Our Fleet

Crew’s fleet is one of the most important collections of historic vessels in the United States.

 
Sherman-Zwicker-Schooner.jpg

Sherman Zwicker

142’ wooden fishing schooner built by Smith and Rhuland in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia, 1942, currently in operation as Grand Banks in Manhattan, New York.

Pilot-Schooner-former-Highlander-Sea.jpg

Pilot

147’ wooden racing schooner built by J.F. James and Sons in Essex, MA, 1924, currently in operation as Pilot in Brooklyn, New York.

 
Governor-Alfred-E-Smith-Statue-of-Liberty.jpg

Governor Alfred E. Smith

105’ FDNY fireboat built by John H. Mathis and Co. in Camden, NJ, 1961, currently undergoing restoration.

 
Last-New-York-Oyster-Barge.jpg

Margaret

79’ New York oyster barge built by the I.P. Mersereau Company Co. in New York, NY, circa 1851, awaiting restoration.

 
She is a significant historic artifact worthy of preservation.
— Maine Maritime Museum
 
 

Sherman Zwicker

FV-Sherman-Zwicker-01.jpg

Sherman Zwicker | 142’ Schooner | Built 1942

Once part of the proud Grand Banks fleet that fished the abundant but turbulent North Atlantic, the Sherman Zwicker traded cod and salt throughout the Americas. Today she is an exceptional and rare surviving example of traditional boat-building skills and  the largest wooden vessel in New York City.

The Sherman Zwicker was built of heavy timber on the plans of her famous sister ship Bluenose, the world-record-holding racing ship and fishing vessel, at the renowned Smith and Rhuland boatyard in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia.

Sherman-Zwicker-Grand-Banks-Schooner-News-Clipping.jpg
A+fisherman+aboard+the+Sherman+Zwicker.jpeg
 

She was one of the first and last of her kind to be built. At the time she was considered a modern transition vessel (vessels transitioning from sails to diesel power), designed to make use of the sleek and fast hull of Bluenose. As a transition rig, she was equipped with smaller masts and sails that were used less for power and more for stability, and fitted with an extremely powerful diesel engine to provide the majority of her propulsion. She was the last of a fleet of hundreds of large wooden schooners fishing the Grand Banks and moving cargoes of fish and salt in the North Atlantic and to South America.

Each year the Sherman Zwicker would make three trips from May - September to the Grand Banks for cod fishing and in the fall she would sail to South America carrying a cargo of salt-cured fish, returning in the spring with a hold full of salt.

The restoration of the boat is a rare feat
— Vanity Fair

 She made her summer port in South Shore, Nova Scotia for 20 years before being sold to a company in Newfoundland where she continued to ply her trade until 1968.

The following year Capt. George McEvoy rescued her from a watery grave in Glovertown, Newfoundland, and sailed her to Maine where he restored her as a museum vessel. Control of the Sherman Zwicker was later turned over to the Grand Banks Schooner Museum Trust, a non-profit group headed by Capt. McEvoy, based in Boothbay Harbor, Maine. Under the Trust, the Sherman Zwicker became a fully operational, traveling museum, attending many tall ship festivities along the eastern seaboard, and frequently visiting her old ports of call in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland to much fanfare. For almost 30 years, she spent her summers docked at the Maine Maritime Museum in Bath, Maine, where she played host to tens of thousands of visitors each season.

In 2014, the Grand Banks Schooner Museum Trust gifted the Sherman Zwicker to the Maritime Foundation to ensure her preservation for future generations.

 
 

 
 
 

Pilot

pilot-schooner-historic.jpg

Pilot | 147’ Schooner | Built 1924

Pilot is one of the few surviving Grand Banks style schooners and an eligible candidate for the National Register of Historic Places. Originally commissioned by an American syndicate as a racing vessel to compete with the fastest sailboats in the world, she was later purchased by the Boston Harbor Pilotage and put into service for over fifty years, becoming the longest-serving pilot ship in the American history. She is one of two surviving racing schooners built to race the infamous International Fisherman’s Cup. 

Pilot-History-2.jpg
Pilot-History-3.jpeg

Beautifully designed by W. Starling Burgess, she was built in Essex, Massachusetts by J.F. James and Sons Shipyard and launched in 1924. Designed in the typical Grand Banks tradition with a spoon bow, round bilge, and full keel, her sleek lines and heavy hull reflected the best understanding of the forces at play in the turbulent North Atlantic  as well as a cultural preference for low slung, almost flat decks. This profile, and the way in which it gracefully and purposefully pushes through rough seas, has remained the iconic and lasting image of a North American Schooner. Today, Pilot’s primary design elements remain exactly as they were when she was built. Her hull, topsides, pilothouse, deck, cabin top and rigging, and structure remain virtually unchanged.

