12281/12630
[ stop the slideshow ]

A Black Ball Packet

A Black Ball Packet.jpg A blacksmithThumbnailsA Bishop’s Crozier, which appears to be of Italian manufacture. (Fourteenth Century)A blacksmithThumbnailsA Bishop’s Crozier, which appears to be of Italian manufacture. (Fourteenth Century)A blacksmithThumbnailsA Bishop’s Crozier, which appears to be of Italian manufacture. (Fourteenth Century)A blacksmithThumbnailsA Bishop’s Crozier, which appears to be of Italian manufacture. (Fourteenth Century)A blacksmithThumbnailsA Bishop’s Crozier, which appears to be of Italian manufacture. (Fourteenth Century)A blacksmithThumbnailsA Bishop’s Crozier, which appears to be of Italian manufacture. (Fourteenth Century)A blacksmithThumbnailsA Bishop’s Crozier, which appears to be of Italian manufacture. (Fourteenth Century)

Ships of this type carried the transatlantic passengers of the early part of the 19th Century. Because of the demand of the owners of the Black Ball Line and of its competitors, America, where these lines were owned and where their ships were built, developed the designers who ultimately gave the world the clipper ships.