Lawrence & Foulks

{{Infobox company

| name = Lawrence & Foulks

| logo =

| caption =

| type = Private

| genre =

| fate = Closed

| predecessor =

| successor =

| foundation = 1852

| founders = {{ubl|Herbert Lawrence Jr|William Foulks}}

| defunct = 1902

| location_city = {{ubl|Manhattan, NY (1852–54)|{{nobreak|Williamsburg, NY (1854–71)}}|Greenpoint, NY (1871–1902)|United States}}

| location_country =

| location =

| locations =

| area_served =

| key_people =

| industry = Shipbuilding

| products = Wooden-hulled steamships and other watercraft

| services = Ship repairs

| revenue =

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| assets =

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| owners =

| num_employees = 150 (1865)

| parent =

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| footnotes =

| intl =

}}

Lawrence & Foulks was a 19th-century American shipbuilding company based in New York. Established in the early 1850s, the company built 144 vessels of all types over the course of some fifty years, but is best known for its production of high-speed wooden-hulled steamboats and steamships. Notable vessels built by the company include the record-breaking Hudson River steamboat Chauncey Vibbard, the luxury Long Island Sound steamer Commonwealth, and the fast oceangoing steamships—later U.S. Navy gunboats—{{USS|Bienville||2}} and {{USS|De Soto|1859|2}}. In addition to the domestic market, the company also built ships for service as far afield as South America and China.

Lawrence & Foulks was one of the few New York shipyards to survive the post-Civil War slump, but was either unwilling or unable to make the postwar transition from wooden to iron shipbuilding, and closed its doors around the turn of the century.

History

=Origins, 1850–54=

In 1849, William Foulks, a British-born ship's carpenter then aged 37, partnered with a young engineer named Humphrey Crary to build a steamboat in New York, which was named Catherine after Foulks' wife.Matteson 2005. pp. 54-55. Foulks received contracts to build several more vessels over the next two years.Silka, p. 20. At this time, his shipyard was located at the foot of Cherry Street, Manhattan.[http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Search&Key=BEG/1886/08/27/4/Ar00416.xml&CollName=BEG_APA3_1885-1889&DOCID=173557&PageLabelPrint=&Skin=BEagle&AppName=2&GZ=T&sScopeID=All&sPublication=BEG&sSorting=Score%2cdesc&sQuery=%22lawrence%20%26%20foulks%22&rEntityType=&ViewMode=GIF&GZ=T "William Foulks"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1886-08-27, p. 4.

By 1852, Foulks had established a partnership with Herbert Lawrence, and the company was renamed Lawrence & Foulks.[https://www.newspapers.com/clip/60179317/shipbuilding-ny-list-sep-1852/ "Ship Building in New York"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1852-09-06, p. 2. Lawrence, then barely in his twenties, was the son of Herbert Lawrence Sr., former co-proprietor of the prominent early New York shipbuilding firm of Lawrence & Sneden.Sitka, p. 50. By 1854, the Lawrence & Foulks shipyard had relocated to North Fifth Street, Williamsburg (now a part of Brooklyn), where it would remain for the next 17 years.

=Plant, equipment and labor force=

While the specific plant and equipment utilized by Lawrence & Foulks is not known, wooden shipbuilding firms in this era could be established for a remarkably small outlay—as little as $11,000, and rarely more than $20,000. Tradesmen at this time mostly supplied their own tools, so a shipyard needed little more than a waterfront property large enough to hold a timber yard and a slipway or two, a derrick to lift heavy components, a large crosscut saw and a few other tools.Heinrich, p. 21.

Since New York was already well served by a number of existing marine engine plants, Lawrence & Foulks, like the other New York shipyards, had no need to establish an expensive engine plant of its own, but could rely upon outsourcing for its steamship engines. Companies which would build marine engines for Lawrence & Foulks prior to the Civil War included leading firms such as the Allaire Iron Works, Morgan Iron Works, Henry Esler & Co. and the Novelty Iron Works. After the war, when many of New York's marine engine manufacturers went out of business, Lawrence & Foulks appears to have come increasingly to rely upon New Jersey's Fletcher, Harrison & Co. to meet its machinery requirements.{{efn|See the various individual entries in the ship table.}}

As with other shipbuilders of the era, the size of Lawrence & Foulks' workforce could fluctuate greatly depending upon the available work. The company appears to have employed about 50 people for every ship under construction, and it was capable of building as many as four ships at once.[http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Search&Key=BEG/1873/04/12/4/Ar00409.xml&CollName=BEG_APA3_1870-1874&DOCID=191449&PageLabelPrint=&Skin=BEagle&AppName=2&GZ=T&sPublication=BEG&sQuery=%22lawrence%20%26%20foulk%22&sSorting=%2553%2563%256f%2572%2565%2c%2564%2565%2573%2563&sDateFrom=%2530%2531%2f%2530%2531%2f%2531%2538%2534%2531&sDateTo=%2531%2532%2f%2533%2531%2f%2531%2539%2530%2532&ViewMode=GIF&GZ=T "The Ship Yards"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1873-04-12, p. 4.

=Early years, 1850s–1860=

File:USS De Soto (1861-1868).jpg

Through the 1850s, Lawrence & Foulks built a number of steamers and other vessels for South American clients, including the 300-ton Spanish steamers General Concha and General Serrano for Cuban service;[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1868/04/26/78914173.pdf "Law Reports"], The New York Times, 1868-04-26. a large steamer for the Río de la Plata; and two small high-pressure riverboats for the Peruvian government destined for service on the Amazon. Two 1,300-ton steamers for Californian service were also completed.

In 1855, Lawrence & Foulks completed construction of the Long Island Sound steamer Commonwealth. Setting a new standard of elegance for Sound steamers, this large, lavishly outfitted steamer quickly became a favorite with the travelling public.Heyl, Vol. 3, p. 97.Monthly Nautical Magazine, pp. 221-226. In 1859–60, Lawrence & Foulks built the fast oceangoing steamships {{USS|De Soto|1859|2}} and {{USS|Bienville||2}}, sister ships designed for passenger-cargo service between New York and New Orleans. Both vessels were later purchased by the U.S. Navy and would serve with distinction during the Civil War as gunboats.Heyl, Vol. 1, pp. 57–58.Heyl, Vol. 1, pp. 129–130.

=American Civil War, 1861–65=

With the outbreak of the Civil War, the U.S. Navy quickly purchased or chartered hundreds of ships from private steamship companies, which were needed to establish the blockade of Confederate ports and to transport troops and supplies along the Atlantic coast. The steamship companies were then obliged to return to the shipyards to replace their fleets, only to find themselves vying with the Navy which needed still more ships. The strong demand for new shipping created boom conditions for American shipyards which would last to the end of the war.Heinrich, pp. 25-28.Swann, p. 18. New York shipyards in this period also benefited from the Treaty of Tianjin. Ratified in 1860, the treaty gave U.S. companies increased access to Chinese waterways and ports,Elleman, p. 47. which in turn stimulated demand for steamboats and steamships for Chinese service.Morrison 1903, p. 510.

File:Geared beam engine.jpg

In 1861-62 Lawrence & Foulks completed at least three screw steamers for U.S. companies operating in China: Flambeau, Kiang-Tsze and Sze-Chuen. The latter two were duly despatched to China but Flambeau was purchased by the U.S. Navy to serve as the gunboat {{USS|Flambeau|1861|6}}. The company also completed a number of screw steamers for domestic American service during the war, including {{USS|Isaac Smith||2}}, D. S. Miller and John L. Hasbrouck, all for Hudson River service. After a few months on the Hudson, Isaac Smith, like Flambeau, was requisitioned by the Navy for conversion into a gunboat. All the above-mentioned screw steamers were powered by beam-propeller engines—a transitional technology that mated the old, slow-rpm beam engine with the screw propeller by mounting the engine athwartships and gearing it up (at a ratio of one to three or more) to the propeller shaft.Johnson, p. 23.

