Current articles in this section:

  1. Firing Up the Kiln

  2. Ordinarie Technology

  3. Notes on a Shallop

  4. Archaeology at Plimoth Plantation: Key to the Past

  5. Maritime Programs at Plimoth Plantation

  6. Recreating the Material Culture of Mayflower II

  7. Documenting Mayflower II

  8. Hands Across the Bay: A 1957 Crewmember Sails Again

  9. A New Furnace for Mayflower II

  10. The Story and Crew of 1957's Mayflower II

  11. Why P-l-i-m-o-t-h?

Notes on a Shallop

by Peter Arenstam, Manager, Maritime Artisans

Building the Elizabeth Tilley

In 1626 an “ingenious man that was a house carpenter” as described by William Bradford in his history of Plymouth Colony, sawed in half one of the larger shallops. He lengthened the vessel five or six feet, raised the side planking some, and laid a deck on her. In this way the colonists were able to keep goods, and themselves, safe as they transported corn to trade with Native People up the Kennebec River in Maine. Presumably, as an assistant to the governor, John Howland was one of the number involved in these ventures.

In the spring of 2000, the president of the Pilgrim John Howland Society approached me about building a replica of the decked vessel John Howland sailed in to the trading post in Maine. The society’s plan was to have a shallop built, launch it in Plymouth harbor, and after a suitable period of sea trials head off to Maine, re-creating one of the trips their Pilgrim ancestor made. We came to an agreement on the price and a time frame in which the boat would be built. After the excitement of landing such a unique and challenging project died away, the Maritime Artisans staff was left with two daunting questions. What did a lengthened and decked over shallop look like? And how would we build it?

William Baker, designer of the shallop exhibited next to Mayflower II in Plymouth harbor, compiled a great deal of research regarding the characteristics of the 17th-century boat type. His work lead him to the conclusion that in most cases a shallop was an open rowing and sailing vessel built to carry cargo, used for fishing, or just traveling on the water. This variety of employment meant a shallop could be either constructed with large frames and thick planking able to withstand rugged use or lightly planked and sparsely framed for increased speed under oars.

Images of shallops can be found in many period illustrations of port scenes, fishing communities and views of river traffic. The type was common to many European countries. From the Dutch sloep, the French chaloupe, the Portuguese chalupa, to the German schlup Baker notes the English shallop shared an ancestry with all these vessels.1

The individual characteristics of a shallop could vary as widely from country to country as the spelling of its name. For example, a chalupa from 1565 recovered from a Basque whaling station in Red Bay Labrador was built with carvel or smooth planking on the bottom, and lapstrake, or overlapping planks, on the topsides. It had two masts likely rigged with square sails and was double ended (pointed at both ends).2 Another shallop, a Dutch sloep, is described in 1671 as being built entirely of lapstrake construction with no sailing rig and a transom stern, (pointed in the front and flat in the back.)3

Decked-over shallops are mentioned in colonial records. In Baker’s Sloops & Shallops, he notes in 1632 a fur trader’s shallop from Maryland, the Firefly, was decked for half her length to protect trade goods.4 Fishermen in Marblehead, MA added a partial deck to a shallop in 1670 and made use of the protection the deck provided by installing a chimney in one of the resulting “rooms.”5

Besides being used independently, a shallop was often employed as a tender to another vessel; sometimes it retrieved anchors or other heavy objects or as a means of transportation among a fleet sailing in company. A shallop would be taken aboard the larger vessels when they sailed on voyages to the New World. It could be broken down into pieces and stowed below decks until needed for traveling along the coast. Captain John Smith’s chaloupe en fagot, used to explore the Chesapeake in 1607, was one such boat. The shallop that the Pilgrims brought with them on the Mayflower in 1620 was another. Governor Bradford describes the stowing of the shallop:

They having brought a large shallop with them out of England, stowed in quarters in the ship, they now got her out and set their carpenters to work to trim her up; but being much bruised and shattered in the ship with foul weather, they saw she would be long in mending.6

The 16 to 17 days the carpenter spent rebuilding and refurbishing the shallop was the beginning of the colony’s boat building efforts. Also during that time men were employed in sawing out planks for a new shallop.7 In the very first days the colonists recognized the importance of acquiring vessels for transportation.

