J. Henry Edmunds was a pilot schooner built in March 1887, at the C. & R. Poillon shipyard in Brooklyn, New York, for a crew of eleven Pennsylvania pilots. She was known as the No. 3 of Philadelphia fleet. The cost of the Edmunds was $13,000.[1]
The J. Henry Edmunds was registered as a pilot Schooner with the ‘’Record of American and Foreign Shipping,’’ from 1888 to 1993. Her ship master was Captain H. Bailey; her owners were Philadelphia pilots; built in 1887 at Brooklyn, New York (C. & R. Poillon); and her hailing port was the Port of Philadelphia. Her dimensions were 76.3 ft. in length; 20.5 ft. breadth of beam; 8.6 ft. depth of hold; and 56-tons Tonnage.[2]
During the Great Blizzard of 1888 the pilot boats J. Henry Edmunds and E. C. Knight were blown out to sea during the storm. Pilots Sam Bailey, M. Hughes, Ellis Eldredge and Albert Bennet.[3]
The pilot boats J. Henry Edmunds and Ebe W. Tunnell and their Cape May pilots, kept to their assigned area at the Five Fathom Bank, which was twenty-five miles east of Cape Henlopen until the Pilots' Association For The Bay & River Delaware was formed in November 28, 1896. This area was ideal for boarding steamers as it was on the direct line from Europe. After the Pilots' Association was formed, many of the Delaware pilot boats were purchased or sold.[4]
When the steamboat Pennsylvania was built in 1896, the Edmunds was used as a auxiliary to her. The Pennsylvania was purchased by the United States Navy on May 23, 1898 from the Philadelphia Pilots' Association, she was replaced by the two remaining pilot boats the J. Henry Edmunds and the Ebe W. Tunnell.[5] In November 1899, the Philadelphia Pilots' Association placed the Edmunds on a railway at the Jackson and Sharp Company for general overhauling and repairs.[6]
On September 27, 1892, the pilot boat J. Henry Edmunds was run down by a four-masted schooner Ralph M. Haywood of New York, twenty-five miles offshore. The Edmunds sank near the Five Fathom Bank lightship and was a total loss. Elis Eldridge and Alfonso Bennett were the only pilots on board at the time of the collision. They and the crew came on board the Haywood and were taken to the pilot boat John G. Whilldin, which took them to Cape May. The pilot boat was valued at $13,000 and owned by the Cape May pilots.[7]
A new pilot boat J. Henry Edmunds was built to replace the Edmunds that sank on 1892. She was launched on February 9, 1893, from C. & R. Poillon's shipyard in New York. Her cost was $16,000.[8] The new J. Henry Edmunds was registered as a pilot Schooner with the ‘’Record of American and Foreign Shipping,’’ from 1894 to 1900. Her new ship master was Captain Hughes; her owners were Philadelphia pilots; built in 1893 in Brooklyn, New York (C. & R. Poillon); and her hailing port was the Port of Philadelphia. Her new dimensions were 85 ft. in length; 21.6 ft. breadth of beam; 9 ft. depth of hold; and 69-tons Tonnage.[9] She was powered by a 125-horsepower diesel engine.
The pilot boat J. Henry Edmunds was lost on March 12, 1928, when she was grounded on the shoals of Cape Henlopen, Delaware, in dense fog and bad weather. The nose of the boat rammed into the sand.[10] The Pilots' Association of Philadelphia, turned her over to the underwriters after failed attempts were made to pull her off the beach. She was the last schooner-rigged pilot boat in the Delaware Bay.[11] [4]
On March 24, 1928, the Edmunds was sold at public auction by D. W. Burbage to George Shockley of Rehoboth Beach, Delaware for $350.[12]