Elissa & Giuliahoot

Elissa & Giuliahoot




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Elissa & Giuliahoot
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E lissa as a girls' name is pronounced eh-LIS-sah . Variant of Alice and Elizabeth . Greek mythology: another name for Dido , Queen of Carthage. Also form of Elise .
ASSOCIATED WITH greek , mythology , queen
Elissa is a very prominent first name for females (#1212 out of 4276, Top 28%) but an unusual last name for all people. (2000 U.S. DEMOGRAPHICS)
Elissa was first listed in 1930-1939 and reached its highest rank of #602 in the U.S. during 1980-1989, and is at #1261 currently. (TOP 2000 NAMES, 2018)
Alica , Alice (#71 FROM CURRENT RECORDS) , Alicia (#391) , Alisa (#1032) , Alise , Alisha (#957) , Alison (#400) , Alissa (#1182) , Alisson (#909) , Allissa , Allyssa , Alysa , Alysia , Alyssa (#150) , Elisa (#457) , Elise (#176) , Eliza (#131) , Elizabeth (#13) , Elsa (#888) , Else , Elsie (#280) , Elyse (#692) , Elysia , Elyssa , Leisa , Lisa (#891) , Lissa , Lissie and Lyssa are the popular related forms of Elissa (#1261) . These relations of Elissa reached the peak of their popularity a century ago (MEDIAN #1472) and have become significantly less conventional since (#1196, 65% LESS USAGE) , with versions like Alysa becoming less trendy. Elisa , Elise and Elyse are three of the more contemporarily stylish birth names in this list.
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

^ "National Register Information System" . National Register of Historic Places . National Park Service . 2 November 2013.

^
"Elissa (Bark)" . National Historic Landmark summary listing . National Park Service . Archived from the original on 13 November 2009 . Retrieved 3 July 2009 .

^ Delgado, James P (8 January 1990). " Elissa " (PDF) . National Register of Historic Places . Washington DC: National Park Service. p.Β 8 of 16 . Retrieved 7 January 2018 .

^
"Galveston Historical Foundation" . Retrieved 30 August 2012 .

^ Wolff, Henry (31 March 1989). "A Trip On Elissa" . Victoria Advocate . Retrieved 22 December 2014 .

^ "Elissa (1980)" . Texas Archive of the Moving Image . Retrieved 10 November 2019 .

^ Rice, Harvey (11 July 2011). "Galveston's tall ship Elissa no longer seaworthy" . Houston Chronicle . Retrieved 25 July 2011 .

^ "Galveston Historical Foundation | #galvestonhistory" .

^
"State symbols" . Texas State Library . Retrieved 10 June 2010 .



Pesse canoe βš“ (8040–7510 BC)
Dufuna canoe βš“ (6550 BC)
Bibongho canoe βš“ (6000 BC)
Pirogues de Bercy βš“ (4500 BC)
Khufu ship βš“ (2500 BC)
Carnegie boat βš“ (1870–1831 BC)
Chicago boat βš“ (1870–1831 BC)
Red boat βš“ (1870–1831 BC)
White boat βš“ (1870–1831 BC)
Appleby logboat βš“ (1500–1300 BC)
Dover Bronze Age Boat βš“ (1500 BC)
Hanson Log Boat βš“ (1500 BC)
Hasholme Logboat βš“ (c. 750-390 BC)
Ma'agan Michael Ship βš“ (c. 450 BC)
Fiskerton log boat βš“ (457–300 BC)
Hjortspring boat βš“ (c. 350 BC)
Kyrenia ship βš“ (c. 350 BC)
Poole Logboat βš“ (c. 300 BC)
Sea of Galilee Boat βš“ (c. 85 BC)
Alkedo βš“ (1st century AD)
De Meern 1 βš“ (148 AD)
Arles RhΓ΄ne 3 βš“ (c. 150 AD)
Bevaix boat βš“ (c. 182 AD)
Roman ship of Marausa βš“ (3rd century AD)
Nydam Boat βš“ (c. 320 AD)
Oseberg Ship βš“ (820 AD)
Gokstad ship βš“ (900 AD)
Tune ship βš“ (900 AD)
Skuldelev ships βš“ (1030–1042 AD)
Quanzhou ship βš“ (1272 AD)
Bremen cog βš“ (c. 1380 AD)
Newport Ship βš“ (1449)
Mary Rose βš“ (1509)
Tarihi KadΔ±rga βš“ (c. 1600)
Vasa βš“ (1627)
Sparrow Hawk βš“ (1628)
St. Nicholas βš“ (1640)
State Barge of Charles II βš“ (1670)
La Belle βš“ (1684)
Queen Mary's Shallop βš“ (1689)
Prince Frederick's Barge βš“ (1732)
Victory βš“ (1765)
Philadelphia βš“ (1776)
Peggy βš“ (c. 1789)
Constitution β›΅ (1797)


