Lagoda - New Bedford, MA
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Metro2
N 41° 38.133 W 070° 55.411
19T E 339789 N 4611100
This replica model is located in the New Bedford Whaling Museum.
Waymark Code: WMKV1H
Location: Massachusetts, United States
Date Posted: 05/29/2014
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member lumbricus
Views: 2

Although it is a replica, this model is the subject of its own Wikipedia page (visit link) which informs us:

"The Lagoda is a half-scale model of the whaling ship of the same name, located at the New Bedford Whaling Museum.

Original ship

The original Lagoda was a merchant ship built in 1826 in the Wanton Shipyard on the North River (Massachusetts Bay)North River in what is now Norwell, Massachusetts. The shipyard was owned and managed by shipbuilders Seth and Samuel Foster. She was commissioned by Duxbury merchant Ezra Weston II.

Originally intended to be named "Ladoga" after Lake Ladoga in Russia, the letters "d" and "g" were accidentally swapped and, due to superstition that correcting the name would bring bad luck, she remained the "Lagoda". The frame of the ship was constructed of live oak. She was a three-masted ship of 340 tons.

Weston employed the Lagoda for about seven years as a merchant vessel in trade with northern European ports. On February 25, 1833, Weston sold the Lagoda to Boston merchant William Oliver. In 1841, she was purchased by Jonathan Bourne of New Bedford and converted to a whaling ship. The most significant aspect of the refit was the addition of a trywork - an on-board hearth to convert blubber into whale oil.

In 1860, the ship was converted to a barque - both to reduce the crew needed, and as it allowed the ship to sail closer to the wind.

In 1871, the Lagoda was among 40 ships whaling in the Arctic. Toward the end of the season, the ice began to surround the ships, and crushed 33 of them. The Lagoda narrowly escaped and, with the remaining ships, picked up some of the 1200 survivors.

In total, the ship made almost $652,000 of profit for Bourne until he sold her in 1886. She sailed from the United States in 1889 and worked as a coal hulk, being used to fuel steamboats in Yokohama, Japan until she was sold again and eventually broken up in 1899.

Replica

In 1915, Jonathan's daughter Emily donated the Bourne Building to the New Bedford Whaling Museum in memory of her father, and the Museum commissioned shipwrights to build the half-size model of the Lagoda in 1916. with funds also provided by Emily. At 89 feet in length, it remains the largest whaling ship model in existence."
Where is original located?: destroyed in 1899

Where is this replica located?: New Bedford Whaling Museum

Who created the original?: shipbuilders Seth and Samuel Foster

Internet Link about Original: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lagoda

Year Original was Created (approx. ok): 1826

Visit Instructions:
Post at least one photo of the replica.
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Metro2 visited Lagoda - New Bedford, MA 07/10/2010 Metro2 visited it