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Swordfish
Owner: Manhattan Sailing Club
LOA: 24'
Type: J/24
Designer: Rod Johnstone
Year Built: 19__?
Material: Fiberglass
Sail #: SF
Commissioned into the Manhattan Sailing Club fleet on August 14, 2000.
Our club boat Swordfish is named after the famous clipper
ship. Swordfish recorded the 4th fastest
sailing time ever from New York to San Francisco. She sailed the route in 91 days
under Master D.S. Babcock, departing New York on November 12, 1851 and arriving in San
Francisco on February 10, 1852.
The below excerpted information about the clipper ship Swordfish
is from "Greyhounds of the Sea," Third Edition, by Carl C. Cutler, Published by
Naval Institute Press, Annapolis, Maryland, (c) 1930, 1984 & 1960
Beginning on p.215:
Meanwhile another race was under way. The 7th of November, 1851, had witnessed
the start of what was to prove one of the most notable of all the Cape Horn contests.
On that day the Flying Fish, McKay's new model, said to be sharper than
any ship then afloat, sailed from Boston commanded by E.C. Nickels. At 8 o'clock
that evening she was ten miles off the tip of Cape Cod and "going like a steam
boat."
Five days later the Swordfish, a somewhat fuller clipper, built by Webb and
commanded by David S. Babcock, of Stonington, left New York passing Sandy Hook at 3 p.m.
It was a race from the start; Nickels against Babcock, Boston against New York and
McKay against Webb. The event had been anticipated for weeks and probably no two
ships ever left port with masters more thoroughly keyed up to the task in hand, or with a
better appreciation of what was expected of them by their respective supporters.
In the light of present day knowledge it would be assumed that the Flying Fish,
with her 500 tons heavier register than the Swordfish, had the odds greatly in
her favor, and time allowances would undoubtedly be elaborately figured. The master
mariner of '52 would have scorned such aid to his art. He would sail it out ship for
ship and man to man or not at all, and generally speaking, the results of clipper ship
contests justified the attitude. If greater length and weight counted off the Horn
or running the Easting down, the smaller and lighter ship had a certain advantage in the
light variable airs prevalent in the middle latitudes.
As it turned out, therefore, victory fell a second time to New York and Webb. The
Swordfish made the best passage of the year and the fourth best for all time,
arriving at San Francisco on February 10th after a passage of 90 days and 18 hours from
Sandy Hook. Four days later the Flying Fish dropped her anchor on the bar,
after a run of 100 d ays and 6 hours. It was a decisive victory for Babcock, yet it
must be said that both ships rank among the fastest of the entire Cape Horn fleet, their
average passages indicating that they were exceptionally well designed for the conditions
of that run.
Nickels had made the Equator crossing on November 25th, a fine 19 day run, while the Swordfish
did not reach that point until the 4th of December, the Flying Fish having
increased her lead another four days. On the slant from the Line down to the Horn,
however, the Swordfish did excellent work, reducing the nine day lead of her
opponent to a scant three days. Up the Pacific they went, the Swordfish now
gaining every day. At the Pacific crossing the Swordfish was two days ahead
and moreover had the advantage of being ten degrees farther east. On the last
stretch the Swordfish continued to increase her lead and on the 10th of February
Babcock wrote his final entry: "12 noon passed the Fort - 91 day passage."
The foregoing by no means tells the story of the quality of the performance of the Swordfish
- a performance which she continued to maintain as she sailed for China and home. A
brief summary of her work is contained in the following letter published a year or two
later:
"May 18, 1853.
"To the Editor of the New York Herald.
SIR - In the Morning Herald of this date, I notice a statement of the comparative
passage of clipper ships from New York to California, in which the Swordfish is put down
at 93 days.
"The Swordfish sailed from New York on the 11th of November, 1851, and arrived at
San Francisco on the 10th of February, 1852, making the passage in 90 days, 18 hours.
She crossed the Equator in the Pacific inside of 71 days and at the end of 89 days
was within 100 miles of San Francisco, or 140 miles less than the Flying Cloud on her
first passage.
"The time of the Swordfish, say 91 days to San Francisco, 46 from thence of China,
and 89 from China home (against the monsoon), has never been equaled, and if the size of
the ships is taken into consideration, her passage to California is far ahead of any
other.
"Yours respectfully, D.S. Babcock."
Beginning on p. 251:
Closely contested races continued to mark the season [1853]. Two old rivals, the Swordfish
and Sea Serpent, sailed from New York on the 12th of February just as the Sovereign
of the Seas left Honolulu on her epochal voyage. Both ships were sailed for all
that was in them. It was anybody's race up to the last few hundred miles, with
almost equal honor to victor and vanquished. The Swordfish arrived out on
the 30th of May in the excellent passage of 107 days, with the Sea Serpent less
than 48 hours behind.
Beginning on p. 292:
Many ships in '54 did as good, but few did a better year's work than the Swordfish.
Captain Horace Osgood had her. He left New York on the 3rd of April, facing
the pleasant prospect of a midwinter passage around the horn. On the 20th of May he
was fighting for westing with one sail going after another, the forecastle battered down
and the entire crew mustered in the safest possible place - on deck. When risk of
drowning in a forecastle becomes greater than danger on deck, it may be safely assumed
that the ship is, as one master mariner grimly noted, "very damp forward."
He crossed the Line in the Pacific 78 days 4 hours out, 35 days under the average
passage for that season of the year. From California he went to Manila and thence
home to New York, anchoring inside the Hook at 11:00 P.M., February 13th. He had
been 261 days at sea and had sailed 39,979 miles.
Beginning on p. 372:
Good passages were becoming increasingly rare. It is therefore somewhat remarkable
that the record from Shanghai to New York should be lowered this year. The Swordfish,
Captain Joseph W. Crocker, left the former port on the 12th of December, 1859, and arrived
at Sandy Hook on the 2nd of March, her passage of 81 days being the shortest on record, in
spite of the fact that she was becalmed 5 days on the equator in the Atlantic.
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