Another newly built Lawrence & Foulks ship to be requisitioned by the Navy at this time was the small sidewheel steamer {{USS|Thomas Freeborn||2}}. In an attack on Mathias Point, Virginia on 27 June 1861, Thomas Freeborn{{'}}s commander, James H. Ward, became the first U.S. Navy officer killed in action in the war.[http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/pers-us/uspers-w/jh-ward.htm "Commander James H. Ward, USN, (1806-1861)"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070703001315/http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/pers-us/uspers-w/jh-ward.htm |date=2007-07-03 }}, Naval History and Heritage Command.

File:Chauncey Vibbard by Stanton.jpg

In 1864, Lawrence & Foulks completed the Hudson River steamboat Chauncey Vibbard. Soon after entering service, the 280-foot vessel proved to be the fastest steamer on the highly competitive route from New York to Albany, making the trip in a new record time of 6 hours 42 minutes. With boilers carefully balanced to eliminate vibration, and a hull said to "cut the water as a knife blade", Chauncey Vibbard helped establish a reputation for Lawrence & Foulks as America's leading designers of high-speed watercraft.

=Postwar slump, 1865–70=

With the end of the war in April 1865, the U.S. shipbuilding industry experienced a severe downturn. The Navy dumped more than a million tons of unwanted shipping onto the market, depressing prices and leaving shipyards with no work. High postwar prices, along with a series of bitter (and unsuccessful) strikes for the eight-hour day, helped prolong the slump to the end of the decade. The slump had a devastating effect on the New York shipbuilding industry, with most of the city's shipbuilders and marine engine manufacturers going out of business in this period.Swann, p. 23.Heinrich, p. 32.

Lawrence & Foulks was one of only a handful of New York shipyards to survive the prolonged slump,[http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Repository/BEG/1875/07/23/008-BEG-1875-07-23-01-SINGLE.pdf#OLV0_Entity_0002_0016 "Shipbuilding. Rise, Progress and Decline in Greenpoint"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1875-07-23, p. 2. aided in part by a flurry of orders in 1864-65. Livingston, Fox & Co., preparing to resume its prewar New York to New Orleans service, ordered a total of six sub-1000 ton steamers from Lawrence & Foulks in this period, including Herman Livingston, General J. K. Barnes and the four sister ships Albermarle, Hatteras, Raleigh and Rapidan.Heyl, Vol. 1, pp. 13, 161, 199, 207, 357, 359. Two large 1,300 ton steamers, Vera Cruz and Manhattan, were also built in 1865 for Charles A. Whitney's American and Mexican Mail Steamship Company.Heyl, Vol. 1, pp. 239, 437. In 1866, Lawrence & Foulks built the 2,200-ton steamship Oregonian for Californian service—probably the largest steamship ever built by the company.

By 1869 the slump had reached its nadir. Lawrence & Foulks managed to secure a couple of contracts early in the year, for the ferry Sylvan Glen and a small 100-ton steamer, but by September, only one vessel was under construction in the whole of New York.

=Recovery, 1871–73=

File:Sylvan Dell 03.jpg

The long postwar slump finally ended in 1871, as shipowners began to return to U.S. shipyards to replace their ageing fleets. In April 1871, after almost twenty years at Williamsburg, Lawrence & Foulks relocated their shipyard to the foot of Noble Street, Greenpoint,[https://www.newspapers.com/clip/74121153/lf-to-greenpoint-apr-1871/ "Shipyard Removed"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1871-04-24, p. 10. on the site of E. S. Whitlock's former shipyard, who like many others had retired from the business after the war.[http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Repository/BEG/1875/07/30/008-BEG-1875-07-30-01-SINGLE.pdf#OLV0_Entity_0002_0041 "Shipbuilding. Further Mention of Old and Prominent Firms"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1875-07-30, p. 2. The shipyard had a frontage of {{convert|200|ft}} along the river and {{convert|500|ft}} on land.

From 1871 to 1873, New York shipyards remained busy. By this time however, the larger steamship contracts were going to the builders of iron-hulled ships on the Delaware—to firms such as John Roach & Sons, William Cramp & Sons, and Harlan and Hollingsworth—leaving New York shipbuilders to fulfill contracts for smaller vessels such as ferries, commuter and excursion steamers, steam yachts and tugboats.Ridgely-Nevitt, pp. 348-349.

Lawrence & Foulks secured a substantial number of such contracts in this period. A notable example was Sylvan Dell, a ferry built for the Harlem & New York Navigation Company. With a speed in excess of 20 mph,Morrison 1903, p. 562. Sylvan Dell was New York Harbor's fastest vessel in her class, and remained popular with the public for many years, eventually being dubbed "Queen of New York Harbor".Morrison 1903, p. 363.Stanton, p. 211.Dayton, p. 429. In 1873, Lawrence & Foulks built Jennie Stout—the first schooner built in New York since the war, and the largest three-masted schooner built there to that date.

=Decline and closure, 1873–1902=

The brief early 1870s boom came to an abrupt end with the Panic of 1873. The subsequent recession would drag on until 1879, but by 1875 there was a widespread recognition that this time there would be no recovery for New York shipyards. Not only were the iron shipbuilders of the Delaware now dominating the contracts for larger ships, but the locus of wooden shipbuilding in the U.S. had moved to the state of Maine, where lower prices for timber, and lower wages, enabled the construction of wooden-hulled vessels as much as 20% cheaper than in New York.

The extent of New York's decline as a shipbuilding center from 1873 is well illustrated by the fortunes of Lawrence & Foulks itself. In the 24 years from 1851 to 1875, Lawrence & Foulks built a total of 122 vessels, an average of more than five per year. In the firm's remaining 25 years, from 1876 to 1901, it built only another 22 vessels, an average of less than one per year.{{efn|The firm built a total of 144 ships according to The New York Times.[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1901/10/02/117974843.pdf "Golden Wedding Celebration"], The New York Times, 1901-10-02). Subtracting the 122 ships reportedly built to 1875 yields a total of 22 ships built between 1876 and 1901.}} Among the latter were San Rafael and Saucelito, sister ferries built in 1877 which were shipped overland in pieces to San Francisco. After reassembly, the two vessels quickly established themselves as the fastest ferries on the Bay.[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=yloBAAAAIBAJ&sjid=YCkDAAAAIBAJ&pg=5607,2944001&dq=steamer+san-rafael&hl=en "In Dense Fog: Two San Francisco Ferries Crash Together"], St. John Daily Sun, 1901-12-02, p. 1.

Among the last notable steamers built by Lawrence & Foulks were Albertina, built in 1882 for the Red Bank Line, and the steam yacht Clermont for Commodore Alfred van Santvoord of the New York and Albany Line. In August 1886, William Foulks fell from scaffolding while inspecting a vessel at his shipyard, suffering internal injuries. He died at home, aged 74, a few days later.[http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Repository/getFiles.asp?Style=OliveXLib:LowLevelEntityToSaveGifMSIE_BEAGLE&Type=text/html&Locale=english-skin-custom&Path=BEG/1886/08/24&ChunkNum=-1&ID=Ar00427 "William Foulks' Serious Fall"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110612034341/http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Repository/getFiles.asp?Style=OliveXLib%3ALowLevelEntityToSaveGifMSIE_BEAGLE&Type=text%2Fhtml&Locale=english-skin-custom&Path=BEG%2F1886%2F08%2F24&ChunkNum=-1&ID=Ar00427 |date=2011-06-12 }}, The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1886-08-24, p. 4.[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1886/08/27/103975627.pdf "Obituary Notes"], The New York Times, 1886-08-27. His partner, Herbert Lawrence, retired in about 1894, but maintained his office in Greenpoint until shortly before he died, aged 73, in 1902.[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1902/10/02/118481105.pdf "Herbert Lawrence"], The New York Times, 1902-10-02.Morrison 1909. p. [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/uc2.ark:/13960/t2j67bq12?urlappend=%3Bseq=174 162]. In total, the Lawrence & Foulks shipyard built 144 vessels of all types in the fifty years to 1901.

