaniel (artist), 150:28, 150:29
sou’westers, 128:40. See also weather; winds
Souza, Peter N, 121:33
Sovereign (ex-Governor Stone) (two-masted Gulf cargo schooner), 165:32
Sovereign of the Seas (clipper), 9:32, 71:12, 155:21, 168:28
“A Soviet-American Sail,” 57:18
Sow and Pigs Lightship, 89:26
Sowinski, Larry, 64:9
“Battle of the Atlantic,” 66:8–15
“Space Age Technology Takes Us Below Decks Aboard ‘Navy Board’ Ship Models,” 77:18–20
spacecraft
Columbia (space shuttle), 144:42
Endeavour (space shuttle), 50:14, 74:4, 83:18, 144:42
Grissom’s Mercury 4 command module, 108:20
space shuttles, 144:42, 160:22
Spadafino, Jessica, 94:5
Spaien, Gail, 169:38
Spain ‘92 Foundation, 56:20
Spanish American War, 86:16–19
“Spanish and British Sail Meet in the Northwest, 1792,” 61:32–33
Spanish Armada, 47:43, 48:0, 48:4, 48:19, 48:22–25, 81:14
art of, 48:26–29
captain’s report to Philip II, 48:25–26
Spanish galleon shipwreck, 68:17, 75:33
Spanish plate fleet, 181:14–20
Spanish seafaring, 48:0, 79:8–11, 79:33, 81:13
Spanish-American War, 112:28, 125:42–43, 146:31
Cardenas Bay, Battle of, 157:18–20
rescue of the USS Winslow, 157:16–20
sinking of the Merrimac, 155:32–37
Spanish Flu (H1N1), 171:24
Spark, USS, 149:38–39
Sparre, Peter (artist), 64:31
Sparrow (schooner), 63:22
Spartan (coasting vessel), 26:28
Spartan (Scottish puffer), 48:11
Spartan, HMS (frigate), 139:11, 181:38
Spartan, SS (ferry), 174:48
Spartanburg Art Museum, 124:36
Spaulding, Dave, 13:25
Special Places Protection Act (Canada), 52:9
spectacled cormorant, 141:36–37
Spectre, Peter, 36:32
Speed, Frederic, 92:51
Speedwell (Pilgrim ship), 171:15
Speedy, 30:8
Speelman, Jennifer, 124:38
Spence, Edward L. 166:38
Spencer, Ambrose Jr., 174:37–39
Spencer, Ambrose Sr., 174:37, 174:37
Spencer, Ernest, 176:24–26
Spencer, John Canfield, 174:37, 174:37
Spencer, Sylvanus, 174:36–39, 174:39
Spencer (British merchant ship), 142:37
Spencer (US privateer), 139:11, 175:16
Spencer, USCGC, 66:12, 66:12, 66:15, 167:30
sperm whales, 123:37, 162:40–41
Spermo (whaleship), 172:19
Sphene (steamship), 43:27
Sphera Mundi (Dutch ship), 174:33, 174:34
Spiers, George, 19:8, 19:11, 28:29
Spiess, Fred N., 117:43, 117:43
Spigot (British galley), 81:38
Spike Afrika, 79:26
Spin, Jacob (artist), 183:53
Spinrad, Rick, 179:50
Spira, Freyda
“Beyond the Light: Identity and Place in 19th-Century Danish Art,” 182:46–48
Spirit of ‘98 (cruise boat), 81:44
Spirit of Adventure, 40:25
“The Spirit of Atlantic Challenge,” 103:30–32
Spirit of Chemainus (brigantine), 39:34
Spirit of Cincinnati (steamboat), 74:18
Spirit of Dana Point (privateer replica), 107:31
Spirit of Detroit Regatta, 22:41
Spirit of Larinda (ex-Hawaiian Chieftain) (gaff-rigged ketch), 177:44–45, 177:44
Spirit of Massachusetts (sail training schooner replica), 30:23, 30:34, 33:33, 47:11, 49:29, 49:30–31, 49:30–31, 63:35, 73:33, 89:35, 93:40, 105:38, 107:4, 107:4, 112:37, 112:37, 115:34, 115:34, 116:38, 127:41, 127:41, 127:44–45, 142:50, 147:28, 150:5, 160:12, 165:24, 168:4, 168:4
Spirit of New Zealand, 40:25
Spirit of South Carolina (Charleston pilot schooner replica), 97:36, 104:38, 121:44–45, 121:44, 138:47, 138:47, 155:49, 155:49
Spirit of the Times (clipper ship), 8:4
Spirit of Winestead (brigantine), 71:40
Spirit of Wye Town (log canoe), 32:11
Spitfire (gundelo), 53:30
“A Splendor of Ships, People and Their Voyaging,” 41:24–27
Sponagle, Steve, 131:9
sporting art, 148:42–44
“Sporting Art—a New Take on our Love of the Water,” 148:42–44
Sprague, Clifton, 71:15–16, 71:18, 71:18
Sprague, Howard Freeman (artist), 47:38
Sprague (steam-powered towboat), 3:31, 15:53, 39:4, 43:8, 44:36, 67:7
Spray (oyster sloop, sailed around the world by Joshua Slocum), 73:21–23, 73:21, 73:22, 86:18, 174:47, 174:47
Spray (steam trawler), 49:23
Spray (wooden sailboat), 125:39
Spray (yacht), 70:26
Spring, Jennifer
“Tall Ships Challenge Education Center and Programs,” 125:54
“Spring Break Wreck in North Florida,” 163:50
Spring Point Museum, 45:34
Springbird (schooner), 146:19
Sprong, Herman Diedrich, 83:13
Spruance, Raymond, 170:36, 170:36
Spruance, USS (destroyer), 30:9, 100:18
Spry (trow), 32:41
Spurling, Jack (artist), 20:44, 20:46
Squanto (Native American), 105:25
Square Rigged Services, Ltd., 47:11
“Square Riggers of Zygmunt Choren,” 62:21–22
“Square Riggery,” 52:30–33
squid, octopus, 157:36–37
Squire, Ed, 4:20
“SS American Victory: The Making of a Mariners’ Memorial,” 97:13–14
