Calburga

{{Short description|Canadian barque}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}

{{more citations needed|date=February 2013}}

{{Infobox ship begin|display title=ital}}

{{Infobox ship career

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|Ship name= Calburga

|Ship owner=Adam MacDougall

|Ship operator=W.D. Nelson

|Ship route=HalifaxLiverpool.

|Ship builder=Adam MacDougall

|IMO no.= {{IMO Number|90478}}

|Ship completed=1890

|Ship identification={{IMO Number|90478}}

|Ship fate= Ran aground on November 13, 1915

}}

{{Infobox ship characteristics

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|Ship class=

|Ship tonnage={{GRT|1406}}

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|Ship length={{convert|64.008|m|ftin|abbr=on}}

|Ship beam={{convert|11.94|m|ftin|abbr=on}}

|Ship height={{convert|7.07|m|ftin|abbr=on}}

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|Ship sail plan=Square rig

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|Ship crew=14

|Ship notes=Last Canadian-built square-rigger of large tonnage left that was still registered in Canada.

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Calburga was a Canadian barque, the last Canadian-built square-rigger of large tonnage. She was built in 1890 at South Maitland, Nova Scotia by local shipbuilder, Adams MacDougall. Calburga was a spruce built vessel, iron and copper fastened, and equipped with three masts. Calburga boasted luxuries such as a windmill pump installed in 1913 to keep free of water, a wheelhouse completely enclosing the helmsman and wheel gear, round and elliptical stems, and an exterior ornamented by hand-carved scrolling.

Calburga was an important transporter in the timber trade to South America and also sailed to South Africa, Buenos Aires, and Great Britain. Amidst her travels, Calburga also transferred ownership and command. She was owned at various times by Thomas Douglas, and W.K. Stair and commanded by Jonatha Douglas, Captain Mackenzie, and W.D. Nelson.

During World War I, Calburga saw service as a transport ship between Canada and Great Britain. On November 13, 1915, on her second transport voyage from Canada to Great Britain, under the command of W.D. Nelson, Calburga ran aground on the rocks near Strumble Head, Pembrokeshire, Wales. Nelson and his crew of 14 came upon a gale described as "one of the most violent storms experienced in twenty years." A lifeboat from the Strumble Head Lighthouse found Calburga a total wreck. The crew were nowhere to be found and the coast was strewn with timber. The crew had managed to escape in their own lifeboat and came ashore at Aberbach beach,{{cite web|url=http://www.visitpembrokeshire.com/explore-pembrokeshire/beaches/aberbach/ |title=Aberbach Beach |work=Visit Pembrokeshire |date=}} where they were welcomed by The Shipwrecked Fishermen and Mariners' Royal Benevolent Society and provided transport back to their home port in Halifax.

The wreck of Calburga still lies on the Welsh seabed{{coflein|num=273175 |desc=Calburga |access-date=14 January 2024}} and has become a popular diving destination. A model of the ship, created by David Coldwell and Glenn Buckmaster, is on display at the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic in Halifax.

Notes

{{reflist|refs=

{{cite book

|title=Welsh Shipwrecks

|publisher=Laidlaw-Burgess

|year=1981

|first=Thomas|last=Bennett

|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gbeLSAAACAAJ

}}

{{cite book

|title=Wooden Ships and Iron Men: The Story of the Square-Rigged Merchant Marine of British North America

|first=Frederick William|last=Wallace

|year=1937

|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2gegK-PBbPoC

|publisher=Charles E. Lauriat

|pages=156–158

|isbn=9781428657182 }}

{{cite news

|newspaper=The Country Echo

|date=18 November 1915

}}

{{cite news|title=Ships of Yesteryear|first=Pete|last=Kendrick|newspaper=Amherst Daily News|year=1978}}

}}

{{Shipbuilding in Atlantic Canada |state=expanded}}

{{coord |52|01|04|N|5|5|35|W|type:landmark_region:GB-PEM |display=title}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Calburga}}

Category:Barques

Category:Sailing ships of Canada

Category:Maritime history of Canada

Category:Tall ships of Canada

Category:Individual sailing vessels

Category:Ships built in Nova Scotia

Category:Victorian-era merchant ships of Canada

Category:1890 ships

Category:Shipwrecks of Wales