| Salvator (schooner) | The Salvator, a four-masted schooner of 467 tons and 550 M capacity, was built at Eureka in 1890 for C. A. Hooper, San Francisco. She was named for J. B. Haggin's great race horse. Later owned by the Pacific Shipping Co., the schooner was sold in 1912 to Libby, McNeil & Libby and operated out of Seattle as a salmon packer. In 1931 she was sold to owners in Seward, and was wrecked in Seldovia Bay in 1935. John Lyman, Pacific Coast Built Sailers, 1850-1905, The Marine Digest. August 16, 1941, p. 2 |
| Citation: Tacoma Public Library |
| Salvator (schooner) | Unloading barreled salmon at San Francisco. Jim Gibbs, Pacific Square-riggers., p. 55. |
| Citation: Tacoma Public Library |
| Salvator (schooner) | The Salvator, a four-masted schooner of 467 tons and 550 M capacity, was built at Eureka in 1890 for C. A. Hooper, San Francisco. She was named for J. B. Haggin's great race horse. Later owned by the Pacific Shipping Co., the schooner was sold in 1912 to Libby, McNeil & Libby and operated out of Seattle as a salmon packer. In 1931 she was sold to owners in Seward, and was wrecked in Seldovia Bay in 1935. John Lyman, Pacific Coast Built Sailers, 1850-1905, The Marine Digest. August 16, 1941, p. 2 |
| Citation: Tacoma Public Library |