W
W. B. Tennison (oyster dredge), 23:23
W. C. Sawyer Collection, 110:26
W. D. Anderson (tanker), 180:29
W. E. Marsh No. 4 (renamed Bonnie Mooseheart), 182:50–51
W. H. Diamond (barquentine), 60:38
W. J. Eckert (four-masted barquentine), 3:10
W. J. Ellison (Newfoundland Grand Banker), 4:7, 4:9, 5:15
W. J. Harahan (ex-El Toro) (tugboat), 77:2
W. O. Decker (ex-Russell I) (wooden harbor tugboat), 145:9, 156:46, 161:50, 161:50, 183:63, 183:63
W. P. Snyder (ex-Clingerman; ex-Perry) (sternwheel tugboat/towboat), 5:29, 8, 14, 21:35, 25:18, 25:18, 43:41, 148:30
W. R. Grace, 44:28
W. T. Preston (steam vessel), 2:31
W. W. Atterbury (ex-Conemaugh; renamed SS Pankakoski), 81:3
Waccamaw (ex-Nuestra Senora de Regla), 67:8
Wacouta (ex-Eleanor) (auxiliary steam yacht), 68:26
Waddell, James, 174:23
Waddenzee fishing craft, 11:5, 11:7
Wade (tugboat), 14:39
Wadleigh, John R.
“The Argonaut Sails into Her Second Half Century,” 17:33
“The Providence Sails Again,” 12:22–24
“Sloop Providence at Yorktown,” 23:28
Wadsworth, Jeremiah, 103:15
Wadsworth, USS (destroyer DD-60), 34:25, 99:8, 125:45, 161:20
Waesche, Russell, 157:16
Wager, HMS, 137:20
Wagner, Dick
“Hands on History,” 51:23
Wagner, Frank, 178:32
Wainwright, John, 147:22
Wainwright, Richard, 120:35, 163:19
Wainwright (US cruiser), 5:15, 62:15
Wainwright, USS (destroyer), 161:20
Waite, Dean P., 6:25
Wakeman, Ned, 143:30
Walbridge, Robin, 141:33, 182:25
Waldemar Kophamel (German submarine support ship), 161:40
Walk-in-the-Water (steamboat), 164:20
Walker, Fred, 76:38
Walker, Grant
“Space Age Technology Takes Us Below Decks Aboard ‘Navy Board’ Ship Models,” 77:18–20
Walker, John, 11:13, 67:11, 67:11
Walker, Nick, 48:34
Walker, Timothy D.
“Sailing to Freedom: Maritime Dimensions of the Underground Railroad,” 175:20–23, 180:51
Walker, William, 174:38–39
Walk-on-Water contests, 105:24
Wall, Mike, 90:20
Wall, Shannon J., 35:13, 36:3, 41:2, 41:2, 119:10, 123:13, 123:13
“To the South Pacific in a Steam Schooner,” 41:19–20
Wallace, Frederick William, 168:9
Wallace, Raymond E., 61:11, 89:43, 171:41
“The Brig Pilgrim: The Old and the New,” 87:18–21
Waller, 26:6
Wallis, Don, 51:15
Wallis, Samuel, 83:13
Wallowa (renamed Arthur Foss) (steam tugboat), 2:31, 5:30, 8:14, 22:41, 25:8, 25:18, 81:44, 95:40
Walpole, 75:9
Walrus, 36:28
walrus, 175:40–42
Walsh, William, 172:6–7
“Walt Whitman’s Passion for the Fulton Ferry,” 13:63
Walter, J. Jackson
“To Meet a Growing Threat,” 53:8
Walter, Samuel (artist), 60:29
Walter B. Allen (schooner), 153:53, 179:cover, 179:15
Walter Q. Gresham (Liberty ship), 29:8
Walters, Angus, 82:25
Walters, Samuel (artist), 75:27, 150:30
Walters Art Museum (Baltimore, MD), 121:46
Walton, Ivan Henry, 47:26
Walton, Terry, 155:16, 181:5, 183:10
“Bon Voyage Fair Harbor Lady!” 37:37
Wambold, Donald A. Jr.
“Independence Seaport Museum: ‘Home Port Philadelphia,’” 85:21–22
wampum, 58:20
Wan Fu (Chinese junk), 40:11
Wan Fu (topsail schoooner), 3:10
Wander Bird (ex-Wandervogel; ex-No 5 Elbe) (pilot schooner), 9:15, 9:15, 31:55, 49:8, 57:33, 72:22, 95:20, 129:10, 129:13, 130:6, 130:12, 152:16, 168:52–54, 168:53, 173:40, 173:40
Lesley Frost’s voyage aboard, 129:4, 129:10–15
Wanderer (ex-Gracie S.) (pilot schooner), 59:6, 86:3
Wanderer (ex-J & B) (schooner), 119:36
Wanderer (slave ship), 125:6–7, 126:5
Wanderer (tugboat), 22:12
Wanderer (whaleship), 10:26, 24:36, 134:17, 147:25
Wandervogel. See Wander Bird (ex-Wandervogel, ex-No. 5 Elbe)
Wandia (renamed Carthaginian) (schooner brig), 17:27, 21:34
Wanggaard, Jan, 156:54–55
Wapama, SS (ex-Tongass) (wooden Pacific steam schooner), 4:26, 4:28, 5:28, 8:11, 8:12–13, 8:13, 9:18, 10:29, 11:35, 18:37, 18:45, 18:45, 19:23, 23:24, 27:38, 32:43, 38:10, 38:11, 40:2, 44:2, 46:15, 47:42–43, 71:7, 79:14–15, 79:14, 80:2, 80:4, 81:2, 81:3, 82:4, 83:40, 83:42, 83:51, 90:6, 101:33, 101:33, 117:28–29, 117:28, 133:21, 133:22
“Wapama: The Last Pacific Steam Schooner,” 79:14–15
War Artists’ Advisory Committee (WAAC); Britain, 147:30
“War Artists at Sea: First and Second World War Art at the Royal Museums Greenwich,” 147:30–32
war canoe (Maori), 43:29. See also canoes
War Hemp Industries, 165:6
War of 1812, 87:15, 103:9, 126:22, 127:8, 133:10–12, 134:7, 143:6, 146:45, 153:24
first year, 134:10–14
second year, 136:10–15
third year, 137:10–16
final chapter, 150:20–23
Battle of Craney Island, 181:38
Battle of Lake Borgne, 141:10–11
Battle of Lake Erie, 144:14–19, 148:21, 148:24
Battle of Plattsburgh Bay, 148:20–24
bicentennial observance, 137:4
blockade running, 181:34–38
British raid on Essex, 149:30–34
British strategy, 145:14–18
Burning of Washington and the “Star-Spangled Banner,” 140:14–18
David Dixon Porter Jr.’s involvement in, 129:19–20
defense of Chesapeake Bay, 147:18–12
funding for, 150:22
on the Inland Seas, 138:22–26
last sea battle, 150:16–18
Marblehead seaman from, 146:18–21
music and song from, 139:16–21
prison ships and POWs, 175:17–18
privateering in, 59:26–27
shipbuilding during, 164:18–19
songs of, 139:16–21
submarine and torpedo warfare, 141:18–22
US Revenue Cutter operations, 139:10–14
USS United States vs HMS Macedonian, 135:10–14
