Balclutha, took her maiden voyage in 1886, setting a course from Cardiff, Wales to
San Francisco, California, with a 26-man crew and a cargo consisting of more than 2,500 tons of coal. She was later transferred to Hawaiian registry in 1899 and became the last vessel to fly under the flag of the Hawaiian Kingdom. In the early 1900s, it was renamed the Star of Alaska and then in the 1930s took the name Pacific Queen, which is also when she played a starring role in the film
Mutiny on the Bounty. Declared a National Historic Landmark in 1985, she now makes her home at the San Francisco Maritime National Historic Park. The park also houses the C.A. Thayer (1895), which was designed to haul lumber, and the USS Alma (1891), the last-of-her-kind scow schooner, designed with a flat-bottomed hull, so she could navigate the shallow waters of the Sacramento/San Joaquin Delta.