C. A. Thayer: The Last of the Lumber Schooners

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  • čas přidán 18. 04. 2018
  • The history and recent restoration of the park's historic lumber schooner C.A. Thayer. Most of the archival photographs and film footage are from the Park's museum archival collections. In particular, film footage was used from the following two archival collections:
    The Harold Huycke motion picture film of C.A. Thayer (built 1895; schooner, 3m) restoration and voyage, 1955-1957 (P79-235, SAFR 15044). A guide to this collection is available on the Online Archives of California at www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:... and the film footage is available for viewing on the Internet Archives at archive.org/details/csfmm_00003.
    The San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park Photo Lab records, 1963-2014 (P14-008, SAFR 24429). A guide to this collection is available on the Online Archives of California at www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:.... Extensive footage was used from Series 4.1 Digital Media, File unit 20, C.A. Thayer (built 1895; schooner, 3m) Restoration Work. This portion of the collection includes much of the documentation of the restoration work from 2003 to 2012. See the following link for more information: www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:....

Komentáře • 93

  • @johnlina5029
    @johnlina5029 Před 4 lety +10

    I boarded the C.A.Thayer at dock in San Francisco. When I told the Ranger that I was a shipbuilder from Newport News Virginia, he took special pains to show me parts of the ship not normally seen. I got an appreciation for riveted construction, something that had ceased by the time I got involved, and the ample size of the below decks. A great experience for me and I appreciate the extra effort of the Ranger.

  • @perrysims3320
    @perrysims3320 Před 4 lety +47

    My first job out of high school in 1961 was as a laborer and night watchman at the California Maritime State Historical Monument when the ships were still in the Alemeda Canal and before any part of the park was in San Francisco. I lived in the Thayer's fishermen's fok'sle, and cooked my meals in the galley. Firing up the sea suction and hosing off the freshwater dew in the morning in the fog could fill a young man with dreams and poetry.

    • @f.puttstycker2784
      @f.puttstycker2784 Před 3 lety +1

      The sound of her bell seemed to cut thru fog! I remember her smell and grateful for watch duty (bell ringer).

    • @patrickhill4682
      @patrickhill4682 Před rokem

      Amazing Mr Sims 🙌🏽

  • @klsc8510
    @klsc8510 Před 2 měsíci

    I toured her in May 1979. I was a SSgt in the USAF stationed at Grissom AFB, IN. I got to by getting an incentive flight aboard a KC-135 from Grissom to Travis AFB, CA. I took buses from the base3 to downtown SF and stayed at the Holliday Inn at Van Nyes and Market. I had read about this museum in Sea Classics magazine. This was my chance to see her and the rest of the museum. As I remember there was a film story about her below decks. To fun the movie they had to turn off the bulge pumps. There was a small steady stream of water flowing through the theater area. We were told not to worry about it.
    I am glad I did the trip back then. Today SF is more deteriorated than the C.A. Thayer was at her worst.

  • @brunol-p_g8800
    @brunol-p_g8800 Před 3 lety +4

    I’m not an easily moved person, but I cried while watching the video. Thanks to all of you who worked on taking care of her and rebuilt her!

  • @lesliechan31
    @lesliechan31 Před 5 lety +31

    We went on this ship and slept overnight on it in 1978ish. I was in 4th grade. I never forgot that trip. Thanks for sharing!

    • @sameyeham
      @sameyeham Před 5 lety +4

      I did the same thing in 4th grade in 1994! Talk about a bad night's sleep... yeesh.

    • @juancagampang4620
      @juancagampang4620 Před 4 lety +5

      Me too, 1978. I still think about that trip- filled me with a love of sailing ships. Pretty magical for a poor city kid.

    • @nmnmnm35
      @nmnmnm35 Před 3 lety +1

      Wow, i did the same in 1999. Never fell asleep though.....

    • @noneyourb2526
      @noneyourb2526 Před rokem

      I also did in the 90s 5th grade

    • @Hy-Brasil
      @Hy-Brasil Před 2 měsíci

      @@sameyeham why? just uncomfortable bedding or the idea of falling asleep on a rotting ship?

  • @jhill4874
    @jhill4874 Před 4 lety +8

    Back a couple of decades a school program was available for kids to spend a night on the Thayer. Great program. Had the kids experience what it was like to be a sailor during that time.

    • @noneyourb2526
      @noneyourb2526 Před rokem

      My class did back in the 90s mr goltzers 5th grade class we also went to ft point

  • @GermanGreetings
    @GermanGreetings Před 4 lety +3

    Thank you all that work... how beautiful she is...

