Lost Maine Coastal Schooners

From Glory Days to Ghost Ships

Nonfiction, Reference & Language, Transportation, Ships & Shipbuilding, History, Travel, Pictorials, Americas, United States
Cover of the book Lost Maine Coastal Schooners by Ingrid Grenon, Arcadia Publishing
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Author: Ingrid Grenon ISBN: 9781614231974
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing Publication: April 23, 2010
Imprint: The History Press Language: English
Author: Ingrid Grenon
ISBN: 9781614231974
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
Publication: April 23, 2010
Imprint: The History Press
Language: English

Dramatic true stories of New England maritime history, with photos.
 
Large, wooden-hulled schooners graced the seas of coastal Maine for more than a century as vessels of trade and commerce. With the advent of steam-powered craft, however, these elegant four-, five-, or six-masted wooden ships became obsolete and vanished from the harbors and horizons.
 
The Edward Lawrence, the last of the six-masters, became her own funeral pyre in Portland Harbor, burning to ash before everyone’s eyes. The Carroll A. Deering washed ashore with no trace of her crew, empty as a ghost ship except for three cats and a pot of pea soup still cooking on the stove. In this testament to the beauty of the Maine coastal region, maritime history enthusiast Ingrid Grenon tells the story of these magnificent relics of the bygone Age of Sail and celebrates the people who devoted their lives to the sea.
 

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Dramatic true stories of New England maritime history, with photos.
 
Large, wooden-hulled schooners graced the seas of coastal Maine for more than a century as vessels of trade and commerce. With the advent of steam-powered craft, however, these elegant four-, five-, or six-masted wooden ships became obsolete and vanished from the harbors and horizons.
 
The Edward Lawrence, the last of the six-masters, became her own funeral pyre in Portland Harbor, burning to ash before everyone’s eyes. The Carroll A. Deering washed ashore with no trace of her crew, empty as a ghost ship except for three cats and a pot of pea soup still cooking on the stove. In this testament to the beauty of the Maine coastal region, maritime history enthusiast Ingrid Grenon tells the story of these magnificent relics of the bygone Age of Sail and celebrates the people who devoted their lives to the sea.
 

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