The Maritime Heritage Project.

Passengers arriving in the Port of San Francisco during the 1800s

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The Maritime Heritage Project is committed to providing free information to everyone; the focus is world shipping during the 1800s, with a concentration on San Francisco Bay during the Gold Rush years.

America was created by everyone and belongs to everyone; early settlers came over land bridges in the Bering Straits from Russia and Japan, up and down coastlines, across the Continent on foot and with horses, by early sailors from France, England, Russia, Spain, and, perhaps, by Polynesian people.

Vital Check
Arrive San Francisco: July 30, 1850
Carthagena
Captain Jones
From Liverpool, England

Passage:
The British bark Carthagena arrived in 180 days from Liverpool, England.   
Cargo: 40 frames, nails, 800 feet (5 tons weight) of 2 iron houses, rope, wince, portable forge, punch press, five cook ranges, four safes, porter ale, hams, 20,150 building bricks and assorted merchandise.

Passengers:
John Henry Eden
William Fitzpatrick
Thomas Hall
William Edward Hall
Richard Hicks
Thomas Bancroft Jagger
Richard Jones
William Kenneth
Andrew Kerr
Frank Mee
James Mee
William Borlase Pascoe
Nathaniel Sylvester
John Whittall


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Page: http://www.maritimeheritage.org/carthagena
Date Entered: November 2001
Source: Daily Alta California


Research and WebDesign: D. B. A. Levy
Contact: D. Blethen Adams Levy
www.MaritimeHeritage.org
Post Office Box 2878
Sausalito, California 94966
U.S.A.