Zetland βš“ (1802)
Ticonderoga βš“ (1814)
Trincomalee βš“ (1817)
Unicorn βš“ (1824)
Charles W. Morgan β›΅ (1841)
Dom Fernando II e GlΓ³ria βš“ (1843)
Bertha βš“ (1844)
Great Britain βš“ (1845)
Brandtaucher βš“ (1850)
Radetzky βš“ (1851)
Snow Squall βš“ (1851)
Edwin Fox βš“ (1853)
Constellation βš“ (1854)
Santiago βš“ (1856)
Skibladner β›΅ (1856)
Gondola β›΅ (1859)
Jylland βš“ (1860)
Warrior βš“ (1860)
Cairo βš“ (1861)
Mayflower βš“ (1861)
Australia βš“ (1862)
Chattahoochee βš“ (1863)
Daring βš“ (1863)
H. L. Hunley βš“ (1863)
Intelligent Whale βš“ (1863)
Neuse βš“ (1863)
Star of India βš“ (1863)
Sub Marine Explorer βš“οΈ (1863)
City of Adelaide βš“ (1864)
Jackson βš“ (1864)
Streletsβ€Ž (1864)
El Mahrousa β›΅ (1865)
HuΓ‘scar βš“ (1865)
Adelaide β›΅ (1866)
Bjoren β›΅ (1866)
Emma C. Berry βš“ (1866)
Buffel βš“ (1868)
EnkΓΆping β›΅ (1868)
Lone Star βš“ (1868)
Schorpioen βš“ (1868)
Cutty Sark βš“ (1869)
Katarina βš“ (1869)
Yavari βš“ (1870)
Leitha βš“ (1871)
Lewis R. French β›΅ (1871)
Raven β›΅ (1871)
Stephen Taber β›΅ (1871)
Puno β›΅ (1872)
GjΓΈa βš“ (1872)
Meiji Maru βš“ (1873)
Rap βš“ (1873)
Hero βš“ (1874)
James Craig β›΅ (1874)
Juno β›΅ (1874)
Uruguay βš“ (1874)
MuΓ±oz Gamero (1875)
SΓΆlve βš“ (1875)
Anna Karoline βš“ (1876)
Bonaire βš“ (1877)
Elissa β›΅ (1877)
Gem βš“ (1877)
Governor Stone β›΅ (1877)
Lady of the Lake β›΅ (1877)
Enterprise β›΅ (1878)
Falls of Clyde βš“ (1878)
Gannet βš“ (1878)
Holland I βš“ (1878)
Lady Elizabeth βš“ (1879)
Vallejo ⛡️ (1879)


