Historic Pelham

Presenting the rich history of Pelham, NY in Westchester County: current historical research, descriptions of how to research Pelham history online and genealogy discussions of Pelham families.

Friday, February 02, 2018

The Launch of the Schooner Yacht Katrina, Built in Pelham, on Tuesday, May 29, 1888


It was a magnificent yacht designed by famed marine architect A. Carey Smith for a pair of brothers:  Edgar Stirling Auchincloss and Hugh Dudley Auchincloss.  It was built in 1888 in the Pelham shipyard of Henrich Carl Christian "Henry" Piepgras once located at the eastern end of Pilot Avenue (today's Pilot Street) on City Island.  It was named "Katrina."  The grand yacht launched from the rails of the Piepgras shipyard into the waters of Long Island Sound on May 29, 1888.

I have written extensively about the Piepgras Shipyard that once operated on City Island in the Town of Pelham.  For one example of such articles, see:  Tue., Dec. 08, 2015:  Heinrich Carl Christian "Henry" Piepgras and His Shipyard in the Town of Pelham on City Island.  

The launch of any large ship from rails on City Island during the 19th and early 20th centuries was a grand spectacle.  Spectators crowded the shores and lined the gunwales of yachts and ships that crowded the nearby waters for the event.  Shipyard owners hosted celebrations in their yards for the workers and even served kegs of beer and gave the workers time off for their jobs well done.  Sometimes yacht owners and their families and friends would crowd onto their new vessels before the launch and ride the vessels down the rails for the monumental splash as the large ships plunged into the waters of the Sound.  Nearly always, the new owner (or a member of the owner's family) would smash a bottle of champagne or wine against the bow of the ship as the ship is named aloud and launched, a tradition intended to invite good luck on the vessel and its future crew and passengers.

On May 29, 1888, about fifty members of the Auchincloss families and their friends were on board the steamboat Laura M. Starin to watch the launch.  Among those on board with them for the celebration were Albert Bierstadt and Mr. John Hyslop, the measurer of the New York Yacht Club.

A daughter of one of the owners cracked a bottle of wine over the bow of the sloop to begin its slide down the rails.  As the Katrina struck the water amid cheers from spectators and vessel passengers.  A host of steamship and sailing yachts gathered for the celebration with steamships blowing their whistles as the yacht slid effortlessly into the water.  According to one account, "all the steam whistles and cannon in the neighborhood echoed their approval." Many spectators witnessed the grand event, including famed American painter of the Hudson River School Albert Bierstadt.  Henry Piepgras gave his shipyard workers a half-day holiday that day and provided them with kegs of beer at the shipyard to celebrate the launch of the Katrina.  

Work on the Katrina began with the laying of the keel shortly after the Great Blizzard of 1888 that occurred March 12-13, 1888.  That storm was so massive that, as one account of the launch of the Katrina put it, "all dates are now B.B. [Before Blizzard] and A.B. [After Blizzard] in Westchester."  By the time of the launch, the schooner was nearly complete.  A little work still needed to be done including rigging the spars of Oregon pine and fitting the interior with white pine and mahogany facing.  

Construction of the yacht cost about $15,000 (the amount budgeted for the work).  This would be about  $505,000 in today's dollars.   

An image of the Katrina is included below.  Her dimensions reportedly were about 84 feet over all; 69 feet 6 inches length of water line, 20 feet 4 inches beam, 12 feet 7-1/2 inches depth of hold and draught 9 feet 3 inches aft.  

Immediately the yachting world began calling for a race between the Katrina and the recently launched Titania also built at the Piepgras Shipyard.  Pelham, for a time, was the center of the yacht-building world.

 

 Katrina, A Sloop Built for Edgar Stirling Auchincloss and
Hugh Dudley Auchincloss in 1888 at the Piepgras Shipyard
in the Town of Pelham.  Source:  Wikimedia Commons.
NOTE:  Click Image to Enlarge.

*          *          *          *          *

"HAIL!  KATRINA!
-----
LAUNCH OF THE NEW SLOOP OF MESSRS. AUCHINCLOSS AT CITY ISLAND.

With the broad bosomed Sound nodding her white caps in welcome, the new yacht Katrina, iron hull and sloop rig, was launched yesterday at Piepgras' ship yard on City Island.

Her keel was laid shortly after the blizzard (all dates are now B.B. and A.B. in Westchester) and in a week or two, or perhaps a little longer, she will be sparred and rigged ready for service.

'It was a won'erful fine launch!' said . . . one old [fellow] who has lived on City Island sixty years.

'I never saw a finer launch!' remarked Captain Herman Golden of the Lurline, Mr. J. M. Waterbury's fleet winged craft.

The verdict among the fifty persons who composed the party on board the new born offspring of the lathe, chisel and mallet was that she went off 'very slippery,' and the local genius in water lore had hopes that 'she'll be a terrible smart boat.'

