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San Francisco Maritime National Historical ParkA historic photo of Chinese fisherman on a shrimp junk pulling in their net.
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San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park
C A Thayer
 
The 1895 lumber schooner, CA Thayer.
An NPS Photo
The lumber schooner, C.A. Thayer, built in 1895.
 

STATS

 

Extreme Length

219 feet

Length on Deck

156 feet

Beam

36 feet

Depth

11.38 feet

Gross tonnage

453

Height of mainmast

105 feet

  • The CA Thayer is a wooden-hulled, three-masted schooner, designed for carrying lumber.
  • She was built in 1895 in Northern California at Hans D. Bendixsen’s shipyard in Fairhaven, CA.
  • The original hull was made of dense, old-growth Douglas fir carefully chosen for shipbuilding.
  • She sailed with a small crew consisting of four seamen, two mates, a cook, and the captain.

Once, hundreds of sailing schooners carried lumber to San Francisco from Washington, Oregon and the California redwood Coast. Built in 1895, C.A. Thayer was once part of that mighty Pacific Coast fleet. Today, she is a rare survivor from the days when strong canvas sails billowed over tall deckloads of freshly-milled fir and redwood.

Click here to find out more about Thayer's careers in the lumber, salmon and cod industries.

Thayer in port with a deckload of lumber.
Learn more about Thayer
She hauled lumber, salmon and cod
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Work in progress laying the deck on the Thayer.
Thayer Restoration Project
Information and recent photos
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The starboard side of Thayer's hull.
Lumber Schooner C. A. Thayer
overview with text and pictures (1.70MB)
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The last stop and turnaround point for the Powell/Hyde cable car line.  

Did You Know?
San Francisco Maritime is the only NPS site that has a cable car turnaround adjacent to the park. Riders disembark and workers push the cars around on the track to position them for the next journey back up steep Hyde Street.

Last Updated: July 25, 2006 at 00:22 EST