Maine and the Sea: 50 Years of Collecting at Maine Maritime Museum

Explore highlights from the 21,500 objects in the museum's collection

By Maine Maritime Museum

Excerpts from 50 Years of Collection at the Maine Maritime Museum

Wyoming on the Ways (2007) by Krupinski, LorettaMaine Maritime Museum

Wyoming on the Ways

In honor of Maine Maritime Museum's 50th Anniversary, Curator Emeritus Nathan R. Lipfert and Trustee Emeritus Charles E. Burden gathered together one hundred of the museum's most significant objects for a 2012 exhibition and corresponding catalogue. We have selected paintings from that exhibit to share with you here. Included are excerpts from Lipfert and Burden that detail how these objects came to Maine Maritime Museum. This selection represents some of the highlights of the over 21,500 objects in Maine Maritime Museum's collection.

Ship MINERVA Under Sail (1810)Maine Maritime Museum

Ship Minerva

Measuring only 76 feet in length, Minerva was the next-to-smallest registered vessel built in Bath in the year 1805. Her captain, John Matthews, apparently thought enough of his brig to have her portrait painted and now, over 200 years later, this is the earliest Bath vessel for which there is any painting known. The style is not unlike that of North Sea area artists of that period. An early enthusiast of the Museum was Charles Morgan, an outstanding maritime history expert. One day when attending a party at the home of his next door neighbor in Concord, Massachusetts, he noticed this watercolor hanging on the wall, realized its significance, and convinced his neighbor to donate it.

Portrait of Captain Moses Owen of Bath, Maine (1822) by Peale, JamesMaine Maritime Museum

Portrait of Captain Moses Owen

Captain Moses Owen was part owner of a number of vessels built by Levi Houghton and commanded several of them. He was born in Topsham, Maine, about 1783, and had apparently risen to the level of mate by 1806. At that time he acquired a quadrant, a pilot book, and a blank journal and undertook studying the art of navigation. He is listed as captain of a number of Kennebec vessels over the next few years.  In 1819 Moses Owen became first captain of the first Houghton vessel, Bolton. He made several passages between the Azores and Philadelphia between 1820 and 1822 and sat for this portrait during a layover at the latter port. The artist, James Peale (1749-1831), was a member of a prominent family of Philadelphia artists. He specialized in miniatures through the 1790s and early 1800s, but with some weakening of his vision he turned to painting large portraits and still-lifes by the time he executed this painting of Capt. Moses Owen. This portrait was purchased by the museum with funds donated by Elizabeth Noyce.

Ship CLARISSA ANN Approaching Le Havre (c. 1830) by Louis Gamain?Maine Maritime Museum

Brig Clarissa Ann Entering Le Havre

The Brig Clarissa Ann was built in Bath in 1824 in the shipyard of Levi Houghton. Clarissa Ann was the third vessel credited to the Houghton shipyard and was registered as owned by her builder and her first master, Capt. Moses Owen. According to Custom House records, she was rigged as a brig, was nearly 100 feet in length and 25 feet breadth, and had a bust of a woman for a figurehead. This remarkable painting of the brig Clarissa Ann was done in Le Havre, France, fairly soon after she first went to sea. Note the accurate rendition of the figurehead attached to her bow. Donated by the great-great-grandson of her builder.

Clipper Ship WARNER Rounding Cape Horn (1851) by Buttersworth, James EdwardMaine Maritime Museum

Clipper Ship Warner Rounding Cape Horn

This clipper was built in 1851 at South Portland, Maine, by Alford Butler, the same yard that built Snow Squall a few months earlier. Painted by James Edward Buttersworth around 1852, this painting differs from many ship portraits, which often represent the same vessel as seen from different points of view. In this case, however, the details of the two ships are different, and the painting is almost certainly made to document the chance close encounter of two ships in mountainous seas off Cape Horn. The crew on watch aboard each vessel can be seen grouped forward of the foremast (a common place of shelter for the watch), regarding the other vessel. Of more than 20,000 vessels built in Maine, only 89 are believed to have been true clippers – sailing vessels of extreme design built for speed. Paintings of them are so rare that when this one became available through Terry Geaghan, a local dealer in ship paintings, even though the price was high, we asked benefactor Betty Noyce to buy it for us. And she did.  