In 1623 a small vessel, the Little James, arrived in Plymouth. The 44-tun vessel had been built in England especially to support the colony’s maritime activities. However, the vessel suffered from a series of unfortunate occurrences and remained with the colony for only two years. On returning from a lack-luster trading voyage to the Narragansetts the vessel ran afoul of Brown’s Bank during a storm and lost its main mast.8 The next season, on a fishing voyage while at Damariscove Island in Maine, a storm “drove her against great rocks, which beat such a hole in her bilge as a horse and cart might have gone in.”9 The Little James was raised and repaired. In 1625 she was loaded with trade goods and sent back to England. Just as she was reaching the English Channel pirates took her and sold off the goods.10

The same year the Little James arrived, a boat builder was sent to Plymouth to bolster the small collection of boats the colony owned. Although he was only in the colony for less than a year, he was able, with the help of some of the colonists, to build two strong shallops, a lighter, (a kind of barge), and hewed out timbers for two ketches. After all that labor, Bradford relates the boat builder "fell into a fever in the hot season of the year, and though he had the best means the place could afford, yet he died."11

After the ill fated Little James was sent back to England in 1625 with its hold full of trade goods, the colonists were left with the two shallops that the boat builder had built the previous year. One of the shallops was used in an attempt to generate revenue for the colony. They laid a little deck over the midships section to protect a cargo of corn, and Edward Winslow, among others, used it for a successful trading voyage to the Kennebec.12

Even with the little deck on the shallop, the colonists felt they ran a great hazard in traveling such a long way in basically an open boat. They realized the need for a larger vessel to safely continue trading in Maine. But as the boat builder had died the previous year, it was left to a house carpenter, who had worked with the boat builder, to attempt to modify one of their shallops. The house carpenter "took one of the biggest of their shallops and sawed her in the middle, and so built her up and laid a deck on her." This vessel, Bradford reports, provided good service to the colony for seven years.13

It is this vessel that we recently replicated for the Howland Society. Fortunately, no one fell down dead after completing the project and we hope that the shallop will last more than seven years!

Since the shallop Plimoth Plantation Inc. owns is not available to be sawn in half, and it did not make sense to saw in half a newly-built boat, we settled on building a larger version of the 33' shallop William Baker designed in 1957. However it is not enough just to add five or six feet to the middle of the Baker shallop design as the resulting vessel would be too narrow for its length to be safe. Also, Bradford relates the house carpenter, along with adding length and a deck, raised the sides making it a larger vessel all around. These modifications led us to believe the best way to proceed was to use the 17th-century system of naval architecture and draft a larger vessel that would reflect the additions the house carpenter incorporated in 1626.

It is commonly assumed the 17th-century boat builder relied on inherited information and that he designed and built boats “by eye.” While experience passed from one generation to the next was important, the builder had access to a system of naval architecture known as whole moulding. Howard Chapelle relates in his book, American Small Sailing Craft, that this system was used well before 1600 and continued until the end of the 18th century and is related to the system for ship design written about by Mathew Baker in 1586.14

Mathew Baker was a master shipwright during Queen Elizabeth I’s reign. His work, Fragments of Ancient ShipWrightery, spells out the geometrical and mathematical principles of using arcs of circles either individually or in combination with other arcs and straight lines to describe the lines of ships. Along with other lines used to control the emerging shape the shipwright could, once the principle dimensions of keel length, breadth and depth of the ship were given by the owner, produce a set of drawings from which the ship was built.

In A Treatise on Shipbuilding written between 1620 and 1625 the unknown author explained in a step-by-step fashion the process of designing a ship. There were rules to determine the size and locations of all the timbers and the proportions applied to the design. This work is believed to be related to if not copied from Baker’s Fragments.

The process of designing in this period started with drawing out the shape of the backbone, that is, the stem, keel and sternpost. Next, two sets of lines known as rising and narrowing lines were drawn. They were all based on arcs of circles with varying radii and were used to determine the shape of the vessel at each frame location or station. One set of these lines dictated how wide and how high the floor of the frame is from the keel. Another set of lines determined how wide and how high the beam of the vessel is at each station. In a ship there could be as many as four or five different arcs of circles connected to make a frame shape. The frames for a boat could be designed with as few as one or two arcs.

The drawing that displays all the frame shapes is called the body plan. In the whole moulding process once the designer has determined the mid-ship, or largest frame, he can use a pattern of it to determine and draw out the shape of all the other frames in the boat. Determining the mid-ship frame is the key to the whole process. That shape can be found either mathematically or as William Sutherland in The Ship Builder’s Assistant, or Marine Architecture, written in 1794, suggests:

…the sweeps can be formed; if by no other means, by repeated trials till they are made to please the fancy and judgment of the artist…Though several ships may be made of the same breadth, depth in the hold and dead rising they may all differ in the form of their timbers.15

We followed the process laid out by these texts in drawing the Howland shallop. The principal dimensions are predetermined. The length is 38’ (33’ shallop sawed in half and five feet added). The beam of 10’4” and the depth amidships, 4’6”, are based on a rule of proportion from the Treatise on Shipbuilding. These figures are also within the range of known dimensions of shallops from the 17th century.