List of ships

The first table below lists ships known to have been built by William Foulks, probably before his partnership with Herbert Lawrence. The second table lists ships built by Lawrence & Foulks. The two lists combined currently represent 112 of the 144 ships known to have been built by Foulks alone or by Lawrence & Foulks. In addition to the ships listed below, Lawrence & Foulks also designed the model for the Hudson River steamer Albany, but as she had an iron hull the construction contract went to Harlan and Hollingsworth.Morrison 1903, p. 134.

Vessels which had more than one name during their career have their later names listed below the original name, followed (where available) by a two-digit number representing the last two digits of the year in which the rename took place. For other abbreviations, see the linked notes in the table column headers.

class="wikitable sortable"

|+ Ships built by William Foulks, 1850–52

! align="left" | Name{{efn|name=shipname|Name=name of ship. Where a ship had more than one name in its career, subsequent names are listed in order, followed by a two-digit figure representing the last two digits of the year the vessel was renamed where available.}}

! align="center" | Type

! align="center" | Built
{{efn|name=yearbuilt|Built = year of ship launch, where available, or else year of completion.}}

! align="center" | Ton.
{{efn|name=tonnage|Ton. = tonnage of ship.}}

! align="center" | Engine
{{efn|name=engine|Engine = engine manufacturer. Manufacturers include: Allaire = Allaire Iron Works; Birbecks = Birbecks & Hodges; Burdon = Burdon Iron Works; Esler= Henry Esler & Co.; Fletcher = Fletcher, Harrison & Co.; Fulton = Fulton Iron Works; Hubbard = Hubbard & Allen; Morgan = Morgan Iron Works; Neafie = Neafie & Levy; Novelty = Novelty Iron Works; Polly = Frank Polly; Secor = Sam Secor & Co.; Stanton = Stanton & Mallory; Sullivan = Sullivan & Boyd.}}

! align="center" | Ordered by
{{efn|name=orderedby|Party which ordered the ship. Abbreviations in this column include: FC = Ferry Company; R/RR/RRC = Railroad Company; SBC = Steamboat Company; SNC = Steam Navigation Company; SSC = Steamship Company.}}

! align="center" | Intended service

! align="center" | Notes

align="left"

| align="left" | Catherine

Steamboatalign="center" | 1850align="left" | Built in partnership with Humphrey Crary and named after Foulks' wife.
align="left"

| align="left" |

Schooneralign="center" | 1851align="right" | 76——Mexican Govt.MexicoSilka, p. 20.
align="left"

| align="left" |

Schooneralign="center" | 1851align="right" | 76——Mexican Govt.Mexico
align="left"

| align="left" | {{unbulleted list|Peter Crary|Hazel Kirke|Naiad}}

Tugboatalign="center" | 1852Reuben Coffin and othersNew York Harboralign="left" | Abandoned 1919

class="wikitable sortable"

|+ Ships built by Lawrence & Foulks, 1852–1901

! align="left" | Name{{efn|name=shipname}}

! align="center" | Type

! align="center" | Built
{{efn|name=yearbuilt}}

! align="center" | Ton.
{{efn|name=tonnage}}

! align="center" | Engine
{{efn|name=engine}}

! align="center" | Ordered by
{{efn|name=orderedby}}

! align="center" | Intended service

! align="center" | Notes

align="left"

| align="left" |

Ferryalign="center" | 1852align="right" | 500George LawNew York Harbor"to run in the People's Ferry to Staten Island"
align="left"

|

Ferryalign="center" | 1852align="right" |AllaireNew York"for Green Point"
align="left"

|

Ferryalign="center" | 1852align="right" |AllaireNew York"for the Houston street ferry"
align="left"

| align="left" |

Ferryalign="center" | 1852align="right" |AllaireNew Yorkalign="left" | "for the Williamsburgh ferry"
align="left"

| align="left" |

Steamshipalign="center" | 1852align="right" |Allaire"Capt. Day"Gulf of Mexicoalign="left" |
align="left"

| align="left" | {{unbulleted list|Josephine|Henry E. Bishop}}

Ferryalign="center" | 1852align="right" |Tompkinsville & Stapleton FCNew Yorkalign="left" | Dayton, p. 296.
align="left"

| align="left" | Joseph Johnson

Towboatalign="center" | 1852align="right" | 240Parks & DuvallNew York Harboralign="left" | Swede, p. 110.
align="left"

| align="left" |

Steameralign="center" | 1853align="right" | >1300Rio de la Plataalign="left" | [https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1853/05/26/87854742.pdf "American Ship Building"], The New York Times, 1853-05-26.
align="left"

| align="left" |

Steameralign="center" | 1853align="right" | 1300Californiaalign="left" |
align="left"

| align="left" |

Steameralign="center" | 1853align="right" | 1300Californiaalign="left" |
align="left"

| align="left" |

Riverboatalign="center" | 1853align="right" | 120FultonPeruvian GovtAmazon Riveralign="left" |
align="left"

| align="left" |

Riverboatalign="center" | 1853align="right" | 80FultonPeruvian GovtAmazon Riveralign="left" | [https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1853/07/06/87862390.pdf No Title], The New York Times, 1853-07-06.
align="left"

| align="left" | J. S. Underhill

Tugboatalign="center" | 1853align="right" |align="left" | [https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1853/08/13/87863833.pdf "Our Shipyards"], The New York Times, 1853-08-13.
align="left"

| align="left" | William H. Brown

Steamboatalign="center" | 1853align="right" | 450align="left" |
align="left"

|

Schooneralign="center" | 1853align="right" | 34——U.S. GovtTexas"to serve as a United States Tender for carrying men, provisions, &c., on the rivers of Texas."[http://fultonhistory.com/Newspaper%2011/New%20York%20NY%20Semi-Weekly%20Courier%20and%20Enquirer/New%20York%20NY%20Semi-Weekly%20Courier%20and%20Enquirer%201853-1855%20Grayscale/New%20York%20NY%20Semi-Weekly%20Courier%20and%20Enquirer%201853-1855%20Grayscale%20-%200077.pdf#xml=http://fultonhistory.com/dtSearch/dtisapi6.dll?cmd=getpdfhits&u=94994ff&DocId=6698948&Index=Z%3a\Index%20U-F-P&HitCount=16&hits=1707+175d+1815+1893+1894+1896+18b7+194a+1a7d+1abd+1afe+1b38+1b7d+1bc0+1bf1+1c18+&SearchForm=C%3a\inetpub\wwwroot\Fulton_New_form.html&.pdf "Ship Building"]. Semi-Weekly Courier And New-York Enquirer. 1853-11-09.
align="left"

| North Point

Schooneralign="center" | 1854align="right" | 350——Johnson & Co,"Southern trade"[http://fultonhistory.com/Newspaper%2018/New%20York%20NY%20Morning%20Courier/New%20York%20NY%20Morning%20Courier%201854/New%20York%20NY%20Morning%20Courier%201854%20-%201813.pdf "Williamsburgh"]. New York Morning Courier. 1854-12-22.
align="left"

| Jack Travis

Schooneralign="center" | 1854align="right" | 50——
align="left"

| Henry Munsi

Towboatalign="center" | 1854align="right" | 150A. O. Jackson"Harbor towing"Fairburn, Vol. 5, p. 2825.
align="left"

