Moshulu
{{Short description|Sailing ship built in 1904}}
{{Use American English|date=January 2025}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2018}}
{{more citations needed|date=February 2021}}
{{Infobox ship begin |display title=ital}}
{{Infobox ship image |Ship image= Moshulu at Penn's Landing.jpg |Ship image size = |Ship caption= Moshulu at Penn's Landing, Philadelphia }} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header= |Ship country=German Empire |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|German Empire|civil}} |Ship name=Kurt |Ship namesake=Dr. Kurt Siemers |Ship owner=G. H. J. Siemers & Co., Hamburg |Ship route=Europe to Chile and Newcastle, Australia |Ship ordered= |Ship builder=William Hamilton & Co., Port Glasgow |Ship original cost=£36,000 |Ship laid down=1903 |Ship launched=18 April 1904 |Ship christened=18 April 1904 |Ship completed=June 1904 |Ship acquired= |Ship commissioned= |Ship decommissioned= |Ship maiden voyage= June 1904 via Santa Rosalía to Valparaíso |Ship in service= |Ship out of service= |Ship renamed= |Ship struck= |Ship reinstated= |Ship homeport=Hamburg, |Ship honours= |Ship captured= |Ship fate=Seized by the US as enemy asset |Ship notes= }} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header=title |Ship country=United States |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|USA|civil}} |Ship name=Moshulu |Ship namesake= |Ship owner= |Ship route=(US) Manila, Australia, South Africa |Ship ordered= |Ship builder= |Ship original cost= |Ship laid down= |Ship launched= |Ship christened= |Ship completed= |Ship acquired=1917 |Ship commissioned= |Ship decommissioned= |Ship maiden voyage= |Ship in service= |Ship out of service=1928 |Ship renamed= |Ship struck= |Ship reinstated= |Ship homeport=San Francisco |Ship honours= |Ship captured= |Ship fate=Sold to Finland, 1935 |Ship notes= }} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header=title |Ship country=Finland |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|Finland|civil}} |Ship name=Moshulu |Ship namesake= |Ship owner= |Ship route=Australia to Europe grain trade |Ship ordered= |Ship builder= |Ship original cost= |Ship laid down= |Ship launched= |Ship christened= |Ship completed= |Ship acquired=1935 |Ship commissioned= |Ship decommissioned=1970 |Ship maiden voyage= |Ship in service= |Ship out of service=1940 |Ship renamed= |Ship struck= |Ship reinstated=1935 as a cargo ship, 1948 as a grain store |Ship homeport=Mariehamn, Naantali |Ship honours= |Ship captured= |Ship fate=Capsized and demasted 1947, sold to the United States, 1970 |Ship notes= }} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header=title |Ship country=United States |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|USA|civil}} |Ship name=Moshulu |Ship namesake= |Ship owner= |Ship route= |Ship ordered= |Ship builder= |Ship original cost= |Ship laid down= |Ship launched= |Ship christened= |Ship completed= |Ship acquired=1970 |Ship commissioned= |Ship decommissioned= |Ship maiden voyage= |Ship in service= |Ship out of service= |Ship renamed= |Ship struck= |Ship reinstated=1975 as a restaurant |Ship homeport=Philadelphia |Ship honours= |Ship captured= |Ship fate= |Ship status=Museum ship/restaurant ship |Ship notes= }} {{Infobox ship characteristics |Hide header= |Header caption= |Ship class=*four-masted steel barque
|Ship displacement=7,000 ts (1,700 ts ship + 5,300 ts cargo) |Ship Gross/Net Tons: 3,109 GRT / 2,875 NRT |Ship Deadweight: 5,300 tons |Ship length=*{{convert|396|ft|m|abbr=on}} (overall)
|Ship beam={{convert|46.9|ft|m|abbr=on}} |Ship height=*{{convert|212|ft|m|abbr=on}} (keel to masthead truck)
|Ship draft={{convert|24.3|ft|m|abbr=on}} at 5,300 tons |Ship depth={{convert|28|ft|m|abbr=on}} (depth moulded) |Ship hold depth={{convert|26.6|ft|m|abbr=on}} |Ship decks=2 continuous steel decks, poop, midshipbridge and forecastle decks |Ship deck clearance= |Ship power=no auxiliary propulsion; donkey engine for sail winches, steam rudder |Ship propulsion=wind |Ship speed=highest recorded: 17 knots (31 km/h) |Ship sail plan= 4.180 m²; 34 sails: 18 square sails, 3 spankers, 13 staysails |Ship complement= max. 35 |Ship boats=four lifeboats |Ship capacity= |Ship crew= 33 (captain, 1st & 2nd mate, 1 steward, 29 able seamen){{citation needed|date=June 2012|reason=At least Erikson seldom had the luxury of having all able seamen.}} |Ship armament= |Ship notes= }} |
Moshulu is a four-masted steel barque, built as Kurt by William Hamilton and Company at Port Glasgow in Scotland in 1904. The largest remaining original windjammer, she is currently a floating restaurant docked in Penn's Landing, Philadelphia.