The stem, sternpost and keel were laid out on paper then the rising and narrowing lines, based on the lines from Plimoth Plantation’s shallop, were drawn in. It is at this point the art and science of the 17th-century designer comes together. We experimented with a number of arcs of circles that would sweep through the given points and appeared to give us a shape that looked correct for the mid-ship frame. We made a number of paper templates and compared them to lines of 17th-century shallops. When we were satisfied with the shape it was drawn in and a template made out of thin Plexiglas. This template was used as the 17th-century boat builder would have used his pattern to draw in the remaining frame shapes.

With a drawing in hand we could finally begin building the shallop. But there are more questions that needed, if not answers, then at least some exploration. The primary one is the sequence in which the boat is to be built. As in drawing the vessel the first step is to build the stem, sternpost and keel, connect them all together and set them up on building stocks. At this point there are a number of options on how to proceed.

Dr. Basil Greenhill explores the different methods of building in his book, The Archaeology of Boats and Ships. He claims there are two great categories into which vessels of western history fall. There are boats whose planks are joined edge to edge and usually, but not always, to strengthening frame timbers inside the shell of planking; there are also vessels which are built of planks not joined together, but only to frames.16

The edge-fastened plank boat is constructed by building the shell of the vessel then fitting in frames to the completed structure. The other method is to create the skeleton or internal structure first and then fit planking to the outside. Of course, there are exceptions to these methods and long periods when parts of both traditions are used to build a single vessel. Greenhill sites the “Dutch” method of temporarily edge-fastening the bottom planks of a vessel into a shell, then adding frames for the topside to which more planks are added as an example of a hybrid system.17 The vessel whose remains are in Pilgrim Hall Museum in Plymouth, MA is believed to be constructed in a hybrid fashion.18

Another example of a hybrid method can be seen in the Red Bay Labrador wreck. Dr. Greenhill believes this vessel was built by setting up some of the principle frames and running some battens, or thin strips of wood, around the outside of them. The remaining frames are then made to fit the natural run of the battens. Greenhill relates there is a wreck of ca. 1520 at Plymouth, England that has similar structural features.19

It is this method of setting up the backbone and then the principle frames that we followed with the Howland shallop. It allowed us to minimize the time it took to make frames and it yet still gave us control over the shape of the emerging vessel.The backbone we used is made of white oak purchased in Connecticut. The white oak tree that became the stem of the boat came from Norwell, MA and was donated to us by Mr. David Lazot along with six beautiful white pine trees that have been sawn up for decking material. All the work was done with the felling axe, broad axe, splitting wedges, adzes and the whip saw. We learned a great deal about 17th-century shipbuilding techniques as the shallop took shape. We learned even more once we launched it!

back to top

Sailing the Elizabeth Tilley

The most hair-raising part of the whole journey of the Elizabeth Tilley from Plymouth to Augusta, Maine was the few feet we had to lift and turn the shallop right at the building site. We built the shallop in the field out side of the Craft Center about two feet off the ground on some large posts. In order for the boat transportation trailer to pick up the boat on launching day we had to lift the shallop off the building stocks, lower it to the ground and turn it about ninety degrees. This whole process was accomplished with hydraulic jacks, large levers, blocks of wood and a whole day for eight people.

Simms Brothers boat haulers from Scituate, Massachusetts picked up the boat the morning of July 8th, 2003 and brought it to the town boat ramp at Plymouth harbor. Nancy Brennan, Plimoth Plantation’s executive director, gave a short speech, John Howland of the Pilgrim John Howland society, christened the boat with champagne and the driver slowly backed the trailer down the ramp until the Elizabeth Tilley floated free.

We had equipped the boat with pumps, hoses and buckets, not so much as a reflection of our abilities as boat builders but as a precaution against an embarrassment with so many people watching the launching. Try as we might, on the short trip from the boat ramp to Mayflower II where the shallop would spend several weeks, we could not find enough water in the bottom of the boat to even sponge out.

We let the boat float next to the ship for about week so that the hull planking could swell tight. During that time we prepared the mast, rigging and sails. We suspended a block and tackle off the main yard of Mayflower II and used it to lift the shallop mast and fit into the hull. The rigging was quickly set up and Friday, July 25th was set as date for the first sea trial.