| H. Morrison

Steamboatalign="center" | 1854align="right" | 150A. O. Jackson"[for] towing"
align="left"

| align="left" | Gerard Stuyvesant

Ferryalign="center" | 1854align="right" | 450New Yorkalign="left" | Houston St. ferry[http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Search&Key=BEG/1854/06/28/2/Ar00230.xml&CollName=BEG_APA3_1841-1860&DOCID=499727&PageLabelPrint=&Skin=BEagle&GZ=T&sScopeID=All&sPublication=BEG&sSorting=Score%2cdesc&sQuery=%22lawrence%20%26%20foulks%22&rEntityType=&RefineQueryView=&StartFrom=8&ViewMode=GIF&GZ=T "Williamsburgh Intelligence"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1854-06-28, p. 2.
align="left"

| Neptune

Steamboatalign="center" | 1854align="right" | 160align="center" |Peter CranyBoston Harbor
align="left"

| align="left" | Surprise

Steameralign="center" | 1854align="right" | 456Edgar WakemanPacific Coastalign="left" | [http://lettuce.tapor.uvic.ca:8081/coldesp/site/getDoc.htm?id=V58028.scx "Despatch to London - Douglas to Stanley, 7832, CO 305/9, p. 116"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110706212003/http://lettuce.tapor.uvic.ca:8081/coldesp/site/getDoc.htm?id=V58028.scx |date=2011-07-06 }}, Colonial Despatches website.
align="left"

| align="left" | Commonwealth

Steamboatalign="center" | 1855align="right" | 1732MorganNorwich & New London SBCLong Island Soundalign="left" | Destroyed by fire at Groton, CT, 1865
align="left"

| E. H. White

Lighteralign="center" | 1855align="right" | 100Fancher & McChesney[http://fultonhistory.com/Newspaper%2011/New%20York%20NY%20Semi-Weekly%20Courier%20and%20Enquirer/New%20York%20NY%20Semi-Weekly%20Courier%20and%20Enquirer%201855-1856%20Grayscale/New%20York%20NY%20Semi-Weekly%20Courier%20and%20Enquirer%201855-1856%20Grayscale%20-%200249.pdf#xml=http://fultonhistory.com/dtSearch/dtisapi6.dll?cmd=getpdfhits&u=ffffffff85818532&DocId=6699742&Index=Z%3a\Index%20U-F-P&HitCount=3&hits=18a1+18a2+2108+&SearchForm=C%3a\inetpub\wwwroot\Fulton_New_form.html&.pdf "Ship Building in New York—1855"]. Semi-Weekly Courier and New York Enquirer. 1855-11-28.
align="left"

|

Ferryalign="center" | 1855align="right" | 550"for the ferry connecting Catherine street, New York, with South Tenth st., Williamsburgh."
align="left"

|

Ferryalign="center" | 1855align="right" | 550"for the ferry connecting Catherine street, New York, with South Tenth st., Williamsburgh."
align="left"

| H. Delafield

Brigalign="center" | 1855align="right" | 250——Henry Delafield"will be employed in trading with Port-au-Prince".
align="left"

| Know Nothing

Towboatalign="center" | 1856align="right" | 300NY & Williamsburgh SBCNY Harbor"to be employed in towing about the harbor."
align="left"

| Corilla

Barkalign="center" | 1856align="right" | 600——Johnson & Lowden"for the South American trade"Griffiths, Oliver W. 1856-57, [https://books.google.com/books?id=KpwAAAAAMAAJ&dq=corilla+foulkes&pg=PA384 p. 384].
align="left"

| John Farrow

Steamshipalign="center" | 1856align="right" | 500"for a New York company"
align="left"

| James A. Stevens

Tugboatalign="center" | 1856align="right" | 100Palmer & CraryNew York
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|

Tugboatalign="center" | 1857align="right" | 100Peter CraryNew York
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|

Tugboatalign="center" | 1857align="right" | 100Roy, Coffin & CoNew York?
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|

Steameralign="center" | 1857align="right" | 300"Captain Porter"New Orleans—Mobile
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| align="left" | General Concha

Steameralign="center" | 1857align="right" | 300BirkbecksSpanish Govt.Cubaalign="left" |
align="left"

| align="left" | General Serrano

Steameralign="center" | 1857?align="right" | 300Spanish Govt.Cubaalign="left" | [http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Search&sSorting=Score%2Cdesc&Key=BEG%2F1875%2F07%2F28%2F2%2FAr00212.xml&PageLabelPrint=&CollName=BEG_APA3_1875-1879&DOCID=40055&sScopeID=All&Skin=BEagle&sPublication=BEG&GZ=T&GZ=T&ViewMode=GIF&sQuery=ship+greenpoint&rEntityType=&Continuation=2 "Shipbuilding. An Account of the Principal Naval Architects of the Country"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1875-07-28, p. 2.
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| align="left" |

Schooneralign="center" | 1858align="right" | 150——Spanish Govt.Cubaalign="left" | For dredging Matanzas harbor[http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Search&Key=BEG/1858/01/27/3/Ar00305.xml&CollName=BEG_APA3_1841-1860&DOCID=682237&PageLabelPrint=&Skin=BEagle&AppName=2&GZ=T&sScopeID=All&sPublication=BEG&sSorting=Score%2cdesc&sQuery=%22lawrence%20%26%20foulks%22&rEntityType=&ViewMode=GIF&GZ=T "The Ship Yards"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1858-01-27, p. 3.
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| align="left" |

Schooneralign="center" | 1858align="right" | 150——Spanish Govt.Cubaalign="left" | For dredging Matanzas harbor
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| align="left" |

Schooneralign="center" | 1858align="right" | 150——Spanish Govt.Cubaalign="left" | For dredging Matanzas harbor
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|

{{nobreak|Screw tender}}align="center" | 1859align="right" |DelameterNew York Harbor"intended as a tender for the new fort at Sandy Hook"[http://fultonhistory.com/Newspapers%206/New%20York%20NY%20Tribune/New%20York%20NY%20Tribune%201859%20May%20-%20Aug%20Grayscale/New%20York%20NY%20Tribune%201859%20May%20-%20Aug%20Grayscale%20-%200276.pdf#xml=http://fultonhistory.com/dtSearch/dtisapi6.dll?cmd=getpdfhits&u=2fcc032b&DocId=5241292&Index=Z%3a\Index%20I-E&HitCount=3&hits=ceb+db3+db4+&SearchForm=C%3a\inetpub\wwwroot\Fulton_New_form.html&.pdf "Brooklyn Items"]. New York Daily Tribune. P. 7. 1859-06-09.
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|

Tugboatalign="center" | 1859align="right" |Oatey, Squires & Co145 ft tug, probably for New York service
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| align="left" |

Ferryalign="center" | 1859align="right" | 60Havana, Cubaalign="left" | [http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Search&Key=BEG/1859/10/08/2/Ar00204.xml&CollName=BEG_APA3_1841-1860&DOCID=772833&PageLabelPrint=&Skin=BEagle&AppName=2&GZ=T&sPublication=BEG&sQuery=steamer%20foulkes&sSorting=%2553%2563%256f%2572%2565%2c%2564%2565%2573%2563&sDateFrom=%2530%2531%2f%2530%2531%2f%2531%2538%2534%2531&sDateTo=%2531%2532%2f%2533%2531%2f%2531%2539%2530%2532&ViewMode=GIF&GZ=T "Ship Building"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1859-10-08, p. 2.
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| align="left" | {{USS|De Soto|1859|2}}

Steamshipalign="center" | 1859align="right" | 1675MorganLivingston, Crocheron & Co.NYNew Orleansalign="left" | USN gunboat, 1861-68. Destroyed by fire south of New Orleans, 1870
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| align="left" | {{USS|Bienville