“The War of 1812 on the Inland Seas,” 138:22–26, 179:4
“The War of 1812: The Burning of Washingson, and the ‘Star-Spangled Banner,’” 140:14–18
“The War of 1812: US Revenue Cutter Operations,” 139:10–14
“The War of 1812: USS United States vs. HMS Macedonian,” 135:10–14
“The War of 1812: Year Three,” 137:10–16
“The War of 1812, Year Two,” 136:10–15
“The War of 1812—Understudied, Misunderstood, and Forgotten,” 133:10–12, 134:10–14
“The War of 1812’s Final Chapter, The: At Sea and at the Negotiating Table,” 150:20–23
War of Jenkins’s Ear, 137:19
War of the Spanish Succession, 177:18
“War Reporting in 1812—Through Song,” 139:16–21
War Stories Journal, 112:36
Waratah (ex-Burundah) (tugboat), 2:27, 2:27, 25:19, 57:17, 67:33, 83:27, 90:39, 92:0
Warburton, Barclay H. III, 8:23, 30:3, 38:30, 182:37–39, 182:37–38
“Do What’s Best for the Ship,” 50:31
letter, 4:3
obituary, 28:40–41
“Sail Training, U.S.A.,” 4:17
Warburton, Barclay IV “Tim,” 182:38, 182:39
Warburton, David
“Al-Hami: A Desert Village Preserves Its Seafaring Past,” 89:14–17
Warburton, Peter, 182:38
Ward, USS (destroyer), 162:16, 162:16, 163:8, 163:54
Ward, Eber, 64:33
Ward, James Harmon, 162:16–20, 162:16, 163:8
Ward, Nannie Davis, 98:15–18
Ward, Tom, 142:41, 164:10, 168:6
Ward, USS (destroyer), 162:16, 162:16
Ward Line, 64:33
Ware River (ex-Potomac; ex-Albany) (steamer), 10:7, 11:8, 16:6, 58:24
“A Warm Reception in the Hudson Highlands,” 98:11–13
Warren, John Borlase, 141:19, 147:18
Warren, Joseph, 179:7
Warner, John William, 96:15, 130:8, 130:8, 132:8, 132:8, 151:8, 163:10, 174:8, 176:47, 176:47, 181:49
Warren, John Borlase, 181:35, 181:38
Warren (frigate), 77:40, 103:15, 103:16
Warren, USS (sloop-of-war), 162:16
Warren P. Marks (renamed USS Protector) (Liberty ship), 34:37
Warren Sawyer (coasting schooner), 182:56–57
Warrior (renamed General Brown) (frigate), 164:19
Warrior, HMS (renamed HMS Vernon) (iron-hulled British warship), 2:14, 3:29, 12:27, 13:22, 15:48, 20:33, 21:29, 24:27, 31:53, 44:22–25, 46:14, 48:10, 48:35, 56:34, 65:31, 65:34, 76:31, 152:11
(pictures), 3:29, 16:12–13, 19:18, 44:22–23
reconstruction of, 16:9, 16:12–15
Warsaw, Matt, 175:25
“Warships for South American Rebels: Shipbuilders Adam and Noah Brown Find a New Market for Frigates in South America” (James Brown), 164:18–21
Warspite, HMS (British battleship), 30:33, 31:7, 69:13, 90:9
Warta, Matthew, 128:29
Warther, David (modelmaker), 78:22–23
Warwick (three-masted schooner), 68:32, 68:32
“Was an American China Trader Wrecked off the Australian Coast?” 16:19–20
Wasa, (17th century warship), 27:0, 27:4, 27:21, 27:22–27, 27:22–27. See also Vasa (seventeenth-century Swedish warship)
“Wasa Triumphant: The Sinking, Search and Salvage of a 17th Century Warship,” 27:22–27
Washburn & Doughty Shipyard, 124:46
Washington, George, 85:11, 98:12, 103:13, 132:22, 153:26, 153:27, 153:28, 178:46, 178:47, 179:5–6
Washington, John P., 65:18
Washington (frigate), 61:32, 61:33, 103:15, 103:16
Washington (1820s, river steamer), 64:13,
Washington (1880, river steamer), 57:35
Washington (row galley), 153:30, 17:17, 117:17, 117:18
Washington (1880s, oceangoing steamer), 64:33
Washington (US revenue cutter), 154:54
Washington, SS (United States Lines passenger liner), 20:29, 65:21, 90:41, 92:55, 144:35
Washington, USCG brig, 70:25, 71:20, 71:22
Washington County Peapod (Maine workboat), 51:38
Washington Invitational Marine Art Exhibition
(2018), 162:12–13
(2019), 166:14–18
Washington Irving (multi-decked excursion steamer), 9:35, 144:35, 149:41
Washington Irving (packet ship), 183:33, 183:34, 183:35
Washington Navy Yard, 156:22–23, 156:24, 156:25
Washington Ship Model Society, 20:40, 29:30
“Washington’s Inaugural Barge,” 44:34
Wasp (ship-rigged sloop), 114:27
Wasp (US warship), 134:14, 137:10
Wassung, Bob, 131:4
Watch and Wait (pinnace), 174:16–17
Watchmoor (steam-powered herring drifter) (ex-Lydia Eva), 3:31, 26:28, 177:46, 177:46
water
salt vs. fresh, 123:38
water cycle, 148:46
Water Pollution Control Act (1972), 167:18
Water Street Gallery, 69:32
Water Witch (tugboat), 10:22, 10:22
Waterbury, David, 117:16
Waterbury, John I., 50:7
“The Watercolors of Bert Wright, RSMA,” 42:24–25
Waterfront Awareness, 23:25
Waterfront Center (Washington DC), 31:55, 36:35, 85:55
Waterfront Wenches, 181:5, 181:5
Waterloo (renamed Bellerophon) (British line-of-battleship), 30:8, 85:12, 86:3, 126:32–33, 126:32
Waterman, Robert H. “Bully,” 88:9, 88:11
“The Waterman’s Song,” 98:14
Watermark (double-ender), 159:23
Watermark program, 70:38
Waters, John M., 35:12–13, 35:24
Watersite 2000, 46:45
Watkins, James D., 108:7, 180:39
“A Call to Accountability,” 30:7
Watson, Baxter, 158:16–17
Watson, David P. H. (modelmaker and author)
“William Falconer: From Survivor to Marine Lexicographer,” 99:30–32
“A Zulu for the Scottish Fisheries Museum,” 95:33
Watson, G. L., 98:24
Watson, Jessica, 128:38, 129:5
Watson, John, 157:18
Watson, Thomas J. Jr., 69:39
Watts, Gordon, 116:24–25, 153:19
Watts, Gordon P. Jr., 182:7
Wave (Hudson River sloop), 43:23
Waverley/Waverly (paddlewheel steamer), 3:30, 20:34, 26:29, 28:30, 33:32, 36:32, 83:53