Pilot was originally commissioned to race and beat Bluenose, a foreboding Nova Scotia schooner and the fastest sailboat in the world, for the International Fisherman's Cup. But, due to the disappointing results of the 1923 race in which the American boat Columbia was outsailed and the previous year’s defeat and disappearance of the boat Puritan, both financed by the Manta Club of Gloucester, the race was called off and funding ceased just as the J.F. James and Sons shipyard neared her completion. Pilot’s death knell almost rang, but, luckily, the Massachusetts Pilot’s Association caught wind of her berth.

Pilot-History-4.jpg

In order to navigate harbor waters quickly, meet larger ships out at sea where the waters proved more foreboding, and also provide crew members, who might stay on ships for weeks at a time, with habitable conditions, pilot ships needed to be fast and maneuverable, with easy motion and amenities. Much of the Massachusetts Pilot’s Association’s fleet comprised ships with recreational pasts, acquired once their owners tired of them, namely, Grand Banks topsail schooners, the exact type half-built in the Essex, Massachusetts dry docks. And so Pilot was completed with funds from the Massachusetts Pilot’s Association, and on September 30, 1924, the Christian Science Monitor announced her launch.

With no need for a spacious fish hold, Pilot sported a large engine room in the middle of the ship where the fish hold might have been for slow speed navigation or for when the wind blew in the wrong direction. A forward and aft compartment accommodated eight pilots, five apprentices, the engineer and cook, and 17’-18’ “yawl pilots” occupied her deck. To allow a low main boom to swing freely, the pilothouse was lowered. Otherwise, all the graceful lines Burgess drew were masterfully carried through to her construction, and she was put to good use. 

From 1924 through the Second World War, Pilot functioned as the “No.1” (emblazoned across her sail) ship in the Boston fleet of pilot boats. During WW2, she was commandeered by the US Coast Guard and made over 13,000 trips, moving “troop transporters, freighters, tankers, and ‘explosive ships’ loaded with tons of concentrated hell fire,” as an article from the October 14, 1945 issue of the Daily Boston Globe phrased it. Longtime Boston pilot captain “Skip” Frye, noted that she was “ cold in the fo'c'sle” and how “the wheel on the Pilot had something like 11 turns from hard over, and the last two or three turns you had to do with three men.” Pilot remained with the Boston Pilots association until the early 1970’s. 

At that point, she was purchased by a utopian community group to circumnavigate the globe. She got as far as Fiji and in 1976 was sold. Her next owner, Norman D. Paulsen of California, renamed her STAR PILOT and obtained a U.S. Coast Guard certification to serve as an educational ship and research vessel. She sailed to the Galapagos and other research destinations. During this tenure, Jacques Cousteau, the famed French biologist toured with the ship.

Pilot-Historic.jpg

She passed ownership again in 1998. Then soon after sailed from San Diego, California, to Nova Scotia. In Nova Scotia she had a major refit and was used as a training ship for young seafarers. At that time her name was changed to HIGHLANDER SEA. 

In 2002 the vessel was once again purchased, this time by Acheson Ventures, which in 2004 provided her with a major refit. After the refit, however, the vessel was largely unused and eventually left to deteriorate at the Gloucester Marine Railways. She was purchased by Miles and Alex Pincus in 2015, then fully restored and converted into a dockside maritime attraction and oyster bar in Brooklyn Bridge Park. 

147 feet of remarkable, historic maritime craftsmanship
— Vogue

 Pilot still retains 75% of her original fabric, and areas that have been rebuilt have always been tended to by expert shipwrights, craftsmen, and engineers using the original materials, methods, and tools with which she was originally built.  

With its traditional construction methods, original materials, and a design that speaks to a foregone era, Pilot retains a feeling of a particularly adventurous life on the high seas in the 19th and early 20th centuries. When looking out over her vast deck or up at her towering stepped masts, it's clear why Pilot occupies a truly important place in the cultural history of the East Coast and the maritime life of the Americas.

 

 
 
 

Governor Alfred E. Smith

Governor-Alfred-E-Smith-Statue-of-Liberty.jpg

Governor Alfred E. Smith | 105’ Fireboat | Built 1961

The 105 foot Governor Alfred E. Smith served with the FDNY for over 50 years, supporting generations of heroic firefighters. Built in 1961 by the John H. Mathis Company's shipyard in Camden, N. J., the fireboat was the last of four identical boats built for New York City.

