Hubbry Logo
search
logo
1870200

Viking (barque)

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers
Write something...
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
See all
Viking (barque)

Viking, (Barken Viking in Swedish ("the barque Viking")), is a four-masted steel barque, built in 1906 by Burmeister & Wain in Copenhagen, Denmark. She is reported to be the biggest sailing ship ever built in the Nordic countries. In the 21st century her sailing days have drawn to a close, and she is now moored as a floating hotel in Gothenburg, Sweden.

By the turn of the 20th century, ship production had almost completely switched to steamships. However, sailing ships were still preferred for crew training. Viking was originally built as a sail training ship for the rapidly growing Danish merchant fleet. At that time, seaworthiness and cargo capacity were given top priority. The ship was launched on December 1, 1906, and was christened Viking in the traditional manner by the Crown Princess, later Queen Alexandrine, of Denmark.

In July 1909, Captain Niels Clausen logged the ship's top speed of 15.5 knots (28.7 km/h; 17.8 mph) at the Roaring Forties, i.e. latitude 40°-50°, with daily distances of 250-275 nautical miles.[citation needed] She was then on her way home fully loaded with wheat from Port Pirie on Spencer Gulf in South Australia.

On 25 February 1917, she was sighted and boarded by the German commerce raider Seeadler. Unusually, the Germans then allowed her to proceed because being Danish, she was a neutral ship. This was something of a lucky escape, because within weeks Germany would return to unrestricted marine warfare, a policy that would have meant the ship's definite sinking.

In 1929, the Åland shipowner Gustaf Erikson bought the ship for £6,500, which then sailed under the Finnish flag. She was now part of his Åland fleet of tall ships. Erikson had a worldwide reputation as a great sailor. In 1931, Viking was fitted out for passengers, who could join the voyages for 25 shillings per person per day.

After several circumnavigations, Viking unloaded her cargo of wheat in Cardiff in the summer of 1939 and then sailed to her home port of Mariehamn, which she entered on July 14. She was then fitted out for her next long voyage, but World War II meant that she remained in port for several years. Viking was towed, along with Passat and Pommern, to Stockholm in July 1944 to be used as a grain silo for the Swedish State Food Commission. In December the following year they were returned to Åland.

She participated in several of the Great Grain Races from Port Victoria, South Australia to Falmouth, Cornwall. Viking won the Grain Race of 1948. David James was an apprentice on her voyage around the world in 1937–38, which is described in his biography. David Robb Muirhead (1921–78) wrote a diary and took photos of his voyage on the Viking as a working passenger in 1948, which records are held in the State Library of South Australia.

She was part of Erikson's fleet until 1950. Viking was about to be scrapped in the late 1940s, but was eventually saved by the Swedish government in 1950 and moored in Gothenburg.

See all
User Avatar
No comments yet.