Wavertree (ex-Don Ariano N, ex-Southgate) (full-rigged ship), 2:10, 4:13, 4:20, 4:43, 5:29, 7:1, 7:14, 7:32, 10:26, 11:25, 11:35, 12:36, 13:12, 13:17, 13:19, 13:44, 15:13, 15:51, 17:47, 18:14, 19:17, 20:2, 20:27, 20:36, 21:10, 21:32, 23:23, 24:3, 24:29, 25:4, 25:15, 25:42, 26:30, 27:38, 28:3, 28:29, 29:5, 30:43, 31:56, 32:13, 32:43, 34:4, 34:37, 38:32, 39:3, 42:3, 43:48, 44:9, 46:13, 47:6, 49:19, 52:37, 55:7–8, 57:19, 64:19, 65:37, 70:11, 70:14, 71:10–11, 71:12, 73:5, 76:7, 79:3, 100:39, 117:28, 117:29, 117:44, 122:7, 136:5, 136:6, 136:8, 141:6, 145:9, 147:7, 148:29, 150:6, 155:13, 156:13, 156:46, 161:50, 164:13, 172:11, 180:12
(pictures), 4:19, 8:16, 11:25, 13:12, 19:0, 19:8–13, 20:17, 20:21, 21:0, 21:10, 25:16, 34:7–10, 70:11, 110:32, 110:33, 117:44, 119:41, 123:31, 123:48, 136:9, 142:8, 152:28–30, 155:0, 155:12–13, 155:18, 155:22–23, 156:16, 161:30, 164:13, 171:10
contributions toward, 34:11, 53:42–43
in dry dock, 155:0
in the Falklands, 13:38, 13:39
figurehead, 20:17
finding of, 20:18–23
names of the sails, 155:18–21
oceangoing career of, 19:8–13
restoration work 1980–1984, 34:11
at South Street Seaport Museum, 19:12, 156:16–17
stabilization and restoration of, 20:17, 34:7–11, 152:28–31, 154:53, 155:22–23
towing in to Liverpool (1910), 13:41, 25:16–17
“Wavertree Memories,” 19:13
“Wavertree on the Ways,” 152:28–31
“Wavertree Restoration: Notes from the Shipyard,” 155:22–23
“Wavertree to Windward,” 19:8–12
Wawona (three-masted Pacific wooden coasting schooner), 2:31, 5:30, 11:35, 18:45, 21:10, 21:24–28, 22:9–13, 22:41, 23:4, 24:32, 25:8–9, 25:9, 27:6, 36:35–36, 67:35, 83:55, 106:18, 125:51, 133:23
(pictures), 21:24, 21:26, 22:10, 106:18, 133:23, 145:42–47, 146:6
deconstruction of, 145:42–47, 146:5–6
“The Wawona Is Waiting”
Part I, 21:24–28
Part II, 22:9–13
Part III, 25:8–9
Way, Frederick Jr.
“The Delta Queen Comes to the Mississippi,” 53:36–38
“The Way of the Sea: Your Turn Today—Mine Tomorrow,” 14:63
Wayling, Ron, 72:19
Wayne, Anthony, 98:12
Wayne, USS, 123:6
“‘We Are Not Alone,’” 48:38
“‘We Built Her to Bring Them Over There’: The Cruiser and Transport Force in the Great War,” 161:18–22
“We Could Do No Less Than Respond With Loyalty,” 21:7
“We Know Ocean!—Improving Ocean Literacy at Cal Maritime,” 154:30–33
“We Must Draw the Circle Larger,” 33:4
“‘We Were There to Prove Ourselves,’” 100:19–20
Wead, Frank “Spig,” 178:30
wearing ship (gybing), 52:31–32
weather
Beaufort Scale, 168:43
ditties, 147:5
gauge, 135:6
lore, 146:34–35
sou’westers, 128:40
trade winds, 134:36
water cycle, 148:46
winds, 134:36
Weatherly (yacht), 116:22, 158:25
Webb, Isaac, 183:33
Webb, Robert Lloyd
“Dauber’s Lucky Brother: Charles Robert Patterson,” 114:12–16
weblogs, 113:33
Webster, Charles, 106:22
diary from sea, 106:23–25
Webster, Daniel, 113:19
Webster, Elbridge, 127:6
Webster, Irmy, 127:8, 127:8, 132:8, 132:8, 135:8, 135:8, 161:11
Webster, Philip J., 113:6, 121:8, 127:8, 127:8, 132:8, 132:8, 135:8, 135:8, 160:12, 160:12, 161:10, 161:11, 161:11, 163:10, 166:10, 167:8, 169:10, 170:10, 170:14–15, 174:8–9, 174:9, 178:12, 179:9, 182:10
“Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum,” 122:16–19
“Exploring the Chesapeake Bay with Captain John Smith: 1608 and 2007,” 118:24–30
“Marc Castelli, Artist Advocate for the Chesapeake Bay Watermen,” 132:28–32
Webster, Robert M.
“Dr. Charles Webster, Ship’s Surgeon,” 106:22
Webster-Ashburton Treaty of 1842, 132:10, 152:24
Weddell Sea Expedition, 179:41
Wede, Karl, 26:10
Weeks, John W., 165:43
Weems, Philip, 108:8–10, 108:8–9
Wegner, Josef, 157:40
Weinstein, Gerald, 183:42
Weinstein, Robert A., 74:38
Weir, Earle P., 35:12
“‘Be Good Seamen,’” 35:25
Weir, Robert (artist), 58:0, 169:24, 170:29
Weirich, Jeremy, 133:4, 133:4, 158:13
Weiringer aken, 11:7
Weiss, Robert (scrimshander), 76:28, 77:24–25, 77:26, 87:26
Welcome (British war sloop reproduction), 5:32, 8:17, 17:26, 17:29, 23:26, 41:32, 68:32–33
“Welcome Home to a Crew-in-Training,” 86:7
“Welcome to the New Land, Draken Harald Hårfagre,” 157:22–25
Welland, HMS (trawler), 68:11
Welles, Gideon, 156:22–23, 156:24, 156:25, 162:17
Welles (ex-Seaconnet) (Gloucesterman), 42:12
Wellesley, Arthur (1st Duke of Wellington), 145:17, 145:17
Wellington, HMS (sloop), 12:28
Wellington (renamed Endeavour) (Cook’s barque replica), 8:25, 17:29, 22:36, 25:43, 32:22, 32:36, 53:11, 68:32, 69:37, 72:9, 72:35, 74:4, 74:30–31, 74:32, 82:36, 84:53, 85:28–29, 85:39, 86:3, 88:36, 88:36, 91:13
Wells, Daniel, 134:7
Wells, Scudder Smith, 174:40
Wells, Thomas (artist and author), 16:47, 18:0, 20:44, 26:3, 26:3, 29:38–39, 30:4, 61:26
“A Cape Horn Odyssey,” 18:57–63
“A Salty Play in Three Acts: ‘The Watch On the Wheel,’” 44:20–21
“‘And Then There Were None’: A Seadog Artist Reports on the XXXIX Cape Horners World Congress,” 29:22–23
Welsh Industrial and Maritime Museum, 25:44
Wendameen (schooner), 170:15
Wendler, William F.
“The Four Sisters,” 54:15
Wendt, William (artist), 175:25
Wennerberg, John, 131:10
Wenzel, Louis P., 166:30
Werner, Arthur, 62:7–8
Weschler, Thomas R., 46:5
Wesley, Richard, 154:13, 154:13, 154:14
“Wesley Marrs Sets His Stays’l,” 49:46–47
West, Ralph W.
