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SS Erl King (1865)
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SS Erl King (1865)
please note:
- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
- it has been imported raw for GetWiki
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2014}}{{Use British English|date=April 2014}}{|- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
- it has been imported raw for GetWiki
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Hide header | |Header caption=|Ship class=|Ship type=Iron auxiliary steamship|Ship tonnage=1671 grt|Ship displacement=|Ship tons burthen=1400 bm|Ship length=305.6 feet|Ship beam=34.1 feet|Ship height=|Ship draught=|Ship draft=|Ship depth=|Ship hold depth=28.3 feet|Ship decks=|Ship deck clearance=|Ship ramps=|Ship ice class=|Ship power=250hp|Ship propulsion=Auxiliary steam, lifting screw|Ship sail plan=Barque|Ship speed=12.24 knots (trials speed)"Trial Trip", 21 October 1865, Glasgow Herald pg 4, column 6|Ship range=|Ship endurance=|Ship test depth=|Ship boats=|Ship capacity=*40 first class passengers, |
Ship troops | |Ship complement|Ship crew=|Ship time to activate=|Ship armament=|Ship armour=|Ship armor=|Ship notes= |
China trade
The Erl King was used in the China trade â sailing from Britain to China to collect, primarily, tea. The ending of the British East India Company's monopoly of the tea trade from China to Britain in 1834 had given rise to the tea clipper era, with much of the tea that was brought from China being carried in high speed sailing vessels that competed to get the first "new crop" to market in Britain. (Slower sailing vessels also carried tea.) In 1866, the Erl King entered this trade in competition with the sailing vessels. The tea clippers, if able to load a cargo early, would race against each other, often with a premium payment written into the bills of lading for the winning ship. These races were reported in the newspapers, bets were placed, and tea wholesalers and retailers would mention which ship had carried the batches of tea they were selling.for example: Adverts, 6 January 1871, Sheffield Independent pg 1, column 51866 happened to be a very close race among the tea clippers. The Erl King loaded a cargo of 1,108,100 pounds of tea in Foochow and sailed on 5 June 1866. The first clippers had left a week earlier."The Great Ocean Race from China", 1 August 1866, Glasgow Herald pg 4, column 4 However, the Erl King arrived in London on 20 August 1866, a passage of 77 days â with the sailing vessels still in the Atlantic."The Great Ocean Race from China, Arrival of the SS Erl King", 24 August 1866, Glasgow Herald pg 4, column 6 The fastest clippers arrived on 6 September with passage times of 99 days â their race was virtually a dead heat. The merchants who had promised the 10 shillings a ton premium to the winning sailing vessel therefore lost out, not only because so many race participants had arrived at the same time, but because "new crop" tea from the Erl King had already been on the market for well over a week.The Erl King also carried passengers. On her 1866 passage from China, these included the wife of Captain MacKinnon, master of the Taeping, one of the two clippers that tied first place in the Tea Race that year. Mrs. MacKinnon had presumably not traveled on her husband's racing ship as she was pregnant. She gave birth to a baby boy whilst the Erl King was "about 4 days sail from Cape de Verde"."The Great Ocean Race from China", Saturday 25 August 1866,Liverpool Daily Post, pg 5, column 1Loss
She was wrecked on Long Reef, east of the Florida Keys.Bruce Biddulph, David Asprey and Stuart Cameron: weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20120614091315weblink">Shipping Times: Launched 1865 â SS Erl King.WEB,weblink SS Erl King (+1891),References
{{reflist|30em}}{{Inglis ships}}{{coord|25.4254|N|80.1248|W|source:wikidata|display=title}}- content above as imported from Wikipedia
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- time: 7:22am EDT - Sat, May 18 2024
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