Bicentennial Speaker Series:
A History of Ship Building Along
Ohio's Northern Shore
A Thesis
Presented to
The Graduate Faculty of the University of Akron
In Partial Fulfillment
of the Requirements for the Degree
Master of Arts
Richard J. Wright
August, 1963
"FAIRBANKS CHURCH"
His place of birth is unknown.
Church was a master carpenter for James Day
in Black River, Ohio.
In 1819, he built the General Huntington
along with James, Day, Augustus Jones
and Enoch Murdock.
The schooners Ann (1819) and Young Amaranth (1825)
were also built there by Church and Day.
He later relocated to Huron, Ohio
where he established a shipyard.
The schooner Marengo (1831) appears to be the first vessel built by Church in Huron.
The steamer George Washington was built
there in 1833 by Church and Captain Augustus Walker.
She ran for the Huron Steam Boat Company with Captain Walker as her Master.
Church and Walker also partnered in the building of the Sheldon Thompson (1833).
Church was well-known for building side-wheel steamer in the 1830s.
The United States (1834), DeWitt Clinton (1836), Cleveland (1837), Great Western(1838)
and General Scott (1839) were all side-wheelers built by Church in Huron.
The steamer Sandusky (1834) appears to be
his only build at Sandusky.
The James Monroe, a side-wheel steamer, was built in Monroe, Michigan by Church in 1834.
In 1841, Church and Joseph Keating built the Toledo,
also a side-wheel steamer, in Toledo, Ohio.
Fairbanks Church launched a small steamer on June 13, 1839 which was described as "the greatest little boat ever built on these or any other waters."
This was the last steamer built by Church.
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Sharing a link to Captain Fairbanks Church III's memorial on
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(F) For purposes of this section:
(1) "Cemetery" means any place of burial and includes burial sites that contain American Indian burial objects placed with or containing American Indian human remains.
(2) "Serious physical harm" means physical harm to property that results in loss to the value of the property of one thousand dollars or more.