Annie βš“ (1880)
Fenian Ram βš“ (1881)
Mary D. Hume βš“οΈ (1881)
George Smeed ⛡️ (1882)
Grace Bailey β›΅ (1882)
Joseph Conrad β›΅ (1882)
Christeen βš“ (1883)
Nelcebee βš“ (1883)
AbdΓ³n CalderΓ³n βš“ (1884)
Little Jennie βš“ (1884)
Kuna β›΅ (1884)
Amazon β›΅ (1885)
Coronet βš“ (1885)
Pioneer β›΅ (1885)
Polly Woodside βš“ (1885)
Wavertree βš“ (1885)
Balclutha βš“ (1886)
L'AlmΓ©e βš“ (1885)
Segwun β›΅ (1887)
Sigyn βš“ (1887)
Tyr βš“ (1887)
Akarana βš“ (1888)
af Chapman βš“ (1888)
Elf β›΅ (1888)
Equator βš“ (1888)
Priscilla βš“ (1888)
Anna Kristina β›΅ (1889)
Arthur Foss βš“ (1889)
Edna E Lockwood ⛡️ (1889)
Peral βš“ (1889)
Raven β›΅ (1889)
" Eureka " βš“ (1890)
Persistence ⛡️ (1890)
Robin βš“ (1890)
Alma βš“ (1891)
Nellie βš“ (1891)
Ruby G. Ford ⛡️ (1891)
Tern β›΅ (1891)
Fram βš“ (1892)
Kestrel βš“ (1892)
Mirosa β›΅ (1892)
Olympia βš“ (1892)
Rona βš“οΈ (1892)
Coya βš“ (1893)
El Primero β›΅ (1893)
Lettie G. Howard β›΅ (1893)
Maggie S. Myers β›΅ (1893)
Result βš“ (1893)
Viking βš“ (1893)
Alfred Corry (ON 353) βš“ (1894)
Effie M. Morrissey β›΅ (1894)
Henry Ramey Upcher βš“ (1894)
Turbinia βš“ (1894)
Vridni βš“ (1894)
Bessie β›΅ (1895)
C.A. Thayer βš“ (1895)
Centaur β›΅ (1895)
Gedser Rev βš“ (1895)
Hiawatha β›΅ (1895)
Kitty β›΅ (1895)
Belem β›΅ (1896)
Edna G βš“ (1896)
GenΓ¨ve βš“ (1896)
Glenlee βš“ (1896)
Meteor βš“ (1896)
Rebecca T. Ruark βš“ (1896)
Rickmer Rickmers βš“ (1896)
La Dolce Vita β›΅ (1897)
Keenora βš“ (1897)
Najaden βš“ (1897)
Presidente Sarmiento βš“ (1897)
Wyvern β›΅ (1897)
Carola βš“ (1898)
Marjorie β›΅ (1898)
Niagara β›΅ (1898)
Berkeley βš“ (1898)
Edme β›΅ (1898)
Moyie βš“ (1898)
Niagara β›΅ (1898)
Waimarie ⛡️ (1898)
Wyvenhoe β›΅ (1898)
Albatros β›΅ (1899)
Decima β›΅ (1899)
Maud β›΅ (1899)
Stjernen I β›΅ (1899)
William B. Tennison βš“ (1899)


Aurora βš“ (1900)
Edward M. Cotter β›΅ (1900)
Ena β›΅ (1900)
Helen McAllister βš“ (1900)
Howard L. Shaw βš“ (1900)
Ironsides β›΅ (1900)
Kathleen and May β›΅ (1900)
Mikasa βš“ (1900)
Regina M. βš“οΈ (1900)
VΓ€stan β›΅ (1900)
Victory Chimes β›΅ (1900)
Cangarda β›΅ (1901)
Discovery βš“ (1901)
Duchesse Anne βš“ (1901)
Elsworth βš“ (1901)
Gazela βš“ (1901)
Holland 1 βš“ (1901)
Kathryn βš“ (1901)
Reaper β›΅ (1901)
Sigsbee β›΅ (1901)
Tilikum βš“ c. 1901
Urger β›΅ (1901)
Basuto βš“ (1902)
Columbia βš“ (1902)
Jupiter βš“ (1902)
Madiz β›΅ (1902)
Shenandoah β›΅ (1902)
Solway Lass β›΅ (1902)
Stanley Norman βš“ (1902)
Suomen Joutsen βš“ (1902)
Alma Doepel β›΅ (1903)
Billie P. Hall ⛡️ (1903)
Celtic βš“ (1903)
Finngrundet βš“ (1903)
FΓΆri ⛡️ (1903)
Light Vessel 72 β›΅ (1903)
Maggie Lee β›΅ (1903)
Normac βš“ (1903)
Pommern βš“ (1903)
Alose βš“ (1904)
Ariki βš“ (1904)
Barnegat βš“ (1904)
Black Jack β›΅ (1904)
Fannie L. Daugherty β›΅ (1904)
J C Madge βš“ (1904)
Maple Leaf ⛡️ (1904)
Juniata βš“ (1904)
Medea βš“ (1904)
Moshulu βš“ (1904)
Sava βš“ (1904)
Swiftsure βš“ (1904)
Asgard βš“ (1905)
Fæmund II ⛡ (1905)
Hathor β›΅ (1905)
Hilda M. Willing β›΅ (1905)
Ridgetown (1905) βš“ (1905)
Alexander von Humboldt β›΅ (1906)
Baltimore βš“ (1906)
BlΓΌmlisalp β›΅ (1906)
Cambria β›΅ (1906)
Edith May β›΅ (1906)
Ena (1906) βš“οΈ (1906)
Ida May β›΅ (1906)
Minnehaha β›΅ (1906)
Minnie V ⛡️ (1906)
Γ–stanΓ₯ I β›΅ (1906)
St. Marys Challenger β›΅ (1906)
Thalatta β›΅ (1906)
Ticonderoga βš“ (1906)
U-1 βš“ (1906)
Viola βš“ (1906)
Ambrose βš“ (1907)
Drazki βš“ (1907)
F. C. Lewis Jr. β›΅ (1907)
Henrik Ibsen β›΅ (1907)
Hercules βš“ (1907)
Irene β›΅ (1907)
Keewatin βš“ (1907)
Nyanza βš“ (1907)
Rosa β›΅ (1907)
Ruby βš“ (1907)
Tarmo βš“ (1907)
Viking βš“ (1907)
Yankee βš“ (1907)


