Construction and Destruction
The “Black Maria” is a
vessel so unique in every respect, that the most detailed
description of her cannot but be most interesting to
all yachting men; and, so far from apologizing for
the length of my observations, I would rather crave
indulgence for the scanty information which this chapter
will afford; but as it must prove pre-eminently dull
to those who are ignorant of such matters, I would
entreat them to pass it over, lest, getting through
the first page, their ideas become bewildered, and,
voting me a bore, they throw down the book, subjoining
a malediction upon my poor innocent head.
The following notes were furnished
me by Commodore Stevens and his brother, who were
the designers and builders of this extraordinary yacht,
and I therefore can vouch for their accuracy.
In case the term “centre-board”
should be unknown to my reader, it may be as well
to explain that it means a board passing longitudinally
through the keel, above which a strong water-tight
case is fixed for its reception; it is raised and
lowered by hand or by machinery, according to its
weight. The advantages proposed by the centre-board
are the stability it gives to the vessel
on a wind when let down; the resistance it removes
if, when running before the wind, it be raised; the
small draught of water which the vessel requires,
thereby enabling her to keep close in-shore out of
the influence of strong tides, &c.; and, lastly, the
facility for getting afloat again, by merely raising
the centre-board, should she take the ground.
To proceed with the notes:
THE CUTTER YACHT “BLACK MARIA.”
Displacement, 145 tons.
Draught of water on straight keel, 5 feet 2 inches.
Length of straight keel, 60 feet,
then running away in a curving line upwards, till
at the bow it draws 10 inches.
Length of centre-board, 24 feet.
Total depth of ditto, 15 feet; weight, 7 tons.
Foremost end of ditto, about 8 feet
abaft the foremost end of straight keel.
When let down, it descends 10 feet
at the further end, and 8 feet at the foremost.
It is made of oak, with sufficient lead let in to make
it sink. By an ingenious mechanical contrivance
one man is enabled to raise and lower it with perfect
facility.
There is another centre-board abaft,
about 10 feet from the stern, which is 8 feet long,
with a total depth of 9 feet, and, when down, extending
5 feet below the keel.
Length over all, 113 feet.
The extreme beam is 26-1/2 feet at
40 feet from the rudder-post running aft to about
19 feet at taffrail; forward, it decreases about 20
inches when abreast of mast, thence runs away sharp
to about four feet at the bow.
The mainmast is placed about 5 feet
abaft the end of straight keel; it is 92 feet long,
housing 8 feet: the diameter in the partners is
32 inches, tapering off to 23 inches at the hounds.
The mast is made of white pine, the centre of it is
bored out, for the lowest twenty feet about 12 inches
diameter the next 20 feet, 10 inches diameter the
next 20 feet, 8 inches, and the remainder 7 inches.
This was done to make the mast lighter, and, by the
circulation of air, enable it to season itself.
The main boom is 95 feet long and
made like a cask. The staves are 31 in number,
of white pine, 2-1/4 inches thick; the staves are of
different lengths, so as to vary the points at which
they respectively abut. The extreme length of
boom is obtained by two lengths of the staves; small
cogs of wood are let in at intervals, half in one stave
and half in its neighbour, so as to keep them from
drawing, the whole bound together with strong hoops
fitted with screws. The extreme diameter of the
boom is 26 inches where the sheets are fixed, tapering
off at the jaws, and 13 inches at the boom end.
To give additional support to the boom, an iron outrigger,
extending about 3 feet on each side thereof, is fixed
where the boom-sheets are placed, and a strong iron
brace extends from the jaws through the outrigger to
the boom end. The gaff is of spruce, 61 feet
long and 9 inches diameter.
The bowsprit is of white pine, 38
feet long, 18 of which is outboard; the remainder
comes under the deck, is let in to each beam, and abuts
against the bitts: it is 24 inches diameter, and
bored out like the mast, from 10 inches diameter at
the heel to 7 at the end. The jibboom is made
of two pieces of yellow pine, grooved out and hooped
together; it is about 70 feet long and about 8 inches
in diameter; the foot of the jib is laced to this
spar on hooks (when required).
The mainsail is made with the seams
horizontal, to avoid the resistance perpendicular
seams in so large a sail would offer to the wind.
