JC Wriede

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The shipyard of J. Wriede and his son JC Wriede on Finkenwerder built around 100 wooden ships for regional needs from 1800 to 1904.

history

From around 1800, Joachim Wriede built small wooden sailing ships , mainly galeasses , schooners , cutters and ewer for coastal travel, the Elbe and tributaries. His son Julius Carsten Wriede worked in his father's shipyard since 1828 and later took over the business from his father. From 1840 on, larger cargo sailors up to 350 GRT were also built, which were well suited for sea travel. From 1880 on, fishing and fishing trawlers of 40 to 100 GRT predominated. It was especially the captains and shipowners from Finkenwerder, Blankenese , Moorburg , Cranz , Estebrugge , Krautsand , Neuenfelde and Hamburg as a whole who had their ships built here. Around a hundred ships were built at this shipyard by 1904.

The shipyard was sold to JR Köser in 1920, who mainly built and repaired yachts until 1926. After the Second World War, Julius Carsten Wriede, a great-grandson of the founder, reopened a boatyard, which however fell victim to the great storm surge in 1962 .

See also

swell

  • Szymanski, H .: Die Ewer der Niederelbe, Salzwasser-Verlag, January 2010; ISBN 3861951916