User:Gatoclass/SB/Thomas Stack
Appearance
< User:Gatoclass | SB
Thomas Stack | |
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Born | About 1820 |
Died | 8 July 1902 (aged 82) |
Nationality | Canadian American |
Occupation | Shipbuilder |
Company type | Private |
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Industry | Shipbuilding |
Predecessor | Perrine, Patterson & Stack |
Founded | 1853 |
Founder | Thomas Stack Co. |
Defunct | About 1882 |
Fate | Dissolved |
Successor | Daniel J. Leary |
Headquarters | Foot of North 6th St., Williamsburg, , |
Products | Wooden-hulled ships of all types |
Services | Ship repairs |
Number of employees | 700-1,000 (peak) |
List of ships
[edit]Name[b] | Type [c] | Built [d] | Ton. [e] | Engine Cite error: There are <ref> tags on this page without content in them (see the help page).
|
Ordered by[f] | Intended service | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cawra | Brig | 1854 | 330 | —— | Gomas, Wallace & Co | [1][2] "[F]or the Angustura trade" | |
Emily Keith | Schooner | 1854 | 209 | —— | Siffken & Ironside | mystic 59 | |
Chanticleer | Bark | 1854 | 332 | —— | Freeman & Co | New York | [3][4] |
Clara | Bark | 1854 | 697 | —— | Wakeman, Dimon & Co | New York | [3][2] "[F]or the general freighting business" |
Delafield | Brig | 1854 | 183 | —— | H. Delafield | New York | [3] |
Emma | Brig | 1854 | 171 | —— | H. K. Corning | New York | [3] |
Hannibal | Bark | 1854 | 497 | —— | W. B. Whitehead | Suffolk | [3][4] |
Ilva | Bark | 1854 | 289 | —— | Maitland, Phelps & Co | New York | [3] Three-masted schooner [1] |
Rebecca | Bark | 1854 | 299 | —— | Freeman & Co | New York | [3] |
White Squall | Schooner | 1854 | 550 | —— | This job was a rebuild of a partially burned clipper [2] | ||
Elwood Walter | Ship | 1855 | 1250 | —— | J. B. Sandal & Co | NY–Liverpool | [5] |
|
Ship | 1856 | 708 | —— | Laytin & Hurlbut | NY?–Antwerp | Packet ship [6] mystic58 |
Jacob A. Stamler | Ship | 1856 | 1101 | —— | Laytin & Hurlbut | NY–Antwerp | Converted into floating home, NY, 1901; condemned as fire hazard, 1915 [7][8] mystic58 |
Lighter | 1856 | 150 | Wm. Galeway | ||||
Teresa | Bark | 1857 | 500 | —— | Maitland, Phelps & Co | "for the South American trade" | |
Marianne Nottebohm | Ship | 1857 | 1200 | —— | Layton & Co | NY-Antwerp | [7][9][10] |
Brig | 1857 | 170 | —— | Benton & Co | [10] | ||
Commodore Perry USS Commodore Perry 61 |
Ferry | 1859 | Novelty | Long Island Ferry Co | New York | [11][12][13] | |
Ethan Allen USS Commodore Barney 61 |
Ferry | 1859 | Novelty | Long Island Ferry Co | New York | [11][12][13] | |
USS Pembina | Gunboat | 1861 | 1171 | Novelty | U.S. Navy | East Coast | |
Convoy | Steamer | 1862 | 375 | Fulton | Arthur Leary & Co | [14] mystic 64 | |
USS Port Royal | Gunboat | 1862 | 805 | U.S. Navy | East Coast | ||
Dictator | Steamer | 1863 | 583 | Arthur Leary | [15] mystic 64 | ||
Louisburg | Steamer | 1863 | 670 | Owned by Baker & Co. 1870. mystic 70 | |||
USS Metacomet | Gunboat | 1863 | 1173 | U.S. Navy | East Coast | ||
Jessie Duncan | Bark | 1864 | —— | #12 | |||
Schooner | 1864 | —— | "[F]or South America" #12 | ||||
Schooner | 1864 | —— | "[F]or South America" #12 | ||||