Circle Line XIV β›΅ (1908)
Entiat Princess β›΅ (1908)
Fehmarnbelt β›΅ (1908)
Mohican II β›΅ (1908)
Oscar W β›΅ (1908)
Oster β›΅ (1908)
Sabino β›΅ (1908)
Speeder ⛡️ (1908)
StorskΓ€r β›΅ (1908)
Ardwina β›΅ (1909)
Bigwin ⛡️ ( 1909)
Dar Pomorza βš“ (1909)
Duwamish βš“ (1909)
Großherzogin Elisabeth β›΅ (1909)
Lotus β›΅ (1909)
President β›΅ (1909)
Stadt ZΓΌrich β›΅ (1909)
Steam Pinnace 199 β›΅ (1909)
Gonca β›΅ (1909)
E.C. Collier βš“ (1910)
Georgios Averof βš“ (1910)
Noorderlicht β›΅ (1910)
NorrskΓ€r β›΅ (1910)
Ste. Claire βš“ (1910)
Trillium β›΅ (1910)
Suriname-Rivier βš“ (1910)
Europa β›΅ (1911)
Eye of the Wind β›΅ (1911)
Helen Smitton βš“ (1911)
Hestmanden βš“ (1911)
James M. Schoonmaker βš“ (1911)
McKeever Brothers βš“ (1911)
Nellie L. Byrd β›΅ (1911)
Nomadic βš“ (1911)
Nusret βš“ (1911)
Passat βš“ (1911)
Peking βš“ (1911)
Pevensey β›΅ (1911)
Tradewind β›΅ (1911)
WΓ€iski βš“ (1911)
African Queen βš“ (1912)
Astoria ⛡️ (1912)
Canberra β›΅ (1912)
Cartela β›΅ (1912)
Chacon βš“ (1912)
Earnslaw β›΅ (1912)
Gustaf III β›΅ (1912)
Gustafsberg VII β›΅ (1912)
James Caird βš“ (1912)
J. L. Runeberg β›΅ (1912)
Kwasind β›΅ (1912)
Lady Denman βš“ (1912)
Margaret β›΅ (1912)
Sundowner β›΅ (1912)
Texas βš“ (1912)
Wendameen β›΅ (1912)
Zhongshan βš“ (1912)
Miktat Kalkavan β›΅ (1912)
Acadia βš“ (1913)
Adventuress β›΅ (1913)
Benjamim GuimarΓ£es β›΅ (1913)
Dredge No. 4 βš“οΈ (1913)
Jolie Brise β›΅ (1913)
Kildare β›΅ (1913)
Kommuna β›΅ (1913)
Kyle βš“ (1913)
North Head βš“ (1913)
Rusinga βš“οΈ (1913)
Stord I β›΅ (1913)
Suur TΓ΅ll β›΅ (1913)
Usoga β›΅ (1913)
Naramata βš“ (1914)
Sicamous βš“ (1914)
Stadt Rapperswil β›΅ (1914)


Belle of Louisville β›΅ (1914)
Britannia ⛡️ (1914)
Bustardthorpe β›΅ (1914)
Caroline βš“ (1914)
Hercules β›΅ (1914)
Horns Rev βš“ (1914)
Katahdin β›΅ (1914)
Libby's No. 23 βš“ (1914)
Doulos Phos βš“ (1914)
Perth βš“ (1914)
Pilot β›΅ (1914)
Statsraad Lehmkuhl β›΅ (1914)
Zumbrota β›΅ (1914)
Bradbury βš“ (1915)
Graf von Goetzen β›΅ (1915)
Katie β›΅ (1915)
Langer Heinrich β›΅ (1915)
M33 βš“ (1915)
Mar-Sue β›΅ (1915)
Miseford β›΅ (1915)
Peacock β›΅ (1915)
Sankt Erik β›΅ (1915)
Wilhelm Carpelan βš“ (1915)
Coastal Motor Boat 4 βš“ (1916)
Krassin βš“ (1916)
Mariette ⛡️ (1916)
Mercantile β›΅ (1916)
Portsmouth βš“ (1916)
UB-46 βš“ (1916)
Carlisle II β›΅ (1917) βš“ (1917)
Carpentaria βš“ (1917)
Commander β›΅ (1917)
L'Art de Vivre β›΅ (1917)
Maud βš“ (1917)
St. Julien ⛡️ (1917)
Valley Camp βš“οΈ (1917)
El Don ⛡️ (1918)
Felipe Larrazabal βš“ (1918)
Kapitan Borchardt β›΅ (1918)
Lotus β›΅ (1918)
Oosterschelde β›΅ (1918)
President βš“ (1918)
Surprise β›΅ (1918)
W. P. Snyder Jr. βš“ (1918)