2}}Steamshipalign="center" | 1860align="right" | 1558MorganLivingston, Crocheron & Co.NY–New Orleansalign="left" | USN gunboat 1861-65. Destroyed by fire at sea off Bahamas 1872, 41 killed
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| align="left" | {{USS|Thomas Freeborn

2}}Tugboatalign="center" | 1860align="right" |AllaireRichard M. SquiresNew York?align="left" | [http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Search&Key=BEG/1860/11/19/3/Ar00308.xml&CollName=BEG_APA3_1841-1860&DOCID=832869&PageLabelPrint=&Skin=BEagle&AppName=2&GZ=T&sScopeID=All&sPublication=BEG&sSorting=Score%2cdesc&sQuery=%22lawrence%20%26%20foulkes%22&rEntityType=&ViewMode=GIF&GZ=T "Launch of a Steam Tug"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1860-11-19, p. 3. USN gunboat 1861–65. Her commander James H. Ward was first USN officer killed in Civil War.
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| align="left" | {{unbulleted list|William Foulks|Venezuela}}

Steameralign="center" | 1859align="right" | 293Dallett & Blissalign="left" | Sold to Venezuelan Navy, 1860Swede, p. 160.American Neptune, Vol. 30, [https://books.google.com/books?id=rw-FYTA1knQC&q=%22william+foulks%22+venezuela p. 277]. While the source does not identify the builder, the ship's original name and build location indicate that the firm in question was Lawrence & Foulks.
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| align="left" | {{USS|Flambeau|1861|2}}

Propelleralign="center" | 1861align="right" | 791EslerP. S. Forbes & CoChinaalign="left" | USN gunboat 1861-65. Grounded, wrecked at New Inlet, N.C. 1867
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| align="left" | {{unbulleted list|{{USS|Isaac Smith

2}}|CSS Stono 63}}Propelleralign="center" | 1861align="right" | 453?FletcherHamilton & SmithHudson Riveralign="left" | USN gunboat 1861-63. Captured by Confederacy 1863, renamed Stono, fate uncertain
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| align="left" |

Propelleralign="center" | 1862align="right" | 160PollyCarey & Co.align="left" | [http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Search&Key=BEG/1862/07/19/3/Ar00322.xml&CollName=BEG_APA3_1861-1864&DOCID=80332&PageLabelPrint=&Skin=BEagle&AW=1277819131632&AppName=2&GZ=T&sScopeID=All&sPublication=BEG&sSorting=Score%2cdesc&sQuery=%22ship%20building%22&rEntityType=&ViewMode=GIF&GZ=T "Ship Building in the Eastern District"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1862-07-19, p. 3.
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| align="left" |

Propelleralign="center" | 1862align="right" | 160PollyCarey & Co.align="left" |
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| align="left" |

Propelleralign="center" | 1862align="right" | 160PollyBronder & Borlisalign="left" |
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| align="left" | {{unbulleted list|D. S. Miller|Poughkeepsie}}

Propelleralign="center" | 1862align="right" | 593FletcherHamilton & SmithHudson Riveralign="left" | Morrison 1903, pp. 156-157.
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| align="left" | {{unbulleted list|James F. Freeborn|{{USS|Nansemond|1862|6}} 63|USRC Nansemond 65|{{nobreak|USRC W. H. Crawford 84?}}}}

Steameralign="center" | 1862align="right" | 380FletcherRichard M. Squires et alalign="left" | USN gunboat, 1863–65, revenue cutter 1865-97. Sold 1897.Frazer 1863. [http://hdl.handle.net/2027/umn.31951000656171k?urlappend=%3Bseq=51 p. 45].[https://www.history.navy.mil/research/histories/ship-histories/danfs/n/nansemond-i.html "Nansemond"]. Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships online edition. Naval History and Heritage Command website.Silverstone 1989. pp. 85-86, 190.
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| align="left" | John S. Williams

Propelleralign="center" | 1862align="right" | 170StantonB. U. CraryNew York Harboralign="left" | [https://www.nytimes.com/1862/04/09/news/our-shipyards-new-steamers-for-the-merchant-service.html?pagewanted=2 "Our Shipyards: New Steamers for the Merchant Service"], The New York Times, 1862-04-09.
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| align="left" | Paquete de Maule

Steameralign="center" | 1862align="right" | 400NoveltyG. K. Stevenson & CoChilealign="left" | Gunboat during Chincha Islands War, captured and scuttled by Spain, 1866Frazer, p. 42.
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| align="left" | Kiang-Tsze

Propelleralign="center" | 1863align="right" | 1100EslerP. S. Forbes & CoChinaalign="left" | Frazer, p. 178.
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| align="left" | Sze-Chuen

Propelleralign="center" | 1863align="right" | 1090EslerP. S. Forbes & CoYangtze R., Chinaalign="left" | Frazer, p. 378.
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| align="left" | {{unbulleted list|John L. Hasbrouck|Marlboro}}

Propelleralign="center" | 1864align="right" | 710nHamilton & SmithHudson Riveralign="left" | Broken up, 1917
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| align="left" | Chauncey Vibbard

Steamboatalign="center" | 1864align="right" | 1158FletcherA. Van SantvoordHudson Riveralign="left" | Record fast time NY-Albany 1864; lengthened, re-engined 1866; rebuilt 1880; broken up 1902Dayton, p. 73.Morrison, pp. 131-132, 134, 136, 145.
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| align="left" | Clara Clarita

Steam yachtalign="center" | 1864align="right" | 231NoveltyLeonard JeromeNew Yorkalign="left" | All-time steamboat speed record on Penobscot Bay. Abandoned 1908[http://digital.library.cornell.edu/cgi/t/text/pageviewer-idx?c=scia;cc=scia;q1=foulks;rgn=full%20text;idno=scia1011-7;didno=scia1011-7;view=image;seq=0110 "Mr. Jerome's Yacht"], Scientific American, New Series, Volume 11, Issue 7, p. 106, 1864-08-13.
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| align="left" | Oriflamme

Steamshipalign="center" | 1864align="right" | 1204MorganU.S. NavyCivil Waralign="left" | Built for Civil War service but sold on completion. Scrapped on or after 1878.Peabody Essex Museum. Heyl (V1, p. 325) gives a history of this ship, but lists the builder as "Lawrence & Son", most likely a typographical error.
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| align="left" | General J. K. Barnes

Steamshipalign="center" | 1864align="right" | 1365MorganAtlantic Coast Mail SSCNY–New Orleansalign="left" | Sunk by hurricane off Cape Hatteras, 1878Heyl, Vol. 1, p. 161.
align="left"

| align="left" | Herman Livingston

Steamshipalign="center" | 1864align="right" | 1314MorganAtlantic Coast Mail SSCNY–New Orleansalign="left" | Scrapped after 1878Heyl, Vol. 1, p. 207.
align="left"

| align="left" | Albemarle

Steamshipalign="center" | 1865align="right" | 871MorganAtlantic Coast Mail SSCNY–New Orleansalign="left" | Barge 1882; schooner 1883; sunk in squall 1885Heyl, Vol. 1, p. 13.
align="left"

| align="left" | Hatteras

Steamshipalign="center" | 1865align="right" | 868MorganAtlantic Coast Mail SSCNY–New Orleansalign="left" | Schooner barge, 1882Heyl, Vol. 1, p. 199.
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| align="left" | Raleigh

Steamshipalign="center" | 1865align="right" | 868MorganAtlantic Coast Mail SSCNY–New Orleansalign="left" | Caught fire and sank off Charleston, S.C. 1867, 24 killedHeyl, Vol. 1, p. 357.
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| align="left" | Rapidan

Steamshipalign="center" | 1865align="right" | 868MorganAtlantic Coast Mail SSCNY–New Orleansalign="left" | Disappeared en route to West Indies, 1886Heyl, Vol. 1, p. 359.
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| align="left" | Sleepy Hollow