Starlight | Steamer | 1864 | Fulton | Messrs Leary | [16] 150-ft keel[16] | ||
Alhambra | Propeller | 1864 | 765 | Fulton | Arthur Leary | [17] | |
George Leary | Steamboat | 1864 | 905 | Murphy | W. Buckmaster Charles C. Leary |
Baltimore–Norfolk, VA | Destroyed by fire, 1901 [18] |
Granada | Propeller | 1864 | 765 | Fulton | Arthur Leary | [17] | |
LV 5 | Lightship | 1864 | 171 | —— | U.S. Lighthouse Board | Massachusetts | Schooner-rigged; retired 1930 [19] archived link |
Ella Nevins | Bark | 1865 | —— | "for the Italian trade" [20] | |||
James T. Brady | Steamer | 1865 | 585om | Fulton | Arthur Leary et al | "In Government service"[21] | |
Shamrock USS Isonomia |
Steamboat | 1865 | 585om | Murphy | Arthur Leary et al | [22][23] | |
Thomas Brooks | Steamer | 1866 | Moses Tayler & Co | Coast of Cuba | [24] | ||
Cleopatra [7] | Half-clipper | 1867 | 1233 | —— | T. S. Hathaway & Co | East Coast–Far East | Fast ship; sold foreign, ca. 1876; destroyed by explosion and fire, 1894[25] |
Gunboat | 1869 | 170 | Delamater | Spanish Govt | |||
Gunboat | 1869 | 170 | Delamater | Spanish Govt | |||
Gunboat | 1869 | 170 | Delamater | Spanish Govt | |||
Gunboat | 1869 | 170 | Delamater | Spanish Govt | |||
Gunboat | 1869 | 170 | Delamater | Spanish Govt | |||
Florida | Steamer | 1871 | Seized by U.S. government "on suspicion of being engaged to carry arms and ammunition to the Cuban insurgents"; later sold to Canadian interests and employed as a coastal vessel. -npc | ||||
Wanderer | Yacht | 1871 | —— | Louis Lorillard | New York | Built by Samuel H. Pine at Stack's shipyard[26] | |
Fern | Propeller | 1872 | U.S. Lighthouse Board | [27] |
|- align="left" | ' || || align="center" | || align="right" | || || || || |- align="left" | ' || || align="center" | || align="right" | || || || ||
Warships and government vessels
[edit]Name | Type | Class | Ton. | Launched | Comm. | Decomm. | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
USS Pembina | SG | Unadilla | 1,171 | 1861-08-28 | 1861-10-16 | 1865-09-22 | Three prizes; sold, 1865-11-30 |
USS Port Royal | DEG | Port Royal | 805 | 1862-01-17 | 1862-04-26 | 1866-05-23 | One prize; sold 1866-10-03 |
USS Metacomet | DEG | Sassacus | 1,173 | 1863-03-07 | 1864-01-04 | 1865-08-18 | Two prizes; six crew awarded Medal of Honor; vessel sold to John Roach & Sons, 1865-10-28 |
Name | Type | Class | Ton. | Launched | Comm. | Decomm. | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
USRC Salmon P. Chase | SW | Chase | 500 | 1865 | 1865-10-09 | 1875 | Sold, 1875-06-15; later SS Admiral; sold foreign, 1883 |
1865? |
Footnotes
[edit]- ^ Some vessels attributed to Thomas Stack in some sources are not included here. For example, the schooner Emily Keith, built in 1854, is erroneously attributed to Stack in the New-York Shipping Register of 1858, but other sources confirm the builder was Stack's former partner Ariel Patterson.
- ^ Name = name of ship. Where a ship had more than one name in its career, later names are listed in descending order, with each followed by a two-digit figure representing the last two digits of the year (where known) that the renaming took place.
- ^ Type = ship type.
- ^ Built = year of ship launch, where available, or else year of completion.
