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Ariel Patterson, (September 1807 – 23 April 1877) was a 19th-century American shipbuilder. He apprenticed under shipbuilder Perrine, Patterson, and Stack in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Patterson had his own shipyard, building and designing for 40 years some of the finest steamships. The most notable were the steamer Ericsson, which had the first Hot air engine invented by John Ericsson and the three-masted side-wheel SS Yankee Blade, one of the first steamships to trade between to New York and San Francisco. In 1863, Patterson bought property at the foot of North Third Street, where he started a shipbuilding, dockage and a sawing and planing mill. He died in Brooklyn, New York in 1877.

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  • Ariel Patterson (en)
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  • Ariel Patterson, (September 1807 – 23 April 1877) was a 19th-century American shipbuilder. He apprenticed under shipbuilder Perrine, Patterson, and Stack in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Patterson had his own shipyard, building and designing for 40 years some of the finest steamships. The most notable were the steamer Ericsson, which had the first Hot air engine invented by John Ericsson and the three-masted side-wheel SS Yankee Blade, one of the first steamships to trade between to New York and San Francisco. In 1863, Patterson bought property at the foot of North Third Street, where he started a shipbuilding, dockage and a sawing and planing mill. He died in Brooklyn, New York in 1877. (en)
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  • Ariel Patterson shipbuilder (en)
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  • Ariel Patterson shipbuilder (en)
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  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Wide_Awake.png
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Ariel_Patterson_advertisement_1865.jpg
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Sub_Marine_Explorer_Wreck.jpg
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Ericsson_(ship).png
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  • Chelsea, Massachusetts, US (en)
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  • Ariel Patterson shipbuilding advertisement, 1865. (en)
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  • Helen Ayres (en)
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  • Ariel Patterson, (September 1807 – 23 April 1877) was a 19th-century American shipbuilder. He apprenticed under shipbuilder Perrine, Patterson, and Stack in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Patterson had his own shipyard, building and designing for 40 years some of the finest steamships. The most notable were the steamer Ericsson, which had the first Hot air engine invented by John Ericsson and the three-masted side-wheel SS Yankee Blade, one of the first steamships to trade between to New York and San Francisco. In 1863, Patterson bought property at the foot of North Third Street, where he started a shipbuilding, dockage and a sawing and planing mill. He died in Brooklyn, New York in 1877. (en)
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