George H. Warren (pilot boat)

Pilot Boat George H. Warren, No. 4.
History
United States
NameGeorge H. Warren
NamesakeGeorge H. Warren
Owner
  • John Harry Jeffery (Boston)
  • J. O'Sullivan (New York)
Operator
  • Boston Pilots: George H. Warren, John P. Spauulding, John M. Ward, Walter W. Jeffrey, Catherine Jeffrey, Hayden Sargent, Charlotte C. A. Archer, Timothy Davis, John M. Davis and Charles L. Davis
  • New York Pilots: William Murphy, Frank Kelly, Thomas F. Pennea, Patrick Walsh, George D. Samson, and Walter Berry
BuilderPorter Keene
Cost9,250
LaunchedDecember 31, 1882
Out of serviceFebruary 7, 1895
FateSank
General characteristics
Class and typeschooner
Tonnage50-tons TM (New York Pilot Boat)[1]
Length70 ft 9 in (21.56 m) (New York Pilot Boat)
Beam20 ft 0 in (6.10 m) (New York Pilot Boat)
Depth8 ft 2 in (2.49 m) (New York Pilot Boat)
PropulsionSail

The George H. Warren was a 19th-century pilot boat built in 1882 by Porter Keene at Weymouth, Massachusetts, to replace the Edwin Forrest, No. 4, which was sold to the Pensacola, Florida pilots. The George H. Warren, originally belonged to the Boston pilot fleet but in 1889, she was purchase by a group of New York pilots. She and her crew were lost in the great blizzard of 1895.

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