Not a mishap occurred to mar the event.  The owners, Messrs. Edgar S. and Hugh D. Auchincloss, were present, accompanied by half a hundred friends, on the steamboat Laura M. Starin, among whom were Mr. John Hyslop, the measurer of the New York Yacht Club, and Albert Bierstadt, the artist.  A daughter of one of the owners cracked a bottle of wine over the bow of the sloop as she struck the water, and all the steam whistles and cannon in the neighborhood echoed their approval.  The workmen in the shipyard were given a half-holiday and beer was provided for them by the keg.

The Katrina's contract specified a cost of $15,000.  She was designed by A. Cary Smith.  Her dimensions are about 84 feet over all; 69 feet 6 inches length of water line, 20 feet 4 inches beam, 12 feet 7-1/2 inches depth of hold and draught 9 feet 3 inches aft.  She is to be rigged with spars of Oregon pine and fitted with white pine and mahogany facing.

A yachting expert alleged that the bow of the Katrina resembles the Thistle.  The stern is fashioned somewhat after that of the Priscilla, although much lighter than the latter.

Among the yachts about the launch were Mr. Augustus Mott's Puzzle, a roomy and elegantly fitted steam vessel; the Priscilla, which, under the ownership of Mr. R. Lenox Belknap, is being transformed into a schooner; the Bo-Peep, and the Mischief.

The Mischief is the property of Messrs. Auchincloss, and her captain and crew will man the Katrina.  

A hope was expressed yesterday that the Katrina, when ready, and the Titania should be matched for a race to test the relative merits of the respective designers -- Smith and Burgess."

Source:  HAIL!  KATRINA! -- LAUNCH OF THE NEW SLOOP OF MESSRS. AUCHINCLOSS AT CITY ISLAND, N.Y. Herald, May 30, 1888, No. 18,909, p. 8, col. 6

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Thursday, December 14, 2017

Edwin Dennison Morgan III's Famed Racing Yacht "Constellation" Was Built in a Pelham Shipyard in 1889


Yesterday's Historic Pelham article addressed the success of the Henry Piepgras Shipyard on City Island in the Town of Pelham during the latter half of the 1880s and efforts by Piepgras to expand the facility in 1888 and 1889.  See Wed., Dec. 13, 2017:  Henry Piepgras Made Improvements to His Pelham Shipyard in 1888 and 1889.  As noted in that article, at the very beginning of 1889, the Piepgras Shipyard was extremely busy.  On February 1, the keels of three yachts were already laid with plans to lay two more keels -- five at once.  All five vessels were steel-plated racing yachts intended to be finished in time for yacht races later that year.  One of the three steel-plated yachts under construction on February 1, 1889, was a yacht commissioned by Edwin Dennison Morgan III (E. D. Morgan).

Edwin Dennison Morgan III has been described as "The Greatest American Yachtsman."  According to one source he had a "long record in yacht racing, including the America's Cup."  He was a grandson of New York Governor and United States Senator Edwin Dennison Morgan and a distant relation of J. P. Morgan.  His father, Edwin Dennison Morgan II, died young.  Thus, when his grandfather died thereafter, the young Edwin Dennison Morgan III inherited from his grandfather an estate valued at about $12,000,000 (roughly $400 million in today's dollars).  He graduated from Harvard in 1877 and lived life thereafter as a "sportsman" -- primarily a yachtsman.

He served as Commodore of the New York Yacht Club in 1893-94 and served on that club's America's Cup Committee four times.  Yachting was central in his life.  His biography for his induction into the Herreshoff Marine Museum America's Cup Hall of Fame notes that "He owned some 17 vessels including steamers, schooners, sloops, America's Cup Defenders and many smaller yachts."  The biography further notes:

"After many years racing lesser yachts, Mr. Morgan came to particular prominence in yachting circles as the owner of Nathanael Greene Herreshoff's breakthrough yacht GLORIANA, which won all eight races in the New York Yacht Club's most competitive class in 1891. Thus began a legendary partnership in competitions over many years between E.D. Morgan as owner and manager and N.G. Herreshoff as designer and builder. The duo's accomplishments included very direct involvement with four Cup Defenders: VIGILANT in 1893 over VALKYRIE; DEFENDER in 1895 over VALKYRIE II; COLUMBIA in 1899 over SHAMROCK; and COLUMBIA in 1901 over SHAMROCK II with E.D. Morgan as syndicate manager."

Source:  Herreshoff Marine Museum / America's Cup Hall of Fame, "EDWIN DENNISON MORGAN, 2000 INDUCTEE" (visited Dec. 9, 2017).



Edwin Dennison Morgan III, Famous 19th Century Yachtsman.

During the late 1880s, E. D. Morgan hired Edward Burgess, one of the nation's premier yacht designers and maritime architects to design a massive steel-plated schooner exclusively for speed.  He also hired New York's premier shipbuilder, Heinrich Carl Christian "Henry" Piepgras of City Island in the Town of Pelham, to construct the massive racing schooner.

By February 1, 1889, the keel of the new schooner had been laid at the Piepgras Shipyard at the eastern end of Pilot Avenue (today's "Pilot Street") on City Island.  Although there are suggestions in some news accounts that Morgan hoped to race the new schooner in upcoming races in the Spring, work on the new schooner was delayed not long after the keel had been laid.  According to one report, Henry Piepgras was not satisfied with the quality of steel available to him for creating the steel plates for the hull and waited until he could obtain better quality steel.  By mid-February, 1889, Piepgras had the steel and arranged for work on the new schooner to proceed "in earnest" the week of February 23rd.

