RFFD7TXA–BALTIMORE:Pungies Ft McHenry Locust Pt Calvert St Spear's Wharf Exchange Pl 1874
RFT47JMT–Newford Ponds, Pungies Lane, near Telegraph, St. Mary's, Isles of Scilly, UK
RM2AM6R4W–Forest and stream . ong, low triangular spit, all sand, with hereand there some patches of stunted growth. The banks below thewater are straight up and down, 4 fathoms on one side and 5 fathomson the other within a couple of boats lengths from the |fringingpebbles. Down upon it we came at a rush, reached up abreast andin an instant more ran into aflat calm, with not a breath to distendthe collaping sail. This strange phenomenon I have observedaround many of the sandy spits in Cuesapeake. Within fifty yardsastern it was blowing a stiff gale and ahead it was absolutely still.While pungies were f
RM2A8E86X–'Scenes in Baltimore', 1874. Places in the city of Baltimore, Maryland, USA: 'Locust Point, "Pungies" [schooners] coming up the Chesapeake, Spear's Wharf, Calvert Street, Night Scene in Patterson Park, Fort McHenry, Exchange Place'. From "Picturesque America; or, The Land We Live In, A Delineation by Pen and Pencil of the Mountains, Rivers, Lakes...with Illustrations on Steel and Wood by Eminent American Artists" Vol. II, edited by William Cullen Bryant. [D. Appleton and Company, New York, 1874]
RFT47JPA–Newford Ponds, Pungies Lane, near Telegraph, St. Mary's, Isles of Scilly, UK: black and white version
RMRG837A–. Bulletin - United States National Museum. Science. CATALOGUE OF THE WATERCRAFT COLLECTION. 153 Atlantic coast, and oyster " pungies " substantially like those used in the closing years of the nineteenth century were built as early as 1845 or 1850. Almost without exception these are keel vessels, with tall raking masts, long bowsprit, and high, narrow sails. They are swift and quick in stays. Deposited by the Bureau of Fisheries. Cat. No. 76,262 U.S.N.M.. FIG. 45. CHESAPEAKE BAY TDNGT " W. F. MC KEWEN." Model of schooner. This model represents the class of vessels most ext
RMRG7F0M–. Bulletin - United States National Museum. Science. CHESAPEAKE BAY PUNGY SCHOONER, 1865 Rigged Model, usnm 76262 W. F. McKewen The Chesapeake Bay pungy 11'. F. McKewen, an ex- ample of a type long popular on the Bay, was built in 1865 for Crisfield, Maryland, owners for the oyster fishery, being employed in oyster dredging and transporting and in general freighting in the off-sea- son. At one time there were a large number of pungies on the Chesapeake but they were gradually replaced with centerboard schooners and bugeyes, and are now an extinct type of vessel on the Bay. The McKewen is a sho
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