“The Loss of the Pamir,” 46:8–9
West Calera (steamer), 15:41
West Cherow (steamer), 15:41
West Coast (steam schooner), 79:14
West Erral, SS (freighter), 134:27
West Harcuvar, SS, 3:21
West Harshaw, SS (freighter), 134:26–29, 134:27
West Honaker (blockship), 69:18
West India Company, 58:19–20
West of Scotland Boat Museum, 26:28
West Point (US Military Academy), 103:5, 158:35
West Point, USS (ex-SS America), (steamship), 56:44, 98:33, 161:22
West Virginia, USS, 170:52
Westchester County, USS (LST-1167; WESCO) (amphibious vessel), 87:38, 87:38, 94:21
Westerdahl, Christer, 153:19
Western Flyer (ex-Gemini) (fishing vessel), 180:50, 180:50
Western Ocean (packet), 17:43
Western Shore (clipper ship), 117:24
Western States (passenger steamship), 169:34
Western Union (renamed Amistad) (coasting schooner/slave ship), 5:15, 10:27, 71:20–21, 71:21, 71:22, 71:23, 107:24, 132:43, 149:4, 150:5, 154:54–55, 154:54
Western Union (renamed New Way) (sail-training ship), 50:32, 50:33, 55:34, 57:18, 57:36, 58:5, 63:35, 69:34
Western Union (schooner), 24:31, 33:33, 36:22, 39:32–33, 39:32
Westernland, clipper card (trading card), 40:28
Westfield, USS, 129:43
Westgate (refrigerated ship), 5:19
Westmoreland, William C., 140:11
Westmoreland (steamer), 34:34
Weston, Jack, 47:9
Westover, Robert H., “SS United States,” 108:33
Westward (racing schooner), 91:39, 93:38
Westward, SSV (1961 sail training schooner), 4:17, 4:35, 5:22, 5:23, 6:29, 8:23, 9:16, 9:16, 11:33, 12:37, 13:23, 19:19, 21:32, 24:29, 47:11, 55:20–21, 57:17, 78:4, 89:35, 105:38, 107:4, 110:9, 112:40, 112:40, 115:0, 115:36, 115:36, 116:38, 117:40, 127:44–45, 142:50, 150:5, 162:47, 165:24, 168:4, 174:55, 182:31–32, 182:35
Westward Ho (trawler), 27:37
“Westward Traces Columbus,” 55:20–21
Wetherell, C. S., 64:36
Wetsera (brigantine), 3:10
Wetton (fishing boat), 58:39
weyschuit, 34:31
whale biologists, 165:38–39
Whale Center of New England, 165:38
“Whale Chart” (Maury), 156:31, 156:32
whale watch videographer, 138:33
whaleboat replicas, 9:17
Whalemen’s Shipping List, 179:49
Whalen, Daniel W., 122:13, 129:8
whales, 148:36, 156:31, 167:44–45
baleen whales, 169:26
blue whales, 168:21
bowhead whales, 168:20
and the equator, 156:31
killer whales (orcas), 123:37, 168:20–21
pilot whales, 169:26
products from, 109:22, 128:16, 128:16, 157:42–43, 169:5–6, 169:5
right whales, 160:46–47, 169:24, 169:28
rorqual whales, 168:21, 169:26
sperm whales, 123:37, 128:16–20, 129:6, 162:40–41, 169:24, 169:24, 169:26, 169:27, 169:28
teeth of, 128:16–20
white whales, 123:37
whaleships, 2:29–30, 90:0, 156:32–33
Alexander, 51:5
Alliance, 16:19
Andrew Hicks, 51:5
Ansel Gibbs, 2:26
Asia, 16:19
Aurora, 174:22
Balaena, 18:42
Barba Negra (converted to barquentine), 3:5, 4:19, 4:35, 10:28, 13:12
Beaver, 86:12
Benjamin Cummings, 174:22
Benjamin Tucker, 174:23
Byzantium, 168:20–21
Cape Horn Pigeon, 174:21, 174:22
Catalpa, 117:13, 117:13, 169:18, 169:18, 169:20–22, 169:20, 169:21
Charles and Henry, 99:15, 99:16
Charles Drew, 174:24
Charles W. Morgan, 179:40
Commodore Morris, 81:29, 169:24–28
Daniel Wood, 125:19
Dawn, 136:40
Diana, 25:43
Edgar, 18:41
Elizabeth, 179:40
Emma F. Herriman, 51:5
Emporium, 51:5
Essex, 21:31, 99:16, 125:19, 132:34, 136:12, 150:50
Florida, 94:39
Franklin, 79:12
Friendship, 172:18
Gay Head, 51:5
George Henry, 175:47
Hannibal, 74:20, 74:21, 168:21
Harmony, 179:38–39
Heimland, 177:14
Hermes, 125:16, 127:23, 127:25
Hudson, 168:20
Industry, 108:3, 172:19, 179:38–40, 179:39
James Arnold, 21:3
John Adams, 172:19
John Winthrop, 51:5
Joseph Starbuck, 140:24, 161:34
Kate Cory, 6:3
Lagoda, 10:26, 11:30, 17:28, 114:40, 114:40, 125:41, 134:9
Levant, 168:19
Loper, 172:19
Lucy Ann, 168:19
Manhattan, 168:18–19
Manta, 8:20
Marengo, 94:39
Maro, 127:23
Mary and Helen (renamed USS Rodgers), 150:11–14, 150:11, 150:13, 151:5
Mary D. Hume, 8:14, 8:16, 13:49, 15:53, 25:23, 25:23, 41:32, 43:4
Mary D. Leach, 51:5
Merrimac, 174:48
Minerva, 174:24
Montezuma, 51:5
Morning Star, 174:21, 174:23, 174:23
N. P. Talmadge, 18:41
Neptune, 121:15, 172:55, 174:36–37
Newburyport, 74:20–21
Niantic, 11:33, 12:6, 12:36, 12:41, 14:32, 15:44–46, 15:46, 18:14, 36:15–16, 90:34, 102:30
Nimrod, 174:23
North America, 164:38
Parker, 106:36, 125:14, 125:18, 127:25
Pearl, 125:15, 125:16, 127:23, 127:25
Richmond, 18:41
Rising States, 172:19
Rosario, 166:20
Sappho, 126:28
Sea Queen, 174:21
and sharks, 164:38–42
Sharon, 105:15–17
Sheffield, 168:20
South Seaman, 125:19
Spermo, 172:19
Superior, 168:20
Syren, 127:23
Thetis, 121:17, 122:5, 180:30–33
Tuscarora, 18:41
Twilight, 104:22
Two Brothers, 179:16
Wanderer, 10:26, 24:36, 134:17, 147:25
William F. Safford, 168:21
William Gifford, 174:24, 174:24
See also Charles W. Morgan
“Whales’ Tales: Matthew Fontaine Maury and the American Quest for the Northwest Passage,” 156:30–33
“Whaleship Charles W. Morgan in Miniature,” 42:20–21
whaling, 18:41, 134:16, 168:18–22, 168:20, 168:22, 174:20–21
as ancient tradition, 123:36
in Britain, 156:30
Captains’s wives, 74:20–22
Commodore Morris logbook, 169:24–28, 169:25
