⚓ Directory
← Museum lobby· wall view· plan
GALLERY II · OBJECT HALL

Ship Construction

The anatomy of a wooden ship — how she was framed, planked, rigged and worked. Walk the cases — press a lit plate to look closer.

Lobby Directory Special Classroom Archives Facilities
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 1 · Gallery II

Hull

The wooden hull was the structural skeleton enabling pirate operations across the Atlantic and Caribbean, 1650–1725. Built from oak, pine, and elm, these vessels combined speed, cargo capacity, and shallow draft for coastal raids and merchant pursuit.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 2 · Gallery II

Frames

Ship frames—the wooden skeleton of Golden Age vessels—were the structural ribs that defined hull shape and strength. Constructed from naturally curved timber and assembled with wooden pegs, frames bore the immense stresses of sail, sea, and cannon. Their design and quality determined a ship's seaworthiness, speed, and combat durability.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 3 · Gallery II

Keel

The keel was the wooden backbone of every Golden Age pirate and merchant vessel, running the entire length of the hull from stem to sternpost. This primary structural member bore all weight, transferred forces, and determined a ship's stability and seaworthiness. Without a sound keel, no vessel survived Atlantic storms or combat.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 4 · Gallery II

Stem

Wooden sailing vessels—primarily sloops, brigantines, and converted merchant ships—enabled piracy's golden age. Built with oak frames, pine planking, and hemp rigging, these ships combined speed, cargo capacity, and shallow draft for Caribbean raiding and Atlantic commerce disruption.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 5 · Gallery II

Sternpost

The sternpost was the vertical timber backbone of a wooden ship's stern, mortised into the sternframe and keel. It supported the rudder, carried the weight of the stern structure, and endured extreme stress from waves, weather, and rudder action during the Golden Age of Piracy.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 6 · Gallery II

Planking

Planking formed the hull envelope of wooden warships and merchant vessels during the Golden Age of Piracy (1650–1725). Overlapped strakes of oak, elm, and pine created watertight hulls capable of withstanding Caribbean storms and naval combat. Planking technique directly determined a ship's seaworthiness, speed, and longevity.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 7 · Gallery II

Copper Sheathing

Copper sheathing, thin copper plates nailed below the waterline, protected wooden hulls from shipworm and barnacle damage during the Golden Age of Piracy. Adopted widely by European navies and merchant fleets after 1700, it extended vessel operational life and maintained speed—critical advantages for naval warfare and commerce raiding.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 8 · Gallery II

Caulking

Caulking sealed wooden ship hulls by driving oakum into seams between planks, then coating with pitch or tar. Essential for watertightness, this labor-intensive craft determined vessel longevity and seaworthiness during the Golden Age of Piracy.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 9 · Gallery II

Ballast

Ballast—heavy material loaded into a ship's hold—was essential to maritime operations during the Golden Age of Piracy. Stones, sand, iron, and lead stabilized vessels, improved sailing characteristics, and enabled cargo capacity. Ballast management directly affected a ship's seaworthiness, speed, and combat effectiveness.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 10 · Gallery II

Bilge

The bilge was the lowest internal compartment of wooden ships (c.1650–1725), collecting seawater infiltration, ballast runoff, and waste. Essential to hull integrity, it required constant pumping to prevent rot, foundering, and disease. Bilge conditions reflected crew discipline and ship maintenance standards.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 11 · Gallery II

Deck Beams

Deck beams were the primary transverse structural members supporting a wooden ship's decks. Mortised into the ship's frame, these massive timbers distributed crew weight, cargo, and cannon loads across the hull, enabling the multi-deck warships and merchant vessels that defined the Golden Age of Piracy.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 12 · Gallery II

Masts

Wooden masts were the skeletal spine of Golden Age pirate vessels, engineered from selected timber and rigged with canvas to harness wind. Three-mast configurations dominated fast sloops and brigantines, enabling speed and maneuverability essential for predation and escape.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 13 · Gallery II

Yards

Wooden merchant and naval vessels of 1650–1725 enabled global trade and piracy. Built with oak frames, pine planking, and hemp rigging, these ships required master shipwrights, specialized labor, and months of construction. Their design balanced cargo capacity, speed, and seaworthiness, making them targets and tools of maritime predation.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 14 · Gallery II

Bowsprit

The bowsprit was a tapered wooden spar extending forward from a ship's bow, essential for spreading headsails and stabilizing the vessel. Critical to Golden Age pirate ships and merchant vessels alike, it bore enormous tensile stress and required expert carpentry to construct and maintain effectively.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 15 · Gallery II

Spars

Wooden spars—masts, yards, booms, and gaffs—formed the skeletal rigging infrastructure of pirate vessels during the Golden Age (1650–1725). Hewn from select timber and precisely positioned, spars enabled speed, maneuverability, and the canvas deployment necessary for commerce raiding across Atlantic and Indian Ocean routes.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 16 · Gallery II

