SNAME Los Angeles Section Hears Of Conversion
Of Existing Schooner Hull To Brig Pilgrim
Shown above during the February meeting of the Los Angeles Metropolitan Section
of SNAME are, left to right: Robert E. Apple, vice chairman; Harry Levy, chairman
of the Section, John C. Hollett, papers chairman; Raymond E. Wallace, speaker,
and Frank Kuntz, secretary-treasurer.
The February Meeting of the
Los Angeles Metropolitan Section
of The Society of Naval Archi-
tects and Marine Engineers was
held aboard the S.S. Princess
Louise I. Thirty-five members
and guests turned out for the
occasion.
The evening's speaker was
Raymond E. Wallace, of Ray-
mond E. Wallace Special Produc-
tions, well-known for his master
planning efforts which produced
all of the ship's and marine ef-
fects at Disneyland. He was also
master planner for the Ports
O'Call Village in San Pedro, Calif.;
the Six Flags Over Texas com-
plex, and the conversion of the
S.S. Princess Louise I and II
Restaurants.
The topic of his presentation
was the conversion of an existing
schooner hull to a replica of the
brig Pilgrim. The Pilgrim is well-
known in maritime lore as the
ship featured in Richard Henry
Dana Jr.'s book "Two Years
Before the Mast." Mr. Wallace
began by describing his own
"W8 HAV£ TO THAW SAM OUTSlOWlY. He spe/vr6mo/aws OA//ce fatpol. '
Danish craftsmen, particularly
their proficiency with the adze,
but economics compelled him to
seek a location with a cheaper,
but no less capable, labor force.
It took a full year to step new
masts and otherwise prepare the
Joal for her trans-Atlantic voy-
age. The next port-of-call was
Miami, where her woodwork was
completed, and she was rigged to
fit Dana's description as "having
royals and skysails fore and aft,
and ten studding sails." She was
re-commissioned the Pilgrim and
is now berthed in San Pedro
awaiting her final journey to
Monterey, Calif. There, she will
be berthed at the end of Fisher-
man's Pier and opened to the
public as a maritime museum.
Mr. Wallace is currently con-
verting the 3,000-ton four-masted
bark, Moshulu, a principal in the
"Great Grain Races" of the
1930s, into a restaurant and mu-
seum to be berthed at Penn's
Landing in Philadelphia, Pa.
experiences "before the mast,"
wherein he spent 15 years sailing
aboard square rigged ships. This
background, and his devotion to
the sea and nautical lore, pro-
vided the basis for his goal of the
re-creation of the Pilgrim.
He began the task with a suit-
able hull he found in Denmark.
The Joal, a Baltic schooner con-
structed in the late 1800s, was
similar to Dana's description of
the Pilgrim, except that she was
a double ender and has finer lines
(the Pilgrim had an "Apple Bow"
and a full stern gallery). The
Joal had been converted to a
motorship and dismasted except
for the foremast which had been
retained for use as a cargo boom.
He surveyed her hull, found it
sound, and designed the modifica-
tions that would be required to
convert her to closely match the
description Dana gave of the
Pilgrim.
Mr. Wallace sailed the Joal to
Portugal for the start of her con-
version. He had been impressed
with the capabilities of the
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April 1, 1976 45
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