  • @glynluff2595
    @glynluff2595 Před 5 lety +13

    Excellent to see a surviving schooner with a sharp entry. So much of more recent designs have yacht style stems and these have no bite upon the water. Traditional ships with long keels swing long and slow whatever their size. That is their joy.

    • @kevinmencer3782
      @kevinmencer3782 Před 3 lety

      I know little about boats, but I've noticed the trend towards the slim little sterns. Doesn't that make the boat less stable?

  • @user-ih5dn3lw3e
    @user-ih5dn3lw3e Před 3 lety +4

    Честь и хвала, глубокое восхищение людям, которые сохраняют свою историю и поддерживают такую красоту

  • @a.r.thayer9760
    @a.r.thayer9760 Před 3 lety +3

    Thanks for the hard work in restoration and preservation of our Maritime past. Beautiful job ! Can't wait to come visit the museum!

  • @rickfranklin5801
    @rickfranklin5801 Před 4 lety +13

    I spent the night on the ca Thayer back in 1984, I was in the 4th grade. this video brought back memories and I also learned a few things I didn't know:). I specifically rememeber doing longshoreman duties and eating cod cakes:0 lol

  • @user-xg8wx5xz2f
    @user-xg8wx5xz2f Před 4 lety +2

    Смотрю на такую огромную реставрацию и проделанные работы, плачу от того как мы отстали во всём. Низкий поклон всем участникам сего проекта.

  • @Peeper1849
    @Peeper1849 Před 4 lety +2

    I am from Seattle.....and have mourned the loss of the Wawona...but I am so very happy that parts of her live on in the Thayer....

  • @eb-rp7ei
    @eb-rp7ei Před 2 lety +2

    My grandfather sailed on the C.A. Thayer out of San Francisco---probably sometime between 1895 and 1912, when she was converted for fishing. He often sailed the coastwise trade, much of the time after steam schooners came into use.. Wish i could have heard his stories.

  • @CockatooDude
    @CockatooDude Před 4 lety +8

    When I saw the extent of the rot I was honestly surprised the damn thing still managed to float! That's crazy. Great work on the restoration and preserving history though.

  • @joepierce1672
    @joepierce1672 Před rokem

    I worked on her in 1968 when sje was docked at the Hyde street pier with the last steam schooner the Wapama. In the evenings, the hippies would build fires on the beach and play their ever present drums as the sun would set behind the Golden Gate. Standing on her deck listening to the drumming was a truly serene experience. Then taking the cable cat home from work made it like living in the past. At that time the park was run by Harry Dring., who would usually answer most of my question. Damn, it's hard to believe that was more than half a century ago.

  • @harbourdogNL
    @harbourdogNL Před 4 lety +2

    Absolutely lovely. Gorgeous lines.

  • @olivierbolton8683
    @olivierbolton8683 Před 4 lety +2

    Congratulations...i remember seeing Wawona being towed away without knowing
    there was another lady CA Thayer on the west coast undergoing a refit...
    great challenges lead to Great results...These ships are history

  • @thejameslealartco.7625
    @thejameslealartco.7625 Před 4 lety +3

    I spent the the night on her back in 1985? I think. I was in the fifth grade. I was a galley cook. Got sea sick. And I cried like a baby when it was over. It was so emotional for some reason.

  • @nicholasmorrill4711
    @nicholasmorrill4711 Před 3 lety

    Really wonderful looking ship.The shear line is fabulous.

  • @laserbeam002
    @laserbeam002 Před 2 lety

    Thankfully there are still people who respect our past and want to save old ships.

  • @luismiguelmonteiro4545

    Beatiful, beautiful work!

  • @granskare
    @granskare Před 4 lety +2

    In the U.P. of Michigan, schooners were on lake superior until they were replaced by steel ships. The schooners had masts cut down and they became barges towed by steamers.

  • @simplyamazing880
    @simplyamazing880 Před 4 lety +2

    You can also see the last of the whaling ships in Old Mystic Seaport Museum in Connecticut.
    I'd love to see Thayer. Nice video.

  • @nickviner1225
    @nickviner1225 Před 4 lety

    Not only old but very beautiful too.

  • @McHeisenburger
    @McHeisenburger Před 4 lety +5

    She looks amazing now!