Clipper Ship DICTATOR in a Typhoon (c. 1860s)Maine Maritime Museum

Clipper Ship Dictator in a Typhoon in the China Sea

This is a rare picture of a Maine clipper, one of only 89 such vessels built in the state. Dictator was built in 1855 way down east at Robbinston, Maine, by James W. Cox. After being owned briefly by William and Samuel Train of Medford, Massachusetts, she passed into the ownership of Charles Green of New York, the owner of the clipper Snow Squall (now partly preserved at this Museum). Green ran her in trade to Asia until April 1863, when she was captured and burned by the Confederate cruiser CSS Georgia, off the coast of Africa. This canvas bears the stamp of an artist supply shop in San Francisco during the 1860s, and the painting was likely made during that time. Donor Ronald Bancroft was a trustee of the Museum from 1985 to 1991. He purchased this painting in 1986 from a dealer in Dedham, MA, researched the ship, and displayed the painting in his home for many years. In 2007, in the process of down-sizing, he and his wife Sara donated the painting to the Museum.

Ship LEONORA at Guano Islands (c. 1869)Maine Maritime Museum

Ship Leonora at Macabi Islands

The painting of the ship Leonora shows her at the Macabi Islands. Like the well known Chinchas Islands 450 miles to the southwes, ocean currents there are particularly favorable for a high yield of fish and they experience miniscule amounts of rainfall year-round. Seabirds abound, snapping up the fish and defecating as they fly over the islands. After hundreds of years with no rain to wash away the drying excrement, the product piled up, a couple hundred feet high. Once its great value as a fertilizer was realized, this product, called guano, became a worthwhile cargo for vessels to carry around Cape Horn to ports in Europe and the Eastern United States. Guano was a miserable cargo to obtain and load. The Peruvian government was difficult to deal with; the guano was mined by harshly-treated workers from China who were lured there by promises of riches; there were long waits before a ship’s turn to load; and the vessels were inundated with the pungent dust of dried bird droppings during loading. But when a vessel had no other paying cargo available to carry on a return trip from the West Coast it was better than nothing. The ship Leonora, 1,500 tons register, was built in Belfast, Maine in 1869, and sold foreign in 1885. When this portrait by an unknown artist of the vessel at the Macabi Islands came up at auction, I had to have it to give to MMM. Displayable objects of the disgusting yet major guano trade are rare and a prize like this should be important in future exhibits. There is at least one other known portrait of a ship, a Thomaston vessel, with the same background.

Ship Samaria Under Full Sail (1888) by Mohrmann, John HenryMaine Maritime Museum

Ship Samaria

The Samaria was built in Bath by Houghton Brothers in 1876 and was engaged primarily in the Cape Horn Trade. Sold 20 years later to a San Francisco ship owner to be used in the Pacific coal trade, she departed Seattle in March of 1897 and went missing. This stunning painting is signed by the artist, John Henry Mohrmann (1857-1915). Mohrmann was born in the United States but spent most of his life doing ship portraits out of Antwerp, Belgium. This was one of seven important paintings of Houghton vessels donated in 1973 by a Houghton descendent.

Dory City of Bath in Storm (1881) by Grandin, EugeneMaine Maritime Museum

Transatlantic Dory City of Bath

Ivar Olsen, a native Scandanavian, and John Traynor, a 25-year-old seaman from Maine, crossed the Atlantic in a small dory on built at a Georgetown, Maine boatshop. They left Bath on July 5, 1881, in their boat which they named City of Bath, only 14 feet long, five feet wide, and 21 inches deep. After 55 days at sea with near fatal incidents, they arrived in Falmouth, England. They departed a couple of days later for Le Havre, France, and made arrangements for a series of one- and two-month-long exhibitions in Paris, Barcelona and other European cities. It was at Le Havre that Eugene Grandin painted this image of one of the intrepid sailors’ crossing events. Clifford N. Carver purchased the painting from a dealer in France 75 years later and donated to Penobscot Marine Museum in Searsport, Maine. They traded it to Maine Maritime Museum for a Penobscot vessel painting which had been donated for the purpose of the trade, and a group of food containers.