It has been calculated that the resistance of perpendicular
seams, in a sail of this size, is equal to that of
a plank 10 inches broad and 60 feet long, placed on
end broadside to the wind; the luff of the sail is
66 feet; the foot, 93; the head, 50; the head and
foot of the sail are laced to battens under gaff and
on boom; the luff is brought to the mast by a contrivance
as original as it is perfect; two battens are fixed
on afterpart of the mast, about an inch and a half
apart, the inner parts shod with iron, and rather
broader than the exterior opening. To each eyelet-hole
of the sail a strong brass-plate is fixed, having 4
rollers traversing fore and aft, and 2 transversely;
these plates, as the sail goes up, are slipped into
the grooves of the battens, the rollers preventing
friction, and the battens keeping the luff fixed to
the after centre line of the mast without
this ingenious arrangement the huge mast would, if
on a wind, becalm at least three feet of the sail three
lazy-jacks are fitted to support the huge mass of canvas
when lowering the sail.
The jib is 69 feet in the hoist, and 70 in the foot.
The bobstays are of solid iron, running
8 feet on each side of the keel, and going through
a strong iron cap over the bowsprit end, where, a
strong iron washer being put on, they are securely
fixed with a nut.
It will be seen that there is a slight
discrepancy between some of the measurements which
I have given, and those which are marked on the print;
I place confidence in those I have received direct
from the fountain-head; the difference is, however,
so trifling, as scarce to need any notice. I
regret omitting to obtain the length of the after-leech
of the mainsail, and of the head of the jib; but I
think the print, which I believe to be very accurate,
would justify me in concluding that the former is
about 110 feet and the latter about 120 feet.
Assuming those calculations to be
correct and they cannot be very far wrong the
mainsail would contain about 5790 square feet, and
the jib about 2100 square feet. When it is remembered
that the largest sail in the British Navy only contains
5480 square feet, some conception may be formed of
their gigantic proportions.
The gallant commodore was kind enough
to trip his anchor and give me a short cruise.
Unfortunately, there was scarcely a breath of wind;
but even under the influence of such scanty propelling
power, the way she shot through the water, like a
dolphin in full cry, was perfectly marvellous; and
the ease with which she came round, and the incredible
distance she shot ahead in stays, was, if possible,
more astonishing still; she steered as easy as a jolly-boat;
or if, when running, a puff made her refractory, by
dropping the after centre-board she became as docile
as a lamb. My only regret was that I could not
see her under the high pressure of a good snorter.
Of course, any salt-water fish will have long since
discovered that this wonderful yacht is a leviathan
plaything, and totally unfit to withstand the most
moderate gale, especially if any sea were running.
What she might do if she were sparred, as other vessels
of her tonnage usually are, I cannot pretend to say;
but my yachting friends need never expect to see her,
with her present rig, re-enacting the “America,”
hurling friendly defiance at the R.Y.C., and carrying
off the crown of victory in their own waters.
But if any of my Cowes friends are
anxious to test the powers of the “Maria,”
the gallant commodore will be happy to accommodate
them, and as he expressed it to me will
further rejoice at having an opportunity of returning
some of the many hospitalities which made his short
stay in England so agreeable to him. The only
complaint I heard him make of the rules of the yachting
at Cowes, was the want of some restriction as to vessels
entering shallow water, by which omission a yacht
with a light draught of water is enabled sometimes
to draw ahead of her competitors by simply hugging
the land out of the full swing of the tide, while
others are forced, from their deeper draught of water,
to struggle against its full force. As, in my
humble opinion, the observation is a perfectly just
one, I insert it here for the consideration of those
whom it may concern.
The accommodation on board is not
nearly so good as in an English yacht, partly owing
to the little height between decks, consequent upon
her very small draught of water, and partly owing
to the great space taken up by the case for the centre-board;
besides which, it should be remembered that a yacht
is not used as a home in America in the same way as
in England. The great, and, I might almost say,
the only quality, transatlantic yachtsmen care about
is speed; and I think my yachting friends at Cowes
must admit that they have proved that they know how
to attain their end, and that Mr. Steers, the builder
of the “America,” is second to none in
his craft; unless the “Black Maria” some
future day assume a practicable rig, and, crossing
the Atlantic, earn the victor’s laurels, in
which case Steers will have to yield the palm to the
worthy fraternity, who are at one and the same time
the owners, builders, and sailers of the subject of
this chapter.
