The Onrust Antique Ship is a piece of digital artwork by Carol Lowbeer which was uploaded on February 3rd, 2023.
The Onrust Antique Ship
This is the bow of the Onrust...a beautiful replica of 20-passenger antique sailboat entitled t which sails out of Essex, Connecticut, along the... more
Title
The Onrust Antique Ship
Artist
Carol Lowbeer
Medium
Digital Art - Photography & Digital Art
Description
This is the bow of the "Onrust"...a beautiful replica of 20-passenger antique sailboat entitled t which sails out of Essex, Connecticut, along the Connecticut River from spring through autumn. Its current home is the Connecticut River Museum in Essex, Connecticut. I created the painterly effect from an original photo i took while a passenger on the boat.
The original ship (The Onrust (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈɔnrɵst]; English: Restless) was a Dutch ship built by Adriaen Blockand the crew of the Tyger, which had been destroyed by fire in the winter of 1613. The Onrust was the first ship to be built in what is now New York State, and the first fur trading vessel built in America. The construction took four months in the winter of 1614 somewhere in New York Bay. Help from the local Native population is surmised based on the relationship developed by Jon Rodriquez, left on the island during a previous voyage. The Onrust was 44.5 feet long[1] and capable of carrying 16 tons.
In 1614, Block sailed through the whirlpools (Hellegat) on the East River, and into Long Island Sound. There he named Block Island for himself. Block was also the first European to venture up the Connecticut River. He managed to get as far as the Enfield rapids, about 60 miles up the river. Besides finding several inland water routes, creating trading networks and mapping native villages, the two first accurate maps of the east coast were drawn based on the voyages of the Onrust. Later in the year, Block rendezvoused with the Fortuyn, also under his command, near Cape Cod and sailed back to the Netherlands on 1 October 1614. The Onrust was last reported in 1616 as headed to explore the "New River", now known as the Delaware River under Cornelius Hendrickson.
Honored to be featured in the following groups:
Sailing Vessels - 2.4.23
Ship to Shore - 2/4/23
New England Photographs - 5/12/23
Uploaded
February 3rd, 2023