History
Originally named Kurt after Kurt Siemers, director general and president of the Hamburg shipping company G. H. J. Siemers & Co., she was, along with her sistership Hans, one of the last four-masted steel barques to be built on the Clyde. Constructed for G. H. J. Siemers & Co. to be used in the nitrate trade, at a cost of £36,000, she was launched in 1904. Her first master was Captain Christian Schütt, followed by Captain Wilhelm H. G. Tönissen in 1908 who made a fast voyage from Newcastle, Australia, to Valparaíso with a cargo of coal in 31 days.
Between 1904 and 1914, under German ownership, Kurt shipped coal from Wales to South America, nitrate from Chile to Germany, coal from Australia to Chile, and coke and patent fuel from Germany to Santa Rosalía, Mexico.
On the outbreak of World War I in 1914, Kurt was sailed to Oregon under the command of Captain Tönissen, then laid up in Astoria until being seized when the United States entered the war in 1917. She was first renamed Dreadnought ("one who fears nothing"), then, because there was already a sailing ship of that name registered in the US, she was renamed the Moshulu (which had the same meaning in the Seneca language) by the First Lady of the United States and wife of President Woodrow Wilson, Edith Wilson. Between 1917 and 1920, Moshulu was owned by the U.S. Shipping Board and carried wool and chrome between North America, Manila and Australia.
From 1920 to 1935, Moshulu was in various private hands based in San Francisco. From 1920 to 1922, it was owned by the Moshulu Navigation Co. (Charles Nelson & Co.), San Francisco; in 1922, it was sold to James Tyson of San Francisco; and, in 1922, it was repurchased by Charles Nelson. The big four-masted barque ran in the timber trade along the U.S. west coast to Australia and South Africa from 1920 to 1928. After her last timber run to Melbourne and Geelong, Australia, in 1928, she was laid up in Los Angeles; later on, she was kept in places in or near Seattle, Washington: Lake Union, Winslow on (Puget Sound), and Esquimalt in British Columbia, Canada, {{convert|100|nmi|km}} north west of Seattle.
In 1935, the Moshulu was bought for $12,000 by Gustaf Erikson. On 14 March 1935, when the contract was signed, Captain Gunnar Boman took over the ship and sailed it to Port Victoria. Gustaf Erikson had her operate in the grain trade from Australia to Europe. During the period of Erikson's ownership the working language of the ship was Swedish, even though it sailed under the Finnish flag; the ship's home port at the time, Mariehamn, is in Swedish-speaking Åland, an autonomous region of Finland.
At the end of 1938, the ship left Belfast for Port Lincoln and Port Victoria, in South Australia, under the command of Captain Mikael Sjögren and with 18-year-old Eric Newby as an apprentice seaman; Newby went on to become a travel writer and wrote about his experiences of that voyage in the book The Last Grain Race (1956). Moshulu arrived in Queenstown (Cobh, Ireland) on 10 June 1939, after 91 days at sea, winning the last race of square-rigged sailing ships between Australia and Europe.
The ship was seized by the Germans in 1940 when she returned to Kristiansand, Norway, again under the command of Captain Mikael Sjögren and with a cargo of wheat from Buenos Aires. She was derigged step-by-step in the 1940s, and, after having capsized in a storm close to shore at a beach in Østervik near Narvik in 1947, she was demasted by a salvaging company to be re-erected, stabilized, and towed to Bergen in July 1948. The ship's hull was sold to Trygve Sommerfeldt of Oslo. A few months later, the ship was transferred to Sweden to be used as a grain store in Stockholm from 1948 to 1952. Then she was sold to the German shipowner Heinz Schliewen, who wanted to put her back to use under the name Oplag as a merchant marine training ship carrying cargo.{{cite book|first=Harold A.|last=Underhill|title=Sail Training and Cadet Ships|location=Glasgow|publisher=Brown, Son & Ferguson|year=1956|pages=145–7}} Schliewen already used the four-masted steel barques Pamir and Passat (both former Flying P-Liners) for that purpose, but before Moshulu was re-rigged, Schliewen went into bankruptcy. In 1953 Moshulu was sold to the Swedish Farmers' State Union (Svenska Lantmännens Riksförbund) of Stockholm, and again it was used as a floating warehouse beginning on 16 November 1953.