I believe it is very generally considered
that the wind-up of a day’s sport is by no means
the least enjoyable portion of the twenty-four hours,
when it comes in the shape of good fellowship and good
cheer; and upon the present occasion we had both alike
undeniable of their kind. The commodore’s
cellar is as rich a rarity in its way as the Bernal
collection, and, from the movement of the corks, I
should imagine it was upon an equally large scale.
I do not purpose inflicting a bill of fare upon you;
but, having, in the foregoing pages, made a promise
to furnish the proper recipe for Toddy and Chowder,
I consider this the proper place to redeem that promise,
under the guidance of my hospitable host, who initiated
me fully into the mysteries of mixture, proportion,
&c., by making both before me.
Whether it is of great importance
to adhere exactly to the recipes, I cannot pretend
to say; the soup was pronounced on all hands to be
most excellent, and some of the knowing ones declared
it was unusually good. We afterwards found out
a good reason for its superior excellence. It
appears that the commodore had given some instructions
to the steward, which he evidently had not understood,
for, upon asking that functionary towards the end
of dinner for a bottle of fine old Madeira which had
been kept back as a bonnebouche, he gave a wild stare-of
astonishment, and said he had put it all into the
chowder. This little addition, I can testify,
most certainly did not spoil it. The toddy was
not subject to any such unwarrantable addition; and,
if I may judge from the quantity taken by my neighbours,
they all found it as delicious a drink as I did myself.
Recipes.
TODD tumblers of water:
1 ditto, sugar: peel of 5 lemons, and dessert
spoon of the juice: add a few pieces of peach
and pine-apple, and some strawberries. Quarter
of an hour before use, throw in 2 tumblers of old
rum and a lump or two of block ice.
CHOWDER. Saucepan ready,
frizzle pork and onions till quite brown; put a layer
at bottom of the saucepan saucerful; on
that, a layer of mashed potatoes soup-plateful; on
that, raw sea-bass, cut in lumps 4 lbs.; on
that, pork and onions as before; add half
a nutmeg, spoonful of mace, spoonful of cloves, and
double that quantity of thyme and summer savory; another
layer of mashed potatoes, 3 or 4 Crackers, half
a bottle of ketchup, half a bottle of claret, a liberal
pinch of black, and a small pinch of red pepper.
Just cover this with boiling water, and put it on
the fire till the fish is cooked.
The gallant commodore and his brother
are now employed in building an iron bomb-proof floating
battery, four hundred feet long, intended as a harbour
defence. What guns she is destined to mount is
a question which has not been definitively settled.
In so large a community as that of
New York, the supply of water forms a subject of the
highest importance, especially when the rapid increase
of the population is taken into account. Some
conception of this extraordinary increase may be formed
from the statistical fact that the city, which in
the year of Independence contained only 35,000 inhabitants,
has now 850,000, if the suburbs are included; nearly
4000 vessels enter the port annually, bearing merchandise
valued at 25,500,000l., and bringing 300,000 emigrants,
of whom one-third are Irish and one-third German.
The tonnage of New York is upwards of a million, or
equal to one-fourth of that of the whole Union:
the business of the city gives employment to upwards
of fifty banks. Religion is represented by 250
churches, of which 46 are Presbyterian, and 45 are
Episcopalian. The Press sends forth 155 papers,
of which 14 are published daily and 58 weekly.
This short sketch will suffice to
show that the city required a supply of water upon
a gigantic scale. The difficulties were increased
by the situation of the town, which is built upon
the eastern extremity of an island Manhattan fourteen
miles long and two broad, the highest point of which
is but two hundred and thirty-eight feet above the
level of the sea. Various plans for supplying
water had been attempted without success, and the
health of the population was suffering so much in
consequence, that at last American energy, which here
had been long dormant, rose like a giant refreshed
and commenced that imperishable monument, the Croton
aqueduct.
It is impossible to convey any idea
of this stupendous work without figures; but I will
endeavour to draw upon your patience as little as
possible. My authority is a work published by
Mr. Schramke in English, French, and German, and full
of explanatory details and plans, &c. Mr. Schramke
being one of the corps of engineers employed upon the
work, I conclude his statements are peculiarly accurate.