Steamboatalign="center" | 1865align="right" |SecorLower Hudson SBCalign="left" | Morrison 1903, p. 162.
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| align="left" | Manhattan

Steamshipalign="center" | 1865align="right" | 1337MorganAmer. & Mexican Mail SSCalign="left" | Schooner barge, 1877; sunk 1882Heyl, Vol. 1, p. 239.
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| align="left" | Vera Cruz

Steamshipalign="center" | 1865align="right" | 1340MorganAmer. & Mexican Mail SSCalign="left" | Struck and sank near Oregon Inlet, N.C. 1866Heyl, Vol. 1, p. 437.
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| align="left" |

Steamboatalign="center" | 1865align="right" | 360NY–Stamford, CTalign="left" | [http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Search&sSorting=Score%2Cdesc&Key=BEG%2F1865%2F12%2F13%2F2%2FAr00206%2Exml&PageLabelPrint=&CollName=BEG%5FAPA3%5F1865%2D1869&DOCID=36113&sScopeID=UDR1&Skin=BEagle&sDateFrom=%2530%2531%252f%2530%2531%252f%2531%2538%2536%2531&GZ=T&GZ=T&ViewMode=GIF&sPublication=BEG&sQuery=ship+greenpoint&RefineQueryView=&sDateTo=%2531%2532%252f%2533%2531%252f%2531%2538%2538%2530&rEntityType=&StartFrom=32&Continuation=2 "Lawrence and Foulke"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1865-12-13, p. 2.
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| align="left" | Maspeth

Ferryalign="center" | 1866align="right" |New Yorkalign="left" | "to be placed on the Grand and Houston street ferry"[http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Search&Key=BEG/1866/08/09/3/Ar00306.xml&CollName=BEG_APA3_1865-1869&DOCID=60906&PageLabelPrint=&Skin=BEagle&AW=1277819131632&GZ=T&sPublication=BEG&sQuery=%22thomas%20stack%22&sSorting=%2553%2563%256f%2572%2565%2c%2564%2565%2573%2563&sDateFrom=%2530%2531%2f%2530%2531%2f%2531%2538%2534%2531&sDateTo=%2531%2532%2f%2533%2531%2f%2531%2539%2530%2532&RefineQueryView=&StartFrom=40&ViewMode=GIF&GZ=T "Two New Ferry Boats"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1866-08-09.
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| align="left" | Oregonian

Steamshipalign="center" | 1866align="right" | 2200AllaireOregon SNCWest coastalign="left" | Scrapped on or after 1886Heyl, Vol. 1, p. 323.
align="left"

| align="left" | Isaac Bell

Steamshipalign="center" | 1868align="right" | 1500AllaireOld Dominion SSCalign="left" | [http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Search&Key=BEG/1868/03/16/3/Ar00307.xml&CollName=BEG_APA3_1865-1869&DOCID=133778&PageLabelPrint=&Skin=BEagle&AppName=2&GZ=T&sPublication=BEG&sQuery=%22lawrence%20%26%20foulk%22&sSorting=%2553%2563%256f%2572%2565%2c%2564%2565%2573%2563&sDateFrom=%2530%2531%2f%2530%2531%2f%2531%2538%2534%2531&sDateTo=%2531%2532%2f%2533%2531%2f%2531%2539%2530%2532&ViewMode=GIF&GZ=T "Launch"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1868-03-16, p. 3.
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| align="left" | Sylvan Glen

Ferryalign="center" | 1869align="right" | 350FletcherHarlem SBCNew Yorkalign="left" | Scrapped 1915Heyl, Vol. 4, pp. 301-302.
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| align="left" |

Screw yachtalign="center" | 1869align="right" | 100"Mr. Cheeseborough"align="left" | [https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1869/09/16/80247256.pdf "Our Ship Yards"], The New York Times, 1869-09-16.
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| align="left" | {{unbulleted list|Americus|Myndert Starin|Newark}}

Steamboatalign="center" | 1870align="right" | 600BurdonNorwalk LineNY-Greenwich, CTalign="left" | [https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1870/11/29/87593094.pdf "Launch Of The Steamboat Americus"], The New York Times, 1870-11-29.Dayton, pp. 431-433.
align="left"

| align="left" | James G. Bennett

Pilot boatalign="center" | 1870align="right" |New Yorkalign="left" | [http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Search&Key=BEG/1870/05/12/11/Ar01113.xml&CollName=BEG_APA3_1870-1874&DOCID=22785&PageLabelPrint=&Skin=BEagle&AppName=2&GZ=T&sScopeID=All&sPublication=BEG&sSorting=Score%2cdesc&sQuery=boat%20foulks&rEntityType=&ViewMode=GIF&GZ=T "The New Pilot Boat"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1870-05-12, p. 11.{{efn|The full name of this vessel was actually James Gordon Bennett, No. 6, but has been abbreviated in the table for reasons of space.}}
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| align="left" |

Steamboatalign="center" | 1871align="right" |BurdonNew Bedford & Nantucket SBCNY–Nantucketalign="left" |
align="left"

| align="left" |

Tugboatalign="center" | 1871align="right" |Reaneyalign="left" | "to replace the Phenix"[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1871/05/15/79000100.pdf "Ship-Building Notes"], The New York Times, 1871-05-15.
align="left"

| align="left" | Farragut

Ferryalign="center" | 1871align="right" |Fulton FCNew York Harboralign="left" | Iron hull by Continental Iron Works[http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Search&Key=BEG/1871/05/19/4/Ar00403.xml&CollName=BEG_APA3_1870-1874&DOCID=84751&PageLabelPrint=&Skin=BEagle&AW=1277819131632&GZ=T&sPublication=BEG&sQuery=%20%28%20fulton%20farragut%20%29%20%20%3CAND%3E%20%28%20fulton%20farragut%20foulks%20%29&sSorting=%2553%2563%256f%2572%2565%2c%2564%2565%2573%2563&sDateFrom=%2530%2531%2f%2530%2531%2f%2531%2538%2534%2531&sDateTo=%2531%2532%2f%2533%2531%2f%2531%2539%2530%2532&RefineQueryView=&RefineQuery=%2566%2575%256c%2574%256f%256e%2520%2566%2561%2572%2572%2561%2567%2575%2574%2520%2566%256f%2575%256c%256b%2573&ViewMode=GIF&GZ=T "Greenpoint Ship Building"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1871-05-19, p. 4.
align="left"

| align="left" | Fulton

Ferryalign="center" | 1871align="right" |Fulton FCNew York Harboralign="left" | Iron hull by Continental Iron Works
align="left"

| align="left" | Harlem

Steamboatalign="center" | 1871align="right" |FletcherMorrisania SBCalign="left" | [https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1871/10/13/82020601.pdf "New York"], The New York Times, 1871-10-13.
align="left"

| align="left" | Morrisania

Ferryalign="center" | 1871align="right" |BurdonNew Yorkalign="left" | [http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Repository/getFiles.asp?Style=OliveXLib:LowLevelEntityToSaveGifMSIE_BEAGLE&Type=text/html&Locale=english-skin-custom&Path=BEG/1871/04/03&ChunkNum=-1&ID=Ar009ao "Boat Building in the E. D."] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110612034130/http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Repository/getFiles.asp?Style=OliveXLib%3ALowLevelEntityToSaveGifMSIE_BEAGLE&Type=text%2Fhtml&Locale=english-skin-custom&Path=BEG%2F1871%2F04%2F03&ChunkNum=-1&ID=Ar009ao |date=2011-06-12 }}, The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1871-04-03, p. 9.
align="left"

| align="left" | Sylvan Dell

Steamboatalign="center" | 1872align="right" | 440FletcherHarlem & New York NCNew Yorkalign="left" | Struck and sank, 1919Heyl, Vol. 4, pp. 299-300.
align="left"