“cutting in,” 164:39, 164:39, 164:40
Lawrence’s logbook, 169:24–28
in Nantucket, 172:16–21
in San Francisco, 117:25
shore whaling, 2:30
whaling journal, 174:48, 174:48
and World War I, 169:5–6
Whaling Crew List Index, 103:38
Whaling Enshrined, 96:18, 134:17
Whaling Heritage Symposiums, 41:32, 122:50, 123:12, 123:45, 124:8
Whaling Museum (Cold Spring Harbor, NY), 20:39, 21:32, 23:23, 33:35, 119:36, 164:53
Whaling Museum (New Bedford, MA). See New Bedford Whaling Museum
“Whaling Shipwrecks in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands: the 2008 Maritime Heritage Archaeological Expedition to the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument,” 125:14–19
“Whaling Wives, Sister Sailors,” 74:20–22
WhalingHistory.org, 164:51, 169:28, 179:49–50
Wharton, Kaiulani Williams, 91:25
“What Is Archaeology?,” 51:8
“‘What Manner of Men Were They?’” 35:24
“What to do with the Evelina M Goulart,” 131:12–14
Whatcom Maritime Museum, 79:37
What’s Going On With Shipping? (YouTube channel), 176:46
“What’s In a Name: A Tour Through the Actual Practices of How Warships Get Their Names,” 30:8–10
WHEC 37 (Coast Guard cutter; formerly Taney), 73:36, 75:3, 85:21, 88:31, 172:53–54, 172:53, 173:6
Wheeler, Charles, 174:36–39
When and If, (schooner), 163:28, 183:62
“When We See Whales: Transcribing Captain Lawrence’s Logbook,” 169:24–28
“Where Does Humanity Fit In?” 58:9
“Where Sea Adventure Spreads Learning,” 104:32, 104:35–36
“Where Sea and City Meet: New York Harbor, Legacy and Promise,” 93:9–13
Whidden, Thomas A., 180:10, 180:11, 180:11, 181:8, 181:8, 181:9
Whipple, Bob, 10:23
Whipple, Seth Arca (artist), 15:56, 47:0
Whipple, William, 103:14
Whipple, USS (destroyer), 178:32, 178:33
Whirlwind (clipper), 168:29
Whisper (Wianno senior), 51:47–48, 53:5–6
Whistler, George Washington (artist), 15:56
Whistler, James A. McNeill (artist), 15:56, 113:34
Whistling up a Breeze (superstition), 101:29
Whitcomb, Lot, 179:18–19
Whitcombe, Mark (artist), 40:30
White, Bob, 57:30
White, Colin, 127:5–6
White, James “Jamie,” 133:42–43, 133:42, 155:22, 156:46, 156:46, 168:56
White, John (artist), 15:56, 176:15
sketches of the New World, 55:24–27
White, Raymond D.
“American Marine Artists: A Research Project,” 15:54–56
“An Appreciation of William Alexander Coulter,” 22:29–31
White, Steve, 133:8, 134:18–19, 144:39, 144:40, 149:8, 154:13, 154:13, 154:15, 157:43, 167:8
White, William H., 85:7, 93:7, 97:6, 99:5, 107:6, 111:2, 124:46, 133:47, 133:47, 134:4, 169:9, 172:12
“Birthplace of the US Navy ––Is Where?” 178:46–47
“Constitution’s Most Challenging Fight and the Battle of New Orleans—A Look at the FInal Battles of the War of 1812,” 141:10–16
“The Barbary Wars,” 105:9–13
“The Barron/Decatur Letters, June 1819 to February 1820, Which Led to the Untimely Death of Stephen Decatur,” 118:16–19
“David Dixon Porter Jr.: A Warrior Uncomfortable with Peace,” 129:16–20
“Heroes of the Sailing Navy: James Lawrence,” 114:26–30
“Heroes of the Sailing Navy: Steven Decatur Jr.,” 116:10–14
“Heroes of the Sailing Navy: William Bainbridge,” 112:12–15
“Heroes of the Sailing Navy: William Henry Allen,” 110:28–31
“Naval Historical Foundation to Turn Over Portion of Cold War Gallery to Navy Museum,” 129:42
“HM Prison Dartmoor––A Paradox in Devon, England,” 165:18–21
“In the Wake of Bounty: A Voyage of Recovery,” 121:20–25, 179:4
“War of 1812: The Burning of Washingson, and the ‘Star-Spangled Banner,’” 140:14–18
“The War of 1812: Year Two,” 136:10–15
“The War of 1812: Year Three,” 137:10–16
“The War of 1812’s Final Chapter: At Sea and at the Negotiating Table,” 150:20–23
“The War of 1812—Understudied, Misunderstood, and Forgotten,” 133:10–12, 134:10–14
“The War of 1812: USS United States vs. HMS Macedonian,” 135:10–14
White Elephant Management, 30:40–41, 33:33
White Plains (escort carrier), 71:17
White Shark (three-masted schooner), 69:5
white shrimp, 156:43
White Squall (clipper), 168:28–32
White Squall (film), 76:37
White Star Clippers, 89:38
White Star liners, 156:17
white sturgeon, 146:35–37
White Tower (Thessalonika), 146:16
white whales, 123:37
“White Wings on Seas of Glory,” 5:15
White Witch (ex-Ciudad de Inca; ex-Inca) (schooner), 21:29, 28:42, 29:26
Whitehead, Donald
“S.O.S. for the Nantucket Lightship / LV-112,” 126:12–15
Whitehorse (sternwheel steamboat), 3:31
Whitelaw (salvage steamer), 63:20–21
Whitesboro (steam schooner), 79:14
Whiteside, Henry, 165:34–36
Whitfield, William H., 79:12–13
“Whither the Dainty?” 30:11
Whiting, Kenneth, 178:27–28, 178:31, 178:31
Whitlock, Peter Charles, 53:41
“To Raise the Mary Rose!” 23:6–13
Whitney, Harry, 151:10–13, 151:10, 151:12
Whittemore, James R., 63:8, 63:39
Whittum, John, 154:26
“Why Build This Ship? Kalmar Nyckel Takes Her Place in the Fleet,” 86:22–23
“Why Educate by Building Wooden Boats?” 10:3
“Why Save Historic Ships?” 110:32–34
“Whydah Archaeologists Defend Their Project,” 51:7. See also Wydah project.
Whydah slave ship excavation, 51:7, 68:16, 156:29. See also Wydah project.
