The pictures below are of a model of the packet ship Shenandoah was built in 1840 by John Vaugn & Son at Philadelphia, Pa. for Thomas P. Cope & Son, better known as the Cope Line. Wealthy Philadelphia Quakers, the Copes transported about 60,000 passengers—mostly Irish immigrants—from Liverpool to Philadelphia from 1820-1870. Of these passengers, our GGG Grandfather, William Bennett, brought his wife, Elizabeth Scholefield Bennett and their two sons, Samuel and our GG Grandfather, Benjamin Franklin Bennett, from their home in Calverley (Leeds), Yorkshire, England via Liverpool to Philadelphia on December 26, 1846.
Genealogical research of the Smith, Boyle, Bennett and Knoll families in the Manayunk/Roxborough section of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. This genealogy has taken 40+ years to collect, analyze, collate and research. I don't mind sharing information, however, this is copyrighted material. Please, do not publish without my permission.
© 2014 - 2021 William B. Hillanbrand. All rights reserved.
Saturday, June 30, 2018
Measuring 143’ long and 738 tons, the Shenandoah spent nearly its entire career on the Philadelphia–Liverpool passage. It made 14 voyages for the Cope Line from 1839-44. In 1845 it sailed for the Dunham & Dimon Liverpool Line out of NY, but the following year it returned to Philadelphia for the Black Diamond Line. By 1847 it served the New Line, clearing Philadelphia on the 1st of the month and leaving Liverpool five weeks later, on the 8th of the following month. In the late 1840s, it lost its popular captain to the new Collins ocean steamship Atlantic. Many of the old sailing packet companies lost their captains to the newer and faster transatlantic steamship lines. The Shenandoah was abandoned at sea in August 1854.
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