Throughout her course of duty she was stationed at 37th Street in Brooklyn, 52d Street in Brooklyn, Pier A at the Battery, and then in a final chapter joined Marine Unit 6 in the Brooklyn Navy Yard. The FDNY placed her reserve in 2005.

The Smith has a speed of 11.3 knots and displaces 290 tons. Her two fire pumps deliver up to 8,000 gallons of water a minute.

She is named after Alfred Emanuel "Al" Smith (1873 – 1944), an American statesman who was elected Governor of New York four times, and was the Democratic U.S. presidential candidate in 1928. She is notable for fighting many waterfront blazes, most significant among them on 9/11.  

FB FDNY Navy Smith 071411 bw-1629.jpg
Fireboat-Governor-Alfred-E-Smith.jpg
 

The Smith’s crew was honored in 1967 for outstanding performance at the scene of the June 16, 1966, collision in Kill van Kull between the tankers Alva Cape and the Texaco Massachusetts. A tug alongside was covered with naphtha from the Alva's ruptured tanks and blew up. In the fire that followed, 33 sea men were lost.

The Alva was towed two days later to an anchorage off Bay 26th Street, Brooklyn. As salvagers neared the end of emptying undamaged tanks, a sudden explosion racked the ship again, and fire and other explosions followed. Four more men died and nine were injured. Lieutenant Louis Rubine Jr., in command of the Smith, was blown off the deck of his vessel and was rescued by men in the Coast Guard.

Crew purchased the Smith at auction in 2016 and has completed a bow to stern restoration. She is slated for a new home at Fulton Ferry Landing in Brooklyn in 2022.

 
 

 
 
 

Margaret

OYSTER-BARGE-BW.jpg

Margaret | 79’ Oyster Barge | Circa 1851

Margaret is the last surviving New York oyster barge, an artifact central to the cultural, maritime, economic and culinary history of the city. Discovered aground and abandoned at the water's edge in Fair Haven, Connecticut, she is presently undergoing a complete restoration in preparation for a return to the shores of New York City. Once a fixture of Manhattan’s Oyster Row on the Hudson River at Gansevoort Pier, she was responsible for feeding a city, state and growing nation and is an exceptional and rare surviving example of early New York, aquaculture, and American ingenuity. She is eligible for the National Register of Historic Places and considered eligible to become a National Historic Landmark.

Dockside Tramp sleeping on an oyster barge's gangway West Street north from Charles St 1890s.jpg
Interior View of Oyster Barge with men.jpg

 Moored on the banks of the Quinnipiac River, east of Yale University, stood a structure decisively out of place. Abandoned since 1987 and aground in the Fair Haven seaport since the 1920s, she stood as a pariah, her siding mascara streaked, her roof leaky, and her walls in-leaning, bow-legged, a telltale that maritime historian John Kochiss noticed and decoded. She is the last of her kind—a New York City Oyster Barge. 

What the hot dog stand is to the New Yorker of today, the oyster stand was to the New Yorker of a century ago, when street vendors spooned chowder, a local favorite, to patrons and more colorful oyster cellars lured customers below ground at the site of a lone red “oyster balloon,” a muslin globe that often stayed lit well into the night.   

In 1880 alone, over 700,000,000 oysters were processed in the United States. In 1891, oysters were the most valuable fishery by more than a factor of five over salmon, a far second. And in 1929, enough oysters were harvested off of the east coast to provide each U.S. citizen with roughly 1¼ lbs each. And it rested on a select fleet of all but forgotten boats to ensure that New York’s oysters made it from seafloor to stomach.

ABOUT THE BARGES

Oyster barges or scows—also called arks, due to their toy-like, biblical appearance—facilitated the dissemination of oysters to a population that depended on them economically and nutritionally, for sustenance and for enjoyment. They were the physical link between the complex ballet of the maritime and terrestrial worlds, functioning not only as efficient depots for wholesale buyers, shuckers, packagers, preservers, and hungry passersby, but also as financial hubs for the barge owners and the growing farmed-oyster industry. 

For nearly a hundred years, starting in the 1820s, roughly 30-50 of these barges etched Manhattan’s coastal skyline, carving a scene of bustle from the pristine blue. At any one time, up to a dozen skiffs might cue with their sterns facing the barge as hired carriers, paid ¢10 per thousand oysters carried, walked wooden-planks connecting the skiffs and unloaded stock from oak buckets into oak hulls.  

