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Mercator visiting Trinidad, c. 1960
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History | |
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Belgium | |
Name | Mercator |
Namesake | Gerardus Mercator |
Builder | Ramage and Ferguson Ltd, Leith, Scotland |
Launched | 1932 |
Status | Museum ship |
General characteristics | |
Tonnage | 770 gross tons |
Length | 78.5 m (258 ft) overall; 68 m (223 ft) hull length[1] |
Beam | 10.6 m (35 ft) |
Height | foremast 39 m (128 ft); mainmast 41 m (135 ft); mizzenmast 40 metres (130 ft) |
Draft | 5.1 m (17 ft) |
Sail plan | Three-masted barquentine, 15 sails: four jibs, four square foresails, three staysails, two spankers, two gaff topsails |
Speed | 13 knots (24 km/h; 15 mph) |
Crew | 150 |
Mercator is a steel-hulled barquentine built in 1932 as a training ship for the Belgian merchant fleet. She was named after Gerardus Mercator (1512–1594), a Belgian cartographer. She was designed by G.L. Watson & Co. and built in Leith, Scotland[2] and launched in 1932.
Besides being a training ship, she was also used, mainly before World War II, for scientific observations, or as ambassador for Belgium on world fairs and in sailing events.
In 1961, she became a floating museum, first in Antwerp and, from 1964, in the marina of Ostend, just in front of the city hall. As of 2019, she remains open to visitors.[3]