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Notes
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The barque was built in 1871 at Belliveau’s Cove, Digby County, Nova Scotia. Her initial owner was William D. Lovitt of Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, where she was registered. The ‘Lennie’ was 175 feet in length, with a tonnage of 984 tons. She was famous for a mutiny in which Captain Stanley Hatfield and his officers were killed by the crew. Several crew members were later tried and hanged. In 1892 she was sold to Liverpool, England, before being sold again in 1895 to the “Russian Finns” and registered in Mariehamn under the name ‘Lima’. She was broken up in 1921. There are two portraits of the ‘Lennie’ in Yarmouth County Museum, Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada, both attributed to E. L. Greaves, a ship portrait painter from Liverpool.
Title
The 'Lennie' of Liverpool in Full Sail
Medium
oil on canvas marouflaged on Sundeala board
Measurements
H 50.8 x W 76.2 cm
Accession number
BHC3443
Work type
Painting
Inscription description
W. H.Yorke