  • @rimasmeleshyus9486
    @rimasmeleshyus9486 Před 2 lety

    Beautiful ship ,thanks for sharing.
    Great history I like it

  • @marvmeng1630
    @marvmeng1630 Před 2 lety

    There is another lumber schooner running regular cruises off Maine. The Victory Chimes. My wife and I spent a week on her in Aug of 2008. Very nice boat and good food,

  • @thereminpitchknob4059

    Old sailors were carpenters as well. What incredible determination they had to explore the ends of the earth. They are celebrated by many strong, quiet people of action.

  • @villageblunder4787
    @villageblunder4787 Před rokem

    Gorgeous

  • @paulgracey4697
    @paulgracey4697 Před 4 lety +1

    My mother's second husband Fred Robblee took me aboard the Thayer to show the sort of ship his Dad skippered before switching to steam. Fred would not have even been born in 1911 if his dad and mother had not survived the Lumber Barkentine Eviston being run aground on an uncharted reef north of Australia, part of a late 1907 voyage carrying lumber to Haiphong and intending to return with Australian coal. In your library is a copy I donated of a short account I wrote incorporating his Captain's log and and newspaper articles of the time. I titled it "Lloyds of London Rings their Great Bell Twice" a reference to the firm's practice of ringing the Lutine Bell to signify the loss of a ship, and that they would ring it again, should the ship be found again in reasonable repair.
    They were stranded on the reef for 75 days. Mrs. Robblee was pregnant and had to deliver a stillborn baby during the calamity probably aided the Captain and crew to find a way off, and to safety. I was struck by the fact that for steamships to be economic in commerce, far flung coal depots were maintained by ships that did not need to use the fuel. Never-the-less, the Eviston, a wooden product of a Coos Bay OR shipyard, could not have got to safety but for the Lumber industry 'donkey' steam engine they had aboard which kept the pumps going despite massive harm from the grounding to her keel.
    Thanks to those of you who took the time to preserve one of the few original large commercial wooden ships still on display in Maritime museums not a replica. Eviston, had 20 more years of service in the far east, a typical life for hard worked ships, but she would never have been sailed back across the Pacific in her poor condition upon being sold.

  • @austinclarke2514
    @austinclarke2514 Před 3 lety

    She's Beautiful...wish we would have kept and restored some of the fishing schooners that were here in Newfoundland years ago.

  • @garystanley1605
    @garystanley1605 Před 4 lety +1

    Well Done!!

  • @luiseduardodealmeida4061
    @luiseduardodealmeida4061 Před 4 lety +1

    Hope She sails for another couple of centuries . Congratulations !

  • @thrawn8840
    @thrawn8840 Před 5 lety +2

    Amazing

  • @PAPOOSELAKESURFER
    @PAPOOSELAKESURFER Před 4 lety +2

    Humboldt Bay in front of Eureka lumber ships dumped rock ballast (forming today's Ballast Island) before loading redwood lumber. The entire bay used to be lined with ancient redwood giants, all gone now. The last local redwood "shade trees" in local's back yards were taxed for value of board feet of lumber to force the sale and recovery often over a million board feet from a single tree.

    • @bidlymovies987
      @bidlymovies987 Před 4 lety +1

      Amazing, never heard of a tree tax before. I guess a form of property tax.

  • @noyfub
    @noyfub Před 3 lety

    The Stephen Tabor in Maine is a 70' timber schooner built in 1868, as I recall, it is still sailing. I sailed on her around 1990.

  • @46danz
    @46danz Před 3 lety

    Brilliant they saved this beauty.

  • @onceANexile
    @onceANexile Před 4 lety +1

    Its a very friendly ship...appealing.

  • @vickie3008
    @vickie3008 Před 4 lety

    Thanks

  • @timothyortiz2222
    @timothyortiz2222 Před rokem

    Gut it for cabins, a galley, births, a head, and a fine diesel drive.

  • @d.cypher2920
    @d.cypher2920 Před 4 lety

    *'...an unusual expression of great craft.*
    Indeed. Perhaps just behind sailing these vessels or any, building them has been the ultimate craft, in my opinion, for literally thousands of years. There have been people sailing, about as long ago as people making swords. That's pretty old.

  • @edenhunter9904
    @edenhunter9904 Před 4 lety

    good job folks

  • @bradfordbarrett3681
    @bradfordbarrett3681 Před 3 lety

    Why any ppl choose a thumbs down baffles me

  • @pierrevillie7181
    @pierrevillie7181 Před 3 lety

    Merveilleux

  • @penguincoldstorage3365

    Good 👍👍

  • @charlespak6784
    @charlespak6784 Před 3 lety

    Must of been in elementary school. when our class was lucky enough to spent a night. we were giving tasked mine was the night port side watch looking out for trouble. need to make it back to the city to meet up with her.