There is a sailor’s superstition about never starting a voyage on a Friday. Technically this wouldn’t be a voyage so much as a pleasant sail around the outer harbor. With several members of the crew who would sail on our trip to Augusta, the building crew and a few other advisors aboard we set out. Too timid to row the shallop so close to Mayflower II, we got a tow from our work skiff out away from all the expensive moored boats in the harbor. The wind was just the right strength, the sun was shinning and there was nothing left to do but set the sails.

All I can remember of the rest of that morning was the overwhelmingly pleasant feeling of seeing the Elizabeth Tilley sailing about the harbor. The white curl of the bow wave, the tug of the main sheet, and the gentle rise and fall of the deck as we moved through the water made all the hard work of building her more than worth the effort.

A few days later, on July 28, a bright day with a light northwesterly wind, we left Plymouth for Augsuta. At our departure no less than two ministers blessed our voyage. Friends, co-workers and family members cheered us on our way. There were twelve people on board the Elizabeth Tilley, comprised of Howland Society members, four who would sail all the way to Maine, six who would swap off with other members at different ports and me as captain.

This trip was the culmination of two years of work and study on the part of the maritime artisans at Plimoth Plantation. It was also the realization of an idea Mr.Brad Gorham, the president of the Pilgrim John Howland Society, held even longer. His notion was to recreate a trading voyage such as his ancestor, Mayflower passenger John Howland, was involved in during the 1620s and ’30s. Brad felt by sailing a recreated shallop up the New England coast to the Kennebec River, stopping at ports along the way, he could bring to life a part of Plymouth’s early history in a way to which people would respond.

The light winds and calm water on the first day out gave the crew a chance to get used to the boat and the motion of the sea. We got out the oars for a while and tried rowing. We raised and lowered sail as the wind came up and died away. We got to know one another as our escort boat, Wavelength also from Plymouth, towed us up the coast. We ate - mid-morning snacks, lunch, afternoon snacks, ah life at sea. When the wind picked up the crew mastered the techniques for sailing a 17th-century craft. Every day we sailed into a new port and were overwhelmed by people’s interest in the shallop and their desire to make us feel welcome.

We visited Cohasset and Rockport, Massachusetts; Isles of Shoals, New Hampshire; and Kennebunkport and Portland, Maine. We sailed up the Kennebec River stopping at Phippsburg, Bath, Richmond, Hallowell and, finally, Augusta. We had all kinds of weather from beautiful sunny skies and following breezes to fog and rain. We saw whales, bald eagles, ospreys, and sturgeon jumping in the river. The Elizabeth Tilley has proved to be an excellent good will ambassador for Plimoth Plantation and the Pilgrim John Howland Society, providing people with a glimpse into our colonial past.

back to top

NOTES:

1. Baker, William A., Sloops & Shallops, University of South Carolina Press, 1966. Pg. xi
Herbert, Joseph M., “Descriptions of the shallop from the 16th and 17th centuries”, Department of Underwater Archaeology, Texas A&M University, Pg. 6

2. Ibid, Pg. 8

3. Baker, pg. 4

4. Baker, pg. 32

5. Bradford, William, Of Plimoth Plantation, (Morison edition 1956), pg. 64

6. Mourt’s Relation, 1622, edited by Dwight B. Heath, Pg. 24

7. Bradford, pg. 139

8. Ibid pg. 140

9. Ibid Pg. 176

10. Ibid, pg. 146

11. Ibid, Pg. 178

12. Ibid, pg. 183

13. Chapelle, Howard I. American Small Sailing Craft, W.W. Norton & Company, 1951, pg. 11
Sutherland, William, The ship Builders Assistant or Marine Architecture, 1794.

14. Greenhill, Dr. Basil, & Morrison, Prof. John, The Archaeology of Boats and Ships, Naval Institute Press, 1995, pg53

15. Ibid, pg. 57

16. Holly, H.H., Sparrow Hawk, A 17th Cent. Vessel in 20th Cent. America, Nimrod Press, 1969, pg. 10
Greenhill & Morrison, Pg.264

back to top

Discover More

COLLECTIONS

Objects and artifacts of daily life from 1500 to 1700.

ARCHEOLOGY

Artifacts from digs are used for study, reproduction and exhibition.

ARTICLES & ESSAYS

A collection of articles, resources, and more on Patuxet and colonial Plimoth.

BLOGS

Find out what goes on behind the scenes here daily.

 

VIDEOS

See why history here is still alive in our TV spots and other videos.

© 2003-2008 Plimoth Plantation. All rights reserved.
hours: The shop is open daily 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. through noon on Christmas Eve!
address: 137 Warren Avenue, Plymouth, MA 02360 USA
telephone: 1 + 508 746 1622

 

pilgrim first thanksgiving american history plymouth rock mayflower