Ship S.S. WINIFRED (1902) by Jacobsen, AntonioMaine Maritime Museum

Tramp Freighter Winifred

The largest vessel built in Bath up until that time, the 5,250-ton Winifred was built in 1898 by Bath Iron Works for a New York firm. Failure to meet contract speed led to a successful lawsuit against BIW, unfortunately. Still, the Winifred was the first American-built steel tramp steamer, that is, employed in carrying cargoes from and to wherever a profit could be made rather than running on a regular route. Painted by Antonio Jacobsen, probably the most prolific of American steamship portrait painters, who had a studio in New York, but used a Hoboken N. J. address on his ship portraits. Bath Iron Works Corporation donated the painting to the museum in 1988.

Ship DIRIGO Off Sydney Heads (1903) by Edgar, WilliamMaine Maritime Museum

Four-Mast Bark Dirigo Off Sydney Heads

Arthur Sewall & Company built eight steel four-mast barks rigged like the Dirigo, the first five for themselves, the remaining three for Standard Oil. Dirigo, meaning “I lead” in Latin, is the motto for the state of Maine and was selected as the name for the first of these, the first steel sailing vessel built in the United States. This painting of Dirigo, by William Edgar, was painted in Sydney in 1903. All of these vessels frequently carried kerosene in cased cans (case oil), often around Cape Horn and across the Pacific to Asia. This painting was loaned to the Museum in 1964 by Dorothy Sewall Jayne, daughter of William D. Sewall, partner in Arthur Sewall & Company. She was given it at one of the divisions of Sewall shipyard artifacts, probably at the time of the sale of York Hall, the William D. Sewall residence, about 1947. In 1991 the painting was donated by her children, Pamela Miller and Kennon Jayne.

Report Me All Well (1933) by Patterson, Charles RobertMaine Maritime Museum

“Report Me All Well,” Ship W. R. Grace

This three-decked ship was built at Bath, Maine, in 1873 by
John McDonald for Chapman & Flint, a partnership of Mainers who had moved
to the New York area. She was named for William Russell Grace,
head of a New York firm that had its origins in the Peruvian guano-carrying
trade and still exists today. W. R. Grace
was built for the California trade, mainly carrying grain, and followed that
trade until being lost in a hurricane in 1889. Sailor-painter Charles Robert Patterson painted this mural
for Grace Line passenger/freight liner Santa
Elena in 1932-1933, just before he painted the Henry B. Hyde series. This mural was removed from the
liner at the outbreak of World War II and later modified for use in the Grace
National Bank of New York. The ship is shown northbound in the Pacific, passing
another vessel. In the days before radio it was common for vessels passing
closely at sea to identify themselves and ask to be reported, not knowing which
vessel would make port first. The Grace
has hoisted the signal flags BQD, meaning “report me all well.” In
1999, acting on the suggestion of Museum volunteer Bob Niles (a former Grace
employee), then-curator Robert Lloyd Webb contacted W.R. Grace & Company to
inquire about the existence and future of this painting. It happened that the
painting was displayed in the corporate headquarters in Florida. However, the
company was moving to a new building and staff had been wondering what to do
with the painting, which was too tall for the new space. They solved the
problem by shipping the painting to Maine.

Flying "BQD" signal flags meant that the W. R. Grace was all well, according to the Commercial Code.

This passing ship would report the W. R. Grace as all well at its next port.

Percy and Small Shipyard, Bath, Maine (1974) by Gray, R. ValentineMaine Maritime Museum

Percy & Small Shipyard

In 1968, L.M.C. and Eleanor H. Smith purchased the Percy & Small shipyard in Bath, Maine, the only nearly intact yard in the United States to have built large wooden sailing vessels. They bought it to hold for the Museum, intending at first to sell it at cost, but eventually very generously donating it. A museum trustee commissioned this three-dimensional painting of the shipyard from local artist R. Valentine Gray (1923-2001). Gray was a commercial artist working in New York when he and his wife moved to Maine in 1971 to get out of the “rat-race.” Appreciating weathered wood, he had begun to use it in his three-dimensional paintings of old boats and buildings. And, indeed, the wooden portions of this painting of Percy & Small consist of weathered pieces of the shipyard buildings retrieved at that time. The artwork gives a perfect sense of the atmosphere of this group of buildings at the time the Museum first acquired them.

