Falls of Clyde was the last surviving iron-hulled, four-masted full-rigged ship, and the last surviving sail-driven oil tanker. She was designated a U.S. National Historic Landmark in 1989, but deregistered in 2024 due to her condition. The ship was scuttled in 2025 off Oahu.

History

Russell and Company built Falls of Clyde in Port Glasgow, Renfrewshire, Scotland. She was launched as the first of nine iron-hulled four-masted ships for Wright and Breakenridge's Falls Line. She was named after the Falls of Clyde, a group of waterfalls on the River Clyde, and built to the highest standard for general worldwide trade, Lloyd's Register A-1. Her maiden voyage took her to Karachi, then to British India, and her first six years were spent engaged in the India trade. She then became a tramp pursuing general cargo such as lumber, jute, cement, and wheat from ports in Australia, California, India, New Zealand, and the British Isles.

thumb|1896 painting of Falls of Clyde, when she was a British merchant ship

After twenty-one years as a British merchant ship, Falls of Clyde was bought for US$25,000 by Captain William Matson of the Matson Navigation Company, taken to Honolulu in 1899, and registered under the Hawaiian flag. When the Republic of Hawaii was annexed by the United States in 1900, it took a special act of the United States Congress to secure the foreign-built ship the right to sail as an American flag vessel.

To economize on crew, Matson rigged Falls of Clyde down as a barque, replacing the five yards on her (jigger) mast with two more easily managed fore-and-aft sails. At the same time, he added a deckhouse, charthouse, and rearranged the after quarters to accommodate paying passengers. From 1899 to 1907, she made over sixty voyages between Hilo, Hawaii, and San Francisco, California, carrying general merchandise west, sugar east, and passengers both ways. She developed a reputation as a handy, fast, and commodious vessel, averaging 17 days each way on her voyages.

In 1907, the Associated Oil Company (later Tidewater Oil) bought Falls of Clyde and converted her to a bulk oil tanker with a capacity of . Ten large steel tanks were built into her hull, and a pump room, boiler and generator fitted forward of an oil-tight bulkhead. and declared a U.S. National Historic Landmark in 1989.

In 1982, the ship was seriously damaged in Hurricane Iwa.

In 2008, the Bishop Museum announced plans to sink her by the end of the year unless private funds were raised for an endowment for her perpetual care. In September 2008, the Bishop Museum was persuaded to transfer ownership to the non-profit group Friends of Falls of Clyde, which intended to restore her. Many artefacts and fixtures had previously been given away, taken, or otherwise disappeared on the assumption that the ship was to be scuttled. $350,000 was obtained from the Robert J. Pfeiffer Foundation, but hoped-for federal funds under the "Save America's Treasures" program or other programs did not come through. Each year, the foundation hoped to get her into drydock but did not succeed. In June 2016, Harbors Division of the Hawaii Department of Transportation (HDOT) revoked the permit for her to moor at Pier 7, citing safety and security risks to port users.

Restoration and repatriation efforts

thumb|Falls of Clyde in 2013, with her masts reduced in height

In August 2016, a group based in Glasgow launched the Save Falls of Clyde – International (FOCI) Campaign, with a view to returning the vessel to Scotland. Initially, they answered a call for help from the charity known as the 'Friends of the Falls of Clyde' (FFOC) who owned and wanted to save the ship from being scuttled. A plan was put together with an attempt to work with HDOT and build and execute a plan.

In February 2019, HDOT put the ship up for auction; however, there were no qualified bids.

In July 2021, HDOT solicited bids for the removal of the ship from Honolulu Harbor and two proposals were received. The foundation challenged the Harbors Division's assessment of the ship, and said they never gave up ownership rights.

In November 2021, HDOT accepted a bid from FOCI to transport the ship to either Greenock or Glasgow where it would be restored. In March 2022, David O'Neill of FOCI said, "There's just a few legal and technical points to be ironed out, and then we will finalise the contract." HDOT canceled the bid in May 2022 after they said FOCI failed to meet conditions of the contract.

The state subsequently began the process of soliciting bids for scrapping the ship, and it was delisted from the Hawaii Register of Historic Places. Delistings from the National Register of Historic Places and National Historic Landmarks programs were pending in early January 2024. The ship was delisted from the National Register on February 1, 2024, and its landmark designation was removed in December 2024.

Scuttling

In the early morning of October 15, 2025, the ship was removed from Honolulu harbor by the Hawaii Department of Transportation, and towed to sea to be sunk at a deepwater site south of Oahu. The scuttling was completed by filling the ship using water hoses. After a short time the ship sank, stern first, in of water, south of Honolulu, at coordinates .

  • The ship appears as a filming location in Hawaii Five-O, season 10, episode 7, "Shake Hands with the Man on the Moon" (November 10, 1977) and season 12, episode 1, "A Lion in the Streets" (October 4, 1979).
  • The ship appears as a filming location in Magnum, P.I., season 2, episodes 5 and 6, "Memories are Forever" (November 5, 1981) and season 6, episode 10, "Blood and Honor" (November 21, 1985).

References

Further reading

  • Hawaiʻi Maritime Center
  • Maritime Heritage Program Information for the Falls of Clyde
  • Princess Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum
  • Falls of Clyde on HawaiiWeb
  • Friends of Falls of Clyde website
  • Falls of Clyde International Ltd