As non-seafaring vessels, the barges could afford certain flamboyance. Painted bright greens, reds, and yellows with white trimming, the scows lured city dwellers from the denizens of the streets to the burgeoning and colorful shore line. Even the elite, from time to time, ventured to the waterfront to steal a peek at their arched doorways and windows and tall flagstaffs that rose high above their roofs. 

One observer commented: “They are curious craft...perhaps more like two-family apartment houses in Flatbush that have run away to sea.” Another remarked that the employees “worked at tremendous speed. A blow of a hammer cracks the lip of the shell, a twist of the knife flips it open, a flirt of the wrist dumps the oyster, uncaged at last…” One, seemingly lacking words, wrote, “a peep at the interior of any one of the oyster barges in the market [is] a revelation.”

ARCHITECTURE OF BARGES

To say that oyster barges were the life centers of the oyster industry is an understatement, and while the oyster barges did not do any of the harvesting themselves, with the so many roles and orders to fill, these three story micro-factories came to occupy a unique niche of New York’s architectural and naval legacy. 

Many of the barge’s design features served mechanical advantages. When John Kochiss saw the scow’s slanted sides, that “tumbled home,” as sailors might say, he knew they served particular purposes. On Oyster Row, the trapezoidal shape of the individual barges prevented the barges from colliding into each other as they rolled in the harbor wind and current; they also helped stabilized the scows as weight constantly fluctuated with each offloaded barrel and each onboard haul of oysters. 

Traditional anchors were similarly foregone to provide added stability and iron rings attached to the boats’ exteriors were fitted around wooden pilings to allow for the tidal rise and drop. To allow the scows to drop beneath street level when the sea level lowered, hinged ramps were the land-to-barge walkway of choice. Only at high tide could a pedestrian see straight into the bowels of the whole affair, at the men on their stools squatting, and at the come and go of fishermen and sailors through the opening in back. 

The addition of a second floor, uncommon in most other barges, provided financial, spatial, and tactical advantages. Accessible by staircase and occasionally an exterior ladder, as seen in at least one 1880 print, the ornate and decorative second floor functioned as an office where business could be conducted and observed. Barrels and extra supplies were also stored upstairs, but the space primarily allowed the barge owner to keep a close eye on his product. This can also be seen in the layout of clear first floor galley, where a continuous line of site provided the owners—sometimes hired watchmen—the ability to oversee the production, start to finish. The oyster trade was lucrative, and “oyster rats” or “dock rats” were known to steal product and profit. Windows on both floors allowed for a more transparent workplace, and a balcony on the second floor provided additional vantages—and a place for the owner to relax. Additionally, by using the aesthetic language of urban architecture that echoed the high-rise vernacular of city residences, barge owners hoped to assert a place of permanence within a city in flux.  

Storage hulls were not uncommon but were necessary to the oyster barges. They protected the oysters during warmer months, keeping them shaded and cool, and shielded the oysters from frigid currents, otherwise. They also allowed the barges to accumulate oysters and stay precisely on pace with demand. This freed up the skiffs, no longer bound by their own size limitations, to continue the raking or poling process, as was sometimes done.

OYSTER ORIGINS 

Most of the stock that passed through Oyster Row came from New York, Connecticut, New Jersey, Maryland, and Virginia and was farmed. Mr. Hunter’s Grave, a 1956 article for the New Yorker written by Joseph Mitchell, reveals fascinating details about the early years of New York’s commercial oyster industry and the role Staten Island played in shaping aquaculture. 

Many of the oystermen who worked the public beds of Staten Island in the early 19th century were free African Americans. They lived and worked together, specifically in Sandy Ground, raking oysters and weaving oak buckets from split saplings, baskets that continued to be the container of choice into the 20th century. They also learned blacksmithing in order to create and repair iron oyster rakes.

Staten Island’s natural-growth oysters, however, were raked to death by the 1820s due to overharvesting. Oystermen turned to buying baby oysters or “spat” from other locations and planting them on old shells and preferable substrates called “cultch.” 

Tended to, farmed oysters grew quicker, but the decrease of abundant natural-growth oysters and the shift to farming seedstock led to the privatization of oyster beds in the mid 1800s, and, ultimately, fights over private property. This marked a decisive shift in the industry from harvesting oysters as sustenance to harvesting oysters as business. In one instance in 1848, a man named Nathaniel W. Cozzens from Rhode Island, previously convicted of stealing from private beds, now appeared on state records as an “oysterman” and joined others in petitioning the state to provide watchmen and protect the private beds he was once accused of pilfering. 

The oyster barges emerged out of this atmosphere and were integral to the centralization of the farmed oyster industry. According to Mr. George H. Hunter, a native of Sandy Ground, and the primary source of Mitchell’s article, “The oyster wholesalers in New York were the unseen powers in the Staten Island oyster business; they advanced the money to build boats and buy Southern seed stock.” 