SS Canadiana Preservation Society, 75:33
“SS Catalina, Mayday,” 106:19
SS Catalina Preservation Association, 95:38
“SS Coamo and SS Borinquen, Twin Sisters of the New York and Porto Rico Steamship Company,” 130:26–29
SS Columbia Project, 119:8, 144:52, 164:50
“SS Columbia To Be Saved!” 149:40–41
SS Great Britain Project, 24:27
“SS John W. Brown: The Ship’s People Speak,” 41:13–14
SS Master Society, 40:23
SS Metero Maritime Museum, 31:57
“SS Nobska,” 108:32
SS United States Conservancy, 127:10, 147:14–16, 154:49, 155:55–56, 156:50, 160:37, 170:8, 175:9, 176:9, 182:54–55, 183:21
virtual exhibition, 175:49
SS United States Preservation Society, 74:41
St. Andrews (packet ship), 7:36
St. Augustine, USS (Navy patrol gunboat), 130:31–32, 130:32
St. Augustine Lighthouse and Maritime Museum, 169:55
St. Augustine Lighthouse Archaeology Maritime Program (LAMP), 163:50
St. Brendan (curragh), 75:13, 75:14
St. Brendan Curragh Racing Association, 25:42
“The St. Brendan Project,” 43:33
St. Brendan Society, 23:23
St. Canute (ex-St. Knudd) (steam tugboat), 2:33, 3:30, 25:18, 33:10, 33:11, 33:13, 100:34, 100:37
St. Cathan, HMS (trawler), 68:12
St. Clair (square rigged ship), 58:34
St. Denys (ex-Northgate Scot) (steam tugboat), 23:21, 25:18
St Fagan (tugboat), 55:11
St. Francis (fireboat), 175:44
St. Francis Sailing Foundation, 169:8
St. Gabriel (Bering’s ship replica), 61:38
St. George Depot (Staten Island), 86:34
St. George Reef Lighthouse, 63:20–23, 63:20–23
St. Hilda, 60:8
St. John (Hudson River steamboat), 10:6, 74:26
St. Katherine’s Dock (London), 26:28, 43:39
St. Knudd (renamed St. Canute (tugboat), 2:33, 25:18, 33:10, 33:11, 33:13, 100:34, 100:37
St. Lawrence, HMS (schooner), 13:44, 59:26, 80:34, 103:16, 137:14, 138:25, 147:20
St. Lawrence II (Pathfinder brig), 3:10, 3:10, 5:22, 67:34, 67:34, 164:30, 166:44, 166:45
St. Lawrence (packet), 99:15
St. Lawrence Seaway Nautical Museum, 81:44
St. Leonard’s Creek
Battle of, 137:14, 137:15, 147:20–21
Second Battle of, 137:14–15
St. Lo (escort carrier), 71:16, 71:17
St. Louis, SS, 183:14
St. Louis, USS (sailing sloop, Civil War era), 162:16
St. Louis, USS (renamed Tamandare; light cruiser, 1938), 12:29,
St. Louis, USS (Spanish American War era), 125:42
St. Mary (Down Easter), 4:40, 7:25, 9:9, 10:14, 10:17, 10:28, 11:3, 11:28, 11:34, 13:23, 13:38, 13:41, 13:42, 14:32, 14:43, 20:27, 25:43, 39:4, 67:6, 67:6, 152:25
first and last voyage of, 9:6–9, 10:14–17
model, 16:34
St. Mary’s (sloop of war), 57:14
St. Mary’s, USS, 163:38
St. Mary’s River Marine Heritage Centre (SMRM-HC), 163:49
St. Paul (Bering’s ship replica), 61:38
St. Paul (Downeaster), 72:21, 72:22
St. Peter (Bering’s ship replica), 61:38
St. Peter (schooner), 11:35
St. Rafael (cutter), 19:19
St. Roch (Arctic RCMP patrol ship), 5:30, 61:39, 77:37, 81:45, 94:38–39, 98:3
St. Zeno, HMS (trawler), 68:11, 68:12, 69:5
Stacey, Duncan
“‘Fishing for a Living’ at the Vancouver Maritime Museum,” 82:18–19
Stackpole, Edouard A., 68:36–37
“Nantucket and Pitcairn: An Islander Unravels an Island Mystery Half a World Away,” 42:16–17
Stackpole, Matthew, 137:40
“Restoring an Icon—Preparing the Whaleship Charles W. Morgan for her 38th Voyage,” 134:16–21, 179:4
Stad Amsterdam, 162:45–46, 162:45
Stafansson, Vilhjalmur, 172:33
Stafford, Mrs. J. W., 83:42
Staffordshire (packet ship), 75:10–11, 183:36
Stag Hound (clipper), 26:37, 75:8–11, 130:18, 183:36
Stalin, Josef, 104:8, 104:9, 104:9
Stammers, Michael, 34:36
Stancomb Wills (lifeboat), 142:32
Standish, Myles, 147:10
Stanfield, Clarkson, 12:47
Stanford, Alfred B., 69:8, 69:18
Stanford, Charles E. (artist), 13:54, 20:47, 48:38
Stanford, Joseph M. 72:10, 125:21
“The Amazing Rebirth of the Picton Castle,” 73:40–41
“So You want To Be a Deckhand?” 76:16–18
Stanford, Norma, 29:5, 34:8, 97:6, 125:21, 136:8, 144:9, 152:28–29, 155:10–11, 155:12–13, 155:14, 156:13, 164:13, 172:12, 173:10, 180:8, 183:10
(pictures), 152:28, 155:14, 156:13, 157:8
Stanford, Norma (author)
“Ambrose With Love,” 54:32
“John White’s Sketches of the New World,” 55:24–27
letter, 100:30
“Looking at Lighthouses,” 63:24–26
Stanford, Peter, 4:17, 4:42, 8:22, 13:12, 19:19, 38:16, 54:9, 55:7, 61:36, 68:7, 76:39, 78:4, 81:21, 85:6, 93:5, 95:5, 95:9, 97:6, 120:37, 131:2, 136:8, 142:14, 152:28–29, 155:4, 155:10–16, 156:10, 156:13, 157:8, 163:14, 164:13, 171:10, 174:11, 178:8, 179:4, 180:5, 183:10
(pictures), 4:29, 19:17, 31:55, 55:8, 70:7, 95:5, 96:13, 97:6, 115:6, 117:44, 120:8, 120:37, 124:8, 145:9, 152:28, 155:10, 155:12–14, 155:16, 156:13, 183:11
