:''For the Scottish waterfalls and wildlife reserve, see '
Falls of Clyde (waterfalls)'.''
''Falls of Clyde'' at Honolulu Harbor |
| Career |  Hawaiian flag |
|---|---|
| Launched: | 1878 |
| Fate: | museum exhibit |
| General Characteristics |
|---|
| Displacement: | 1809 tons |
| Length: | 85.3 meters (280 feet) |
| Beam: | 12.2 meters (40 feet) |
| Draft: | 6.4 meters (21 feet) |
 The ''Falls of Clyde'' (detail of the prow) Detail of prow | |
'''Falls of Clyde''' is the only surviving
iron-
hulled, four-
masted
full rigged ship, and the only surviving
sail-driven
oil tanker in the
world. She is presently a
museum ship in
Honolulu,
Hawaii.
She was built in 1878 by
Russell and Company in
Port Glasgow,
Inverclyde,
Scotland, launched as the first of eight iron-hulled four-masted ships built for
Wright and Breakenridge's
Falls Line. She was named after the
Falls of Clyde, a waterfall up the
River Clyde. She was built to the highest standard -
Lloyd's Register A-1 - for general worldwide trade. Her maiden voyage took her to
Karachi, now in
Pakistan, and her first six years were spent engaged in the
India trade. She then became a tramp pursuing general cargo such as
lumber,
jute,
cement, and
wheat from ports in
Australia,
California,
India,
New Zealand, and the
British Isles.
After twenty-one years under the
Red Ensign, ''Falls of Clyde'' was purchased for US$25,000 by Captain
William Matson of the
Matson Navigation Company, taken to
Honolulu, Hawaii in 1899, and registered under the
Hawaiian flag. When the
Republic of Hawaii was annexed by the
United States in 1900, it took a special act of the
United States Congress to secure the foreign-built ship the right to fly the
Stars and Stripes.
To economize on crew, Matson rigged ''Falls of Clyde'' down as a
barque, replacing the five yards on her aftermost (
jigger) mast with two more easily-managed fore-and-aft sails. At the same time, he added a deckhouse, charthouse, and rearranged the after quarters to accommodate paying passengers. From 1899 to 1907, she made over sixty voyages between
Hilo, Hawaii, and
San Francisco, California. She carried general merchandise from San Francisco and sugar from Hawaii, and passengers both ways. She developed a reputation as a handy, fast, and commodious vessel; her voyages averaged 17 days each way.
In 1907, the
Associated Oil Company (which later became
Tidewater Oil) bought ''Falls of Clyde'' and converted her to a bulk tanker with a capacity of 19,000 barrels (three million liters, 800,000 gallons). In this configuration she sailed from
Gaviota, California, with
kerosene, which she discharged in Honolulu at the
Oahu Railway and Land Company's Pier 16. On her return voyages, she carried bulk
molasses to California, where it was used for cattle feed.
In 1927, the bark was sold to the
General Petroleum Company, her masts were cut down, and she served as a floating fuel depot in
Alaska until 1959. She was sold to William Mitchell, who towed her to
Seattle, Washington, intending to sell her to a preservation group. Mitchell's plan fell through and subsequent efforts by Karl Kortum, director of the
San Francisco Maritime Museum, and Fred Klebingat, who had sailed in her as chief mate in 1915, to place her in
Long Beach, California, or
Los Angeles, California, were similarly disappointed.
In 1963, the bank holding the mortgage on ''Falls of Clyde'' decided to sell her to be sunk as part of a
breakwater at
Vancouver, British Columbia. Kortum and Klebingat aroused interest in the ship in
Hawaii, and within days of the scheduled scuttling, raised funds to buy the ship. At the end of October 1963, ''Falls of Clyde'' was taken under tow by fleet tug USS ''Moctobi''. In honor of their historic tow, the crew of the tug kept their logs in verse, the first entry reading
:As we sail across the Sea
:The Falls of Clyde keeps us company
:Moctobi's engines grit and grind
:To keep old Clyde close behind.
On
18 November, they arrived in Honolulu, recording
:Today, hauling cargo to Hawaii was seen a proud white ship.
:We couldn't help remembering Clyde and all her similar trips.
:Yes this one is quite differenct than those of earlier times,
:When she carried black oil and molasses to many different climes
:Today the cargo is memories and sea stories yet untold
:Which when moored tomorrow may be brought up from the hold.
:Tomorrow at Honolulu her final trip will end,
:And we will bid aloha to our gallant seagoing friend.

Looking forward along the deck.
The crew was concerned about the reaction these verses might receive from Commander, Service Force, Pacific Fleet. Upon their arrival at Honolulu they received a message reading
:Your towing debut is finally Pau
:The Clyde's at home forever now.
:Your sitreps were noted with interest each day
:As Moctobi pulled the long, rough way.
:This grand old lady is destined to be
:A memorable relic for all Hawaii
:By your fine effort the task is won.
:Welcome home, and to all a well done.
::-- VADM Roy Johnson, Deputy, CINCPACFLT
In May 1964, on behalf of his crew, the commanding officer of ''Moctobi'', Lieutenant Leo Connolly, accepted the Distinguished Service Award for Community Relations from the Chamber of Commerce of Honolulu.
''Falls of Clyde'' was given to the
Bishop Museum and was opened to the public in 1968. The grandson, of the original 19th century designer
William Lithgow, assisted in her restoration as a full-rigged ship. Support came from
Sir William Lithgow, the shipbuilder and industrialist, whose
Port Glasgow shipyard donated masts and other fittings. In 1973 she was entered into the
National Register of Historic Places. As of
2005, ''Falls of Clyde'' is still located at Pier 7, Honolulu Harbor, part of the
Hawaii Maritime Center.
See also
Four other Clyde-built
tall ships are still afloat:
★ ''
Balclutha'' (San Francisco)
★ ''
Glenlee'' (Glasgow)
★ ''
Moshulu'' (Philadelphia)
★ ''
Pommern'' (Finland)
References
★ Jim Gibb, ''Pacific Square-Riggers'' (Schiffer Publishing, 1987) ISBN 0-88740-106-6 p. 110
★ Heine, ''Historic Ships of the World''
★ Klebingat, "Falls of Clyde"
★ personal communications of Lieutenant Leo Connolly, commanding officer, USS ''Moctobi''
External links
★
Hawai`i Maritime Center
★
Maritime Heritage Program Information for the ''Falls of Clyde''
★
Princess Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum
★
''Falls of Clyde'' on HawaiiWeb