| align="left" | Midland

Ferryalign="center" | 1872align="right" |New Jersey Midland R.Adams, p. 143.
align="left"

| align="left" | Day Star

Steamboatalign="center" | 1873align="right" |BurdonAmerican SBCLong Island Soundalign="left" | [https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1873/03/12/79208760.pdf "Brooklyn"], The New York Times, 1873-03-12.[http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Search&Key=BEG/1873/03/11/4/Ar00433.xml&CollName=BEG_APA3_1870-1874&DOCID=187091&PageLabelPrint=&Skin=BEagle&AppName=2&GZ=T&sScopeID=All&sPublication=BEG&sSorting=Score%2cdesc&sQuery=lawrence%20launch&rEntityType=&ViewMode=GIF&GZ=T "Launch of the Day Star"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1873-03-11, p. 4.
align="left"

| align="left" | Amos C. Barstow

Steamboatalign="center" | 1873align="right" |NY-Providencealign="left" | [https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1873/07/24/79040132.pdf "Brooklyn"], The New York Times, 1873-07-24.
align="left"

| align="left" | Fidelity

Screw launchalign="center" | 1873align="right" |Commissioners of Charities & CorrectionNew Yorkalign="left" | Sunk in collision, East River, 1879[http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Repository/getFiles.asp?Style=OliveXLib:LowLevelEntityToSaveGifMSIE_BEAGLE&Type=text/html&Locale=english-skin-custom&Path=BEG/1873/08/21&ChunkNum=-1&ID=Ar00425 "Shipbuilding"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110612035459/http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Repository/getFiles.asp?Style=OliveXLib%3ALowLevelEntityToSaveGifMSIE_BEAGLE&Type=text%2Fhtml&Locale=english-skin-custom&Path=BEG%2F1873%2F08%2F21&ChunkNum=-1&ID=Ar00425 |date=2011-06-12 }}, The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1873-08-21, p. 4.[http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Search&Key=BEG/1873/10/10/3/Ar00315.xml&CollName=BEG_APA3_1870-1874&DOCID=216349&PageLabelPrint=&Skin=BEagle&AppName=2&GZ=T&sScopeID=UDR1&sPublication=BEG&sSorting=Score%2cdesc&sQuery=steamer%20foulks&sDateFrom=%2530%2531%2f%2530%2531%2f%2531%2538%2536%2531&sDateTo=%2531%2532%2f%2533%2531%2f%2531%2538%2538%2530&rEntityType=&ViewMode=GIF&GZ=T "Shipbuilding"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1873-10-10, p. 3.[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1879/04/20/80748813.pdf "Collision On The East River"], The New York Times, 1879-04-20.
align="left"

| align="left" | Jane Mosely

Steameralign="center" | 1873align="right" |Long Island RRCLong Island Soundalign="left" | Morrison 1903, p. 178.
align="left"

| align="left" | Jennie Stout

Schooneralign="center" | 1873align="right" | 600——F. Alexander & SonNY-Savannahalign="left" | "largest three-masted schooner ever built" in New York. Sank in storm off Cape Hatteras 1875, 8 killed[http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Search&Key=BEG/1873/08/12/3/Ar00327.xml&CollName=BEG_APA3_1870-1874&DOCID=207975&PageLabelPrint=&Skin=BEagle&AppName=2&GZ=T&sPublication=BEG&sQuery=%22lawrence%20%26%20foulk%22&sSorting=%2553%2563%256f%2572%2565%2c%2564%2565%2573%2563&sDateFrom=%2530%2531%2f%2530%2531%2f%2531%2538%2534%2531&sDateTo=%2531%2532%2f%2533%2531%2f%2531%2539%2530%2532&ViewMode=GIF&GZ=T "Greenpoint Ship Building from a New York Standpoint"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1873-08-12, p. 3.[http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Search&sSorting=IssueDateID%2Casc&Key=BEG%2F1873%2F02%2F17%2F4%2FAr00419%2Exml&PageLabelPrint=&AW=1277819131632&CollName=BEG%5FAPA3%5F1870%2D1874&DOCID=184253&sScopeID=UDR1&Skin=BEagle&sDateFrom=%2530%2531%252f%2530%2531%252f%2531%2538%2536%2531&sPublication=BEG&GZ=T&GZ=T&ViewMode=GIF&sQuery=launch+yacht+lawrence&sDateTo=%2531%2532%252f%2533%2531%252f%2531%2538%2538%2530&rEntityType=&Continuation=1 "Shipbuilding"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, p. 4, 1873-02-17.
align="left"

| align="left" | Jessamine

Steameralign="center" | 1873align="right" |Revenue Servicealign="left" |
align="left"

| align="left" | Governor Andrew

Steameralign="center" | 1874align="right" | 503FletcherBoston & Hingham SBCBostonHinghamalign="left" | [https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1874/04/26/79072725.pdf "New York"], The New York Times, 1874-04-26.Morrison 1903, p. 401.
align="left"

| align="left" |

Steamboatalign="center" | 1875align="right" |City of BostonBoston Harboralign="left" | "to convey prisoners to Deer Island"
align="left"

| align="left" |

Steamboatalign="center" | 1875align="right" |St. John's GuildNew Yorkalign="left" | Floating Hospital
align="left"

| align="left" | Crystal Wave

Steamboatalign="center" | 1875align="right" | 700HubbardAmerican SBCLong Island Soundalign="left" | [http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Search&Key=BEG/1875/03/08/4/Ar00416.xml&CollName=BEG_APA3_1875-1879&DOCID=12420&PageLabelPrint=&Skin=BEagle&AppName=2&GZ=T&sScopeID=UDR1&sPublication=BEG&sSorting=Score%2cdesc&sQuery=steamer%20foulks&sDateFrom=%2530%2531%2f%2530%2531%2f%2531%2538%2536%2531&sDateTo=%2531%2532%2f%2533%2531%2f%2531%2538%2538%2530&rEntityType=&ViewMode=GIF&GZ=T "Steamboat Launch"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1875-03-08, p. 4.
align="left"

| align="left" | Fanwood

Ferryalign="center" | 1876align="right" | 1300FletcherNew Jersey Central RRalign="left" | "Monster ferry"[http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Search&Key=BEG/1876/04/03/4/Ar00423.xml&CollName=BEG_APA3_1875-1879&DOCID=97387&PageLabelPrint=&Skin=BEagle&AppName=2&GZ=T&sScopeID=UDR1&sPublication=BEG&sSorting=Score%2cdesc&sQuery=steamer%20foulks&sDateFrom=%2530%2531%2f%2530%2531%2f%2531%2538%2536%2531&sDateTo=%2531%2532%2f%2533%2531%2f%2531%2538%2538%2530&rEntityType=&ViewMode=GIF&GZ=T "Two Steam Vessels Launched"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1876-04-03, p. 4.
align="left"

| align="left" | San Rafael

Steameralign="center" | 1877align="right" | 692FletcherSan Franciscoalign="left" | Shipped overland in sections to S.F. Collision off Alcatraz Island, 1901[http://www.miramarshipindex.org.nz/ship/show?nameid=393322&shipid=221118 "Single Ship Report for "2115556""]. miramarshipindex.org.nz {{subscription required}}
align="left"

| align="left" | Saucelito

Steameralign="center" | 1877align="right" | 692FletcherSan Franciscoalign="left" | Shipped overland in sections to S.F. Destroyed by fire, 1884[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1877/07/22/80655590.pdf "Times On The West Coast"], The New York Times, 1877-07-22.[http://fultonhistory.com/Newspaper%2014/Brooklyn%20NY%20Daily%20Union/Brooklyn%20NY%20Daily%20Union%201876/Brooklyn%20NY%20Daily%20Union%201876%20-%201091.pdf "Eastern District Business"]. The Brooklyn Daily Union. 1876-11-16.[http://www.miramarshipindex.org.nz/ship/show?nameid=393324&shipid=217866 "Single Ship Report for "2115586""]. miramarshipindex.org.nz {{subscription required}}
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| align="left" |