Stanford, Peter (author)
“Alan Villiers: ‘Here in the Battered Bark All Men Mattered’“, 32:13
“The American Achievement by Sea,” 103:8–11
“The American Achievement by Sea, Part II; From Two-Ocean Navy to All-Ocean Navy,” 104:6–9
answering a letter, 122:7
“The Art of the Tug,” 76:19
“The Battle of the Atlantic,” 65:11
“The Best Answer is in Wood and Iron,” 20:17
“Between Two Worlds: The Long Voyage Home,” 62:10–11
“Brooklyn Bridge: Spanning Time & Tide, 1883-1983,” 28:24–27
“The Cape Horn Road Part I,” 70:11–14
“The Cape Horn Road, Part II: How the Sails of the Square-rigged Ship Got Their Names,” 71:10–12, 155:18–21
“The Cape Horn Road, Part III: Mediterranean Origins,” 72:13–15
“The Cape Horn Road, Part IV: Frogs Round a Pond,” 73:9–13
“The Cape Horn Road, Part V: Confronting the Wild Atlantic,” 75:12–15
“The Cape Horn Road, Part VI: Castled Ships in Northern Seas,” 76:8–11
“The Cape Horn Road, Part VII: Portugal Opens the Ocean Doorway to a Wider World,” 77:14–17
“The Cape Horn Road, Part VIII: Columbus Opens the Americas to the World,” 78:8–11
“The Cape Horn Road, Part IX: Spain Charges Ahead—Around the World!” 79:8–11, 79:33
“The Cape Horn Road, Part X: Francis Drake Sails for Freedom,” 80:8–11
“The Cape Horn Road, Part XI: In the Wake of the Golden Hind,” 81:12–15
“The Cape Horn Road, Part XII: The River That Led Around the World,” 82:6–9
“The Cape Horn Road, Part XIII: Captain Cook Offers the World a New Picture of Itself,” 83:11–18
“The Cape Horn Road, Part XIV: How the Races of Mankind Came Together in the Immense Mixing Bowl of the Pacific,” 84:10–15
“The Cape Horn Road, Part XV: Britain Keeps the Sea,” 85:8–13
“The Cape Horn Road, Part XVI: Columbia, the Gem of the Ocean!” 86:8–13
“The Cape Horn Road, 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
“The Cape Horn Road, 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
“The Cape Horn Road, Part XIX: Steamships Take Over the North Atlantic, Driving the Sailing Ship into Increasingly Remote Trades,” 89:8–12
“The Cape Horn Road, Part XX: The Voyage is Toward Freedom,” 90:9–12
“The Cape Horn Road, Envoy: A Message to the Future about What These Cape Horn Sailors Did and the Echoing Consequences of Their Sailing,” 92:9–11
“A Celebration of Clippers,” 88:24–26
“Challenging, Beautiful, Noble Ships.,” 72:10
“Columbus Rediscovered: In Quest of Ships for the Voyage,” 54:18–22
“A Critical Supply Line,” 68:8–9
“D-Day: A Defining Moment in a Century of Conflict,” 69:8
“Each With Her Story to Tell,” 42:28–29
“Elissa: The Long Sea Career,” 15:9–11
“Francis Drake Sails for Freedom,” 143:14–18
“Fred Freeman: A distinguished artist and historian casts a loving look at life along the banks of the Connecticut River,” 36:28–30
“Greasy Luck for the Charles W. Morgan: A New Idea—Doing Things the Old Way,” 96:16–17
“Historic Ships as World Heritage Sites, a World Ship Trust 2007 Resolution,” 119:34
“How an Ugly Duckling Fought Back and Sank Her Assailant,” 35:22
“How the America’s Cup Became the World’s Most Famous Trophy,” 98:21–25
“How the Tall Ships Sail Today for Our Tomorrows,” 82:10–11
“How We Lost the Kaiiulani—and What We’ve Been Doing About It!,” 71:6
“Humanity After Victory: How Nelson’s Victory at Trafalgar Changed the Course of History,” 112:27–29
“Islands in the Stream of History,” 42:7
“John Noble’s Voyaging Studio,” 33:20–21
“The Last Dreadnought,” 31:7
“Liberty Ships That Made History,” 104:11
“The Living Act: Ship Restoration at Mystic Seaport,” 5:6–11
“Long Island Sound: Introduction to a Storied Seaway,” 50:15–17
“Looking for Japan—in the Caribbean,” 59:12–14
“The Lordly Hudson: ‘But the Rhine has no Mary Powell!’”, 37:9–11
“‘Mantanhas’: Ernestina’s Work Today,” 49:21
“Mark Myers and West Country Seafaring,” 59:16–21
“Nautical Archaeology: The Real Treasure,” 39:7
“The Navigator Gets to Sea at Last, 55:16–18
“A New Morning in South Street,” 136:8–9
“New York Harbor Renaissance: To Revive a Shining Asset of a City Born of the Sea,” 83:32–33
“The Oceanic Mission I: Sea History and the Cause We Serve,” 93:6–7
“The Oceanic Mission II: How Initiatives Bred Up in the Ocean World Led to the End of Slavery,” 97:16–19
“The Oceanic Mission, Part III: Heralds of the Morning,” 99:12–13
“The Oceanic Mission, Part IV: They Said of Winston Churchill, Not Since Francis Drake Had Such a Man Been on the River,” 101:7–9