  • @bliz78obrien1
    @bliz78obrien1 Před 4 lety

    Is there a historical connection between the New England Schooners and San Francisco Schooners other than replicating the architecture?

  • @the10thleper
    @the10thleper Před 5 lety +3

    I'm watching the History Channel right now. "Save our history." I'm a old school sailor, builder and restorations.
    I think the C A Thayer is done. Her rot is all consuming. With what I just saw of her, this hull and deck are done.
    Every piece of wood needs to be replaced. We all know it. It's time to build a new hull and deck. Salvage all her iron works, masts, hardware and anything else that can be saved/transfered to the new hull. Say good by to that old hull and be done with it. Quicker, easyer and soo much cheaper. You will have a seaworthy vessel that will last three times as long.
    What are you going to do, replace every bad board with a new board? Yeah right... build a new damn hull and go sailing.

  • @peterbee162
    @peterbee162 Před 4 měsíci

    ❤❤❤

  • @ericlakota6512
    @ericlakota6512 Před 4 lety

    Gorgious ship glad to see her in this time even built as work horse they the tall ships are gorgious i like their lines beter then a race regata winner

  • @MrLawman82
    @MrLawman82 Před 2 lety

    I'd love to see it but not going anywhere near SF.

  • @f.puttstycker2784
    @f.puttstycker2784 Před 3 lety

    What became of her old masts?

  • @suzettebecker3581
    @suzettebecker3581 Před 3 lety

    Restore it‼️

  • @suzettebecker3581
    @suzettebecker3581 Před 3 lety

    Please restore it🇺🇸😊

  • @vickie3008
    @vickie3008 Před 4 lety

    Was there lumber schooners in Scotland ?

  • @yokehuatgoh
    @yokehuatgoh Před 4 lety

    wait.... 10:22 what's that behind her then? looks like a greater wooden relic of the past with huge cross-beam wooden masts for rigging sails.

    • @joeyk169
      @joeyk169 Před rokem

      pretty sure it's a ship called the balcutha. not a lumber schooner, but an old wooden sailing ship of some other kind

  • @josephinebennington7247
    @josephinebennington7247 Před 4 lety +1

    Totally rebuilt? But same ship? Like my grandfathers axe. New head, new handle, same axe!

    • @haraldoyen
      @haraldoyen Před 3 lety

      Well said. Just had a long discussion on preservation and restoration with our SFMMP boat shop ranger. He used the same axe analogy. Is there a thesaurus somewhere that can iron out the wrinkles on the subject?

  • @noneyourb2526
    @noneyourb2526 Před rokem

    Anyone here remember mr goltzer from ponderosa?

  • @timerickson7056
    @timerickson7056 Před 3 lety +4

    sadly there is a 108 year old wooden sailboat being restored in washington state. it's name is tally ho .
    .the winner of the first fastnet race.
    it's owner and savior has been painstakingly restoring it for several years outside port angeles washington.
    unfortunately the county is attempting to stop the restoration.
    callum county washington .
    if you know someone who can help stop the mindless county morons from their mindless attempt to stop the work . the owner has a youtube channel and could use some help

  • @graemelliott3942
    @graemelliott3942 Před 4 lety

    Does it ever go out and sail?

    • @haraldoyen
      @haraldoyen Před 3 lety +1

      Not yet! However, her new sails and yards are waiting to get together once again. It's a love affair.

  • @MichaelABarton-ek1vs
    @MichaelABarton-ek1vs Před 3 měsíci

    I was just watching a bit on story TV. About this ship. Shouldn't it be considered a veteran because it served in the military??
    I don't know just a thought.

  • @stevehyman9464
    @stevehyman9464 Před 6 lety +3

    Hey Courtney, thought you rigged movie ships, not starred in their videos?

  • @obiterdictum3021
    @obiterdictum3021 Před 3 lety

    ....the way is backwards... (and faster...) .../I*

  • @montblanchaircrew-salaoees8866

    MONTBLANC HAIR CREW © aurélioMACŪLIN

  • @shoresharp8349
    @shoresharp8349 Před 3 lety

    What a shame San Francisco has turned into. At least they had enough common sense to save this beautiful boat.

  • @timdumler5628
    @timdumler5628 Před 3 lety +1

    It is not the last of the lumber schooners. Misleading clickbait, fail and thumbs down.