Joseph N. Lord
The SHP Joseph N. Lord was a 19th-century Sandy Hook pilot boat built in 1840 at the Jabez Williams shipyard in East River, for New York pilots. She helped transport maritime pilots between inbound or outbound ships coming into the New York Harbor. The Joseph N. Lord was lost at sea in 1845 at Port-au-Platt, Dominican Republic.
Construction and service
The pilot boat Joseph N. Lord was launched on February 7, 1840, from the Jabez Williams shipyard on the East River. She was at first called the Thunderer but changed her name to Joseph N. Lord by her trail trip. She had the number 6 painted on her mainsail and a pennant flag with her name on it. On February 25, 1850, the Joseph N. Lord went on her first cruise past Sandy Hook. Commodore Hammell was on board.John J. Canvin Sr., started in the pilot service as a pilot on the pilot boat Joseph N. Lord.
On December 14, 1840, Jarvis P. Calvert of the pilot boat Joseph N. Lord, along with other pilots from the port of New York, stated in a public letter to the New York Daily Herald that they had never been employed by J. D. Stevenson as their agent and any services which he may have rendered their delegates at Washington, no compensation has been offered or demanded.
On May 13, 1842, an apprentice Charles Allen, age 20, on the Joseph N. Lord, was lost when the main sheet hit him and knocked him overboard where he sank.
On March 15, 1844, an Admiral of the New York Clipper Boats thanked the pilots of the Charlotte Ann, Jacob Bell, Blossom, and Joseph N. Lord for their service and for the fact that they have often been boarded two hundred miles at sea by New York pilots.
The New York Pilotage reported that pilot boat Joseph N. Lord boarded and brought thirty one vessels safely into port in the past month for August 1844.