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  2. Transatlantic crossing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transatlantic_crossing

    Prior to the 19th century, transatlantic crossings were undertaken in sailing ships, and the journeys were time-consuming and often perilous.The first trade route across the Atlantic was inaugurated by Spain a few decades after the European Discovery of the Americas, with the establishment of the West Indies fleets in 1566, a convoy system that regularly linked its territories in the Americas ...

  3. Jamestown supply missions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamestown_supply_missions

    The Jamestown supply missions were a series of fleets (or sometimes individual ships) from 1607 to around 1611 that were dispatched from England by the London Company (also known as the Virginia Company of London) with the specific goal of initially establishing the company's presence and later specifically maintaining the English settlement of "James Fort" on present-day Jamestown Island.

  4. Baltimore Steam Packet Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baltimore_Steam_Packet_Company

    The Old Bay Line's District of Columbia in 1949. The Baltimore Steam Packet Company, nicknamed the Old Bay Line, was an American steamship line from 1840 to 1962 that provided overnight steamboat service on Chesapeake Bay, primarily between Baltimore, Maryland, and Norfolk, Virginia. Called a "packet" for the mail packets carried on government ...

  5. Susan Constant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Susan_Constant

    Tons burthen. 120. Length. est. 116 ft (35 m) Sail plan. barque. Susan Constant, possibly Sarah Constant was the largest of three ships of the English Virginia Company on the 1606–1607 voyage that resulted in the founding of Jamestown in the new Colony of Virginia. Captained by Christopher Newport, she was joined by the Discovery and Godspeed.

  6. Packet boat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Packet_boat

    Indeed most shipwrecks took place during the period when the competition between sail and steam was hardest. From a mail, business and journalism transmission point of view, the trend was most alarming. Between 1838 and 1847 no less than 21 mail-carrying ships were lost on the North Atlantic route—two each year on average.

  7. Triangular trade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triangular_trade

    Ships sailing from Britain to Australia in the last third of the 19th century found a shortage of cargoes to take back to Britain. Therefore they took New South Wales coal to China and then loaded tea and silk to carry back to Britain. The clipper Thermopylae was one of the ships that sailed this triangular route. When steamships became fuel ...

  8. Merchant's Hope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merchant's_Hope

    Coordinates: 37.266025°N 77.202574°W. Merchant's Hope was the name of a plantation and church established in the Virginia Colony in the 17th century. It was also the name of an English sailing ship, Merchant's Hope, which plied the Atlantic bringing emigrants to Virginia in the early 17th-century. The Merchant's Hope was owned by a man named ...

  9. SS United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_United_States

    SS. United States. SS United States is a retired ocean liner built during 1950 and 1951 for United States Lines. She is the largest ocean liner constructed entirely in the United States and the fastest ocean liner to cross the Atlantic in either direction, retaining the Blue Riband for the highest average speed since her maiden voyage in 1952 ...