List of longest wooden ships


This is a list of the world's longest wooden ships. The vessels are sorted by ship length including bowsprit, if known.
Finding the world's longest wooden ship is not straightforward since there are several contenders, depending on which definitions are used. For example, some of these ships benefited from substantial iron or even steel components since the flexing of wood members can lead to significant leaking as the wood members become longer. Some of these ships were not very seaworthy, and a few sank either immediately after launch or soon thereafter. Some of the more recent large ships were never able or intended to leave their berths, and function as floating museums. Finally, not all of the claims to the title of the world's longest wooden ship are credible or verifiable.
A further problem is that especially wooden ships have more than one "length". The most used measure in length for registering a ship is the "length of the topmost deck" – the "length on deck" – 'measured from leading edge of stem post to trailing edge of stern post on deck level' or the "length between perpendiculars" – 'measured from leading edge of stem post to trailing edge of stern post in the construction waterline '. In this method of measuring bowsprit including jibboom and out-board part of spanker boom if any have both no effect on the ship's length. The longest length for comparing ships, the total "overall" length based on sparred length, should be given if known.
The longest wooden ship ever built, the six-masted New England gaff schooner Wyoming, had a "total length" of to tip of spanker boom and a "length on deck" of. The -difference is due to her extremely long jib boom of her out-board length being.

Longest known wooden ships

Over 100 meters (328 feet)

100-90 meters (328-295 feet)

LengthBeamNameServiceFateComment
6 m
Belyana type ships19th centurydisassembledBelyanas were Russian freshwater ships used for log driving on the Volga and Vetluga rivers. Their bottom was made from fir and sidings from pine and featured a complement of 60 to 80 workers. The largest Belyanas could transport up to of logs all stacked on their deck in the form of an inverted pyramid.
14.0 m
1899–1918sunkA schooner-barge on the Great Lakes, towed by until 1905 and then the steamer John F. Morrow until 1918.
15.0 m
1892–1905burned, then sunkA huge four-masted barque with skysails of a total length of and. In 1905 she was under the command of Captain Jabez A. Amesbury when she caught fire while loading at the anchorage of Noumea and burned to the waterline. This ship used iron bolts and steel reinforcements.
12.8 m
1896–1905run aground and sunkA Great Lakes steamship capable of carrying 3,000 tons of bulk cargo. Built with metallic cross bracing, keelson plates, and multiple arches because of her extreme length. Several syphons and steam-driven pumps were required to keep her afloat. Towed the steamer barge Santiago.
unknown 1871–1905decommissionedA steam-propelled yacht for personal use of the Russian Imperial Family in the Baltic Sea.
18.6 m
1825stranded and broken apartThis unseaworthy British ship was a disposable ship. Created to avoid taxes on timber, the components were intended to be sold after the ship's arrival from Quebec to London. The ship stranded on the Goodwin Sands and broke apart while being towed with a pilot aboard. Parts of her timber were found on the French coast. The ship had 5,294 GRT and an overall length of 362 ft / 110 metres.
13.0 m
1892–1919burnedA steam screw operating on the Great Lakes, it required an innovative iron and steel-reinforced hull to be a viable vessel.
15.0 m
Shenandoah1890–1915accidentally rammed and sunkAnother huge four-masted barque of the fleet of Arthur Sewell & Co. of Bath, Maine, with double top-sails, single topgallant sails, royal and sky sails of a total length of and 3,406.78 GRT. It was rammed by the steamer Powhattan near Fire Island, Long Island, New York in 1915.
23.7 m
1890–1957museum shipA steamboat with twin, 27-foot paddlewheels that carried railcars, cars and passengers across San Francisco Bay. Currently a National Historic Landmark at the San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park, and the longest wooden ship that is still afloat.
12 m
1891–1905sunkA lake freighter that sank on September 2, 1905, on Lake Superior with the loss of all hands.
12 m
1893–1898wreckedA lake freighter that sank on Lake Michigan with the loss of all hands. Her wreck was located in 2010.
17.1 m
1865–1923sold for scrapA Royal Navy central battery ironclad. It served in the Channel Fleet and North America.
13 m
Haian
Yuyuen
1872–?
1873–1885
hulked and scrapped
sunk
Twin steam-powered frigates of the Imperial Chinese Navy, and the largest vessels built in China until the 1930s. Yuyuen was sunk in action during the Sino-French War; Haian survived, but was hulked after being used as a blockship in the same war, and was scrapped years later.