Long discussions, patient investigations, and careful
surveys, combined to fix the position for commencing
operations upon the Croton river, forty and a half
miles from New York, and five miles below a small lake
of the same name. All the preliminaries had been
hitherto carried on under the superintendence of Major
Douglas, professor of engineering at the Military
Academy at West Point; but, owing to some disagreements,
Mr. J.B. Jervis was the engineer eventually selected
to carry out the undertaking. It is but just
to mention his name, as the skill exhibited entitles
him to lasting fame. By the construction of a
substantial dam, the water was raised 40 feet, and
a collecting reservoir formed, of 500,000,000 gallons,
above the level that would allow the aqueduct to discharge
35,000,000 gallons a day. This stupendous work
consists of a covered way seven feet broad and eight
feet and a half high; in its course it has to pass
through sixteen tunnellings, forming an aggregate
of nearly 7000 feet; to cross the river Harlem by a
bridge 1450 feet long and 114 feet above tide water,
and to span various valleys. The receiving reservoir
outside the town gives a water surface of 31 acres,
and contains 150,000,000 gallons; it is divided into
two separate compartments, so that either may be emptied
for cleansing or repair. From this point the
water is carried on, by three 36-inch pipes, to the
distributing reservoir, which is 386 feet square and
42 feet deep, but filled generally to the depth of
38 feet, and then holding 21,000,000 gallons.
From this point it radiates throughout the city by
means of 134 miles of pipes, varying in size from
4 to 36 inches. There is an average fall of 14
inches in the mile; and the supply, if required, can
be increased to 60,000,000 gallons daily. The
total cost was 2,500,000l.; the revenue derived from
it is 100,000l. a year, moderate-sized houses paying
2l., and others in proportion.
(From Schramke’s Description
of the New York Croton Aqueduct.)]
In conclusion, I would observe that
this grand work is entitled to notice from the skill
displayed by the engineers, the quantity of the supply,
and the quality of the article, which latter is nearly
as good as sherry cobbler not quite.
If my reader has been inveigled into reading the foregoing
details, and has got bored thereby, a gallon of Croton
water is an admirable antidote; but, as that may not
be available, I would suggest a cobbler, and another
page or two; the latter upon the principle adopted
by indiscreet drinkers, of “taking a hair of
the dog that bit them.”
The concluding passage of the last
paragraph reminds me of a practice which, I have no
doubt, the intense heat of a New York summer renders
very advisable, if not absolutely necessary viz.,
the canine auto-da-fe, which takes place in
July. The heart sickens at the thought of the
wholesale murder of “man’s most faithful
companion,” and the feeling increases when you
read that sometimes more than a thousand dogs fall
victims to the law in one season; but that very fact
is the strongest point which can be urged in its justifications
for the dry hot atmosphere of the summer affords a
ready stepping-stone to hydrophobia, and the larger
the canine family, the greater the danger of that fearful
and incurable disease.
Upon a certain day, the mayor of New
York offers the usual reward of 2s. for every dog,
which, having been found unmuzzled in the streets,
is brought to the canine pound. However judicious
this municipal regulation may be, it cannot fail to
strike the reader as offering one most objectionable
feature, in the golden harvest which it enables those
astute rogues, the dog-stealers, to reap. Any
one conversant with the irresistible nostrums possessed
by those rascals, can readily understand what an extensive
field is hereby opened up to them; and, if one can
form a just opinion by comparing the number of dogs
one habitually meets in the streets with the multitude
that are reputed to fall victims under the official
mandate, they certainly make the most of their opportunity.
To any admirer of the race, the inside
of the pound must be a most painful and revolting
spectacle: there may be seen, lying side by side,
“dignity and impudence,” the fearless bull
and the timid spaniel, the bloated pug and the friendly
Newfoundland, the woolly lap-dog and the whining cur;
some growling in defiance, some whimpering in misery,
some looking imploringly their intelligent
eyes challenging present sympathy on the ground of
past fidelity all, all in vain: the
hour that summons the Mussulman to prayer, equally
silently tolls their death-knell; yon glorious sun,
setting in a flood of fire, lights them to their untimely
grave; one ruthless hand holds the unconscious head,
another with deadly aim smashes the skull and scatters
the brain man’s faithful friend is
a corpse.
Owners are allowed to reclaim their
property before sunset, on payment of the 2s. reward;
the best-looking dogs are sometimes kept for two or
three days, as purchasers are frequently found.
The price, after the first day, is, the killer’s
fee and the food given, in addition to the original
reward; altogether, it rarely exceeds 8s. The
owner has to purchase like any other person.
