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‘Bluenose’ was a legendary Canadian schooner from Nova Scotia, a celebrated racing ship and a symbol of the province. (The word "bluenose" is slang for Nova Scotian.)

‘Bluenose’  was launched at Lunenburg, Nova Scotia on March 26, 1921, as both a working cod-fishing schooner and a racing ship. This was in response to a Nova Scotian ship's defeat in a race for working schooners established by the Halifax Herald newspaper in 1920.

After a season fishing on the Grand Banks, ‘Bluenose’  defeated the ship Elsie from Gloucester, Massachusetts, returning the trophy to Nova Scotia. During the next 17 years of racing no challenger, American or Canadian, could wrest the trophy from her.

BluenoseFishing schooners became obsolete after World War II, and despite efforts to keep her in Nova Scotia, the undefeated ‘Bluenose’  was sold to work as a freighter in the West Indies. She foundered on a Haitian reef on January 28, 1946.

‘Bluenose’  and her captain, J. Angus Waters, were inducted into the Canadian Sports Hall of Fame in 1955.

Her daughter, ‘Bluenose II’, was launched at Lunenburg on July 24, 1963, built to the identical plans by many of the same workers. She was sold to the government of Nova Scotia for $1 and serves as a goodwill ambassador, tourist attraction in Lunenburg, and symbol of the province. During the summer she visits ports all around Nova Scotia. ‘Bluenose’  II does not race.

‘Bluenose II’, like her mother, has the largest working mainsail in the world, measuring 386 m2; she has a total sail area of 1036 m2.

‘Bluenose’  has been portrayed on the Canadian ten-cent piece since 1937 and has been portrayed on a postage stamp.

ImageText above found somewhere sometime at Wikipedia and available under GNU Free Doc License.

 
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