89-80 meters (291-262 feet)

LengthBeamNameServiceFateComment
17.3 m
Sagunto
1869-1896hulked and broken upDesigned as a 100-gun screw-propelled frigate but turned into an armored frigate during construction. The hull was wooden but fully covered by iron plates. Turned into a hulk in 1887.
87 m
13 m
1845–1940museum shipA 50-gun frigate of the Portuguese Navy. It became a training ship in 1865 and was permanently moored at Lisbon after 1878. Despite this, it was named the flagship of Portugal's European squadron in 1938. Two years later it became a naval school and museum ship. It is currently displayed in Almada.
12 m
1884–1896burnedA steamship that burned down on Lake Michigan.
15.0 m
Rappahannock1889–1891burnedA three-masted wooden full-rigged ship of 3,054 GRT, built and owned by Arthur Sewall & Co., with double top-sails and topgallant sails, royal and sky sails of a total length of. The ship burned down near Juan Fernández while transporting soft charcoal from Liverpool to San Francisco, but everyone aboard reached Robinson Crusoe island, where they were rescued.
16.6 m
Zaragoza1867–1899scuttledA Spanish armored frigate built in Cartagena with a wooden hull covered by iron plates. Became a torpedo training ship in 1892.
10.97 m
1869–1954museum shipBuilt as one of the last and fastest clippers for the tea trade with China, it switched to transporting wool from Australia after the Suez Canal was built. It was sold to a Portuguese company and used as a cargo ship between 1895 and 1922, when it was reacquired by British citizens and eventually restored for exhibition.
18 m

1864–1875
1865–1889
run aground and sold for scrap
broken up
Sister ships reputed at once to be the heaviest wooden ships ever built, the fastest steaming wooden ships, and the slowest-sailing ironclads in the Royal Navy. Both served in the Channel Fleet and the Mediterranean Squadron. Lord Clyde was plagued with engineering problems and was sold for scrap after it run aground and its hull was found to be rotten. Lord Warden had a more distinguished career, serving in the Reserve at the Firth of Forth after leaving the Mediterranean.
15.9 m
Arapiles1868–1883broken upA Spanish ironclad with a wooden hull covered entirely by iron plates. It served mostly in the Caribbean.
15.2 m
1859–1883broken upA 26-gun sixth-rate screw frigate of the Royal Navy's North America and West Indies Station.
17 m
Tetuán1863-1874burned and sunkFirst armored frigate built in Spain, in the Ferrol royal shipyard, with a wooden hull covered by iron plates. She burned as a result of sabotage during the Cantonal Revolution.
18.5 m
2001–museum and restaurantA Kuwaiti non-seagoing model of a dhow, reputed to be the largest ever built.
13.7 m
Susquehanna1891–1905sunkThe third hugest four-masted wooden barque of the fleet of Arthur Sewell & Co. with double top-sails, single topgallant sails, royal and sky sails of 2,745 GRT. Lost in a heavy storm three days after leaving Noumea, New Caledonia, for Delaware with a cargo of 3,558 tons of nickel ore. This ship used also iron bolts and steel reinforcements.
10.9 m 1873–1878run aground and sunkA steam-propelled yacht for personal use of the Russian Imperial Family in the Black Sea. It sank at night, due to unruly weather, but without loss of life or cargo.
18.08 m
1855–1880broken upA 130-gun three-decker ship of the line, built as an improvement over the successful. It was equipped with an 8-boiler steam engine and a propeller that could be retracted to streamline the hull when sailing under sail only. It saw action during the Crimean War, and was used as a school ship after 1866.
13.4 m
Morning Light
1856–1889wreckedLargest vessel in British North America at the time of its construction. Sold to a German company in 1881, and found wrecked and abandoned north of New Jersey, in 1889.

79-70 meters (259-230 feet)

69-60 meters (226-197 feet)

59-56 meters (193-184 feet)

Longest wooden ships by ensign

NationalityNavyLengthMerchantLength
Australia City of Adelaide 74.4 m
Belgium British Queen 75 m
Canada William D. Lawrence 102 m
China Haian
Yuyuen
91 m
50 m
Denmark 71 m
47 m
England 71.5 m
Egypt Khufu ship 43.6 m
Finland Sigyn 57.5 m
France 120 m
Provence 59.7 m
Germany Walther von Ledebur 63.16 m
Jacob Fritz 80.9 m
Greece Olympias 36.9 m
Hanseatic League 78.3 m
51 m
Hong Kong 42 m
Italy Cambria 67 m
Ireland 53.7 m
Japan Kasuga 73.6 m
Date Maru 55.35 m
Korea Turtle ship 36.6 m
Kuwait 83.7 m
Malta San Giovanni 49.8 m
Netherlands
Koninklijke Hollander
55.2 m
56.6 m
New Zealand Edwin Fox 48 m
Norway Kong Sverre 64.9 m
Kommandør Svend Foyn 102 m
Portugal 87 m
Ferreira 85.34 m
280 ft
Prussia SMS Barbarossa 63 m
Roman Empire Nemi Ship II 73 m
Caligula's Giant Ship c. 104 m
Russia 94.8 m
Belyana type 100 m
Scotland 73.2 m
249.8 ft
Spain Sagunto 89.5 m
El Galeón 55 m
Sweden 69 m
58.5 m
Ottoman Empire 76.15 m
United Kingdom Columbus 108 m
United States 115 m
140 m

Claimed but poorly documented

Longest still afloat

Over 56 meters (184 feet)

56-40 meters (184-131 feet)

40-30 meters (128-98 feet)