“The Wianno Senior: 75 Years Young!” 51:12
Wianno Seniors, 51:12–13, 51:47–48
Wiannos, 53:5–6
Wichita (US cruiser), 62:15, 173:7
Wick Heritage Society, 48:11
Wickes, Lambert, 101:3
Wicksteed, Godfrey, 19:18, 83:53
“Wide Ocean World of William Bradford,” 104:22–25
Wide West (sternwheeler), 179:22, 179:22
Wigglesworth, Edward, 117:16
Wignall, Sydney
“The Search for the Bonhomme Richard,” 12:25–26
Wigsten, Hjalmar, 142:11
Wilbur, Curtis, 151:30
Wilcox, Martin, 68:22
Wild, Frank, 142:30, 142:33, 179:43
“A Wild Note of Longing,” 176:38–39
Wilde, Hamilton Gibbs (artist), 150:29
Wilde-Ramsing, Mark
“Marine Archaeology Experts Bring their Science to Schools, 67:8–9
Wilder, Laura Ingalls, 171:18, 171:18
“Wildlife and Windjammers,” 18:20
Wildwood, 142:51
Wiles, Peter Sr., 75:37
Wilfred Sykes (Great Lakes bulk carrier), 175:48
Wilhelm (steamer), 179:52
Wilhelm Bauer (ex-U-2540) (U-boat), 29:30, 32:42
Wilhelm Pieck (renamed Greif) (brigantine), 3:10, 3:10, 65:39
Wilhelmina (wooden kotter), 25:33
Wilhelmsson, Jerry, 157:44
Wilkes, Charles, 38:34, 109:3, 109:3, 156:30, 169:25
Wilkes, Hamilton, 97:8, 143:32
Wilkes, James
“Schooner Sherman Zwicker; Making the Transition from Sail to Power on the Grand Banks,” 150:36–40
Wilkie, James J., 144:31
Wilkie II (replica paddlewheel steamboat), 20:42
Wilkins, Hubert, 181:26
Wilkins, Mark C., 182:53
“Training for D-Day on Maryland’s Western Shore,” 166:28–32
Wilkinson, Elizabeth Stuart “Stu,” 180:38
Wilkinson, James, 136:12
Wilkinson, Norman (artist), 15:54, 98:32
Wilkinson, William, 1:33
Will, John Mylin “Dutch,” 21:7, 21:7, 21:16, 33:25
Will Rogers (submarine), 30:10
“Will There Be a Main Skysail-Yarder in Operation Sail 1992?” 52:36–37
Willanne (trawler), 173:45
Willard, Jack
“Battleship New Jersey,” 107:12
Willard Mudgett (barque), 114:34
Willauer, Peter O., 51:29
Willcox, Roland, 84:27
Willdora (trawler, Dunkirk “little ship”), 173:45–46, 173:46
“Willem van de Velde & Son, a Retrospective,” 177:32–36
Willett, Donald E.
“At War Before the War––SS City of Flint’s Ordeal Under the Nazi Flag,” 159:10–14
Willett, Kenneth M., 35:22
Willey, Owen S., 178:45
William A. Coulte, SS (Liberty ship), 22:31
William A. Graber (schooner), 8:20
William A. Grosier (Cape Verde schooner), 9:28
William A. Irvin (Great Lakes ore carrier; museum ship), 49:5, 148:30, 169:54, 169:54
William A. Vail (schooner), 36:12
William B. Allison (Liberty ship), 92:4
William B. Tennison (bugeye), 14:49, 14:49, 17:36, 25:46, 32:43, 67:36
William Bryan (schooner), 36:16
William C. Daldy (steam tug), 14:43, 25:19
William Carson (barque), 21:27
William Clark, SS (Liberty ship), 149:14, 149:14
William Clay Ford (Great Lakes freighter), 168:52
William D. Bloxham, SS, 177:27
William Dollar (four-masted barque), 15:52, 114:0
William F. Romer (steamboat), 37:13
William F. Safford (whaleship), 168:21
“William Falconer: From Survivor to Marine Lexicographer,” 99:30–32
William G. Mather, SS (bulk cargo carrier), 49:5, 67:4, 71:7, 71:7, 72:34, 76:37, 148:30, 148:30
William Gaston, SS (Liberty ship), 35:14–19, 35:16, 39:3
William Gifford (whaling ship), 174:24, 174:24
“William Gordon Muller, Steamboats, and the Hudson River,” 58:24–26
William Grabner (Cape Verde packet), 8:21
William H. Albury (schooner), 85:18, 85:18, 89:35, 89:35
William H. Smith (Down East fishing trawler), 15:52, 19:41
William Hooper, SS (Liberty ship), 11:21
William Hunter (schooner), 68:5
William Johnson, SS (Liberty ship), 49:5
William L. Douglas (six-master), 16:25
William L. Elkins (schooner), 50:7
William M. Black (sidewheel dredge), 43:8, 43:8, 43:9, 160:52, 160:52
“William M. Davis: Artist of Port Jefferson,” 50:24–26
William M. Tweed (steam yacht), 9:32
William Manson (barque), 161:31
William Mason (brig), 125:6
William McCann (ex-City of Edinboro; ex-Sjoborgin) (sailing trawler), 22:36, 27:37, 28:30
William Mitchell (sidewheel steam dredge), 68:32
William N. Pendleton, SS (Liberty ship), 69:22–23
William Nottingham (four-masted schooner), 22:12
William O. Benson (fantail steam launch), 30:40, 82:4
William P. McArthur, 142:51
William Pendleton, 69:30
William Penn (barque), 127:6
William S. Mitchell (paddlewheeler), 43:4
William Shand ((hulk, formerly barque), 13:41, 38:16, 162:30
William Stewart (renamed John Taxis) (tugboat), 13:48, 25:18, 25:46
William Vail, 36:16
William Williams, SS (Liberty ship), 11:21–22
Williams, Anne Kaiulani, 11:26
Williams, Ann Sparrow, 11:26
Williams, Arthur, 11:26
Williams, E. Frank, 176:49, 176:49
Williams, Emma Kaiulani Sewall, 11:26
Williams, George, 181:37
Williams, Harold Sewall, 11:26
Williams, James H., 173:37, 173:37, 173:39
Williams, Jan, 95:5
Williams, Jayson T., 172:4, 172:40, 172:40
Williams, John D., 154:22, 154:24
Williams, John Winslow, 11:26
Williams, Kaiulani Cooper, 11:26, 74:4
Williams, Kaiulani Sewall, 11:26
Williams, Kathleen Broome, 176:8
“‘Amazing Grace’ Hopper: The Woman Who Brought the Navy into the Digital Age,” 168:24–27, 176:8, 179:4
Williams, Kaye, 95:5, 95:5, 182:22, 182:23
Williams, Kayla, 170:18, 172:9
Williams, Roger III
“An Ohio River Window,” 57:28–29
Williams, Sewall
“Aloha, Kaiulani Part III: A Name That Lives,” 11:26
Williams, Stefan, 156:53
Williams, Thomas, 105:16–17
Williams College, Maritime Studies Program, 127:45, 166:12–13, 167:8, 167:9, 174:51–52
Williamsburg (yacht), 6:30
Williamsburg, USS, 28:32
Williams-Mystic: The Maritime Studies Program of Williams College and Mystic Seaport, 166:10, 166:12–13, 180:55
Williamson, James (artist), 20:44
Williamson, R. S., 140:29
Willie R. Hume (four-masted barquentine), 117:24
Willis B. Boyer, SS (ex-SS Col. James M. Schoonmaker) (freighter), 49:5, 121:44, 147:43–44, 148:30
Willliam J. Mather (steamer), 55:29
Willmarie (trawler), 173:45
Willmott, H. P.