The yachting world was beginning to anticipate great things regarding the new schooner.  On February 16, 1889, a New York City newspaper reported a rumor that "the mainmast is to be 100 feet from tenon to masthead.  This looks as thought the yacht is to carry a big spread of sail."

By at least February 27, 1889, the new schooner under construction at the Piepgras Shipyard had a name.  The New York Herald of New York City reported that day that the "name of Mr. E. D. Morgan's schooner which Piepgras is building at City Island, will be the Constellation."

Work on the Constellation progressed slowly but steadily over the next six weeks.  By mid-April, the steel-plating was nearly complete with "only a little more" left to do.  The deck was expected to be laid "soon."  

As the Constellation slowly took shape at the Piepgras Shipyard slowly took shape during the next two months, it became increasingly clear that the schooner would be something very special.  It clearly would be the largest steel schooner yacht yet built in the world (136 feet overall, almost half the length of a modern football field).  In addition, it was being designed exclusively for speed.  

The Constellation, a centerboard schooner, had a rather revolutionary feature.  It was designed so that the centerboard did not rise above the cabin floor.  Reported measurements for the schooner differed slightly in various reports, but the vessel was about 136 feet long overall, 107 feet long on the water line, 24 feet 9 inch beam, and a draft of about 12 feet.  The ballast of the vessel was lead, "most of it being poured in hot."  The vessel also had a "pole bowsprit and set[] her jib flying cutter style" with a very large set of sails.  


By July 15, 1889, the Constellation was "rapidly approaching completion."  One newspaper reported that day that Morgan hoped to have the racing yacht ready for upcoming races of the New York Yacht Club.  

Though work on the yacht was not yet complete, over the next two and a half weeks, Morgan was able to take the vessel on "two or three trial spins."  The New York Herald reported on July 31 that Morgan was "quite satisfied with his new schooner Constellation."  It further reported that the trial runs gave Morgan "hope for great things when she gets into thorough racing trim.  In the forthcoming cruise of the New York Yacht Club her speed will be thoroughly tested, and some people think she will be a formidable candidate for the $1,000 Goelet Cup."  

That same day (July 31, 1889), the Constellation's designer, Edward Burgess, spent the day at the Piepgras Shipyard in Pelham giving Henry Piepgras instructions for a "few alterations in the rig" of the schooner "so as to have her in the best possible condition for the New York Yacht Club cruise" that would be held on August 8.  

On Thursday, August 8, the beautiful day broke with light breezes.  Edwin Dennison Morgan III and everyone else, frankly, expected great things of the Constellation during the New York Yacht Club Squadron Races from New London to Newport held that day. 

The Constellation raced among five other "First Class Schooners" including the Palmer, the Ramona, the Intrepid, the Norseman, and the Dauntless.  It won the race, beating all by about a minuteSee BEAUTIFUL GRAYLING LEADS THE FLEET, N.Y. Herald, Aug. 9, 1889, p. 4, cols. 1-3.  

Surprisingly, however, reaction to the Constellation and its performance in the race was somewhat negative among American yachtsmen.  The New York Herald reported the day after the race as follows:

 "The Constellation, the big schooner designed by Mr. Burgess for Mr. E. D. Morgan, comes in for a great deal of unkind criticism, and rather unjustly so, in my opinion.  She is a steel centreboard craft, 106 feet on the load water line, 24 feet 9 inches beam and 12 feet draught.  Constructed expressly for speed, her ballast is of lead, most of it being poured in hot.  She has a pole bowsprit and sets her jib flying cutter style.  Her sail plan is very large.  As to her beauty people are divided, but the point made against her is that she undoubtedly should have shown to better advantage."

The problem seems to have been one of expectations.  The Constellation was brand new with purportedly significant technological improvements.  Yet, it beat the last place Dauntless, a 24-year-old vessel, by only one minute and nine seconds.  Moreover, the remaining vessels that it also beat were a hodge podge of older ships with one even described as "old fashioned."  Indeed, the New York Herald reported "With such boats as these against her it is argued with some force that the Constellation ought to have made a more remarkable record.  Unkindly criticism of this kind ought, however, to be deferred until next season."

 Morgan himself seems to have been less than enthusiastic about the potential of the Constellation.  Barely two years later, on September 10, 1891, a local newspaper reported that he had sold the vessel to Mr. Bayard Thayer of Boston for $40,000, a price that was "much below the original cost of the yacht."  

Eight years later, in 1899, Bayard Thayer sold the Constellation to Francis Skinner of the Eastern Yacht Club.  The yacht eventually landed in the hands of Henry Sears, also of the Eastern Yacht Club.  According to the City Island Nautical Museum, "The yacht was the flagship and landmark at Marblehead Harbor and the Eastern Yacht Club until 1941, when the yacht was donated to the Navy for scrap metal, so much of Constellation went into the construction of war ships. Constellation was considered by many to be the most beautiful yacht in America during its lifetime."

