Some ships of the clipper ship era, their builders, owners, and captains; . rough their captains, their builders, ortheir owners. The pamphlet does not purpose to be more thanan outline presentation of the subject that has been so fully coveredby Captain Arthur H. Clark in his book on Clipper Ships and byothers. The Company desires to acknowledge its indebtedness to , T. Howe, whose exhaustive study of the clipper ship era wasplaced freely at its disposal, as well as to the Clipper Ship Eraby Captain Arthur H. Clark. Thanks are also due for theirassistance in the preparation of this book o
Some ships of the clipper ship era, their builders, owners, and captains; . rough their captains, their builders, ortheir owners. The pamphlet does not purpose to be more thanan outline presentation of the subject that has been so fully coveredby Captain Arthur H. Clark in his book on Clipper Ships and byothers. The Company desires to acknowledge its indebtedness to , T. Howe, whose exhaustive study of the clipper ship era wasplaced freely at its disposal, as well as to the Clipper Ship Eraby Captain Arthur H. Clark. Thanks are also due for theirassistance in the preparation of this book or for permission tophotograph paintings or prints in their possession to Charles , Jr., the heirs of William F. Weld and William G. Weld,Louis Bacon, C. M. Baker, C. H. Millett, B. B. Crowninshield,Captain Horace N. Berry, Senior Port Warden of Boston, FrankCousins, Richard Martin, A. W. Longfellow, Portsmouth Athe-naeum, Portsmouth, , George H. Allen, Captain SylvanusNickerson, Lawrence W. Jenkins, of the Peabody Museum, and tothe Bostonian Society. 102ri97Q.
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Keywords: ., bookauthorstatestr, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1913