“Battle of Midway: America’s First Victory in a Fleet Action in World War II,” 102:8–12
Will-o’-the-Wisp, HMS, 157:32
Willoughby, Hugh, 173:30
Willoz-Egnot, Jeanne
“A Unique Concours d’Elegance of Canoes,” 99:18–21
Wills, Frances, 178:40, 178:40
Wilma, 5:31
Wilma Lee (skipjack), 23:23
Wilma Rudolf (ex-Fear Not) (sailing trawler), 32:42
Wilmington, USS (gunboat), 157:18–19
Wilmington Steamboat Foundation, 18:44, 19:39, 25:45, 27:38, 31:56
Wilson, Eben, 155:42–43
Wilson, Edith, 169:13
Wilson, Edward, 173:32
Wilson, Evan
“The US Naval War College––The Navy’s ‘Home of Thought’,” 170:34–37
Wilson, James H., 166:35, 169:18, 169:19
Wilson, John, 132:14
Wilson-Kautz Raid, 166:35
Wilson, Nathaniel, 132:40, 132:40, 133:8, 133:8, 147:5, 147:24–28, 147:28
Wilson, Richard, 104:32, 104:34, 107:6, 180:10
Wilson, Woodrow, 99:7–8, 104:7, 169:12, 169:13, 169:15, 169:20–22, 170:13, 171:23
Wilson, SS (steamer), 131:3
Wilton (minesweeper), 30:9
Wimsatt, Robert W. C., 101:10, 101:11
Winans, Ross, 53:43
Winans, Thomas, 53:43
Winarski, John, 128:29
Winchelsea (battleship), 85:45
Winchester (packet), 70:25
wind power, 20:7, 20:36, 21:30, 79:36, 130:44, 146:33–44
Wind Ship Development Corporation, 22:36
Wind Star (electronically automated sailing cruise ship), 59:32, 59:32
Windborne Gallery, 38:29
Winder, William, 140:15, 147:21
Windermere Steamboat Museum, 65:38
Windjammer (film), 32:26
Windjammers (musical), 167:52
“Window on the Royal Navy,” 76:30–31
winds, 134:36
powering railroad locomotion, 108:22, 121:5–6
sou’westers, 128:40
trade winds, 134:36
See also weather
Windship Magnificent, 20:36
Windships America, 79:36
Windy I (schooner), 92:54
Windy II (barkentine), 92:54
Wines, Charlie, 68:11
Winfield Scott (sidewheel steamer), 58:38, 130:14, 130:14, 130:15
Wing, William R., 96:47
Wingfield Castle (paddle wheeler), 18:47, 28:30
Winifred, SS, 129:34
Winkleigh (British freighter), 144:26
Winkler, David F., 129:42, 129:42, 144:12, 176:47, 179:8–9, 179:9
“A Centennial of American Destroyers,” 100:15–18
“‘Wisky’ Aground: Inter-Service Can-Do Saves the Day!” 92:17–18
“USS Langley and the Centennial of US Navy Carrier Aviation,” 178:26–33
Winnebago (steel steam schooner), 39:46
Winnepesauke (Cape Verde packet), 8:20
“Winning the America’s Cup in 1851,” 97:7–10
“Winning Their Way to Bermuda,” 47:8–10
Winona County Historical Society, 12:42
Winslow, Charles Eliot, 130:30–33, 130:30, 130:31
Winslow, Eliot, 142:16–22, 142:16
Winslow, Job, 36:13
Winslow, USS (torpedo boat), 157:16–20, 157:17, 157:17–18, 157:18, 157:18–19
Winslow Homer Studio, 140:40–41, 140:41
Winston Churchill, USS (destroyer; DDG 81), 100:15, 176:50
Winter, Anne Kaiulani (daughter), 11:26, 91:25
Winter, Anne Kaiulani Williams (mother), 11:26, 91:25
Winter, Edward, 11:26
Winter, John, 80:11, 143:16, 143:18
“Winter Alongside,” 42:44–46
Winter Quarter lightship LV-107, 82:34
Winterer, William G., 55:7
Winterhude, 93:18
Winters, Christopher, 175:48
Winters, Robin, 179:39–40
Wire (Coast Guard tugboat), 71:38
“Wireless Goes to Sea: Marconi’s Radio and SS Ponce,” 122:20–23
Wisconsin, USS “Wisky” (battleship), 92:17–18, 92:17–18, 94:21, 108:4, 108:4, 123:46, 148:33, 155:50, 182:8, 182:8
“Wisconsin Fourth Graders ‘Adopt-a-Ship,” 64:8
Wisconsin Historical Society, 177:44, 181:54, 181:54
Maritime Preservation and Archaeology Program (MPA), 106:9
Wisconsin Lake Schooner Education Association (WLSEA), 181:46
Wisconsin Maritime Museum, 79:38, 101:34, 114:37, 115:2, 115:14–16, 163:13, 175:48, 177:40, 181:22, 181:51, 181:51
“Wisconsin Maritime Museum: a CAMM Profile,” 115:14–16
Wisconsin Maritime Trails Program, 123:47
Wisconsin Shipwreck Coast National Marine Sanctuary (WSCNMS), 177:47, 177:47, 179:cover, 179:15, 179:16
Wisconsin Underwater Archaeology Association, 118:40
Wish You Were Here (postcard exhibit), 169:53
“‘Wisky’ Aground: Inter-Service Can-Do Saves the Day!” 92:17–18
Wisla (ex-Elm Branch; ex-Ellen Jensen; now Furley Beeches) (steamer; turret ship), 22:4
Wisting, Oscar, 177:14
Witchcraft (Witchcraft II; sailing yacht), 182:53–54
“With U-53 to America”
Part I, 55:44–45
Part II, 56:44–45
Wittek, Seymour, 126:20, 130:4, 130:10, 130:10
Wittholz, Charles W., 12:22–24, 68:37, 95:9, 142:13
Witting, Jan, 172:43
Witty, Anne, 158:44
WLV-604 Columbia Lightship, 126:15
WLV-605 Relief Lightship, 126:15
WLV-612 (Nantucket lightship), 126:12
WLV-613 (Nantucket lightship, Nantucket II), 54:32, 126:14, 161:41
Wm B. Tennison. See William B. Tennison (bugeye)
“Wm. Gilkerson’s Ten-Year Quest for The Ships of John Paul Jones,” 45:26–28
Wm. H. Smith (Down East schooner), 15:52, 19:41
Wm. McCann (sailing trawler), (ex-City of Edinboro; ex-Sjoborgin) (sailing trawler), 22:36, 27:37, 28:30
Woburn Abbey, 169:38
Woerner, Frank, 4:42
Wolf (German raider), 86:4
Wolfe, Elridge, 131:9
Wolff, Jane
“North Carolina Maritime Museum: Council of American Maritime Museums Profile,” 109:12–14
Woltman (tugboat), 25:19
Wolverine (catboat), 171:34
Wolverine (ex-USS Michigan) (iron-hulled warship), 66:10, 66:10, 67:7
Woman, VeryNice, 181:5
women
as abalone divers, 177:41–43
on board ships, 175:45
in maritime history, 128:43
sailing ships, 13:5, 20:36, 140:48
wives of naval captains, 152:36–39
wives of whaling captains on shore, 85:42–45
wives of whaling captains at sea, 74:20–22
See also Hopper, Grace Murray
Women Accepted for Volunteer Service (WAVES), 178:40
Women at the Helm (WATH), 20:36
“Women of the Deep: A Light History of the Mermaid,” 68:44–46
Women’s Maritime Association, 23:21