The tall ship Elissa is a three- masted barque . She is based in Galveston, Texas , and is one of the oldest ships sailing today. Launched in 1877, she is now a museum ship at the Texas Seaport Museum. She was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1990.

Elissa was built in Aberdeen , Scotland as a merchant vessel in a time when steamships were overtaking sailing ships. She was launched on October 27, 1877. The vessel was named for the niece of Henry Fowler Watt, Elissa ' s first owner, [3] though according to his descendants the ship was named for the Queen of Carthage, Elissa (more commonly called Dido ), Aeneas' tragic lover in the epic poem The Aeneid . [ citation needed ]

Elissa also sailed under Norwegian and Swedish flags. In Norway she was known as the Fjeld of TΓΈnsberg and her master was Captain Herman Andersen . In Sweden her name was Gustav of Gothenburg . In 1918, she was converted into a two- masted brigantine and an engine was installed. She was sold to Finland in 1930 (owned by Gustaf Erikson to 1942) and reconverted into a schooner . In 1959, she was sold to Greece, and successively sailed under the names Christophoros , in 1967 as Achaeos , and in 1969 as Pioneer . In 1970, she was rescued from destruction in Piraeus after being purchased for the San Francisco Maritime Museum . However, she languished in a salvage yard in Piraeus until she was purchased for $40,000, in 1975, by the Galveston Historical Foundation, her current owners. [4] In 1979, after a year in Greece having repairs done to her hull , Elissa was first towed to Gibraltar . There, she was prepared for an ocean tow by Captain Jim Currie of the New Orleans surveyors J.K. Tynan International. The restoration process continued until she was ready for tow on June 7, 1979. [ citation needed ]

Elissa has an iron hull, and the pin rail and bright work is made of teak . Her masts are Douglas fir from Oregon , and her 19 sails were made in Maine . She has survived numerous modifications including installation of an engine, and the incremental removal of all her rigging and masts. [ citation needed ]

Elissa made her first voyage as a restored sailing ship in 1985, traveling to Corpus Christi, Texas . In Freeport the crew was joined by seventh grader Jerry Diegel and Betty Rusk, his history and English teacher, after Diegel won an essay contest on the history of the Elissa. [5] A year later, she sailed to New York City to take part in the Statue of Liberty 's centennial celebrations. When she's not sailing, Elissa is moored at the Texas Seaport Museum in Galveston. [6] Public tours are available year-round-provided she is not out sailing. The ship is sailed and maintained by qualified volunteers from around the nation. [ citation needed ]

In July 2011, the U.S. Coast Guard declared Elissa to be "not seaworthy." [7] The Coast Guard inspection in 2011 revealed a corroded hull. The tall ship is inspected twice every five years, said John Schaumburg, museum assistant director. The 2011 inspection uncovered the worst corrosion since the tall ship was rebuilt in 1982, he said. [ citation needed ] Texas Seaport Museum raised the $3 million that paid for hull replacement and other long-overdue maintenance projects, finishing in January 2013. The museum also replaced the 22,000 board feet of Douglas fir decking and building new quarterdeck furniture out of high quality teak. Elissa returned to sailing once again in March 2014. She ran a series of daily sails for a period of two weeks out of her home port of Galveston.

Elissa remains one of the world's oldest sailing hulls still in operation. [8] The oldest is the coasting schooner Lewis R. French , launched in 1871 in Christmas Cove, Maine . She still sails as part of the windjammer fleet out of Camden, Maine .


Alexander Hall & Co.
Aberdeen, Scotland

Galveston Historic Seaport, Galveston, Texas
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Elissa (ship, 1877) .

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