The most beautiful yacht in America during the late 19th and early to mid-20th centuries was built in a Pelham shipyard by Pelhamite and City Island shipbuilder Heinrich Carl Christian "Henry" Piepgras.  The lovely yacht is pictured immediately below.



Edwin Dennison Morgan's Centerboard Schooner Constellation
Designed by Edward Burgess and Built at the Henry Piepgras Shipyard
on City Island in the Town of Pelham in 1889.  This Image Shows the
Yacht on August 10, 1892 in a Race Near Marblehead, Massachusetts
Which She Won in Her Class.  Source:  Wikimedia Commons.
NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

*          *          *          *          *

"YACHTING NOTES AND COMMENTS. . . .

I saw Mr. E. D. Morgan and Mr. Edward Burgess at City Island.  They had gone there to see how the big steel schooner is progressing.  There has been some little delay in getting the proper kind of steel for the yacht, but Mr. Piepgras has at last obtained what he wants and work will go on in dead earnest next week.  I hear a rumor that the mainmast is to be 100 feet from tenon to masthead.  This looks as thought the yacht is to carry a big spread of sail."

Source:  YACHTING NOTES AND COMMENTS, N.Y. Herald, Feb. 16, 1889, p. 8, col. 2.

"YACHTING TOPICS. . . . 

The name of Mr. E. D. Morgan's schooner which Piepgras is building at City Island, will be the Constellation. . . . ."

Source:  YACHTING TOPICS, N.Y. Herald, Feb. 27, 1889, p. 8, col. 2.

"YACHTING NOTES.
-----
A Great Deal of Activity in all the Local Shipyards. . . . 

Work is being rapidly pushed on Mr. E. D. Morgan's Burgess cutter Tomahawk and Burgess' schooner Constellation by Piepgras.  The former is nearly plated and her deck will soon be laid.  Only a little more plating is needed by the Constellation. . . ."

Source:  YACHTING NOTES -- A Great Deal of Activity in all the Local Shipyards, The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Apr. 11, 1889, Vol. 49, No. 100, p. 1, col. 3.

"YACHTING TOPICS. . . .

Mr. E. D. Morgan's fine steel centreboard yacht Constellation, designed by Mr. Burgess, was launched yesterday afternoon from the yard of Mr. Henry Piepgras at City Island, on the Sound.  A large party of yachtsmen and ladies witnessed the launch, which was successful in every way.  Just as the yacht settled in the water Mrs. Morgan, wife of the owner, broke a bottle of wine over the yacht's prow, at the same time saying prettily, 'I christen thee Constellation.  Be speedy, victorious and safe.'  The yacht will be schooner rigged, is both keel and centreboard.  A feature of the centreboard is that it does not rise above the cabin floor.  The Constellation is 138 feet long over all, 107 feet on the water line and 26 feet beam and 16 feet depth of hold.  Her spars are in readiness at the yard of her builder, and she will probably receive them to-morrow."

Source:  YACHTING TOPICS, N.Y. Herald, Jun. 21, 1889, p. 8, col. 6.  

"YACHTING. . . .

Edwin  D. Morgan's handsome new schooner Constellation is rapidly approaching completion at Piepgras's yard.  Mr. Morgan hopes to have her ready for the cruise of the New York Yacht Club.  She will be classed with the schooners Dauntless, Roseman, Palmer and Ramona. . . ."

Source:  YACHTING, Utica Morning Herald [Utica, NY], Jul. 15, 1899, p. 3, col. 2.  

"YACHTING TOPICS.
-----

Mr. E. D. Morgan is said to be quite satisfied with his new schooner Constellation, which Mr. Burgess designed and Mr. Piepgras built.  He has given her two or three trial spins, and the way she goes through the water leads him to hope for great things when she gets into thorough racing trim.  In the forthcoming cruise of the New York Yacht Club her speed will be thoroughly tested, and some people think she will be a formidable candidate for the $1,000 Goelet Cup.  The Constellation is one of the largest centreboard schooner yachts afloat.  Her fittings are in excellent taste and cost a pile of money."

Source:  YACHTING TOPICS, N. Y. Herald, Jul. 31, 1889, p. 8, col. 6.  

"YACHTING TOPICS. . . . 

Mr. Edward Burgess spent some time yesterday at City Island giving Mr. Piepgras instructions for a few alterations in the rig of Mr. E. D. Morgan's schooner Constellation, so as to have her in the best possible condition for the New York Yacht Club cruise."

Source:  YACHTING TOPICS, N. Y. Herald, Aug. 1, 1889, p. 6, col. 4.

"THE CRUISE AND ITS LESSONS.
-----
How Yachtsmen Regard the Results of the New York Yacht Squadron Races.
-----
SOME FACTS ABOUT THE FORTIES.
-----
Minerva the Most Popular Boat in Her Class in Spite of Her Scotch Origin.
------

The problems which the cruise of the New York Yacht Club, with its glorious races, was expected to solve are as yet unsolved.  It is one of a yachtsman's salient characteristics never to admit that he is beaten, so the owners and designers of the vessels which sustained actual defeat are by no means satisfied that under different conditions their boats would not have come in at the head of the fleet.  Nearly all the yachtsmen have returned and are sweltering in their offices, trying to get on even terms with the immense amount of work which has accumulated during their absence.  They do not seem so happy, though, as they did at Newport or Cottage City, when with silken soul and body lashings of various brilliant hues they charmed the hearts of the girls and had a tip-top, glorious time.