Riverboatalign="center" | 1879align="right" |NY–Yonkersalign="left" | [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/60177507/lawrence-foulks-riverboat-1879/ "About Brooklyn People"], The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1878-10-27, p. 2.
align="left"

| align="left" | Northampton

Steamshipalign="center" | 1880align="right" | 483Old Dominion SSCalign="left" | Caught fire and beached at Norfolk, VA 1898[http://shipbuildinghistory.com/history/shipyards/8other/19atlantic.htm "Other 19th Century Shipbuilders on the Atlantic Coast"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121019191747/http://www.shipbuildinghistory.com/history/shipyards/8other/19atlantic.htm |date=2012-10-19 }}, shipbuildinghistory.com.
align="left"

| align="left" |

Steam launchalign="center" | 1881align="right" |SullivanOld Dominion SSCalign="left" | [http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Repository/getFiles.asp?Style=OliveXLib:LowLevelEntityToSaveGifMSIE_BEAGLE&Type=text/html&Locale=english-skin-custom&Path=BEG/1881/11/04&ChunkNum=-1&ID=Ar00303 "Greenpoint Work"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110612040201/http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/Repository/getFiles.asp?Style=OliveXLib%3ALowLevelEntityToSaveGifMSIE_BEAGLE&Type=text%2Fhtml&Locale=english-skin-custom&Path=BEG%2F1881%2F11%2F04&ChunkNum=-1&ID=Ar00303 |date=2011-06-12 }}, The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1881-11-04, p. 3.
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| align="left" | Albertina

Steamboatalign="center" | 1882align="right" |FletcherRed Bank Linealign="left" | Morrison 1909, p. 163.
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| {{unbulleted list|Kecoughtan|Luray}}

Steamboatalign="center" | 1882align="right" |FletcherOld Dominion SSCNorfolkNewport News{{efn|The New York Times refers to the ship as Keroughtan (with an "r"),[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1882/03/14/96858315.pdf "A New Old Dominion Steamer"]. The New York Times. P. 8. 1882-03-14. almost certainly a misspelling of Kecoughtan which was an early name for Newport News, Virginia, the steamer's destination. Additionally, Kecoughtan{{'s}} engine dimensions as reported in the Times match those of only one steamboat in the records of the manufacturer, W. & A. Fletcher Co., that of Luray, built in about 1882 for the Old Dominion SSC.[http://www.shipsnostalgia.com/guides/W_and_A_Fletcher_and_Co "W and A Fletcher and Co"]. shipsnostalgia.com. Evidently, Kecoughtan was renamed Luray by the company either prior to or shortly after the vessel entered service.}}
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| align="left" | {{unbulleted list|F. P. James|Bronx 02}}

Ferryalign="center" | 1884align="right" | 445align="left" | Broken up 1917
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| align="left" | Jacob H. Tremper

Steamboatalign="center" | 1885align="right" | 571AlbanyNewburghalign="left" | Broken up 1929[http://fultonhistory.com/Newspaper%2020/Albany%20NY%20Evening%20Times/Albany%20NY%20Evening%20Times%201885%20Jan-Jul%201885/Albany%20NY%20Evening%20Times%201885%20Jan-Jul%201885%20-%200139.pdf#xml=http://fultonhistory.com/dtSearch/dtisapi6.dll?cmd=getpdfhits&u=ffffffffc6a69062&DocId=2019186&Index=Z%3a\Index%20O-G-T&HitCount=3&hits=779+88a+88b+&SearchForm=C%3a\inetpub\wwwroot\Fulton_New_form.html&.pdf "Albany Times"]. Albany Times. 1885-02-11.
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| align="left" | {{unbulleted list|Haarlaem|Harlem 22}}

Ferryalign="center" | 1889align="right" | 382New York & East River FCNew York?align="left" | Abandoned 1927
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| align="left" | Clermont

Steam yachtalign="center" | 1892align="right" |A. Van Santvoordalign="left" |

== Footnotes ==

{{notes}}

References

{{reflist|2}}

Bibliography

;Books

  • Adams, Arthur G. (1996): The Hudson Through the Years, Fordham University Press, p. 143, {{ISBN|978-0-8232-1677-2}}.
  • Dayton, Fred Erving (1925): Steamboat Days, Frederick A. Stokes Company, New York.
  • Elleman, Bruce A. (2001): Modern Chinese Warfare, 1795-1989, p. 47, Routledge, {{ISBN|978-0-415-21474-2}}.
  • Fairburn, William Armstrong; Ritchie, Ethel M. (1954–55): Merchant Sail, Volume 5, Center Lovell, Maine : Fairburn Marine Educational Foundation.
  • Frazer, John F. (1863): Journal of the Franklin Institute, Third Series, Volume XLV, January–June 1863, Franklin Institute, Philadelphia.
  • {{cite book |title=The U.S. Nautical Magazine and Naval Journal |editor1-last=Griffiths |editor1-first=Oliver W. |date=Oct 1856 – Mar 1857 |publisher=Oliver W. Griffiths |location=New York |page=[https://books.google.com/books?id=KpwAAAAAMAAJ&dq=corilla+foulkes&pg=PA384 384] }}
  • Griffiths & Bates (1855): The Monthly Nautical Magazine and Quarterly Review, Volume 2, April–September 1855, pp. 221–226, Griffiths & Bates, New York.
  • Heinrich, Thomas R. (1997): Ships for the Seven Seas: Philadelphia Shipbuilding in the Age of Industrial Capitalism, The Johns Hopkins University Press, {{ISBN|0-8018-5387-7}}.
  • Heyl, Erik (1953): Early American Steamers, Volume 1, Erik Heyl, Buffalo, New York.
  • Heyl, Erik (1965): Early American Steamers, Volume 4, Erik Heyl, Buffalo, New York.
  • Johnson, Emory R.; Huebner, Grover G. (1920): Principles of Ocean Transportation, p. 23, D. Appleton & Co., New York and London.
  • Matteson, George (2005): Tugboats of New York: An Illustrated History, pp. 54–55, NYU Press, {{ISBN|978-0-8147-5708-6}}.
  • Morrison, John Harrison (1903): History of American Steam Navigation, W. F. Sametz & Co., New York.
  • Morrison, John Harrison (1909): History of New York Shipyards, W. F. Sametz & Co., New York.
  • Peabody Essex Museum (1956): The American Neptune, Volume 16, Peabody Essex Museum.
  • Ridgely-Nevitt, Cedric (1981): American Steamships on the Atlantic, pp. 348–349, University of Delaware Press, Newark.
  • Swede, George (2010): The Steam Tug, [https://books.google.com/books?id=GuXWEl2lVU0C&q=%22lawrence+%26+foulks%22&pg=PA82 pp. 110, 160], Xlibris Books,{{Self-published inline|certain=yes|date=January 2018}} United States, {{ISBN|978-1-4535-7237-5}}.

;Periodicals

  • Silka, Henry: [http://cnrs-scrn.org/northern_mariner/vol16/tnm_16_2_15-52.pdf "Shipbuilding and the Nascent Community of Greenpoint, New York, 1850-1855"], Northern Mariner, Volume 16.
  • The Brooklyn Daily Eagle
  • The New York Times

{{List of Shipbuilders and Designers}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Lawrence and Foulks}}

Category:Companies established in 1852

Category:Defunct shipbuilding companies of the United States

Category:1852 establishments in New York (state)

Category:American shipbuilders