“Opening the Atlantic World,” 40:6–7
“Operation Sail 1976,” 4:11–13
“‘A Peculiar Note of Romance’: The Heritage of the Hudson River Steamer,” 10:6–8
“The Portuguese Initiative: Breakout into the Ocean World,” 45:12–13
“The Price of Liberty,” 41:12
“The Queens at War,” 95:15–16
“The Quest of the Gloucester Schooner,” 49:11–12
“Rear Admiral Walter F. Schlech, Jr., USN (Ret.),” 35:26
Rediscovering Columbus Part 1: “The Man and the World He Sailed In,” 53:16–19
Rediscovering Columbus Part II: “In Quest of Ships for the Voyage,” 54:18–22
Rediscovering Columbus Part III: “The Navigator Gets to Sea at Last, 55:16–18
Rediscovering Columbus Part IV: “Romping Across the Unknown Atlantic,” 56:16–19, 56:21
Rediscovering Columbus Part V: “Under Indian Eyes,” 58:12–14
Rediscovering Columbus Part VI: “Looking for Japan—in the Caribbean,” 59:12–14
Rediscovering Columbus Part VII, “Between Two Worlds: The Long Voyage Home,” 62:10–11
Rediscovering Columbus Part VIII, “Sail On, Columbus!” 63:12–15
remembrance of Karl Kortum, 80:14
“A Restoration of Spirit Indeed!” 34:7–11
“The River Towns,” 36:10–11
“Rivers of America,” 43:6–7
“Romping Across the Unknown Atlantic,” 56:21
“Sail On, Columbus!” 63:12–15
“Samuel Eliot Morison: He Stood for Things Too Important for the World to Lose,” 113:26–30
Sea Forum, 1:8
“Sea History & the Cause We Serve,” 93:6–7
“The Sea People of Exeter,” 33:10–11, 100:34–35
“Seamen’s Recognition Day,” 35:12–13
“The Seaport Experience,” 44:9
“Seaport Experience,” 46:32–33
“In the shadow of the Bridge: ‘A Restoration of Spirit,’” 28:29
“The Ship as Museum,” 46:12–15
“Ships of San Francisco, The: Ships Built the City, and Their Heritage Challenges the City Today,” 38:9–11
“Sketches from a Voyage to Nova Scotia in the Wianno Senior Whisper,” 51:47–48
“The SL-7L Sea-Land’s Clipper Ship,” 12:30–31
“Steam & Speed, Part I,” 64:12–19
“Steam and Speed, Part II,” 65:30–35
“Summer of 1940: The Little Ships at Dunkirk,” 55:11
“Think in Oceans,” 125:20–21
“Of Time and Tide in New York’s East River,” 13:9–11
“Toward an American Ship Trust—If We’re Serious about Saving our Heritage in Historic Ships,” 117:28–29
“Treasure of Snug Harbor,” 29:17
tribute to Richard Rath, 80:38
“Tugs, Like Old Shoes,” 25:15–17
“USS Constitution: Reaching Out Over the Horizon,” 44:11–13
“Wavertree to Windward,” 19:8–12
“‘We Were There to Prove Ourselves,’” 100:19–20
“Why Save Historic Ships?” 110:32–34
“Winning the America’s Cup in 1851,” 97:7–10
“Working Sail: Ten Vessels That Do Real Work Under Sail,” 7:11–13
“The World Ship Trust Established,” 16:9
Stanhope, Henry E., 141:18
Stanley, Frank, 47:39
Stanley, John, 126:16–18
Stanley, Morton, 103:34
Stanley M. Seaman (sailing ship), 161:40
Stanley Norman (skipjack), 127:29, 127:30
Stannard, Bruce
“From Weather Deck to Easel: Oswald Brett’s Sea Paintings,” 140:24–27
Stanton, Charles E., 171:23
Stanton, Edwin M., 156:23
Stanton, Samuel Ward (artist), 9:35, 37:25
Star Clipper (barquentine, 1992), 76:20, 89:38, 105:34, 116:42
Star Clipper cruises, 76:20, 89:38
Star Flyer (four-masted barquentine) 59:32, 59:32, 76:20, 76:20, 89:38
Star I (submersible), 85:21
“The Star is Reborn!” 5:18–19
Star of Alaska. See Balclutha (ex-Pacific Queen; ex-Star of Alaska) (Cape Horn square rigger)
Star of Bengal (windjammer), 14:36
Star of Empire (clipper ship), 183:36, 183:36–37
Star of Finland. See Kaiulani (ex-Star of Finland) (barque)
Star of France (1877), 14:36, 64:6
Star of India (ex-Euterpe) (barque), 1:31–32, 2:10, 2:31, 5:1, 5:5, 5:10, 5:28, 7:5, 8:11, 8:13, 8:22, 9:1, 9:4, 10:26, 12:13, 13:31, 13:48, 14:36, 15:53, 21:34, 24:28, 26:21, 27:5, 46:13, 46:15, 62:35, 64:35, 72:12, 75:21, 76:7, 83:51, 90:40, 109:4, 133:35, 136:6, 141:44, 150:6, 152:30, 155:51, 156:46, 157:27, 162:45–46, 167:38, 170:50, 171:42–43
(pictures), 1:39, 5:0, 5:18, 8:11, 76:29, 79:0, 79:16–17, 91:13, 98:36, 118:0, 118:14–15, 118:41, 120:5, 120:16, 120:17, 148:29, 155:51, 157:27, 161:43, 170:50, 171:43, 173:11
American Ship Trust Award, 79:16–17
at the Maritime Museum of San Diego, 120:16, 120:17, 120:18
ranked as historic ship, 148:29–30
restoration of, 5:18–19
under sail, 118:14–15
Star of Lapland (ex-Atlas), 14:36, 52:3
Star of New Zealand (ex-Astral) (four-masted barque), 14:36
Star of Peru (ex-Himalaya; now Bougainville), (screw steamer), 14:36, 23:4, 27:28, 90:3
Star of Poland (ex-Acme), 14:36
Star of Russia, 14:36
Star of Scotland (ex-Kenilworth), 14:36
