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The Coquette was a 19th-century yacht and pilot boat, built in 1845 by Louis Winde, at the Winde & Clinkard shipyard in Chelsea, Massachusetts for yachtsmen James A. Perkins. Her design was based on a model by shipbuilder Dennison J. Lawlor. The Coquette was a good example of an early American yacht with a clipper bow. As a yacht, she won the attention for outsailing the larger New York yacht Maria at the second New York Yacht Club regatta in 1846. Perkins sold the Coquette to the Boston Pilots' Association for pilot service in 1848. She continued as a pilot boat until 1867 when she was sold as a Blackbirder to be used on the African coast.

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rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Coquette (pilot boat) (en)
rdfs:comment
  • The Coquette was a 19th-century yacht and pilot boat, built in 1845 by Louis Winde, at the Winde & Clinkard shipyard in Chelsea, Massachusetts for yachtsmen James A. Perkins. Her design was based on a model by shipbuilder Dennison J. Lawlor. The Coquette was a good example of an early American yacht with a clipper bow. As a yacht, she won the attention for outsailing the larger New York yacht Maria at the second New York Yacht Club regatta in 1846. Perkins sold the Coquette to the Boston Pilots' Association for pilot service in 1848. She continued as a pilot boat until 1867 when she was sold as a Blackbirder to be used on the African coast. (en)
foaf:name
  • Coquette (en)
foaf:depiction
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Coquette_Yacht.jpg
dcterms:subject
Wikipage page ID
Wikipage revision ID
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
sameAs
Ship operator
  • Elbridge Gerry Martin (en)
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
thumbnail
Ship sail plan
  • * mainmast * foremast (en)
Ship builder
  • Louis Winde (en)
Ship caption
  • The Coquette, Yacht and Pilot Boat, painted by C. Drew. (en)
Ship class
Ship country
  • United States (en)
Ship image
  • Coquette Yacht.jpg (en)
Ship launched
Ship name
  • Coquette (en)
Ship namesake
  • bark Coquette (en)
Ship notes
  • Two staterooms, six berths, cook room, water-tanks, closets; four berths in the forecastle (en)
Ship out of service
Ship owner
  • James A. Perkins, a yachtsmen (en)
Ship propulsion
  • Sail (en)
Ship tonnage
has abstract
  • The Coquette was a 19th-century yacht and pilot boat, built in 1845 by Louis Winde, at the Winde & Clinkard shipyard in Chelsea, Massachusetts for yachtsmen James A. Perkins. Her design was based on a model by shipbuilder Dennison J. Lawlor. The Coquette was a good example of an early American yacht with a clipper bow. As a yacht, she won the attention for outsailing the larger New York yacht Maria at the second New York Yacht Club regatta in 1846. Perkins sold the Coquette to the Boston Pilots' Association for pilot service in 1848. She continued as a pilot boat until 1867 when she was sold as a Blackbirder to be used on the African coast. (en)
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