- ^ Ton. = tonnage of ship; registered (ie official) tonnage where available. Some tonnages may only be approximations, reported by newspapers prior to the ship's official measurement.
- ^ Party which ordered the ship.
- ^ The longer name (with the added "e") first appears in American Lloyds in 1881; whether it represents an actual name change to the ship, or just a spelling correction in the register, is not known. Grahams Polley, for whom the ship was evidently named, was a well known Brooklyn philanthropist, who at one time was also the next-door neighbor of Ariel Patterson. The ship's name is also often misspelled Graham's Polly (i.e. with an apostrophe).
References
[edit]- ^ "Williamsburgh". New York Morning Courier. 1854-12-22.
- ^ a b c "Long Island", The New York Times, 1854-06-20.
- ^ a b c d e f g Fairburn, Vol. 5, p. 2827.
- ^ a b "Williamsburg City", The New York Times, 1853-09-03.
- ^ "Ship Launch", The New York Times, 1855-01-16.
- ^ "A Launch", The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1856-04-12.
- ^ a b c Fairburn, Vol. 5, pp. 2828-2829.
- ^ "A Hot Supper and a Benevolent Berth: Brooklynite John Arbuckle and his Deep Sea Hotel, the Jacob A. Stamler", gothamcenter.org. Launch cited in New York Herald, 1856-10-12.
- ^ Cutler, p. 333.
- ^ a b "Shipbuilding", The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, p. 3, 1857-09-16.
- ^ a b Bauer and Roberts, p. 95.
- ^ a b Frazer 1859, p. 348.
- ^ a b "Launch of a New Ferry Boat", The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, p. 3, 1859-06-04.
- ^ "Local Intelligence: Our Shipyards", The New York Times, 1863-01-26.
- ^ "Local Intelligence", The New York Times, 1862-11-09.
- ^ a b "Miscellaneous". New York Herald. P. 8. 1864-01-24.
- ^ a b "Shipbuilding in New-York", The New York Times, 1864-12-01.
- ^ Heyl, Vol. 4, pp. 107-109.
- ^ "Vessel Designation: LV 5", United States Coast Guard website.
- ^ "Williamsburg", The New York Times, 1865-05-05.
- ^ Frazer, July 1865, No. 475, p. 53.
- ^ Frazer, July 1865, No. 475, p. 56.
- ^ "New Steamships for the Southern Trade", The New York Times, 1865-08-19.
- ^ "Miscellaneous", The New York Times, 1866-10-15.
- ^ Matthews 1930. pp. 77–78.
- ^ "Ship Building", Brooklyn Daily Eagle, p. 3, 1871-01-18.
- ^ Morrison 1909, p. 163.
Bibliography
[edit]- Frazer, John F., ed. (1865): Journal of the Franklin Institute of the State of Pennsylvania, Vol. 80, No. 475, Third Series, Vol. L, July 1865, No. 1, pp. 53, 56; Franklin Institute, Philadelphia.