Standing Rigging

Standing rigging—the permanent rope and wire system supporting masts and spars—was essential to Golden Age pirate and merchant vessels. Fixed in place, it bore structural loads and enabled sail deployment. Understanding standing rigging reveals how wooden ships achieved seaworthiness and speed.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 17 · Gallery II

Running Rigging

Running rigging—the movable rope systems controlling sails and yards—enabled rapid sail adjustment essential to merchant pursuit, naval combat, and pirate predation. Composed of halyards, sheets, tacks, and braces, these systems represented the technological interface between human crew and wind power during 1650–1725.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 18 · Gallery II

Blocks

Wooden blocks—pulley systems essential to sailing ship operation—enabled crews to manage heavy rigging, sails, and cargo through mechanical advantage. Carved from lignum vitae or elm, these devices represented critical maritime technology, with hundreds installed on a single vessel to distribute loads and facilitate complex maneuvers.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 19 · Gallery II

Deadeyes

Deadeyes were wooden or lignum vitae blocks with three holes, used to tension shrouds and stays on sailing vessels. Essential rigging hardware from the Age of Sail, they distributed load across multiple rope passes and allowed fine adjustment of mast stability without metal fittings.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 20 · Gallery II

Capstan

A rotating cylindrical machine that multiplied human muscle through mechanical advantage, the capstan hauled anchors, raised sails, and moved cargo aboard pirate and naval vessels during the Golden Age. Essential to ship operations, it embodied Renaissance engineering principles applied to maritime survival.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 21 · Gallery II

Windlass

The windlass was a horizontal rotating drum powered by sailors pushing capstan bars, essential for raising anchors, hauling cargo, and managing heavy rigging aboard Golden Age pirate and merchant vessels. Its mechanical advantage transformed human muscle into decisive maritime power.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 22 · Gallery II

Anchors

Anchors were critical survival equipment for wooden sailing vessels during the Golden Age of Piracy (1650–1725). These massive iron devices secured ships in harbor and emergency situations, with designs refined over centuries. Pirate and merchant vessels carried multiple anchors of varying sizes and specialized functions.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 23 · Gallery II

Ship's Wheel

Wooden ship's wheel, c.1680–1720, the primary steering mechanism of Golden Age pirate ships and merchant vessels. Rope-and-pulley system transmitted helm orders to rudder. Diameter 4–6 feet; typically 8–12 spokes; oak or elm. Essential to command and survival at sea.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 24 · Gallery II

Tiller

The tiller was a wooden lever pivoted on the sternpost, transmitting helmsman force to the rudder. Essential for steering wooden sailing vessels during the Golden Age of Piracy, tillers were crafted from oak or elm, typically 12–18 feet long, and required considerable physical strength to operate in heavy seas.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 25 · Gallery II

Pumps

Wooden ships of the Golden Age leaked constantly. Pumps—hand-operated centrifugal and chain devices—removed seawater from bilges, keeping vessels afloat. Essential to survival at sea, pumps required round-the-clock operation during storms and combat.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 26 · Gallery II

Sails

Sails were the critical propulsion system of Golden Age pirate vessels, engineered from linen canvas in multiple configurations to maximize speed and maneuverability. Skilled sailmakers crafted square, fore-and-aft, and specialized sails using hand-sewn techniques. Maintenance and replacement consumed significant crew labor and ship resources throughout the era.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 27 · Gallery II

Canvas

Canvas—the woven fabric that powered the Golden Age of Piracy. From Caribbean sloops to Indian Ocean frigates, canvas sails transformed wooden hulls into instruments of commerce and predation. This exhibit examines the material, manufacture, rigging systems, and operational demands of sail cloth during the era 1650–1725.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 28 · Gallery II

Rope

Rope was the circulatory system of wooden sailing vessels, enabling rigging, anchoring, and cargo operations. Made from tarred hemp, manila, and coir fibers, period ropes ranged from 1-inch diameter hawsers to delicate signal lines, each engineered for specific loads and environmental conditions aboard pirate and merchant ships.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 29 · Gallery II

Tar

Tar was the critical waterproofing and preservation agent in Golden Age shipbuilding, derived from pine and other softwoods through destructive distillation. Applied to hulls, rigging, and seams, it prevented rot, extended vessel lifespan, and enabled long-distance oceanic commerce and naval warfare across the Atlantic and Indian Oceans.

Read the Exhibit
PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 30 · Gallery II

Pitch

Pitch—a viscous byproduct of pine tar distillation—was essential to wooden ship construction and maintenance during the Golden Age of Piracy. Applied to hulls, seams, and rigging, it waterproofed vessels and extended their operational lifespan in saltwater environments.

Read the Exhibit
END WALL · GALLERY II

Loading day on the quay — demo mural; swap or clear from the Exhibit Plan.

← PREVIOUS GALLERY
I · Ships of the Golden Age
PLAN
Visit Planner
NEXT GALLERY →
III · Weapons
🗺 POCKET MAP
🗺 Museum Map
Galleries
Plan your visit
Your route
…tracing your steps…