Star of Shetland (ex-Edward Sewall) (five-masted barque), 13:6, 14:4, 14:36, 28:47, 52:3, 53:43
Star Pilot (ex-Pilot; renamed Highlander Sea) (Gloucester schooner), 79:24, 79:25, 79:26, 93:13, 103:36, 103:36
Star of the West (merchant ship), 162:17
The Star Republic, 15:23, 36:16
Starbuck, Edward, 172:16
Starbuck, Mary (daughter), 172:16
Starbuck, Mary Coffin (mother), 172:16
Starbuck, Nathaniel, 172:16
Stark, ADM Harold R. “Betty” 84:16, 98:34
Starkey, Noah, 36:16
Starling, HMS, 67:11
Starr, Michael, 128:29
Stars & Stripes (catamaran), 116:23
Stars & Stripes (yacht), 116:23, 180:11, 180:11
“Star-Spangled Banner,” 87:15, 88:30, 140:32
State Conference on Waterways, Inc. (SCOW), 41:11, 72:17–18, 80:3
State Maritime Museum (NY), 4:21
State of Maine (oceanographic research vessel), 155:41
State of Maine III (merchant marine schoolship), 13:42
State of Nevada, clipper card (trading card), 40:28
State of Pennsylvania (“Pennsy”) (passenger steamboat), 10:13, 11:9, 13:47, 18:44, 27:38
State University of New York (SUNY) Maritime College, 79:4, 81:4, 143:20, 154:32, 163:43, 166:40–43
Staten Island ferries, 10:10, 178:54–55, 180:5
Staten Island Museum, 177:10, 178:8
Statendam (Holland-America liner), 18:60, 98:33, 144:27
Statsraad Lehmkuhl (ex-Grossherzog Friedrich August) (barque), 2:12, 4:13, 4:18, 5:20, 6:29, 7:25, 13:31, 15:50, 17:43–44, 83:50, 172:38
Statts-Sekretar Kraetke (German steamer), 52:16
Stavanger, 30:10
Ste. Canute. See St. Canute (ex-St. Knudd) (steam tugboat),
Ste. Claire (steamer), 80:36, 149:40–41, 164:50, 164:50
“Steam and Speed”
Part I, 64:12–19
Part II, 65:30–35
steam coasting, 31:53
“Steam Navigation on the Hudson River,” 10:8–11
“Steam Tug Baltimore,” 110:35
Steamboat Conference, 77:41
“Steamboat Rivalry on the Columbia River: Captain Ernest Spencer vs. The Dalles, Portland and Astoria Navigation Company,” 176:24–26
steamboats, 134:22–25. See also steamships
early, 64:12–14
of Istanbul, 45:23–25
steam schooners, 47:42
Steamer Alexander Hamilton Society, 9:14
Steamer Columbia Foundation, 81:44
Steamer Virginia V Foundation, 67:35, 178:35
“Steamship Central America and Her Era,” 64:26–30
Steamship Historical Society of America (SSHSA), 118:38, 119:36, 124:48, 125:49, 126:10, 148:56, 172:8
Steamshipmen’s Protective Union, 121:11
steamships, 65:30–35, 88:13–14. See also steamboats
fjordsteamers, 64:46–47
menhaden, 2:29
tramp steamers, 28:3, 129:30–36, 130:5, 130:6, 131:3
transatlantic, 64:14–15
Yukon River, 34:38
“Steamships Take Over the North Atlantic, Driving the Sailing Ship into Increasingly Remote Trades,” 89:8–12
Steedman, Dick, 39:32–33
Steel Rover, SS, 140:11, 140:13
Steel Scientist (steamer), 15:41
Steele, Jonathon Walkden, 171:29, 171:30
Steers, George, 97:8, 97:9, 143:32, 143:32
Steers, James, 143:32
Stefan Batory (ex-Maasdam) (transatlantic liner), 65:22
Stefansson, Vilhjalmur, 181:26
Steffens, Lincoln, 160:30
Steffy, J. Richard, 35:7, 122:44, 153:18
Steinbeck, John, 180:50
Steinbrenner, George, 175:14
Steiner, Charles, 63:23
Steinhoff, Ernest, 80:33
Steinhoff, Fritz, 80:33, 142:18
Steinlein, Eric Joslyn, 47:40
Steinlein, Eric Sr., 48:38
Stella (launch), 137:44, 137:44
Stella Maris (tugboat), 160:17, 160:17
Stella Polaris, HMS (trawler), 5:20, 68:12, 75:17
Steller, Georg Wilhelm, 140:34–35, 141:36–37
Steller’s sea cow, 140:34–35
Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary (SBNMS), 104:40, 118:38, 127:45, 139:26–27, 140:45, 147:44, 148:36, 179:13, 179:14
“Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary Celebrates its 20th Anniversary,” 139:26–27
STEM Gains STEAM program, 159:31–32
Stephano (British steamer), 56:44
“Stephen B. Luce and the Federal Act of 1874,” 57:12–14
Stephen Douglas, SS (Liberty ship), 47:5
Stephen F. Austin, 36:16
“Stephen Hopkins,” 41:46
Stephen Hopkins, SS (Liberty ship), 11:21, 29:43, 32:43, 35:22, 35:29, 44:22, 44:36, 46:19, 46:19, 91:32–34, 91:32–33, 92:2
Stephen R. Mallory (renamed Ansel) (clipper ship), 36:37, 136:26–29, 136:27
“Stephen R. Mallory, The Southernmost Clipper Ship,” 136:26–29
Stephen Scott (tugboat), 80:21
Stephen Taber (coastal schooner), 5:29, 7:11, 24:29, 30:24–27, 30:24–26, 33:3, 57:17, 60:17, 93:22, 172:42, 172:42
“Stephen Taber: After 112 Years, She Still Earns Her Way,” 30:24–27
Stephen Whitney, 165:16
Stephens, Dean, 102:34
Stephens, Deyon, 103:5
Stephens, Donald, 103:5, 103:5
Stephens, James F., 181:44
Stephens, Jessie Taylor, 170:54
Stephens, Karl F.