Discussion as to the merits of each and every boat in the squadron may be heard at all the haunts of yachtsmen.  There are two factions -- Burgess and anti-Burgess -- and the way they clapperclaw each other is a caution to snakes.  The Constellation, the big schooner designed by Mr. Burgess for Mr. E. D. Morgan, comes in for a great deal of unkind criticism, and rather unjustly so, in my opinion.  She is a steel centreboard craft, 106 feet on the load water line, 24 feet 9 inches beam and 12 feet draught.  Constructed expressly for speed, her ballast is of lead, most of it being poured in hot.  She has a pole bowsprit and sets her jib flying cutter style.  Her sail plan is very large.  As to her beauty people are divided, but the point made against her is that she undoubtedly should have shown to better advantage.  She had against her the Dauntless, a boat twenty-four years old, whose shape and spars have been described until they are quite familiar.

Competing against her also was the Intrepid, a wooden keel schooner, designed in 1878 by Mr. A. Cary Smith for ocean work entirely, with inside ballast of iron and lead, and rigged with flying jib-boom in the old style.  Her dimensions are 100 feet 8 inches load water line; beam 24 feet 1 inch; with a plumb sternpost, a deep bilge and flat floor, with nothing modern about her.

Another of her rivals was the Palmer, a wooden schooner, lately rebuilt by Piepgras and transformed into a keel yacht by Poillon.  She is 104 feet 3 inches on the load water line, 24 feet 2 inches beam and 12 feet draught.  Her ballast is of lead, about forty tons of it on the keel.  She has a pole bowsprit.  She carried away her foretopmast on the run to Vineyard Haven, and sailed without it during the rest of the cruise.  Consequently she could not set her spinnaker or jibtopsail is a great help to speed in windward work.

With such boats as these against her it is argued with some force that the Constellation ought to have made a more remarkable record.  Unkindly criticism of this kind ought, however, to be deferred until next season, when she will be in full racing condition, and then she may turn out the best centreboard racing schooner of her size in the world.  Yachtsmen who have seen the fast keel schooner Yampa, designed by Mr. A. Cary Smith, whose fine achievements in deep water have been from time to time chronicled in the HERALD, would very much like to see the two boats in an ocean race.  The Iroquois, a good, seaworthy cruising craft, from the design of Mr. A. Cary Smith, successfully weathered the memorable blizzard and did very well indeed on the cruise.

If Mr. Burgess made a partial failure with his schooners this year, all hands must congratulate him on the peerless work of his smart sloop Titania.  This boat, with the exception perhaps of the Puritan, is undoubtedly the very best yacht Mr. Burgess has ever turned out.  The Volunteer is excepted for many reasons obvious to well informed yachtsmen.  The brilliant all round work of the Titania must make her celebrated in the annals of American yachting.  There is not a yachtsman on this side of the Atlantic who does not believe that the Titania could walk away with the Valkyrie with great ease under any conditions of weather.  The general impression goes that if Valkyrie had only proved herself just a wee bit smarter in her races the Royal Yacht Squadron would probably have taken a different view of the New Deed of Gift.

The Titania, therefore, seems to be facile princepa in her class.  The owners of the Katrina have had tests enough and they must fain admit that the Burgess boat is the better.  As for the Bedouin she might, with a few alterations, have done more creditably, but the good old cruiser has been out-built.  Nevertheless she is still staunch and sound as a roach and for a good all round boat, perfectly safe and seaworthy and one that can weather a gale of wind in fine style, commend me to Archie Rogers' fine old cutter.

The next class which commands attention is that of the forty footers -- those purely racing machines concerning which the HERALD has had something to say since they first originated.  Boats with great beam, large displacement, deep draught and enormous sale area, they were sprung with a rush upon American yachtsmen.  The result cannot be truly said to have been satisfactory.  All of them which have tried conclusions with the Scotch cutter Minerva have come woefully to grief.  Burgess, Cary, Smith, Gardner and McVey have trotted out their finest and choicest designs and young Fife of Fairlie has beaten them with a last year's boat."

Source:  THE CRUISE AND ITS LESSONS, N. Y. Herald, Aug. 25, 1889, p. 7, col. 6.

"E. D. MORGAN'S SCHOONER SOLD. -- The famous schooner yacht Constellation, built two years ago by Piepgras of City Island, for Mr. Edwin D. Morgan, of New York, the owner of the Gloriana, has been sold to Mr. Bayard Thayer of Boston.  The price paid for the schooner is said to be $40,000.  This is much below the original cost of the yacht.  She is of Burgess design, built of steel, fitted with a centreboard below the cabin floor and rigged in the strongest manner.  Her dimensions are:  131 feet over all, 166 [sic] feet water line, 24 feet 9 inches beam and 12 feet draught.  She is just the kind of vessel in which to make a cruise around the world."

