Eliza Stewart (ship)

The Eliza Stewart was a sailing ship built in 1833.[1]

History

In 1841 a group of passengers who had sailed from London to Australia on the ship published a letter in The Sydney Morning Herald thanking Captain Robert Millar for his "polite, kind and gentlemanly conduct" to them on the voyage and noting the "very liberal manner in which we were provided and our comforts attended to whilst on board his ship", and thanking Messrs Phillips and Tiplady as charterers of the ship.[2]

William Clark (1803-1883), a Scottish artist specialising in ships, painted The Eliza Stewart Under Reduced Sail in the Channel.[3] This was offered for sail at Christie's auctioneers in 2013, but described as being of a ship built in 1845 in Gloucestershire for a Greenock firm.[4]

References

  1. "Eliza Stewart", The Clyde Built Ships.
  2. "The Ship Eliza Stewart". The Sydney Morning Herald. 29 March 1841. Retrieved 21 July 2016.
  3. "The Eliza Stewart Under Reduced Sail in the Channel". Fine Art America. Retrieved 21 July 2016. includes image of the painting
  4. "William Clark (Greenock 1803-1883) The Eliza Stewart Under Reduced Sail in the Channel off the Eddystone Lighthouse". Sale 9679. Christie's. Retrieved 21 July 2016. includes image of the painting
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