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The Schooner Ernestina is a one hundred year old ship designated by the Department of the Interior as a National Historic Landmark. Originally built at the James and Tarr Yard in Essex, Massachusetts and launched February 1, 1894 as the Effie M. Morrissey, she has sailed on through the century to become one of six remaining Essex-built schooners.

She reached within 600 miles of the North Pole and is the last ship to bring immigrants to this country under sail from the Cape Verde Islands. Ernestina was given to the people of the United States by the people of the Cape Verde Islands in 1982. Her history is a remarkable legacy that spans continents, races and generations --

Explore Ernestina's TIMELINE in text and photographs that document this fantastic vessel or go directly to some publications or audio clips that tell individual stories below.....

 If you would like to contact us with a question relative to our museum or the history email us at curator@ernestina.org. If you would like to contribute with a fully tax deductible donation click the icon to the right.

 

You can access a growing set of resources available from our site...
          available as downloadable pdf files with topics of special interest.

z Cape Verdeans in America: Our Story  from Tchuba, the American Committee for Cape Verde, 1978.
    Introduction (1.35M)
    Early Contacts (2.02M)
    Whaling (3.15M)
    Cape Verdean American Packet Trade (4.59M)
    A New Life in America (3.23M)
    Footnotes and Bibliography (529K))

z  Schooner Ernestina National Historic Landmark Study  1990
   HTML Text Version
    PDF Download (376K)

z New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park Legislation  1996
    PDF Download (120K)

z Cape Verdean Image Library
Traudy Coli has scanned and launched part of her extensive collection of images on the internet. If you have particular key words like a family name or a place like an island in Cape Verde, you can go to a searchable image file click here... If you would like to view a gallery of images grouped by place click here...

z The Fishing Wonsons, the original owners of the Morrissey
In 1894, when the John F. Wonson company had the Effie M. Morrissey built, she was one of seventeen schooners sailing under the John F. Wonson flag. If you would like to read more about the Wonson Family click here...

z Gloucester Captains and the Shipbuilder
"Capt. Clayton Morrissey took his first command when he was but 19 years of age.  He was on the Effie M. Morrissey, named after his sister, when his father was taken sick, after the first baiting.  The youthful fisherman assumed command and astonished the waterfront when he arrived after two months on the banks with a big fare of salt fish.  He made good from the start and before many years had passed, ascended to the pinnacle of the slat fishing fleet of the North Atlantic...."
You can read about many of the Gloucester Captains on the Out-of-Gloucester Website in transcribed obituaries:

Clayton Morrissey
Josh McInnis
Ben Pine
Everett James, Shipbuilder of the Morrissey in 1894

z The Log of a Record Run
Frederick William Wallace was a Canadian Historian who documented the fishing industry of the American and Canadian Maritimes in 1911-1924. Click here to read his story aboard the Schooner Effie M. Morrissey, skippered by Capt. Harry Ross, for a fast run between Portland, Maine and Yarmouth, N.S. in December 1912. The Morrissey inspired Wallace's ballad sung in many a fo'c'sl to this day.

z Arctic Exploration Image Library
Bill Wilcox recently sent some scanned images to us from his father's voyage on the Morrissey to Greenland in 1926. This was the first trip for the Effie M. Morrissey as an Arctic explorer sponsored by the Publicist George Palmer Putnam sailing under the auspices of the American Museum of Natural History and the University of Michigan. Click here to view the photos.

Laura van der Meulen recently sent some scanned images of her father, Donald E. Clark, aboard the Morrissey to Northwest Greenland in 1938 and 1939 for the New York Zoological Society and Smithsonian Institution. Apparently Donald, in his mid-eighties and living in California today, still talks about his adventures on the Morrissey with Capt. 'Bob.' Donald was the youngest member of the crew and served as Radio Telephone Operator. Click here to see a picture of Donald and get a look at a FCC (Federal Communications Commission) Radio Telegraph Operators License.

