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Schooner Sails
The schooner sail-plan has two or more masts with the forward mast being shorter or the same height as the rear masts. Most traditionally rigged schooners are gaff rigged, sometimes carrying a square topsail on the foremast and occasionally, in addition, a square fore-course (together with the gaff foresail). Schooners carrying square sails are called square-topsail schooners. Modern schooners may be Marconi or Bermuda rigged. In Bermuda, Bermuda rigged schooners had appeared by the early 19th Century. Known as Ballyhoo schooners, or, along with single masted relatives, with Bermuda or gaff rig, with or without a square topsail, as Bermuda sloops. A memorable example ot the last type was HMS Pickle. Some schooner yachts are Bermudian rigged on the mainmast and gaff-rigged on the foremast. A stay-sail schooner has no foresail, but instead carries and main-stay sail between the masts in addition to the fore-staysail ahead of the foremast. A stay-sail or gaff-topsail schooner may carry a fisherman (a four sided fore and aft sail) above the main-stay sail or foresail, or a triangular mule. Multi masted stay-sail schooners usually carried a mule above each stay sail except the fore-stay sail. Gaff-rigged schooners generally carry a triangular fore-and-aft topsail above the gaff sail on the main topmast and sometimes also on the fore topmast(see illustration), called a gaff-topsail schooner. A gaff-rigged schooner that is not set up to carry one or more gaff topsails is sometimes termed a 'bare-headed or bald-headed' schooner. A schooner with no bowsprit is known as a 'knockabout' schooner.
The schooner may be distinguished from the ketch by the placement of the mainsail. On the ketch, the mainsail is flown from the most forward mast; thus it is the main-mast, and the other mast is the mizzen-mast. A two-masted schooner has the mainsail on the aft mast, and therefore the other mast is the fore-mast.
Schooners were more widely used in the United States than in any other country. Two masted schooners were and are most common. They were popular in trades that required speed and windward ability, such as slaving, privateering, blockade running and offshore fishing. They also came to be favoured as pilot vessels, both in the United States and in Northern Europe. In the Chesapeake Bay area several distinctive schooner types evolved, including the Baltimore clipper and the pungy.

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File information
Album:Rigging
Keywords:Schooner Sails
File Size:313  KBs
Dimensions:1500 x 1026 pixels
Date added:May 09, 2007
Viewed:559 times
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Fully Rigged Ship
Mast_Lines_Spars_1200x1600.gif
Masts, Spars, Lines, Hull
Schooner_Sails_1500x1000.gif
Schooner Sails