Launching of the USS Mason (DDG-87) (2003) by Gable, JohnMaine Maritime Museum

Launching of the U.S.S. Mason

U.S.S. Mason, DDG-87, is an Arleigh Burke-Class AEGIS destroyer, the 21st such destroyer to be built at Bath Iron Works, a General Dynamics Company. On June 23, 2001, the Mason became the last BIW ship to slide down inclined ways into the water, ending a Bath shipbuilding tradition going back more than 250 years. Every vessel since then has been launched using BIW’s floating drydock. This guided missile destroyer has seen a number of deployments to the Persian Gulf in support of the Iraqi War, the war on terrorism, and American interests in the Arab Spring. Artist John Gable attended the launching, seeing it from the point of view of the Carlton Bridge across the Kennebec River. Many people were aware of the significance of the launching, and attendance was high, despite the cool, cloudy June weather. Mr. Gable was inspired to make this large painting over the next couple years. With his help, that of BIW, and especially that of the late Crispin Connery, the painting was acquired for the Museum.

The Henry B. Hyde entering the Golden Gate (1933) by Patterson, Charles RobertMaine Maritime Museum

Charles Robert Patterson's Henry B. Hyde Series

The following is a group of four paintings done on commission by Charles Robert Patterson for John H. Hyde’s Elmhurst mansion in Bath, Maine, in 1933. All four depict the maiden voyage to San Francisco of the big 1884 down-easter Henry B. Hyde. John Hyde’s family founded Bath Iron Works, the shipyard still operating in Bath today, although they did not build or own the Henry B. Hyde, nor were they related to Henry B. Hyde of New York, founder of the Equitable Life Insurance Company. We are not quite sure what attracted them to this vessel, although the Hyde was much admired in her day as a well-designed, well-built, and profitable Bath-built ship.  When the Hyde family sold Elmhurst in the mid-20th century, these four paintings were kept in the family, split up among family members. Each individual painting was donated separately between the 1990's and 2010's. We are happy that all four can be displayed together again.

Ship Henry B. Hyde off Seguin Island, Maine (1933) by Patterson, Charles RobertMaine Maritime Museum

Henry B. Hyde off Seguin Island, Maine

The Ship Henry B. Hyde in the North East Trade Winds off the Coast of South America (1933) by Patterson, Charles RobertMaine Maritime Museum

Henry B. Hyde in North East Trade Winds off Coast of South America

Ship Henry B. Hyde Rounding Cape Horn Western Passage (1933) by Patterson, Charles RobertMaine Maritime Museum

Ship Henry B. Hyde rounding Cape Horn

The Henry B. Hyde entering the Golden Gate (1933) by Patterson, Charles RobertMaine Maritime Museum

Ship Henry B. Hyde entering the Golden Gate

Credits: Story

Based on exhibit catalogue Maine and the Sea by Curator Emeritus Nathan R. Lipfert and Trustee Emeritus Charles E. Burden. Original Exhibit ran November 10, 2012 to May 27, 2013.

Google Arts and Culture exhibit was curated by Elizabeth Beaudoin and Paul Fuller.

With thanks to an anonymous donor for their support in acquiring photographic equipment.

With special thanks to donors of the original publication:
Lewis P. and Susan K. Cabot, and Timothy and Maren Robinson

And others for their financial support:
Jennifer and Bill Bunting
Adam Patten Burden and Allison B. Burden
Charles E. Burden, M.D.
Daniel and Elisa Burden
Ben Fuller
William Gemmill
Peter and Mabel Gerquest
Philip H. Haselton
Amory and Joan Houghton
James and Anne Hunt
Capts. Douglas K. & Linda J. Lee
Amy and Bill Lent
Nathan and Janine Lipfert
Kenneth R. Martin
Jim Millinger
Jane P. Morse
Barbara S. Rumsey
Ralph L. Snow

Original Exhibit sponsors:
Bath Savings Institution
Anonymous Foundation
Davenport Trust Fund
Bath Iron Works, a General Dynamics Company
Walt and Betsy Cantrell
John H. Staples
Ingrid and Henry Thomas
Elena P. Vandervoort
David and Sandy Weiss

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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