z The Logbook of Monroe Grey Barnard
Monroe Barnard came aboard the Schooner Effie M. Morrissey in 1927 for a voyage into the far north into Fury and Hecla Straits for the American Geographical Society, Museum of the American Indian and the Heye Foundation. This was the second trip funded by Publisher George Palmer Putnam and written about in David Putnam's book David Goes to Baffin Land. Click here to read about Monroe's exploits aboard the Morrissey as transcribed from his hand written journal by his son George Barnard II. If you are curious about some Innuit (Eskimo) words you can go to Monroe's dictionary pages in his log. You can find David's book in your local library to read about the trip from his perspective....

z The Journal of Marie Peary Stafford, Peary's Daughter
Mrs. Stafford sailed north on the Morrissey with her two sons, Edward (14) and Peary (12) to Cape York on the West Coast of Greenland to build a monument to her father, Admiral Peary in 1932. A transcript of her journal is available by clicking here.

z National Geographic Articles
Greenland from 1898 to Now, by Robert Abram Bartlett, in National Geographic, vol. 78, no. 1, July 1940.

Servicing Arctic Airbases, by Robert Abram Bartlett, in National Geographic, vol. 89, no. 5, May 1946.

Voyaging on the Morrissey, by Daniel S. Turner, in National Geographic, vol. 89, no. 5, May 1946.

z The Logbook of John P. Pitcairn
John P. Pitcairn came aboard the Schooner Effie M. Morrissey in 1940 as a teenager for a voyage into the far north for the Smithsonian Institution, Vasser College and the U.S. Navy Department. Little did he know they would take the ship farther north than any sailing vessel had been! Click here to read about John's exploits aboard the Morrissey for a trip into into Davis Straits and beyond along the West Coast of Greenland and back along Ellesmere Island, Baffin Island and the Labrador.

z Excerpts from Fast and Able by Gordon W. Thomas
Gordon Thomas wrote Fast and Able, a book about the Gloucester Fishing Schooners. The Ernestina ex-Effie M. Morrissey is featured. Click here to view the excerpt... By the way, he had some facts wrong. The ship was launched from the James and Tarr Shipyard (not Burnham's) in Essex in 1894.

z The Story of Captain Alexandre Fortes
Alexandre Fortes came aboard Schooner Ernestina as captain for the 1960-'61 voyages across the Atlantic between Providence, RI and the Cape Verde Islands. To read a story about his life written by two of his grandchildren click here...

z The Logbook of Ernestina 1954 and 1955
Click here to explore three transatlantic voyages in detail.... Thanks to a grant from the Island Foundation, Gil Pires translated and transcribed this logbook recording three trans-Atlantic voyages.

z The Genealogy Project
Thanks to a grant from the Island Foundation, Gil Pires and Kendra Santos researched and assembled genealogical information about the Mendes family, Morrissey family and Bartlett family. Please follow the links to pages that have been developed thanks to their work.

z Explore Ernestina's TIMELINE

  Oral Histories

You can access a growing set of audio resources available to you from our site...
          available as downloadable wav files with interpretive text.

z Cape Verdean Stories
    Patricia Rodrigues has captured some of the essence of Cape Verdean culture in text, photos and audio clips from interviews. Enter her pages and listen to some stories of immigration.

  Video Library

There are a growing set of video resources available to you...

z "Legacy: Shipbuilders, Fishermen and the Age of the Gloucester Schooners"
    Yesterday's News, a production company based on Cape Ann, recently released a documentary that chronicles the industries and personalities that once launched over 4000 wooden vessels from Essex, MA and made Gloucester the largest fishing port in the United States. Using archival photographs, rare film footage and oral history interviews, this compelling, fifty-eight minute documentary relates the development of shipbuilding and fishing on Cape Ann, the opportunities it created for Portuguese, Canadian and Italian immigrants and the thousands of fishermen who lost their lives at sea. Ernestina is one of the featured schooners in the film along with the Schooner Adventure based in Gloucester. Capt. Amanda Madeira was interviewed for the film. Copies are available from Yesterday's News by calling 978-546-9920 or emailing at YestNews@aol.com. Please contact them for details.

Legacy: A Documentary

Copyright 1997-2006
Schooner Ernestina
phone 508.992.4900 -- fax 508.984.7719
www.ernestina.org