Source:  E. D. MORGAN'S SCHOONER SOLD, Queens County Sentinel [Hempstead, NY], Sep. 10, 1891, Vol. 35, No. 15, p. 3, col. 2.  

"VICE COMMODORE MORGAN'S ITUNA. . . .

Yachtsmen here who had given the subject consideration during the winter and early spring wondered a little what Vice Commodore Morgan would do this year for a large boat.  He had disposed of the schooner Constellation to Mr. Bayard Thayer, of Boston. . . ."

Source:  VICE COMMODORE MORGAN'S ITUNA, N.Y. Herald, Jun. 8, 1892, p. 11, col. 4.  

"NEWS FOR YACHTSMEN. . . .

B. B. Crowninshield reports that he has sold the schooner Puritan, the former cup defender, for J. Malcolm Forbes to J. O. Shaw, Jr. Eastern Yacht Club, and the steel schooner Constellation for Bayard Thayer to Francis Skinner, Eastern Yacht Club.  The Constellation is one of the largest and finest schooners in the fleet; was designed by Burgess and built by Piepgras in 1889.  The yacht's dimensions are 131 feet over all, 107 feet water line, 25 feet beam, and 12 feet draught. . . ."

Source:  NEWS FOR YACHTSMEN, N. Y. Times, Mar. 12, 1899, p. 8, col. 4.

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Wednesday, December 13, 2017

Henry Piepgras Made Improvements to His Pelham Shipyard in 1888 and 1889


Heinrich Carl Christian "Henry" Piepgras purchased the David Carll Shipyard at the eastern end of Pilot Avenue (today's "Pilot Street") on City Island in the Town of Pelham in about 1885.  (To read more about the origins and history of the David Carll Shipyard, see Mon., Nov. 16, 2015: David Carll's Shipyard in the Town of Pelham on City Island.)  Henry Piepgras was a talented and masterful shipbuilder and ship architect.  He brought the art of iron and steel ship construction to Pelham after having become an expert in crafting lead keels (and building hollow masts for such ships) while working as a shipbuilder in Germany and, later, in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. 

Previous Historic Pelham articles have dealt with Henry Piepgras and his Pelham shipyard.  See, e.g.:

Mon., Nov. 27, 2006:  The 19th Century Ejectment of Henry Piepgras from Land Beneath the Waters Surrounding City Island.

Mon., Sep. 7, 2009:  More on the Ejectment of Henry Piepgras from Land Beneath the Waters Surrounding City Island.

Tue., Dec. 08, 2015:  Heinrich Carl Christian "Henry" Piepgras and His Shipyard in the Town of Pelham on City Island.

Thu., May 19, 2016:  Descriptions And Rare Drawings of Shipyards in 1892 on City Island in the Town of Pelham.

Wed., May 10, 2017:  More on 19th Century Efforts To Eject City Island Businesses from Land Beneath Waters Surrounding the Island.

Thu., Aug. 03, 2017:  Brief 1894 Account Shows Devastating Impact on City Island from Ejectment Action Pursued by Elizabeth De Lancey.

By 1889, Henry Piepgras had converted the old Carll Shipyard into a modern marvel.  That year it was described as "[o]ne of the principal features of City Island" with "better facilities than any other ship builder in the State of New York; in fact, with a few more improvements, would no doubt have the best of any on this continent."

When busy, as it was in 1889, the Piepgras Shipyard employed up to one hundred men -- the largest employer in Pelham.  The shipbuilding industry at the time likely was the second largest industry in Pelham, led only by the oystering industry that involved hundreds of small family-owned vessels.  

The economic impact of shipbuilders such as Henry Piepgras on such a small community as Pelham, of course, was substantial.  According to the same account quoted above, "[t]he benefits to be derived from this establishment to the store keepers and other men of business on this island can hardly be estimated."

By 1889, the Piepgras shipyard machinery alone was valued at $90,000 (about $3.1 million in today's dollars).  Piepgras had been engaged in extensive improvements to the yard calculated to expand the business.  For example, at about this time he used a steam dredger around the dock of the shipyard so that at low tide there still would be eleven feet of water allowing enough clearance for yachts of virtually any size of the day.  He also extended the shipyard one hundred feet further down the sloping "basin" that led to the water at that location to provide room for "more facilities for building purposes."  In addition, Piepgras had solidified all abutments at the water (and in the water) by building "crib work" around each abutment and filling that crib work with stone to secure the abutment.

At the very beginning of 1889, the Piepgras Shipyard was extremely busy.  A local newspaper reported on February 1 as follows:

"At present there are the keels of three yachts laid, one of which is all plated up.  The work is progressing as rapidly as workmen can be obtained.  There are now employed at this yard 82 men, and Mr. Piepgras expects shortly to have work enough for over 100 men.  Preparations are going on for the laying of two more keels, which will make five down at once.  All will be steel plated vessels and it is hoped that they will be all finished in time to take part in the coming spring races."  