In 1961, the Finnish government bought the ship for 3,200 tons of Russian rye; she was towed to Naantali, a town near Turku, and she continued to be used as a grain warehouse.
In 1970, the ship was bought by the Specialty Restaurants Corporation, who rigged her out at Scheveningen in the Netherlands with replica masts, yards, and lines and towed her to South Street Seaport Museum, New York.{{cite web |title=History |url=http://www.moshulu.com/history.html |website=Moshulu |access-date=30 August 2021}} The United States Coast Guard 3rd District Band rode on the Moshulu as she was towed from Brooklyn to the museum and played for the arrival ceremony on the Manhattan side of the river.{{citation needed|date=February 2023}} She was later towed to the Penn's Landing waterfront in Center City, Philadelphia, where she is adjacent to the museum ships {{USS|Olympia|C-6|6}} and {{USS|Becuna}} in Independence Seaport Museum Other sources{{which?|date=March 2024}} have it that The Walt Disney Company bought the ship but soon transferred it to the Specialty Restaurants Corporation. Since 2003 she is operated by SCC Restaurants LLC.
In popular culture
Moshulu was made famous by the books of Eric Newby. At the age of 18 he was apprenticed aboard the Moshulu, joining the ship in Belfast in 1938 and sailing to Port Lincoln in Australia with a load of ballast stone in 82 days, a good passage for a windjammer. Moshulu took 4,875 tons of bagged grain on board in Port Victoria and began her return voyage to Ireland in the spring of 1939. She reached her destination in 91 days, a faster passage than that of any of the other sailing ships making similar passages that year.
During the voyage, Newby took part in all the work required to maintain the ship, such as constant chipping of rust, painting and polishing brass and copper and overhauling the standing and running rigging – all of this on top of the day-to-day tasks required to sail the ship, such as changing from fair weather sails to storm sails and back again as storms rose and abated.
The crew at the time was predominantly Finnish and Swedish, and nationality was a source of friction amongst them throughout the voyage.
The journey was documented in Newby's books The Last Grain Race (1956) and Learning the Ropes: An Apprentice in the Last of the Windjammers (1999). The title of the former book refers to the last grain race before the outbreak of World War II. The latter contains more than 150 of the photographs Newby took while aboard.
In the 1974 American film, The Godfather Part II, the ship plays the role of the vessel that brought the boy Vito Andolini across the Atlantic from Sicily to New York in 1901.{{cite web
| url = https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/607777/the-godfather-part-ii-movie-facts
| title = 12 Surprising Facts About 'The Godfather Part II'
| last = Beggs
| first = Scott
| date = 2022-03-19
| website = Mental Floss
}}
In the training montage sequence of the blockbuster 1976 film Rocky, Rocky Balboa, played by Sylvester Stallone, can be seen running past Moshulu while training for his heavyweight championship bout against Apollo Creed.{{needs reference|date=May 2024|reason=previous ref is a fan site}}
See also
Further reading
- Newby, Eric, The Last Grain Race, Secker & Warburg, London, 1956; Penguin Books, New York, N.Y., U.S.A., 1986. {{ISBN|0-14-009571-3}} (pbk.)
- Newby, Eric, Learning the Ropes – An Apprentice in the Last of the Windjammers, John Murray, London 1999. {{ISBN|0-7195-5636-8}}
References
{{Reflist}}
- Sven-Erik Nylund: Inte rädd för någon, Vasa 2001, Schildts {{ISBN|951-50-1195-7}} (in Swedish)
External links
{{Commons category|Moshulu (ship, 1904)|Moshulu}}
- {{Official|http://www.moshulu.com/}}
{{Clyde-built tall ships still afloat}}
{{Oldest surviving ships (pre-1919)}}
{{Authority control}}
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{{Restaurants in Philadelphia}}
Category:Individual sailing vessels
Category:Tall ships of the United Kingdom
Category:Tall ships of Germany
Category:Tall ships of Finland
Category:Tall ships of the United States
Category:Ships built on the River Clyde
Category:Restaurants in Philadelphia
Category:Restaurants established in 1975