Marine Distances.

A nautical mile, or “knot,” is about 6,082.66 feet; a statute, or land mile, 5,280 feet; the knot is, therefore, equal to 1.1515 mile. The circumference of the earth being divided geographically into 360 degrees, and each degree into 60 nautical miles, the circumference measures 21,600 knots, equal to about 25,000 statute miles. Knots can be readily reduced to statute miles by means of the following table:

Knots1 23 45 1025 100
Miles1.151 2.3033.454 4.6065.757 11.51528.787 115.148

When the Lucania averaged 22 knots, she was running at the rate of 25⅓ statute miles an hour; her longest day’s run (560 knots) was equal to 644¾ miles, about the distance covered by an ordinary fast express train on the Canadian Pacific Railway.

The old-fashioned ship’s “log” is a piece of wood in the form of a quadrant, loaded with lead at the circumference, to which is attached a line of 120 fathoms or more. Allowance being made for “stray line,” the balance is divided into equal distances by knots and small bits of coloured cloth. The distance between each knot is the same part of a mile that 30 seconds is of an hour (the 120th); the length between knots should thus be a trifle over 50 feet. The number of knots run out in half a minute (as measured by the sand-glass) indicate the number of nautical miles the ship is running per hour.

Even express steamships do not always sail between given points exactly as the crow flies. Various reasons lead to the selection of different routes, and even when following the same route, the actual distance run varies a little on each voyage. The Cunard Line, as a precautionary measure, has four sharply defined “tracks” across the Atlantic—two for the westward and two for the eastward voyages—one pair being used in summer and the other in winter, or the ice season.[31] The northern route, used from July 15th to January 14th, is considerably shorter than the southern route, which is followed from January 15th to July 14th. The distances by these routes are given by the company as follows:

Queenstown to Sandy Hook,bynorthern track2,782 knots.
""  ""southern "2,861 "
Sandy Hook to Queenstown,"northern "2,809 "
""  ""southern "2,896 "

Daunt’s Rock, Queenstown, being about 244 knots from Liverpool, and Sandy Hook lightship 26 knots from New York, the distance from Liverpool landing-stage to the dock in New York by the Cunard’s northern track is about 3,052 knots, and by the southern track, 3,131 knots; from New York to Liverpool, 3,079 and 3,166 knots, respectively. Captain W. H. Smith says that the shortest distance that can be made between Liverpool and New York is 3,034 knots.

TABLE OF DISTANCES.[32]


Sandy Hook to Antwerp3,336 knots.
" Bremen3,484 "
" Copenhagen3,800 "
" Genoa4,060 "
" Gibraltar3,200 "
" Glasgow, via North of Ireland2,941 "
" Hamburg3,510 "
" Havre3,094 "
" London3,222 "
" Naples4,140 "
" Southampton3,100 "
" Queenstown2,809 "
" Liverpool, via northern route3,088 "
  Quebec to Montreal, by the river160 miles.
" "by the Canadian Pacific Railroad172 "
" Rimouski180 "
" Belle Isle747 "
" St. John’s, Newfoundland896 "
" Moville, via Belle Isle and North of Ireland2,460 knots.
" Liverpool,""""2,633 "
" "" Cape Race""2,801 "
" """and South "2,826 "
" Glasgow " Belle Isle and North "2,564 "
" "" Cape Race""2,732 "
" Queenstown, via Belle Isle2,473 "
  Moville to Liverpool190 "
  Halifax to New York538 "
" Quebec680 "
" St. John’s, Newfoundland520 "
" Liverpool, via North of Ireland2,450 "
" "  " South"2,475 "
" London2,723 "
" Glasgow2,381 "
" St. John, N. B.277 "
" Portland, Me.336 "
" Sable Island169 "
" Boston, Mass420 "
St. John’s, Newfoundland, to Galway, Ireland,
which is the shortest land-to-land voyage1,655 "
Liverpool to St. John, N. B., via North of Ireland2,700 "
" Portland, Me., " ""2,765 "
" Boston, Mass., " ""2,807 "
" Queenstown244 "
Montreal to Halifax, via Intercolonial Railroad845 miles.
" " " Canadian Pacific Railroad756 "
" Boston,  " Central Vermont Railroad334 "
" Portland, Me., via Grand Trunk Railroad297 "
" New York, via Central Vermont Railroad403 "
" Toronto,  " Grand Trunk Railroad333 "
" " " Canadian Pacific Railroad338 "
" " by water376 "
" Winnipeg, Man., via Canadian Pacific Railroad  1,424 "
" Vancouver, B.C., """"2,906 "
Vancouver to Yokohama, Japan4,283 knots.
" Shanghai, China5,330 "
" Hong Kong  "5,936 "
" Honolulu, Hawaii2,410 "
" Sydney, N. S. W.6,824 "
Lech Ryan to Quebec, via Belle Isle2,513 "
" North Sydney, C. B.2,161 "
" Halifax, N. S.2,330 "
" St. John, N. B.2,580 "
Milford Haven to Quebec, via Belle Isle2,587 "
" Halifax2,353 "
" North Sydney, C. B.2,186 "