Half hull construction model of the "Washington Irving"
Donald McKay
(American (born in Canada), 1810 – 1880)
1845
Object PlaceEast Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Medium/TechniqueWood
DimensionsOverall (H x W x L): 30.5 x 12.7 x 121.9 cm (12 x 5 x 48 in.)
Credit LineGift of John Templeman Coolidge
Accession number41.288
On View
On viewClassificationsModels
Collections
Canadian-born Donald McKay (1810-1880) was one of the nineteenth-century's most important designers and builder of ships. Some of the fastest clipper ships ever made were produced in his East Boston shipyard, established in 1845. "Washington Irving," a 751-ton packet ship, was the first vessel McKay constructed there, and he may have used this model in its construction. Packet ships carried passengers, mail, and freight between two ports-in this case, Boston and Liverpool, England. The ship was launched in 1845 for Enoch Train's White Diamond Line, and the model descended in the family of Captain Daniel Upton, who once commanded the ship.
about 1780
About 1780–90
1836
about 1740
about 1810 (rigging about 1840)
about 1730