“Grandfather and the ‘Mystery Ship’”, 90:29–31
Stephens, Olin J. II, 47:8, 47:9, 47:10, 98:25, 115:38, 116:8, 116:8, 116:22, 116:22, 117:8, 117:8, 123:44, 125:50, 131:29, 158:25, 164:26, 168:4, 169:8
Stephens, Roderick Jr., 41:38, 47:8, 158:25, 164:26, 168:4
Stephens, William P., 36:8
Stephenson, Henry, 26:3
Sterett, USS (cruiser), 94:21
Sterling, Peter, “USS Constitution and the American Spirit,” 24:12–14
Stern, Jean, 175:24
Sterna (renamed America) (river barge), 20:19
Sterrett, Andrew, 129:18
Stettin (renamed Edgar) (steamer), 93:17
Steven Taber. See Stephen Taber
Stevens (merchant steamer), 4:9
Stevens, Charles R., 69:18
Stevens, Edward, 174:55
Stevens, J. M., 138:14–15
Stevens, John, 10:9
Stevens, John Cox, 97:7–8, 97:8, 98:21–23, 98:25, 143:32, 158:22
Stevens, Rob, 181:6
Stevens, Robert J., 178:43
Stevens, Robert L., 10:9
Stevens, Roland “Chip,” 173:24–28, 173:24
Stevens, William Seaford, 93:22
Stevenson, Laura
“OpSail 2000 Baltimore,” 88:32
Stevenson, Robert Louis, 38:32
Stewart, Brian (artist), 145:32
Stewart, Charles, 116:11, 129:17, 141:14–15, 141:14, 150:16–18, 150:16, 151:29, 181:36
Stewart, Isabelle
“S.E.A. and the History of Ocean Plastic Research,” 182:30–35
Stewart, John Henry, 121:10
Stewart, Joseph, 101:36, 118:8, 124:48
Stewart, Kenneth, 161:14, 161:14, 164:50
Stewart, Rex (modelmaker), 37:31, 38:3
Stewart, Robert (Viscount Castlereagh), 145:14–15, 145:15
Stewart, W. R., 76:38
Stewart, USS (destroyer escort), 5:30, 12:28, 73:17, 116:6, 116:6, 118:5–6, 118:6
Stewart Shipyard, 68:17
Sticker, Robert (artist), 6:16, 16:45, 20:47, 43:27, 69:28–29
Stickney, Joseph L., 170:23
Stidham, Mike (artist), 148:43
Stier (German armed raider), 11:21, 32:43, 35:22, 44:36, 91:32–34, 91:33–34
Stifinder (barque), 181:11
Stiletto (Gloucester schooner), 49:24, 49:25
Still, Mildred, 182:7
Still, William, 175:20, 175:21
Still, William N. Jr., 153:19, 182:7
“Maritime History and Nautical Archaeology,” 116:24–25
Stille, William D. (artist), 21:37
Stillman, Kurt, 72:20
Stimson (log boom tug schooner), 22:41
Stindt, Frederick, 14:37, 14:37
Stine, Al (artist), 97:27
Stirling (harbor oiler), 4:43
Stiverson, Gregory A.
“The Maryland Federalist and the Constitution,” 44:28
Stobart, John (artist), 6:15, 8:3, 8:30, 11:36–38, 15:0, 26:10, 31:23, 33:37, 36:0, 38:0, 38:29, 43:0, 53:26, 67:0, 67:26–30, 69:33, 75:21, 87:0, 95:0, 97:28, 100:0, 123:0, 123:4, 123:28–32, 123:48, 124:5, 124:8, 157:8, 157:15, 159:30–32, 159:30, 161:31, 169:6, 169:6, 177:37, 177:37, 183:10, 183:11, 183:12, 183:38
obituary, 183:10–12
tribute from ASMA, 183:39
Stobart Foundation, 183:10
Stobart, John (author)
“The Watercolors of Bert Wright, RSMA,” 42:24–25
Stocker, Margaret, 103:6
Stockholm (passenger liner), 156:8
Stockholm, MS, 122:35
Stockton Historical Maritime Museum, 181:50
Stodder, David, 128:12–15
Stoddert, Benjamin, 153:33, 153:34, 169:41, 174:55
Stoll, John, 83:40
Stoltenberg, Donald (artist), 30:21, 62:30
Stone, Elmer Fowler, 172:48
Stone, Herbert L., 47:9
Stone, Joel
“Fighting Head Winds, not Windshields,” 169, 30–34
Stone (Legend-class National Security Cutter), 172:48
Stone Fleet, 158:34–35
“Stone Fleet,” 158:35
“The Stone Fleet” (Melville), 158:36
Stonegate (British freighter), 159:12
Storck, William Penniman (artist), 150:0, 150:44
Storis, USCG (cutter), 75:2, 150:56, 158:14–15
STORIS Act, 150:56, 152:26, 155:24, 157:27, 161:17
“Storis’s Legacy: How a Decommissioned Ship Inspired a Movement,” 158:14–15
Storm, RV (research vessel), 183:26
Storm King (slave ship), 132:12
storm petrels, 118:34–35
Stormie Seas (caique), 18:24–25, 18:24–25
“Stormie Seas: An Unfinished Saga,” 18:24–25
Stormvogel (ketch), 47:9
“Stormy Past—Bright Future: The Story of Merchant Marine Officer Education, 10:19–20
Stormy Petrel (smack), 35:37
Stormy Weather (schooner yacht), 47:9
Stornaway/Stornoway (British clipper ship), 4:30, 15:13
Story, A. D., 183:30
Story, Dana, 34:13, 131:13, 183:30
Story, John Prince, 183:30
Story, Lewis H., 183:30
Stosz, Sandra L., 134:44, 134:44, 144:46, 144:46
Stothart, Matthew (scrimshander), 102:23
Stoyan-Rosenzweig, Nina, 148:18–19
“The Straits of Florida: Where Oceanography Makes History,” 107:22–25
Strandberg, Charley, 131:9, 131:11
“Strange Story of the Fouled Anchor,” 96:29–30
Stranger (Cape Verde schooner), 9:30
Strasbourg (cruiser), 177:13, 177:14
Strathdene (British steamer), 56:44
Stratton Commission, 179:12
Strawbery Banke (Portsmouth, NH), 21:30
Streibert, Marshall, 85:6, 113:8
Stricker, John, 140:17
Strickland, Peter, 114:32–35
Stringham, USS (destroyer), 166:29
