Baltimore 'Star-Spangled Sailabration' in June features tall ship parade of sail

USCGC EagleAn international parade of ships will sail into Baltimore on June 13 for Star-Spangled Sailabration, the national launch of the three-year commemoration by the U.S. Navy and the State of Maryland of the Bicentennial of the War of 1812 and the penning of "The Star-Spangled Banner." Star-Spangled Sailabration features seven days of free entertainment including ship tours, a Blue Angels air show, patriotic fireworks, memorial ceremonies and much more.

More than two dozen ships including U.S. Navy, British and Canadian warships and tall ships from countries including Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Indonesia, Mexico and the United States are expected to flank Baltimore's famed Inner Harbor during Star-Spangled Sailabration. The tall ships and naval vessels will offer free, daily tours from June 14 to June 18.

Other highlights of the festival include:

  • Star-Spangled Air Show featuring the Blue Angels, the U.S.Navy's Flight Demonstration Squadron, on Saturday, June 16, and Sunday, June 17
  • The Celebration of the American Flag event at Fort McHenry National Monument and Historic Shrine on Saturday, June 16, complete with fireworks and concerts
  • A Star-Spangled Festival at Martin State Airport featuring U.S. Navy, U.S. Marine and U.S. Coast Guard aircraft on display along with autograph opportunities with the Blue Angels pilots on Saturday, June 16, and Sunday, June 17
  • A concert featuring the premiere of a new symphonic work on Sunday, June 17 at the Meyerhoff Symphony Hall

Some of the war's greatest artifacts can be found in Baltimore, with more than 10 sites boasting a direct tie to the War of 1812. The Maryland Historical Society's With Broad Stripes and Bright Stars exhibit focuses on the "Rock Stars" of the War of 1812 and gives visitors a glimpse of the original version of Francis Scott Key's manuscript of "Defence of Fort M'Henry," which would later become our national anthem. The society will open a special new exhibit also dedicated to the "second war of independence" on June 10, just in time for Sailabration.

The festival winds down with the official 200th anniversary of the Declaration of War on Great Britain event and a celebration of two centuries of peace on June 18 followed by the Parade of Sail departure on June 19.

For more information on the event schedule, to reserve a hotel room or to purchase official merchandise, visit www.starspangled200.com. For more information on the national commemoration by the U.S. Navy, visit www.OurFlagWasStillThere.org. For more information about the tall ships 2012 tour, visit www.OpSail.org.

Newsletter signupSign up for the Fyddeye newsletter!

Maritime History Guide

Add a comment

Tall Ships for Sustainability, Featuring the Schooner Adventuress

ALT TEXTTall Ships for Sustainability (via YouTube) Tall Ships for Sustainability, featuring the Schooner Adventuress, explores the mission of tall ships dedicated to environmental education. From providing youth science stations to sustainably supporting a full-time crew, tall ships around the country are making a difference to conserve the marine environment. More information available on the Sailors for the Sea website.

Fyddeye Guide thumbnail

Buy Now button

Add a comment

Oregon tall ship sailor Lucy Bellwood tells her tales with comic book artistry

When the subject of “unusual jobs” comes up, tall ship sailor should definitely make the list. So should “comic book artist.” It’s truly amazing when one person combines both, and that’s what Lucy Bellwood of Portland, Ore., has done. As a citizen in the U.S. and Great Britain, she styles herself at “America's one and only dual citizen tall ship-sailing cartoonist.” She’s the author of two volumes of a comic called “Baggywrinkles,” and she’s an experienced hand on the tall ship Lady Washington. She took some time to answer a few questions from Fyddeye.

lady_washington_bellwoodHow did you get interested in tall ships? When I was in high school in the southern California town of Ojai, I’d often dreamed of a practical way of going to sea. One day, I ran across a list of working replicas, and learned that many of them offered volunteer programs. Then I discovered that the brig Lady Washington would visit Ventura and I booked spots for a sail.

bellwood_head_shotI can't really do justice to the excitement and exhilaration I experienced during those first three hours on board. Mostly I was fascinated by the crew -- their easy camaraderie, boundless enthusiasm, and dedicated competence were inspiring, to say the least. I hadn't a nautical bone in my body, but I'd always loved the feeling of working with others to create something bigger than the sum of its parts.

