Four-masted barque

Pommern

Finland Mariehamn
Pommern
Pommern · Wikipedia

About

Pommern, formerly Mneme (1903–1908), is a steel-hulled four-masted barque. It was built in 1903 at the J. Reid & Co shipyard in Glasgow, Scotland. Pommern (German for Pomerania) is one of the Flying P-Liners, sailing ships of the German shipping company F. Laeisz. In 1921 the Pommern had to be handed over to Greece as war reparation. In 1923 she was acquired by Gustaf Erikson of Mariehamn in the Finnish Åland archipelago, who used her to carry grain from the Spencer Gulf area in Australia to harbours in England or Ireland until the start of World War II. On 2 March 1935, Pommern ran aground at Port Germein, South Australia, but she was refloated and returned to service. After World War II, Pommern was donated to the town of Mariehamn as a museum ship. It is now a museum ship belonging to the Åland Maritime Museum and is anchored in western Mariehamn, Åland. A collection of photographs taken by Ordinary Seaman Peter Karney in 1933 showing dramatic pictures of life on a sailing ship rounding Cape Horn can be found in the National Maritime Museum at Greenwich. A 1:35-scale model of Pommern hangs in Grundtvigs Kirke, in Copenhagen, Denmark, though on being donated to the church in 1939...

- Cargo: 4,050 t (3,990 long tons; 4,460 short tons)

- Total area of sails: 3,240 m 2 (34,900 sq ft)

- Area of square sails: 2,450 m 2 (26,400 sq ft)