bio
[edit]- marriage kate kelly 1851 -npcom
- paid workers himself -eagle
- still active 1872 -npc
- still active 1873 -npc
- rescues boy 1874 -npc
- times union obit -npc
yard
[edit]- incendiary attack 1854 -npcom
- injunction, yard location 1866 -eagle np
- stink continues 1866 -eagle npcom
- gang of thieves 1866 -eagle npcom
- leary succeeds stack about 1867, leary kept stack name until about 1886 -eagle npcom
ships
[edit]- eileen evans, two revenue cutters 1864 -npc[2]
- contract for sloop of war 1873 -npc
- fern, florida 1871 -npc
- emily keith 1854
- 1853 ships for freeman, whitlock, other builders -npcom
- grahams polly 1856 nyt -np eagle -np launch -np
- ship for layton, brig for benton 1857, other yards empty -eagle np
- com. perry, ethan allen launches 1859 -np more -np r & j launch -npcom
- pembina launch also seneca (simonson) 1861 -nyt np
- sale of thomas foulks 1864 -npcom
- granada alhambra 1865 also van deusen others -npcom
- bark ella nevins 1865 -nyt npcom
- ship, only busy yard aug 1865 -nyt np
- ship, van deusen, other yards dec 1865 -eagle np
- steamer thomas brooks 1866 -eagle np
- adimral schooner 1865 -abs1885 htrust
- louisburg 1863 -mystic70
- j a stamler img details
refs
[edit]- jessie duncan bark, shamrock, live oak, steamboats, 2x 800-ton propellers, 2x schooner for s. america, other builders -fulton
- 1863 steamer dictator -mystic
Eck- ford Webb, EF Williams, Edward Lupton and Samuel Snee- den had yards in Greenpoint, while Laurence & Foulks, Ariel Patterson and Thomas Stack were located in Williamsburgh
- james daniel leary a nephew book
- 1848 andrew foster eagle
- early years perrine etc 1848-9, stack's yard 1,000 employees etc eagle
- fire 1849, ship ticonderago? eagle
- 1849 ship eagle
- 1847 ship enterprize eagle
- 1850 ship arctic eagle
- 1852 3 ferryboats nyt
- ericsson pps jan 1853 nyt
- partners split, own businesses book
- 1850 ship eagle
- 1852 ss uncle sam nyt
- 1853 2 steamers, 1 clipper 1 barque nyt
- aug 1853 split into two firms, yankee blade, old and new yard locations, nyt
- 1854 ships various yards ny evening post fultonhistory
- june 1854 bark clara, white squall, brig nyt
- jun 1854 yard foot of north 2nd street williamsburg bark clara, unnamed brig nyt
- packet ship elwood walter jan 1855 nyt
- 1855 clipper white squall book
- 1856 ship grahams polley eagle
- oct 1857 ship, brig eagle
- 1850s? cleopatra clipper, marianne nottebohm book
- ethan allen, commodore perry ferries 1859 eagle
- plus two more by Roosevelt & Joyce -eagle
- port royal launch and details 1862 -fultonhistory
- pembina launch -fultonhistory
- http://fultonhistory.com/Newspaper%205/Brooklyn%20NY%20Daily%20Eagle/Brooklyn%20NY%20Daily%20Eagle%201937%20Grayscale/Brooklyn%20NY%20Daily%20Eagle%201937%20Grayscale%20-%202633.pdf#xml=http://fultonhistory.com/dtSearch/dtisapi6.dll?cmd=getpdfhits&u=21ea6e8d&DocId=6968844&Index=Z%3a\Index%20O-G-T&HitCount=5&hits=123+124+3f8+401+5e0+&SearchForm=C%3a\inetpub\wwwroot\Fulton_New_form.html&.pdf friendly sons 1861 - eagle (fulton history)]
- repairs magnolia as uss magnolia
- 1862 jan "... at the shipyard of Thomas Stack foot of North Sixth street Wllliamsburgh ... engine and is schooner rigged mounting two pivot guns and four broadside ... " nyt
- steamer nov 1862 nyt
- 1863 metacomet book
- metacomet claim eagle
- success on metacomet claim 1902 eagle
- dec 1864 granada alhambra propellers nyt
- may 1865 bark ella nevins, revenue cutter nyt
- 1865 two cutters great lakes nyt
- 1865 steamer shamrock/gunboat isnomia steamer james t. brady book
- aug 1865 busy 350 employees one ship, repairs? eagle
- 1866 repairs, also maspeth l & f, isaac waterbury yard
- 1865 grenada -mystic
- 1866 james brooks another for leary -nyt
- president shipbuilders and shipwrights assoc., nov 1869 nyt
- Pembina built by Thomas Stack at his yard in Wiiliamsbnrgh was launched yesterday ia the presence of some 1500 persons The falling off in the emigrants ... aug 1861 ppv
- five spanish gunboats 1869 -fultonhistory
- 1870 commerce decline, location of stack yard eagle
- 1871 yacht wanderer also l & f ships etc
- aug 1873 bid for steam sloop of war nyt