A few months later, I completed a two-week volunteer stint on Lady Washington. I was petrified, but I was also utterly aflame with the thrill of actually doing this thing I'd spent so much time reading about in books and seeing on screen. I returned twice for a stint in the San Juan Islands in Washington state (heavenly) and a vomit-filled transit from Aberdeen, Wash., to San Francisco. Later, after I returned from an eight-month trip outside the country, I signed on Lady Washington again. I suppose there's no hope for me now.

How did you get interested in comics as an artist? Rather like sailing, comics were a late-blooming passion for me. I grew up exceedingly passionate about drawing and writing, but didn't quite realize that I could put the two together until I entered college. After spending some time at Reed College, I took a summer course at the Center for Cartoon Studies in White River Junction, Vermont.

The five days I spent there were staggeringly inspirational, life-changing to the same degree that my first trip aboard the Lady Washington had been. The 35 workshop participants ate, slept, and breathed comics the entire course. My goal was to create an eight-page story, but I arrived with no clue as to what it would be about. I began doodling a mast and a few sails, and realized that the story of my first experiences on a tall ship would be excellent fodder for a small comic.

Add a comment

Read more: Oregon tall ship sailor Lucy Bellwood tells her tales with comic book artistry

Shipwrecks and Technology

Shipwrecks and Technology (via YouTube) A 2011 event brought to you by the Great Lakes Naval Memorial and Museum and the West Michigan Underwater Preserve.

Fyddeye Guide thumbnail

Buy Now button

Add a comment

America’s 10 Most Endangered Historic Ships

America’s most endangered historic ships often go unnoticed. They rot at an inaccessible industrial pier, sit idle in a marina’s back lot, or float nobly with a hidden cancer below the waterline. When Fyddeye uses the term “endangered,” we mean the ship is in serious, even imminent danger of destruction. But “endangered” can also mean that a detailed plan to save the ship doesn’t exist, or preservation is impossibly expensive. In an effort to raise public awareness of the fragility of these unique treasures, we’ve compiled our list--with the help of our readers--of the 10 most endangered historic ships in the U.S. in 2011. Some of these vessels could disappear completely in 2012.

WapamaWapama (Richmond, Calif.) – The steam schooner Wapama, the last surviving example of a fleet of ships that carried cargo and passengers along the west coast, suffers the ignominy of a death sentence that will be carried out by the federal government. This year, the National Park Service, which has charge of the 1915 vessel, announced that it will “dismantle” Wapama, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and protected as a National Historic Landmark. No timeline has been announced for her destruction.

EquatorEquator (Everett, Wash.) – Long-neglected in a shed, the schooner Equator once carried poet and novelist Robert Louis Stevenson, who sailed from Honolulu to the Gilbert Islands aboard the 1888 vessel. His voyage inspired the story, "The Wrecker" in his book, "Tales of the South Seas." Located on Port of Everett property and listed on the National Register of Historic Places, little or nothing has been done to preserve the ship or its memory by the owners in at least a decade, and it is quickly disintegrating. No one is even sure who owns Equator.

KalakalaKalakala (Tacoma, Wash.) – The 1935 ferry, designed in the art deco style, is a one-of-a-kind treasure that carried hundreds of thousands of Seattleites across Puget Sound for more than 30 years. Retired in 1967, it spent time as a land-locked fish processing plant in Alaska before it was rescued and towed back to Seattle in 1998. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the vessel is now a rusting hulk, a victim of poor leadership, bad planning, and financial neglect. This month, an unidentified man purchased the boat for $1, but the Coast Guard has declared her a navigation hazard, demanding a plan to move her.

Maritime History Guide

Add a comment

Read more: America’s 10 Most Endangered Historic Ships

Subcategories

  • Travel News Summaries

    Summaries of the day's travel news and heritage activities related to maritime history and heritage travel.

    Submit your articles and news releases to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

  • News and Commentary
    Travel news and maritime heritage activities from maritime museums, tall ships, lighthouses, and historic ships you can visit today. Submit your news releases to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .
  • Wendy's Sea Log

    Wendy JosephWendy Joseph is a professsional seafarer and amateur sea shanty singer based in Seattle. She has graciously agreed to share her sea log entries with Fyddeye readers.