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Friends Good Will

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American sloop
Friends Good Will
History
United States
NameFriends Good Will
BuilderJohn Scarano, Albany, New York
Laid down2004
LaunchedAugust 29, 2004
Identification
StatusIn service
NotesReproduction of a bermuda sloop bearing the same name that was involved in the War of 1812.
General characteristics
Typesquare topsail sloop
Displacement150,000 lbs
Tons burthen6372⁄94 (bm; by calculation)
Length
  • 101 ft (31 m) (sparred length)
  • 56 ft 5 in (17.20 m) (length on deck)
Beam16 ft 10 in (5.13 m)
Draft8 ft 9 in (2.67 m)
Propulsion165 hp (123 kW) Yanmar diesel engine
Sail plan3,180 sq ft (295 m), (Main, staysail, 2 jibs, square topsail)
Capacity28
Complement7
Armament9-pounder pivot gun + 2 × 6-pounder guns
NotesLaminate wood planks over frame.

Friends Good Will is a working American reproduction of the historical Friends Good Will (1811–1813), a merchant square-rigged topsail sloop that was overtaken by the events of the War of 1812. The British captured her in a ruse of war shortly after they captured Fort Mackinac, and renamed her HMS Little Belt. In British service she was armed with a 9-pounder pivot gun and two 6-pounder guns. The Americans recaptured her during the Battle of Lake Erie. She then served in the US Navy before the British destroyed her at the end of December 1813.

The current vessel was built in 2004, at Scarano Boat Building, Inc. in Albany, New York, and was sailed by volunteers through Lakes Ontario, Erie, Huron, and Michigan to the Michigan Maritime Museum, in South Haven, Michigan where she brings the area's history to life through educational tours, day sails, and school field trips. She can also be found visiting ports throughout the Great Lakes for maritime festivals and American Sail Training Association races.

During Michigan winters, Friends Good Will remains at the Michigan Maritime Museum. Her lines, spars, and sails are removed each October during the downrigging process, and inspected, repaired and/or replaced during ongoing winter maintenance by the volunteers of the ship's company. The following April, the ship's company removes the vessel's cover and performs her uprigging over the course of two weekends.

USS Providence, John Paul Jones' first command as a captain, was a similar square topsail sloop.

See also

References

42°24′21.4″N 86°16′26.3″W / 42.405944°N 86.273972°W / 42.405944; -86.273972

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