Significantly, Piepgras clearly envisioned further expansion of the shipyard.  On November 1, 1889, Piepgras published notice that he intended, on December 24, 1889, to apply to the Commissioners of the Land Office of the State of New York in Albany "for a grant in perpetuity of certain lands under the waters of the Long Island Sound on the east shore of and adjacent to the upland now owned and occupied by said applicant."

Sadly, the application and the subsequent grant of such rights to Piepgras set into motion a series of events that virtually broke Piepgras and his shipyard.  Elizabeth De Lancey and other members of her family eventually sued Piepgras Shipyard and other City Island businesses, successfully obtaining court orders ejecting them from such land beneath the waters of Long Island Sound.  See the numerous articles cited and linked in the list above for more information about the extensive ejectment dispute that lasted throughout a large portion of the 1890s.

For a shining moment in the late 1880s, however, the Piepgras Shipyard on City Island in the Town of Pelham was a shining example of the best of the shipbuilding industry.



Henry Piepgras in an Undated Photograph (Detail from Advertising
Brochure for his Shipyard). Source: Ancestry.com Genealogical
Data for Heinrich Carl Christian Piepgras (Paid Subscription Required).
NOTE: Click Image to Enlarge.

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"City Island.

Scarlet fever is quite prevalent here at present.  Mr. Robert Newman lost two children with that dreaded disease inside of two weeks, and fears are entertained by the people that it will spread all over the island.  Diphtheria is also raging here.

The Ben Franklin, an oyster sloop, was wrecked on the Sound during Sunday's gale.  The crew are supposed to be lost.  This fact was reported by Mr. Horton, a City Island pilot.

Those wanting summer homes on the Sound will do well to call on Mr. Reynolds, at his pharmacy, City Island.

A sociable was held at Mr. S. D. Horton's last night and a good time was spent by all present.

One of the principal features of City Island is Mr. Piepgras's ship yard.  At present there are the keels of three yachts laid, one of which is all plated up.  The work is progressing as rapidly as workmen can be obtained.  There are now employed at this yard 82 men, and Mr. Piepgras expects shortly to have work enough for over 100 men.  Preparations are going on for the laying of two more keels, which will make five down at once.  All will be steel plated vessels and it is hoped that they will be all finished in time to take part in the coming spring races.  Mr. P. has been using the steam dredger around the dock so that at low water, there will be 11 feet, and yachts of any size can lay up.  The yard has been extended 100 feet down into the basin, giving more facilities for building purposes.  The yard has been made perfectly solid at abuttments [sic] by building crib work and filling in with stone to properly secure it, and the earth taken from the basin has been used to fill in the 100 foot extension above mentioned.

It is said by those well posted in ship building, that Mr. Piepgras has better facilities than any other ship builder in the State of New York; in fact, with a few more improvements, would no doubt have the best of any on this continent.  The machinery alone in this yard has cost in the neighborhood of $90,000, not speaking of many other improvements that have been made since Mr. Piepgras took possession, about three years ago.

The benefits to be derived from this establishment to the store keepers and other men of business on this island can hardly be estimated.  It is well worth the while of those who have never seen a place of this kind to pay it a visit, and from the genial disposition of Mr. Piepgras, plenty of useful information can be obtained.

Quite a little interest is being manifested on City Island and in the neighborhood, over a case that is going through the Court here.  It is a case of cruelty to children.  The victim is a child only seven months old.  The grandmother of the infant testified on oath that the mother had brought the child to her and shown her its body covered with black and blue marks and had said that the father, Jonathan Bean had given it a severe whipping.  At the trial, however, Mrs. Bean claims that she did not say anything of the kind, and that she had never seen the father whip the child.  She had told the grandmother previously that she was afraid to have the father arrested for fear of the people.  The case was to come on again yesterday, but too late for us to repost it in this issue.  We hope, however, to have full particulars by our next."

Source:   City Island, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Feb. 1, 1889, Vol. XX, No. 1,164, p. 3, col. 4.  

"NOTICE is hereby given that the undersigned applicant will apply to the Commissioners of the Land Office of the State of New York, at their office in the City of Albany, in said State, on the twenty-fourth day of December, A. D., 1889, at ten o'clock in the forenoon or as soon thereafter as said Commissioners may meet, for a grant in perpetuity of certain lands under the waters of the Long Island Sound on the east shore of and adjacent to the upland now owned and occupied by said applicant, and described as follows, viz:  All that certain piece or parcel of land under the waters of Long Island Sound, in front of and adjacent to uplands owned by Henry Piepgras situated on the easterly shore of City Island, in the Town of Pelham, County of Westchester, State of New York, described as follows:  Beginning at the most easterly corner of a grant to David Carll of December 3rd, 1863; the said point being distant three hundred feet north eighty-six degrees and forty-five minutes, east (true) from high water mark where the same is intersected by the southerly line of the upland of the said Henry Piepgras, and running thence north three degrees and fifty minutes west, (true) four hundred and forty three feet along the most easterly line of the said grant of December 3rd, 1863, and a grant to David Carll dated October 21st, 1875; thence north eighty-six degrees and forty-five minutes east, (true) two hundred and twenty-five feet; thence south three degrees and fifty minutes, east, (true) four hundred and forty-three feet; thence south eighty six degrees and forty-five minutes west, (true) two hundred and twenty-five feet to the place of beginning; containing two acres and twenty-nine one hundredths of an acre of land under water.  The upland adjacent thereto is owned and occupied by said applicant and is bounded as follows:  North by lands of the Duryea Estate, east by the Long Island Sound; south by lands of Benjamin F. Wood, and west by lands of George Horton and lands now or late of David Carll.  The soundings taken once in every fifty feet on the whole exterior water line of the land under water above described commencing at the most easterly corner of grant to David Carll above mentioned, are as follows:  eight and a half feet, ten feet, twelve and a half feet, thirteen feet, thirteen and a half feet, fourteen and a half feet, fifteen feet, fourteen and a half feet, fourteen and a half feet, fourteen feet, thirteen and a half feet, twelve and a half feet, twelve and a half feet, eleven feet, nine and a half feet, eight and a half feet, eight and a half feet, eight feet.  The mean rise of the tide is seven and a half feet.