Striniste, Nancy, 183:67
Stroh, Amos, 166:35
Stromboli, 30:8
Strong, Elena, 163:13
Strong, Ray (artist), 128:25
Stuart, Gilbert (artist), 137:0
Stuart Royal Yacht Replica, 57:39
“The Stuff of Dreams,” 70:16–17
Stumholmen, 97:23
Stump, Felix, 178:32
Sturgis, William, 87:12–13
Sturgis, SS (ex-Charles H. Cugle) (Liberty ship), 11:22, 34:37
Striniste, Nancy, 183:67
Sturm, Gerard, 119:36
Sturm, Robert, 147:16, 160:36–38, 160:36
Styles, T. J., 174:39
Sub Marine Explorer (submarine), 165:44–45
subarctic air bases, 101:10–13
“A Sublime Satisfaction,” 7:34–36
Submarine Force Museum and Library, 92:54, 181:54–55
Submarine Memorial Association, 77:36
“Submarine Warfare and the Decline of Sailing Fleets, 1914–1918.” 181:10–13
submarines, 9:15, 22:0, 148:29. See also German U-boats
Columbia-class, 182:11
“hedgehog” bomb projectors, 175:33, 175:33
Japanese, 176:48
naming, 30:10
in the war of 1812, 141:18–22
Virginia-class, 147:42–43, 182:11
in World War I, 181:10–13
submarines by name
Alvin (submersible), 153:47, 164:11, 164:55
Becuna, 5:29, 6:30, 12:28, 71:36, 73:17, 84:25, 169:11, 169:11, 170:8, 170:8, 170:26, 170:26, 170:27, 175:9, 175:9, 176:4
B-39 (Soviet), 120:17, 120:19, 120:19, 178:55, 178:55
Buffalo, USS, 165:42–43
CSS American Diver, 158:17
American Turtle (reproduction), 36:19
Becuna, 5:29, 6:30, 12:28, 71:36, 73:17, 84:25
Blueback, 64:37
Bowfin, USS, 5:28, 12:28, 73:17, 181:51
Bremerton, 162:26
Cavalla, 5:30, 12:28, 73:17, 118:5–6, 118:6
Charlotte, 117:30
Cobia, USS, 5:30, 12:28, 40:35, 73:17, 81:44, 115:14, 115:16, 115:16, 163:13, 177:40, 177:40
Croaker, USS, 12:28, 73:17, 175:52
Deutschland, 161:39
Francis Scott Key, 30:10
George Washington, 80:33
Grunion, 117:41–42
CSS H. L. Hunley, 74:8, 75:33, 79:37, 94:40, 95:18, 95:18, 99:39, 103:10, 107:36, 136:42, 136:42, 158:17–21, 158:16, 158:21, 156:9, 156:25, 171:13
Holland I, 24:27, 95:18–19, 100:42, 104:41, 104:41
HU-75 (midget), 12:28
I-52 (Japanese), 76:36
Intelligent Whale, 12:28
Juliett 484, 103:36, 116:37, 116:37
Kamehameha, 30:10
Kete, 22:23
L8, 90:29–30
Ling, USS, 5:29, 12:28, 77:36, 168:5
Lionfish, 5:29, 12:28, 73:17, 94:20
Marlin (midget), 12:28
Narwhal, 107:36
Nathan Hale, 30:10
Nautilus, 19:38, 27:34, 30:10, 59:33, 95:19, 100:42, 123:46, 173:31, 181:54–55, 181:55
North Carolina, USS (SSN 777), 177:8
Pampanito, 5:28, 12:28, 38:11, 65:38, 73:17, 89:41, 99:36
Patrick Henry, 35:26
Perch, 158:48
CSS Pioneer, 12:28, 158:16, 183:69, 183:70
Pisces II, 100:46
Plunger, 95:19
Pollack, 144:35
Robert E. Lee, 30:10
Roncador, 12:28
S-5, 158:31
Savannah, 98:39
Scorpion, 80:36
Silversides, 5:28, 12:28, 73:17
Skolinna, 30:10
Sub Marine Explorer, 165:44–45
Thomas Edison, 30:10
Thomas Jefferson, 30:10
Thresher, USS (nuclear), 107:4, 149:17, 168:52, 175:51
Tilefish, 35:26
Torsk, 5:29, 7:31, 12:28, 19:39, 73:17, 73:36, 88:31
Tradewind, 38:5
Turtle, 103:33
USS-X1 (midget), 100:42, 100:42
Utvaer, 30:10
Submerged Heritage Preserves (New York), 70:39
Submerged Resources Center (National Parks Service), 153:20
Suez Canal, 64:18, 129:35, 129:36, 147:12, 152:52, 175:4, 175:13
Suffolk Marine Museum, 14:44, 15:50, 21:31–32, 24:29, 50:17
Suffolk Maritime Museum, 7:32
Suffren, Pierre André de, 180:23
Sugden, Becky, 63:35
Sugg, Philip
“A Unique Vision of the Sea on Film,” 32:26
Suhali (wooden sailboat), 105:37, 125:39
Sullivan, Albert (Al), 163:54, 163:54, 168:52, 175:51, 179:48
Sullivan, Francis (Frank), 163:54, 163:54, 168:52, 175:51, 179:48
Sullivan, George, 163:54, 163:54, 168:52, 175:51, 179:48
Sullivan, Joseph (Joe), 163:54, 163:54, 168:52, 175:51, 179:48
Sullivan, Madison (Matt), 163:54, 163:54, 168:52, 175:51, 179:48
Sullivan, Timothy J., 117:38, 156:50
Sullivan engine, 77:2
Sullivan’s Island, South Carolina, 166:37, 166:38, 174:55
Sully, Thomas (artist), 15:56
Sultan (steamer), 67:47
Sultana (schooner), 90:40, 98:36, 98:36, 107:4, 107:6, 107:8–10, 107:8–10, 119:39, 119:39, 160:48, 160:48
Sultana (topsail schooner reproduction), 122:18, 122:19, 147:28, 160:48, 160:48, 175:5, 183:71
Sultana (sidewheel steamboat), 92:49–51, 92:49, 180:52, 180:54, 180:54
Sultana Disaster Museum, 180:52, 180:54
Sultana Projects, Inc., 107:6, 107:10, 119:39
Sumerian sailing vessels, 72:14
“Summer of 1940: Britain Stands Alone in World War II,” 56:12
“Summer of 1940: The Little Ships at Dunkirk,” 55:10
“Summer-North Atlantic,” 6:34–38
Summerlee Heritage Museum, 169:55
Summers, John, 121:8
“The Schooner Yacht Coronet,” 89:19–21
“Taking the Measure of Coronet,” 97:33
Summertime (pinky schooner), 51:11
Summit Venture (freighter), 179:34, 179:34
