S.S.S. Lotus
S.S.S. Lotus | |
Lotus at mooring in Sodus Bay, July 2007 | |
| |
Location | Trestle Landing Marina, Co. Rt. 14 at Sentell Rd., Sodus Point, New York |
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Coordinates | 43°15′59″N 76°59′29″W / 43.26639°N 76.99139°WCoordinates: 43°15′59″N 76°59′29″W / 43.26639°N 76.99139°W |
Area | less than one acre |
Built | 1916 |
Architect | Hand, William H.,Jr.; Zickes, Ted |
Architectural style | Auxiliary Schooner |
NRHP Reference # | 90000694[1] |
Added to NRHP | May 10, 1990 |
The S.S.S. (Sea Scout Ship) Lotus is a historic gaff rigged schooner located at Sodus Point in Wayne County, New York and is operated and maintained by Sea Scout Ship 303 of Webster, New York.
History of the Lotus
The keel on Lotus was laid down in 1917 and the boat was completed in 1918, in Rocky River, Ohio. Designed by the naval architect William Hand Jr. in 1916, and christened with the name of Miss Gloucester, she was designed as a pleasure yacht for sailing on the Great Lakes.
As Miss Gloucester, she was commissioned by Thomas B. Van Dorn, to be the Van Dorn family yacht. The Van Dorn family sailed her on Lake Erie and perhaps Lake Huron.
In 1922, the ship was sold to Stephen Estes Comstock of Newark, NY. He moved the ship to Sodus Bay, on Lake Ontario, and renamed her Lotus, after the wild water lilies that grew in the bay.
Lotus was sold again in 1938, to Dick Todd and Ken Cooley. They renamed her again, this time to Dickens, a combination of their first names.
In 1943, Ezra Hale and his partners bought the ship and changed her name back to Lotus. Ezra Hale and John Trahey donated Lotus to the Otetiana Council of the Boy Scouts of America in 1971, specifying that Sea Explorer Ship (now Sea Scout Ship) 303 be the ones to use it. The Sea Explorer Ship 303 had begun in 1965, and used a variety of power cruisers before the Lotus was donated.
Unfortunately, it was difficult to keep up with the required maintenance and by 1991 Lotus needed serious restoration. With the support of sponsors the Webster Kiwanis, the money was raised for a restoration, soliciting donations from individuals and corporations. A matching funds grant was also received from New York state, which brought the total amount of money raised to $150,000.
Lotus was trucked to Rivendell Marine, in Rhode Island, in 1991. The refit was complete in 1993, and should see Lotus well into her 100th year.[2]
Present
Lotus is sailed each summer by members of Sea Scout Ship 303 around all of Lake Ontario. Lotus visits many harbor festivals, and reenactments each year including Alexandria Bay Pirate Week, Oswego Harborfest, and reenactments in Sacketts Harbor.
Lotus has also participated several times in Operation Sail.
Specifications
Dimensions
- Length : 48 feet (15 m) on deck, 60 feet (18 m) from the tip of the bowsprit to the end of the main boom[3]
- Beam : 12 feet (3.7 m), 3 inches
- Draft : 4 feet (1.2 m), 9 inches
- Weight : 16 tons (approximate)
- Total Sail Area : 950 square feet (88 m2)
Engine
- Yanmar 88 hp (66 kW) four cylinder, turbo-charged diesel with sealed heat exchange
Materials
- Masts : Sitka Spruce
- Frames : Oak
- Original Hull Planking: Long-leaf Yellow Pine
- Replacement Hull Planking: Mahogany
- Main Deck : Vertical-grain Douglas Fir
- Cockpit Deck : Long-leaf Yellow Pine
- Original Cabin tops : Canvas
See also
References
- ↑ National Park Service (2009-03-13). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
- ↑ Lotus Website and original source of Lotus history by Anitra Setchell
- ↑ Mark L. Peckham (February 1990). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Lotus". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved 2009-06-14. See also: "Accompanying five photos".
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lotus (ship, 1916). |
- Photo of the Lotus
- Official Ship 303 page on the Sea Scouts website
- Rivendell Marine Lotus Restoration, 1991
- SSS 303 Lotus Facebook Group, Maintained by the crew
- Slideshow of Cub Scouts Sailing on Lotus, September 2005 on YouTube