Enoch Train
Enoch Train was an American shipowner and merchant.
Early Life
Enoch Train was born around 1801, in Weston, Massachusetts to Enoch Train and Hannah Ewing Train, daughter of a Scotch chaplain in British army. The fourth of five children, but the second living child. His oldest sister, Harriette died in her fourth year and his oldest brother, also named Enoch Train, died in his second year.After death of his father Enoch's mother married Captain Levi Bishop in 1807 and they moved to Halifax, Vermont and to be closer to her parents. Then, in 1814 she died and Train found himself an orphan at the age of 13. It seems that he then lived with his uncle Samuel Train where he learned the hide and leather business.
Marriages and family
On November 3, 1823 Enoch Train married Adeline C. Dutton in Hillsborough, New Hampshire. By 1824 they were living in Boston where their first child, Adeline, was born on September 15. She was followed by four more children, Theodore, George, Caroline, and Enoch.Adeline died less than a year after the birth of their last child, in August 1834.
Train married Almira Cheever in 1836. They had one boy who died shortly after his birth in 1838. Almira lived until 1881.
Early years as a ship owner
Train bought his first ships in the late 1830s and early 1840s. Dorchester, Cario, and Governor Davis served as trading vessels between Boston and South America. He then decided to move into the Baltic cotton trade with St. Petersburg.White Diamond Line / Enoch Train & Co. / Train & Co.
In 1843 Enoch Train established the White Diamond Line, to provide a packet service between Boston and Liverpool. Initially he pulled ships from other service to that purpose, until new ships were built. His Boston based firm was named Enoch Train & Company, while the Liverpool end of the operation was Train & Co.Enoch Train and Donald McKay
While sailing to Liverpool, to establish Train & Co., Enoch Train had opportunity to converse with Dennis Coudry who had recently taken delivery of the Delia Walker, the first ship designed and built by Donald McKay. Coudry was so impressed with McKay's work, and spoke so highly of his ability that Enoch decided to speak to Donald McKay when he returned to the U.S., about having him build the first packet ship. Upon his return to Boston he sought out McKay in Newburyport, MA and according to Captain Clark, ″it was the swift contact of flint and steel″, and Enoch ordered the Joshua Bates, his first ship built by McKay. Upon the launch of this ship Train offered McKay his financial backing if he would move his ship yard to Boston. This began a relationship that produced nine ships between 1844 to 1853.The Panic of 1857 significantly effected and eventually ended Enoch Train's shipping businesses. A Liverpool partnership, Thayer & Warren succeeded Train & Co. as the Warren Line.
Ships built by Donald McKay for Enoch Train
Date | Name | Size | Notes |
1844 | Joshua Bates | 620 tons | |
1845 | Washington Irving | 751 tons | Launched 15 September 1845. Sold to England in 1852 |
1846 | Anglo-Saxon | 894 tons | Launched 5 September 1846 |
1847 | Ocean Monarch | 1,301 tons OM | Burnt in North Atlantic 1848 |
1848 | Anglo-American | 704 tons | |
1850 | Daniel Webster | 1187 tons | |
1851 | Flying Cloud | 1782 tons OM | Wrecked on Beacon Island 1874 |
1851 | Staffordshire | 1817 tons OM | Wrecked off Cape Sable, Florida in 1853 |
1852 | Sovereign of the Seas | 2421 tons OM | Initially named Enoch Train, she was renamed and sold before she was launched. She was wrecked in the Malacca Straits in 1859 |
1853 | Star of Empire | 2050 tons OM | In 1857, laden with guano, she broke to pieces on Currituck Beach, N. C. |
1853 | Chariot of Fame | 2050 tons OM | Sold in 1862 and came to her end in January, 1876, being abandoned or lost at sea en route from Chincha Islands to Cork. |
unk. | Parliament | unknown | |
unk. | Empress of the Seas | unknown | |
unk. | Plymouth Rock | unknown | Half-owned by George B. Upton |
unk. | Lightning | unknown | |
unk. | Cathedral | unknown | |
unk. | John Eliot Thayer | unknown |