Sumner, Edwin V., 166:35
Sumner, USS (hydrographic vessel), 49:9
Sumrall, Robert, 31:43
Sumter, CSS, 120:27
Sun Shipbuilding Company, 158:30
Sunbeam (barque), 29:47, 126:28, 126:31, 150:28, 150:30–32
Sunbeam II (ex-Flying Clipper; renamed Eugene Eugenides) (three-masted topsail schooner), 3:6, 37:33
Sundberg, Göte
“Gustaf Erikson: King of the Sailing Ships,” 93:15–18
Sunderland, Abby, 129:5
Sunderland, Zac, 128:38, 129:5
Sunderland Maritime Heritage Centre (SMHC), 173:45
Sundowner (ex-Marjorie & Dorothy) (Gloucester schooner), 6:6
Sundowner (motor yacht), 51:37, 54:38, 54:38, 55:12
Sunfish (whaler), 115:12
Sunshine (steamer), 36:16
Sunshine Skyway Bridge disaster, 34, 34, 36
SUNY Maritime College, 123:47, 157:27, 178:57
Suomen Joutsen (ex-Laennec; ex-Oldenburg), 2:10, 2:11, 16:17
Superior (sloop), 50:17
Superior (whaleship), 168:20
Superior Shipbuilding Company, 158:28
“Superstitions of Fishermen,” 101:28–30
Supply, HMS (replica sloop), 12:36
Supply, USNS (transport ship), 112:17
Supreme Allied Commander (COSSAC), 69:10, 69:12
Supreme Headquarters of the Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF), 69:12, 69:18
Surcouf, 30:10
Surge (catboat), 171:34
Surgent, George, 51:19
Suribachi, USS (ammunition ship AE-21), 178:15
Surprise (frigate), 85:40
Surprise (steam schooner), 79:14
Surprise, “HMS”. See Rose, “HMS” (aka HMS Surprise) (frigate reproduction)
Surveillante, 132:23
Surveyor (US revenue cutter), 139:0, 139:12–13, 139:12, 141:31
Susan (British merchantman), 150:16
Susan Constant (Jamestown ship), 14:23, 17:28, 121:4, 131:36, 170:44
Susan Constant (Jamestown ship replica), 7:31, 8:17, 11:35, 14:23, 17:25, 17:28, 57:36, 58:37–38, 59:10, 68:30, 68:30, 76:22, 76:22, 77:41, 119:19, 119:19, 120:36, 157:14, 157:14
Susan May (skipjack), 180:36, 180:38
Susan II (Bahamian fishing sloop), 39:19, 39:19
Susan Vittery (renamed Brooklands) (topsail schooner), 60:46–47
Susanna (German sailing ship), 58:46–47, 58:47
Susinno, Mark (artist), 148:43
Susquehanna (four-masted barque), 121:12
Susquehanna, USS (CTF ship), 161:21, 161:22
Sussex, 104:41
Sutherland, Benjamin, 122:10, 122:11
Sutil (Spanish schooner), 61:33
Sutton, USS, 142:18
Suwanee, USS (aircraft carrier), 71:16
Suys, Bill Jr. (artist), 67:28–29
Suzanne Vinnen (ex-Patria; renamed Piombino) (motorship, former five-masted topsail schooner), 3:9
Svalen. See Skaregrom (ex-Castleton; ex-Svalen) (Norwegian full-rigger)
Svanen (three-masted schooner), 3:31
Svenson, John, 160:22
Swain, John, 160:48
Swain, Robert L., 167:30
“How Lowly Archers Won the Naval Battle that Launched the Hundred Years’ War,” 101:20–22
Swain, William, 172:18
Swallow (clipper-bow fantail steamer), 6:3
Swallow, HMS, 42:16
Swan, Mary, 64:27
Swan, Sam, 64:27
Swan, William W., 171:35
Swan (Drake’s ship), 80:10, 81:45
Swan fan Makkum (brigantine), 69:5
Swanella (stern-trawler), 34:37
Swanson, Albert A., 5:22, 29:5, 76:40, 76:40
Swanson, Charles, 178:46–47
Swanson, Eric, 9:5
Swanson, Shirley H., remembrance of Karl Kortum, 80:15
Swanwich, John, 153:28
Swanzey, Gregg, 97:6
Sweall, Arthur, 91:24
Swedish Coast Guard, 139:31
Swedish Medieval Museum, 169:4
Swedish National Maritime Museums, 153:4
Sweeney, J. Gray
“In the Landlocked Heart of Our America,” 47:35–37
Sweepstakes, HMS, 20:46–47, 20:47
Swegle, Madeline, 178:41, 178:41
Swift, James V.
“The Greatest Race of All,” 43:13
Swift (replica privateer), 8:17, 10:26
Swift (topsail schooner), 3:10
“Swift of Ipswich,” 81:24–25
Swift of Ipswich (square topsail schooner), 79:24, 79:25, 81:24–25, 94:37, 95:21, 168:56, 168:56
Swiftsure (lightship), 95:40, 100:42
Swile (Gloucester schooner), 6:5
Switzer, David, 34:36
swordfish, 153:46–47
art from swordfish bills, 154:42–43
Sybil (yacht), 70:26
Sycamore (USCG buoy tender), 177:45, 178:23–24, 178:23
Sydney, HMAS (light cruiser), 91:34
Sydney Cove Waterfront Museum, 2:27–28
Sydney Heritage Fleet, 94:37
Sydney Maritime Museum, 80:36, 83:25, 83:26–27
Sykes, Ellen I., 117:44, 117:44
Sylph (blockade runner), 166:36–37
Sylphide (Russian brig), 75:10
Sylvester F. Whalen (Gloucester dragger), 6:3
Sylvia W. Beal (schooner), 21:30
Sylvie DeGrasse (packet ship), 36:15
“The Symbolic Significance of Shipcarving,” 81:27–29
Symonds, Craig, 172:8
Symphony of the Seas (cruise ship), 178:51, 178:51
Symposium on Southern New England Maritime History, third annual, 29:31
Synthetic Aperture Sonar (SAS), 175:34–35, 175:35
Syren (privateer schooner), 153:34
Syren (whaler), 127:23
Syrene (ex-Molly; ex-Sea Nymph; brigantine), 8:26, 153:39–40, 159:40