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Asgard II Ireland
104' long brigantine from Ireland, owned by the state and operated as a sail training ship. She was built in Wicklow, Ireland, and launched in 1981 as a replacement for the original Asgard. She has 372 square-metres of sail and boasts an unusual carved figure-head of Granuaile, the famous 16th century Pirate Queen. Her name comes from Norse mythology and means Home of the Gods.

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Capitan Miranda - Uruguay
 

Length overall: 205’
Beam: 27’
Draft: 12’
Hull: Steel
Rig: Staysail schooner
Year built: 1930
Home port: Montevideo

Uruguay’s big staysail schooner, Capitan Miranda, has served her nation’s Navy for more than two decades. Built in 1930 as a sailing cargo carrier, she was active in various trades in Latin America after World War II. She became a hydrographic survey vessel for the Uruguayan Navy during the 1960s, and in 1978 she became a sailing ship again, with a modern schooner rig that was developed in the 1920s for racing yachts.
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Cuauhtmoc – Mexico
 


Length overall: 270’
Draft: 17’1”
Beam: 39’4”
Rig: Barque
Hull: Steel
Home port: Vera Cruz

This relatively new barque, named for an Aztec emperor, brings an officer, crew and cadet complement of 185 to OpSail Miami from Vera Cruz. Cuauhtmoc was launched in Spain in 1982 and sailed home with Mexican Naval Academy cadets and crew.
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Danmark – Denmark

Length overall: 253’
Beam: 33’
Draft: 15’
Hull: Steel
Rig: Ship
Year built: 1933
Home port: Copenhagen
Launched in 1932 to train officers for the Danish Merchant Navy, the steel-hulled, double-bottomed Danmark was destined to have a significant impact upon U.S. military training. Visiting the New York World’s Fair when war broke out in 1939, she and her crew were offered to the Coast Guard. Modernization in 1959 cut the Danmark’s capacity from 120 cadets to eighty. This 249-foot ship serves the Danish marine Authority from her home port in Copenhagen.
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Dar Mlodziezy – Poland

Length overall: 360’
Beam: 45’9”
Draft: 20’7”
Hull: Steel
Rig: Ship
Year built: 1982
Home port: Gdynia
Dar Mlodziezy was commissioned in 1982 to replace the Dar Pomorza. She is a full-rigged, 360-foot ship designed by Polish architect Zygmunt Choren. Dar Mlodziezy was funded by the contributions of elementary school children during the 1960s and 1970s. This is her first OpSail .
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Esmeralda – Chile

Length overall: 371’
Beam: 42’8”
Draft: 19’8”
Hull: Steel
Rig: Four-masted barquentine
Year built: 1952-54
Home port: Valparaiso
The world’s second largest sailing ship, Chile’s Esmeralda, 353 feet long with a mast height of 165 feet, was launched in 1952. The four-mast barkentine, capable of twelve knots under engine power, is armed with a quartet of 5.7-centimeter rapid-fire guns and has participated in OpSail 1964, 1976 and 1986.
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Gloria – Columbia

Length overall: 249’
Beam: 34’8”
Draft: 16’4”
Hull: Steel
Rig: Barque
Year built: 1968
Home port: Cartegna
From a new generation of tall ships designed for cadet training, Columbia’s remarkably beautiful Gloria, launched from Bilbao, Spain in 1968, recalls the classic German barks built in the 1920s and 1930s. She carries a crew of ten officers, a professional crew of fifty and seventy-five cadets.
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Gazela of Philadelphia – USA

Length overall: 178’
Beam: 27’
Draft: 17’
Hull: Wood
Rig: Barquentine
Year built: 1883
Home port: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Gazela of Philadelphia, built in 1883, was still fishing the Grand Banks for cod in 1969, when she was the last of the country’s square-rigged fishing schooners to be retired. Now, she is probably the oldest and largest wood-hulled square-rigger still actively plying the waves. Most of her hull’s oak and pine is original; having been harvested from a forest especially planted in 1460 by Prince Henry the Navigator. Owned by the Penn’s Landing Corporation of Philadelphia, she is sailed and maintained by enthusiastic volunteers.
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Guayas – Ecuador

Length overall: 257’
Beam: 33’
Draft: 14’6”
Hull: Steel
Rig: Barque
Year Built: 1977
Home port: Guayaquil
Built in 1977, the 914-ton Guayas is a training ship for the Ecuadoran Navy and was christened in honor of an 1841 steamship, the first to be constructed in South America. As a participant in the 1980 Tall Ships Races, she earned the American Sail Training Association Cutty Sark Trophy for international friendship. Based in Guayaquil, the 257-foot-long three-mast bark carries eighty cadets under the guidance of thirty-five officers and experienced crew.
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Gorch Foch II - Germany
Gorch Foch II is a three masted bark, 293' long, and is the replacement for the original Gorch Foch (now the Ukrainian Tovarishch). She was built in 1958 and serves as a school ship of the German Navy.
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HMS Rose – USA
 