BARGE DECLINE

Unfortunately, countless factors contributed to the demise of oyster populations and the eventual displacement of the iconic oyster barge. As industrialization took its grip on New York City and other coastal cities, water pollution spiked and typhoid outbreaks ravaged the city. Raw sewage that had been dumped into New York’s harbors for over 300 years were the leading culprit. 

While sanitation issues worried consumers and killed off stock—the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906 enacted strict regulation—a volatile cocktail of technological and commercial changed upended the industry. Complaints that started mounting in the 1850s about the barges’ interference with commercial shipping, forced the barges to constantly shift locations. Suppliers, most notably Virginia, concerned about environmental and economic strain in local communities outlawed the exportation of oyster seeds in the late 19th century,. And, as a  New York Times article from April 4. 1906 suggests, “Oysters by telephone and telegraph did it…[they] wiped out the middle man or jobber.” Buyers no longer frequented the barges, instead capable of calling oyster farmers directly. 

And, if this instability wasn’t enough, Prohibition sank the industry. As one observer noted, oysters were so ubiquitous and democratizing that the only difference between the rich and the poor is that the poor eat oysters with beer and the rich with Champagne. With neither beverage legal anymore, the once famous oyster cellars dried up and their suppliers slowly went out of business (at least according to the barge owners). 

The scows were eventually slung around Battery Point and onto the East River, and in 1925, only five of the scows remained. But, resilient and determined as always, it took until the 1940s for the last oyster barge to wash away from New York City’s memory somewhere beneath the Manhattan Bridge.

FAIR HAVEN BARGE HISTORY

The Fair Haven barge is the last remaining barge. Over the years, it has operated as a speakeasy, a Yale University dive bar, a popular local restaurant, and, as rumor has it, even a brothel. According to Kochiss, based on an interview with Ernest E. Ball, Ball purchased the barge from either I.P. Mersereau company or the Alexander Frazer Company—both companies ceased business around the same time—and shipped it north to Fair Haven. Ball was a well known oysterman in Connecticut. 

Further research indicates that the Fair Haven barge most likely belonged to the I.P. Mersereau company and was built in Tottenville, Staten Island in 1881 (Kochiss suspected it was the Mersereau boat due to the Frazer Co.’s reputation for having one of the largest scows in the fleet; the Fair Haven barge was average sized).

In 1904, the Superintendent of Docks issued new permits, following shifting ownership amongst the barges and a desire to change points of anchor. From Bloomfield Street to Gansevoort Pier, barges 1-14 occupied the “Upper Oyster Basin.” South of Gansevoort Pier, barges 15-17 occupied the “Lower Oyster Basin.” Of these scows in the lower basin, spot number 15 was designated to I.P. Mersereau. At a rate of ¢10/day/foot, the price for all scows, the barge is listed as requiring “16 feet” of frontage; the Fair Haven Barge measures just over 16 feet wide. 

Tidbits of the I.P. Mersereau barge’s maritime past, preserved in city records, also coincide with oral history. In 1915, the I.P. Mersereau barge’s official number is listed as 100277 at 64.4’ long, 15.5’ wide, and 5.2’ deep—all measurements correspond with the Fair Haven barge with a degree of error. And, while traditionally oyster scows were not named beyond the company that operated them, the I.P. Mersereau barge again took a different trajectory. After being converted as a freighter ship with a 200HP independent motor in 1916, she was christened Margaret

CONCLUSION

Michael J. Chiarappa, in his decisive essay titled New York CIty’s Oyster Barges, discusses the Fair Haven Barge and notes that, “to restore it and bring it back to the Manhattan waterfront [is] an opportunity for interpretive rapprochement in a city that so often appears historically and environmentally disconnected from the maritime world that shaped it.” (102) And, with the resurgence of the oyster industry and continuing efforts to revitalize New York City’s coastline, the time couldn’t be more right. 

John Kochiss feels similarly and, in a 2006 interview, remarks on the rarity of his find and the specialness of the Fair Haven Barge. In response to a question on why the barge should be preserved, he recounted what his boss once said to him about unique maritime vessels: “Would you rather have a copy of the Mona Lisa or the original? That applies to this Fair Haven, New York Oyster Barge.” And while his interest in the Fair Haven Barge is more storied and intimate than any other historians and activists, and despite the barge’s reliance on the very oysters Connecticut locals grew and harvested,. Kochiss concluded: “It should be displayed in New York City because that’s where it belongs.”