Women’s Royal Naval Service (WRNS), 147:32
Wood, Aaron, 69:5
Wood, David V. V., 66:4, 66:6, 113:38
“Sail Training: The Next Century,” 70:20–23
Wood, Fred, 30:25
Wood, Henry J., 169:43
Wood, John Taylor, 151:34–35, 151:35
Wood, Rick, 95:29
Wood, Sarah, 165:13
Wood, William, 164:46
Wood Island Life Saving Station, 157:44–45, 159:5–6, 159:5
Wood Island Life Saving Station Association (WILSSA), 167:52–53
Wood Island Lighthouse, 157:44, 157:44, 159:5–6
Woodall, John, 172:31
Woodburn, 93:17
Woodbury, Charles, 169:38
Woodbury, USS (destroyer), 109:4
Wooden Boat Festival, 24:31, 25:47
Wooden Boat Foundation, 76:36
Wooden Boat Rendezvous, 32:43
Wooden Boat Rescue Foundation (WBRF), 123:47
Wooden Boatbuilding Apprenticeship Program, 24:29
Wooden Boatbuilding Symposium, 25:47
Wooden Bones—The Sunken Fleet of 1758 (documentary), 132:47
“‘Wooden Ship Era’ Opens at Manitowoc,” 29:29
Wooden Shoe (Dutch botter), 30:22
WoodenBoat, 21:30
Woodenboat Apprenticeship, 20:39
WoodenBoat Show, 62:36
Woodman, David C., 166:27
Woods, Alison, 171:12
Woods, Steven
“How Sail Fueled the Industrial Revolution––Sailing Colliers and the Steamship Fleet,” 179:30–31
“Submarine Warfare and the Decline of Sailing Fleets, 1914–1918,” 181:10–13
Woods, Woodson K., 136:30, 136:30, 137:8, 137:8, 171:12, 171:12, 172:7
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute (WHOI), 37:39, 135:35, 153:20, 155:52–53, 156:51–53, 169:28, 182:32
Woodward, Mabel M. (artist), 15:55
Woodwind (schooner), 92:12, 150:8, 150:8
Woody Guthrie (ferry sloop), 11:34–35, 13:16, 14:44, 18:46, 22:38, 32:43, 37:18, 161:51, 161:51
Wool, John, 134:12
Woolf, Virginia, 137:26–28
Wooley, William, 183:25
Woolsey, Bob, 154:35–36
Woolsey, Charles H., 144:31, 144:32
Woolsey, Maxine, 168:47
Worcester (stationary schoolship), 3:13
Worcester (tugboat), 25:18, 25:18
Worcester, USS, 57:14
“The Work of Captain George Comer—Whaling and Anthropology in the Arctic,” 123:18–22
Working Harbor Committee, 155:16
“Working Sail: Ten Vessels that Do Real Jobs Under Sail,” 7:11–13
Working Watercraft Committee, 155:16
“Working With the Medium,” 92:20–22
Works Project Administration, 128:22
World Congress of Amicale Internationale des Captains au long Cours Cap-Horniers Saint-Malo (AICH), 64:39
World Hercules, 20:46
World History Connected, 174:51
World Marine Millennial Conference, 86:5, 91:36, 93:7
World Ocean Day, 115:35
World Ocean Observatory (W2O), 127:44–45
World Ocean School, 103:36, 163:24–27, 163:25, 163:26, 181:46–48
“The World of the Dutch East India Company,” 102:14–15
World Ship Trust, 7:16–18, 9:1, 13:22, 16:9, 19:18–19, 20:32, 21:10, 25:42, 27:38, 31:53, 32:41, 36:33, 44:24, 57:20, 57:22, 69:38, 77:41, 90:40, 100:35, 100:39, 100:41, 117:28, 119:34, 155:13
1984 report, 34:36–37
1985 report, 38:32
1986 report 42:35
1987 report, 46:38
1990 report, 54:12
first ten years report, 54:12
Maritime Heritage Award, 99:36, 104:11
“The World Ship Trust Celebrates the Charles W. Morgan,” 96:13
World Ship Trust Council, 93:6
“The World Ship Trust Established,” 16:9
“World Ship Trust Report: The First Ten Years,” 54:12
World Ship Trust Roundup, 83:51
World Trade Center, 99:12–13
World Trade Center Ship, 99:13, 132:47, 132:47
World War I, 103:11, 104:7, 146:31
100th anniversary, 148:10
Cruiser and Transport Force, 161:18–22
Queenstown Naval Command, 99:7–10
submarine action in, 181:10–13
World War II, 92:10–11, 103:11, 146:32
amphibious operations, 166:28–32
Battle of Midway, 102:8–12
Crystal Project, 101:10–13
Cunard liners in, 95:16
merchant marine, 35:10, 180:28–29
ocean liner dazzle and drab paint schemes, 98:32–33
Operation Overlord, 69:10–16
Pacific War Veteran Vessels in Museums, 73:17
retrospective, 75:6
shipping losses, 68:8–9
subchasers, 84:16–20
U-boats in the Gulf of Mexico, 155:26–30
war at sea, 87:34–37
war in the Atlantic, 91:32–34
war in the Pacific, 71:4, 71:14–17, 166:29
See also Atlantic, Battle of; convoys (WWII); D-Day
“World War II Is Over—What Did Victory Mean?” 75:6
World Youth Sailing Trust, 168:11
World’s Fair 1984, 31:55
“World’s Last Surviving Whaleback, SS Meteor,” 111:33
“Worldscape” videos, 67:26–30
Worley, Sharon
“Making Waves: 20th-Century Fisheries on Cape Ann,” 82:20–21
Worsley, Frank, 179:43
Worsley, John (artist), 35:38, 147:32
Wort, Jean, 80:4, 85:6, 87:5, 97:6, 155:15, 156:44, 168:4, 168:12–13, 168:13, 169:4, 169:8, 169:9, 169:9, 176:4
“Historic Ship Profile: My Commander,” 75:19
Worth, SS (renamed USNS Mercy, T-AH 19), 171:26–27, 171:26
Wray Castle (British fullrigger), 9:5
“The Wreck of the Breadalbane,” 22:26
“The Wreck of the Gold Rush Steamship Winfield Scott,” 130:14–18
“Wreck Preservation in Canada,” 52:9
“wreckers,” 39:15
Wright, Bert (artist), 42:24–25
Wright, Michael, 15:26–27
Wright, Rinn, 49:31
Wright, SS, 161:8
“Writer, Painter, Seafarer: The Captain John J. Bertonccini Collection,” 90:24–26
Wroblewski, Nick (artist), 181:40
Wuerth, Pamela
“A Soviet-American Sail,” 57:18
Wulfram Puget, 6:35
Wunderlich & Company, 42:26
Würdemann, Erich, 155:26, 155:28
Wurster, Kimberly, 175:37–38
Wyatt, Anne, 85:45
Wyatt, John Parker, 174:40, 174:42–43
Wydah project, 50:11, 54:9. See also Whydah, Whydah Project.
Wylde Swan (topsail schooner), 172:38
Wylie, J.C., 17:19
Wyllie, Joannes, 176:14–18
Wyllie, William Lionel (artist), 60:29
Wyomi (ketch), 64:6
Wyoming (collier), 179:30, 179:30
Wyoming (six-masted schooner), 84:22, 106:37, 1:33, 130:46, 142:55, 142:55, 145:11, 172:5, 172:5
sculpture of, 113:39, 118:38, 145:46
Wyoming (six-masted schooner reconstruction), 106:37