The bodies are all taken away to be boiled down for
their fat, and the skins go to the tanners. Let
us now turn from this disgusting subject to something
more agreeable.
I have already alluded to the great
fancy Americans have for trotters. The best place
to see “turns out” is the Bloomingdale
road, which runs out of New York, nearly parallel
with the Hudson, and separated from it only by the
country villas, &c., built on the banks of that noble
stream. This drive may be called a purely democratic
“Rotten-row,” as regards its being the
favourite resort; but there the similarity ceases.
To the one, people go to lounge, meet friends, and
breathe fresh air on horseback; to the other, people
go with a fixed determination to pass everybody, and
on wheels. To the one, people go before dinner;
to the other, after.
A friend of mine having offered me
a feed, and a seat behind a pair of three-minuters,
the offer was too good to be refused. The operation
of getting into one of these four-wheel waggons, looks
perplexing enough, as the only rest for the feet,
which appears, is the cap of the axle; but, upon pulling
the horses’ heads into the middle of the street,
and thus locking the fore-wheels, a stop is discovered,
which renders the process easy. It is difficult
to say which is the more remarkable, the lightness
of the waggon, or the lightness of the harness; either
is sufficient to give a nervous feeling of insufficiency
to a stranger who trusts himself to them for the first
time; but experience proves both their sufficiency
and their advantage. In due time, we reached the
outer limits of the town; struggling competitors soon
appeared, and, in spite of dust as plentiful as a
plague of locusts, every challenge was accepted; a
fair pass once made, the victor was satisfied, and
resumed a more moderate pace. We had already
given one or two the go-by, when we heard a clattering
of hoofs close behind us, and the well-known cry,
“G’lang.” My friend let out
his three-minuters, but ere they reached their speed,
the foe was well on our bow, and there he kept, bidding
us defiance. It is, doubtless, very exciting
to drive at the rate of twenty miles an hour, and
though the horses’ hoofs throw more gravel down
your throat in five minutes than would suffice a poultry-yard
for a week, one does not think of it at the time.
On we flew; our foe on two wheels
and single harness every now and then letting us get
abreast of him, and then shooting ahead like an arrow
from a bow. A few trials showed us the struggle
was useless: we had to deal with a regular “pacer,”
and as I have elsewhere remarked their
speed is greater than that of any fair trotter, although
so fatiguing that they are unable to keep it up for
any great distance; but as we had already turned the
bottom of the car into a gravel-pit, we did not think
it worth while to continue the amusement. The
reason may be asked why these waggons have such low
splashboards as to admit all the gravel? The
reason is simple. Go-ahead is the great desideratum,
and they are kept low to enable you to watch the horses’
hind legs; by doing which, a knowing Jehu can discover
when they are about to break into a gallop, and can
handle “the ribands” accordingly.
A tremendous storm brewing to windward,
cut short our intended drive; and, putting the nags
to their best pace, we barely succeeded in obtaining
shelter ere it burst upon us; and such a pelter as
it came down, who ever saw? It seemed as though
the countless hosts of heaven had been mustered with
barrels, not buckets, of water, and as they upset
them on the poor devoted earth, a regular hurricane
came to the rescue, and swept them eastward to the
ocean. The sky, from time to time, was one blaze
of sheet lightning, and during the intervals, forked
flashes shot through the darkness like fiery serpents
striking their prey. This storm, if short, was
at all events magnificently grand, and we subsequently
found it had been terribly destructive also; boats
on the Hudson had been capsized and driven ashore,
houses had been unroofed, and forest trees split like
penny canes.
The inn where we had taken shelter
was fortunately not touched, nor were any of the trees
which surrounded it. Beautifully situated on a
high bank, sloping down to the Hudson, full of fine
old timber; it had belonged to some English noble I
forget his name in the old colonial times;
now, it was a favourite baiting-place for the frequenters
of the Bloomingdale road, and dispensed the most undeniably
good republican drinks, cobblers, cock-tails, slings,
and hail-storms, with other more substantial and excellent
things to match. The storm being over, we unhitched
the horses, and returned to town at a more sober pace;
nor were we much troubled with dust during the drive
home.
Lest the reader should get wearied
with so long a stay at New York, I now propose to
shift the scene for his amusement, and hope he will
accompany me in my wanderings. If, during the
operation, he occasionally finds me tedious in any
details uninteresting to him, I trust that a judicious
skipping of a few leaves will bring us again into agreeable
companionship.