The “President.”

The President was launched on December 7, 1839, on the Thames by the same builders, Messrs. Curling and Young. She was almost a sister ship to the British Queen, as far as appearance and general equipment went, but the engines of the second vessel were slightly more powerful.

The “British Queen.” From an Original Painting in the Possession of the Author.

The following comparative table, showing the dimensions of these vessels, was published in 1840:

Dimensions.Great
Western.
British
Queen.
President.
Extreme length (feet)236275265
Extreme length under deck (feet)212245238
Extreme length keel (feet)205225220
Breadth within the paddle-boxes (feet)35·4 in.4041
Breadth, including paddle-boxes (feet)59·8 in.6464
Depth of hold at midships (feet)23·2 in.27·6 in.23·6 in.
Tons of space679¹⁄₂1053--
Tonnage of engine-room (feet)641¹⁄₂963--
Total tonnage (tons)132120161840
Power of engines (horses)450500540
Diameter of cylinders (inches)7377¹⁄₂80
Length of stroke (feet)777¹⁄₂
Diameter of paddle-wheels (feet)28·9 in.30·6 in.31
Total weight of engines, boilers, and water (tons)480500500
Total weight of coals, twenty days’ consumption (tons)600750750
Total weight of cargo (tons)250500750
Draught of water with the above weight of stores (feet)16·8 in.16·7 in.17

They were square-sterned vessels, barque-rigged, and carried a long white funnel with a black top. The paddles were placed almost amidships, with the funnel abaft the paddle-boxes. The Great Western might be described as a four-masted barquentine. She had one funnel carried between the fore and main masts, and the paddles were set abaft the main-mast. All three vessels had engines of the side-lever type. Those of the British Queen were supplied by Napier from the Clyde, and those of the President by Fawcett and Preston of Liverpool. The Great Western’s engines were built by Maudslay, Son, and Field of London.

The President was built of oak with fir planking, her upper deck being flush from bows to stern. The stern was ornamented with the British and American arms, supported by the lion and eagle, appropriately painted. And for a figure-head she had a bust of Washington. The paddle-boxes were decorated with a five-point star. The first attempt to float the President was not a success owing to the tide not being high enough. A second attempt the following day also failed, but on the third day, Monday, December 9, 1839, she was floated, and towed out of the dock and down to Blackwall, where she was safely moored.

After the loss of the President in 1841, the British and American Steam Navigation Company sold the British Queen to the Belgians and retired from business altogether, leaving the Great Western practically in sole possession of the Atlantic. But, as the next chapter will show, this splendid isolation was not hers for long.

CHAPTER VI
DEVELOPMENT OF THE TRANSATLANTIC SERVICE