Length overall: 179’
Beam: 32’
Draft: 13’
Hull: Wood
Rig: Ship
Year built: 1970
Home port: Bridgeport, Connecticut

Built in 1970 in Canada, the HMS Rose was refurbished in 1991 to bring her up to par with U.S. Coast Guard standards. This environmentally friendly vessel has 13,000 square feet of sail made from recycled products. HMS Rose is an educational sailing school, which operates out of Connecticut
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Kruzenshtern – Russia
Length overall: 376’
Beam: 46’1”
Draft: 23’5”
Hull: Steel
Rig: Four-masted barque
Year built: 1926
Home port: St. Petersburg
This four-masted barque is the second-largest tall ship in the world. During World War II Kruzenshtern was used as a barge to transport supplies. At the end of the war, Kruzenshtern joined the Soviet fleet and became a training vessel for the Soviet Ministry of Fisheries.
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Libertad – Argentina
 

Length overall: 356’
Beam: 45’3”
Draft: 21’9”
Hull: Steel
Rig: Full-rigged ship
Year built: 1960
Home port: Buenos Aires

This full-rigged ship is one of the largest tall ships in the world, with a 3,675-ton displacement. Libertad participated in Operation Sail in 1964, 1976, 1986 and 1992. Launched in 1956, she annually takes up to 120 four-year cadets on lengthy training cruises, frequently stopping in foreign ports and participating in worldwide gatherings of sailing ships. In 1966 while crossing the Atlantic, she used all 28,500 square feet of her sails to set a new record of eight days and twelve hours.

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Pride of Baltimore II – USA
 

 

Length overall: 170’
Beam: 26’
Draft: 12’4”
Hull: Wood
Rig: Topsail schooner
Year built: 1988
Home port: Baltimore, Maryland

Pride of Baltimore is a topsail schooner operated by Pride of Baltimore, Inc. and owned by the state of Maryland. She functions as an educational vessel, passing on her history and knowledge to the young cadets that operate this nineteenth century ship.
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Pochaina - Ukraine
The 65' brigantine Pochaina and the schooner Bat'kivschyna belong to Dmytro Birioukovitch and Roman Maliarchuk who are letting the world know about Ukraine and furthering their own sailing interests by sailing around the globe and acting as goodwill ambassadors for Ukraine. 
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USCG Barque Eagle
 

Length overall: 295’
Beam: 39’
Draft: 17’
Hull: Steel
Rig: Barque
Year built: 1936
Home port: New London, Connecticut

Built as one of the five German sail-training barks available as reparations after World War II, Eagle’s primary mission is training U.S. Coast Guard cadets. Through practical application, cadets learn navigation, engineering, and ship maneuvering. The Eagle brings 12 officers, 38 crew and 150 cadets from the Coast Guard Academy to Miami. In addition, they set some 20,000 square feet of sail and control more than 20 miles of rigging lines while under way.
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Simon Bolivar – Venezuela

Length overall: 270’
Beam: 35’
Draft: 14’6”
Hull: Steel
Rig: Barque
Year built: 1980
Home port: La Guaira
Superbly designed and built Simon Bolivar, though launched as recently as 1979, has become a familiar participant in Tall Ship events. Her frequent transatlantic voyages and tours of ports in the Americas have gained a wide following for the class “A” square-rigger, exclusively used as a training vessel for the Venezuelan Navy.
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HMS Bounty

Length overall: 169’
Beam: 30’
Draft: 13’
Hull: Wood
Rig: Ship
Year built: 1960
Home port: Fall River, Massachusetts

Built in Nova Scotia in 1960 the HMS Bounty was featured in the 1962 MGM movie Mutiny on the Bounty, starring Marlon Brando. Turner Broadcasting later acquired the full-rigged ship which was then donated to the chamber of commerce of Fall River, Massachusetts. HMS Bounty now has an educational partnership program with the Fall River Public School System and also offers sail training.

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Picton Castle – USA

Length overall: 148’
Beam: 24’
Draft: 14’5”
Hull: Steel
Rig: Three-masted Barque
Year built: 1928
Home port: Cook Islands

Built in 1928, the Barque Picton Castle was completely overhauled and outfitted for tropical ocean voyaging as a training ship in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia, during a 2 million-dollar refit in 1996-97. The ship is registered in Avatiu, Rarotonga Cook Islands, headquarters for her South Pacific voyages.

 



               


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