Dated November 1st, 1880.

HENRY PIEPGRAS, Applicant.

A. B. CHALMERS,
Attorney for Applicant, 117 Nassau street, New York City."

Source:  NOTICE [Legal Notice], The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Nov. 15, 1889, Vol. XXI, No. 1,246, p. 1, col. 4.


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Thursday, August 03, 2017

Brief 1894 Account Shows Devastating Impact on City Island from Ejectment Action Pursued by Elizabeth De Lancey


During the early and mid-1890s, members of the Hunter family pursued an ejectment action alleging that they owned underwater lands all the way around City Island.  They sought to "eject" one of the largest shipyards on City Island -- that of Henry Piepgras -- from the land.  They asserted that the marine railways that extended into the waters, the shipyard docks, and other associated equipment that extended into the water trespassed upon their underwater land.

The lawsuit was a so-called "test case."  There were a host of such shipyards, as well as many other businesses that relied upon docks, etc.  All would be ruined if the underwater land rights were affirmed in favor of the Hunter family.  

In the mid-1890s, following lengthy litigation to have Henry Piepgras “ejected” from the land beneath the waters surrounding City Island, the Courts finally held that he could be excluded from such land beneath the water.  Elizabeth De Lancey erected a structure to shelter employees to guard against use of the land beneath the water. Piepgras made violent threats, then removed De Lancey’s structure, throwing it into Long Island Sound.  De Lancey brought a new lawsuit against Piepgras and the court ordered Piepgras to restore possession of the land beneath the water to De Lancey and to cease and desist from interfering with her enforcement of the execution of the judgment in the earlier action allowing her to take possession of the land beneath the water.  An appellate court affirmed the decision.  

The test case was over.  The result of the decision was devastating.  I have written extensively about the Piepgras Shipyard and its extensive legal battle with Elizabeth De Lancey and members of the Hunter family.  See Tue., Dec. 08, 2015:  Heinrich Carl Christian "Henry" Piepgras and His Shipyard in the Town of Pelham on City Island.  

During the late summer of 1893, the shipyard shut down and several hundred men lost their jobs.  At the time, according to one account, Henry Piepgras had "a large number of orders for the construction of yachts and ships" at the time.  

The shipyard remained shut down for six months as Henry Piepgras and his attorneys scrambled to reach some form of settlement with Elizabeth De Lancey and members of the Hunter family.  Hundreds of unemployed men waited in anticipation, hoping against hope that the matter could be resolved.  Hundreds of others feared for their jobs, knowing what likely would happen next:  enforcement of the underwater land rights against their own employers.  

Finally, on February 7, 1894, Piepgras and his attorneys reached a settlement with De Lancey.  The settlement was announced publicly the following day.  According to one brief account:  "When the settlement was announced today, the residents of City Island expressed much joy, as most of the men living on 'the island' are dependent upon the works for their living.  The yards have been shut down for six months on account of the legal controversy.  To-day the workmen celebrated the event."

Work at the shipyard restarted immediately.  Indeed, it took "several hundred men" to fulfill the backlog of orders for the construction of new yachts and other vessels by the following spring.



Henry Piepgras in an Undated Photograph
(Detail from Advertising Brochure for his Shipyard).
Subscription Required).  NOTE:  Click Image to Enlarge.

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"City Island.

For several months past the shipyard property of Henry Piepgras, at City Island, has been in litigation and recently the case was decided against Piepgras.  The plaintiff was Mrs. Delancey Hunter, who claimed that she had a right to the property under land grants dating back 200 years.  Yesterday Piepgras effected a settlement with the claimant.  Piepgras is one of the most prominent ship and yacht-builders in the vicinity.  When the settlement was announced today, the residents of City Island expressed much joy, as most of the men living on 'the island' are dependent upon the works for their living.  The yards have been shut down for six months on account of the legal controversy.  To-day the workmen celebrated the event.  Piepgras has a large number of orders for the construction of yachts and ships, and will at once proceed to put men to work in building them.  This will give employment to several hundred men, in order to get the yachts cut by spring."

Source:  City Island, The Evening Post [NY, NY], Feb. 8, 1894, p. 4, cols. 1-2.


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