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Bluenose - Wikipedia A celebrated racing ship and fishing vessel, Bluenose under the command of Angus Walters, became a provincial icon for Nova Scotia and an important Canadian symbol in the 1930s, serving as a working vessel until she was wrecked in 1946
What Happened to the Bluenose? - Readers Digest Canada The popular tourist attraction in Lunenburg Harbour isn’t the Bluenose, but the Bluenose II, which begs the question: What happened to the original? Find out the fascinating history—and tragic fate—of a true Canadian icon
Bluenose - The Canadian Encyclopedia The most famous ship in Canadian history, the Bluenose was both a fishing and racing vessel in the 1920s and 1930s The Nova Scotia schooner achieved immortality when its image was engraved onto the Canadian dime The Bluenose was launched at Lunenburg, Nova Scotia in 1921
The Bluenose - Canadas History Bluenose not only found glory at that race but went on to dominate international sailing racing for the next decade In the 1930s, the vessel found further fame, representing Canada at the 1933 world’s fair in Chicago and taking part in the 1935 silver jubilee of King George V
Bluenose - Fisheries Museum of the Atlantic Generations of Atlantic Canadians have grown up with stories of Captain Angus Walters and Bluenose The vessel became the world's most famous Nova Scotian fishing schooner and won a place in the hearts of thousands
Home - Bluenose 100 Welcome to the Bluenose 100th Anniversary website This special site is a tribute to the legendary fishing schooner herself, her colourful captain and devoted crew, and all the courageous fishermen who sailed the seas during the “ golden age of sail ”
Nova Scotia Archives - Bluenose: A Canadian Icon A virtual exhibit featuring over 350 heritage photographs, original documents, charts and miscellaneous items that tell the stories of Bluenose and Bluenose II, the people who sailed them and the times in which they lived
Bluntnose sixgill shark - Washington Department of Fish Wildlife The litter size for bluntnose sixgill sharks ranges from 22 to 108 pups! Due to their prevalence in deepwater habitat, evidence indicates this is one of the most widespread shark species in the world