
This volume traces the birth and growth of the United States’ commercial fleet, beginning with the modest thirty‑ton pinnace Virginia launched on the Kennebec River in 1607. It places that first vessel within the wider context of the Atlantic cod fishery that drew European mariners to the harsh waters of Newfoundland for centuries. Through concise narrative and striking period illustrations, the book shows how early shipbuilding laid the groundwork for a new nation’s maritime identity.
The author paints a vivid picture of the daring fishermen who braved the “roaring forties,” black fogs, icebergs and relentless storms to harvest the cod banks. Their lives were marked by brutal discipline, cramped quarters, and constant danger, yet cooperation often crossed national rivalries as English, French, Spanish and Portuguese crews rescued one another in peril. These stories reveal the grit and resourcefulness that forged the character of America’s first seafarers.
From these rugged beginnings the account moves forward, following the evolution from wooden hulls to the sleek clipper ships and the first steel‑built vessels of the nineteenth century. Along the way, readers encounter landmark ships, pioneering engineers and the shifting technologies that transformed trade routes. The narrative remains anchored in the human experience of those who sailed, built, and kept America’s commerce thriving on the high seas.
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (496K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2016-09-22
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1850–1936
A newspaper reporter turned popular historian, he wrote vivid books about sailors, frontier life, and the growth of the United States. His work blends a journalist’s eye for detail with a storyteller’s sense of adventure.
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