Who knows their Nautical History?! Step right up and test your knowledge! What can y'all tell me about my old girl Elissa?
HAH! Yes sir, that it is; and she is my avatar, as I've been crewing her for almost seven years! I see a lot of folks on here from up north, so I'm interested to see what they know about her!https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elissa_(ship)
In the age of information, ignorance is a choice.
P.S.- she appears to be your avatar.
She was actually built in 1877 by Alexander & Hall as a specialty cargo vessel shipping bananas in Aberdeen, Scotland. She rounded Cape Horn multiple times and sailed the world for decades and eventually was purchased by the U.S. while she was still a sailing ship. In the Civil War, she served in the Texas Navy and saw action in the Gulf of Mexico; after that, she was retired, and was bought by an anonymous company and smuggled cigarettes for decades. Eventually, she ended up stranded and abandoned in a Greek salvage yard where she was purchased by the Galveston Historical Foundation, towed across the Atlantic and restored to her full beauty and original name, Elissa. She costed millions of dollars to restore and is ONE of TWO functional sailing tall ships on the East Coast. She is also going onto 141 years old this next year. This is not to argue, it's just that I've put a lot of my life and passion into this ship since I was 11 years old, and to me she's more than just a foreign boat that didn't sink. You have a very nice boat, sir; I always was fond of Bavarias!!After reading WikipediA I did not find much of historical significance that a nautical history buff would need to know regarding the ship. Apparently, she was essentially a barely floating merchant wreck eventually restored by a foundation/museum and got dubbed a national historic landmark. "A National Historic Landmark (NHL) is a building, district, object, site, or structure that is officially recognized by the United States government for its outstanding historical significance"... which in this case is...what? That she didn't sink? Wasn't even built in one of our yards! Sorry.
Sure you have the facts right? Civil War was from 1860-1864. She hadn't been built until 1877 as you say.She was actually built in 1877 by Alexander & Hall as a specialty cargo vessel ... In the Civil War, she served in the Texas Navy and saw action in the Gulf of Mexico;
You are right, sir, my mistake!!Sure you have the facts right? Civil War was from 1860-1864. She hadn't been built until 1877 as you say.
I believe one call in Galveston was to deliver a cargo hold of bananas from Central America.
She is a beautiful ship. She used to sail up into upper Galveston Bay for the Houston Yacht Club "Elissa Regatta" a fund raising regatta to help keep her squared away. I've seen her under full sail twice and sailed circles around her while she was anchored to get some pictures of our boat near her. She doesn't come up into the upper bay any more because she ran aground once. But she is still a beauty. One of the last of the non replica tall masts and square riggers. Here is a link to a little info about her.No, it is not the USS Constitution, no where near the historical importance or national treasure that ship is. But if you're ever on Galveston Island, I think it's worth the price of admission to go aboard.
Yes, but at what point in that ignorance did somebody decide it was a good idea to hang a monster kite off that sprit?In the age of information, ignorance is a choice.