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Niña (ship)

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A replica of the historic ship Niña docked in Morro Bay Harbor, California.

La Niña

La Niña (Spanish for The Girl) was one of the three Spanish ships used by explorer Christopher Columbus in 1492 when he sailed to the West Indies. She was first named Santa Clara, following a tradition of naming ships after female saints. But she was mostly called La Niña, meaning "The Little Girl." This nickname likely came from her owner, Juan Niño of Moguer, whose name "Niño" means "Little Boy."

Niña was Columbus's favorite ship. She was a caravel, a small and fast ship good for exploring new waters. Before the trip began, her sails were changed in Las Palmas, in the Canary Islands, to help her sail better in the open ocean. We don’t know exactly how big she was, but one person who sailed with Columbus said she was about 60 tons, which suggests she was a medium-sized ship around 50 feet long.

Unlike bigger ships of that time, Niña, along with the other ships Pinta and Santa María, were smaller trading ships made for the Mediterranean Sea. They were much smaller than huge ships like Peter von Danzig from the Hanseatic League or the English carrack Grace Dieu. Still, Niña had an important part in one of the most famous voyages ever.

History

On Christopher Columbus's first trip to the West Indies in 1492, the ship Niña carried 26 men led by Vicente Yáñez Pinzón. They started from Palos de la Frontera on August 3, 1492, stopped at the Canary Islands, and reached the Bahamas on October 12, 1492.

Later, during a storm near the Azores in February 1493, the Niña almost crashed into rocks. The crew made promises to do special things when they returned to Spain. The ship made it to Lisbon, Portugal, and then back to Palos de la Frontera by March 15, 1493. The crew of Niña started using hammocks after seeing Native Americans using them.

Niña joined Columbus's second voyage on September 25, 1493, helping discover parts of Cuba and Jamaica. But on June 30, 1494, the ship got stuck and damaged. In 1495, a big storm in Hispaniola hurt the Niña and sank other ships. A new ship called Santa Cruz was built to replace them. In 1496, Niña returned to Spain with Columbus.

The ship then went on an unauthorized trip to Rome but was captured by a pirate near Cagliari. The captain, Alonso Medel, escaped and managed to bring the ship back to Cádiz. In 1498, Niña returned to Hispaniola for Columbus's third voyage and was later used for trading along the Pearl Coast of Venezuela. The ship traveled over 25,000 nautical miles under Columbus's leadership.

Replicas

Niña and Pinta replicas at the 1893 Columbian Exposition

A copy of Niña was made by the Spanish government for a big event in 1893. It sailed with copies of Santa María and Pinta for the celebration.

The replica of the Columbus Foundation

Today, a copy of Niña sails around the world. This copy was built between 1988 and 1991 by a team in Brazil. They used old building ways from the 15th century and strong wood. The crew says the ship can move about 5–7 knots, which is faster than older ships from that time. The copy weighs 75 tons.

In 1991, the copy went to Costa Rica for a movie called 1492: Conquest of Paradise. Since then, it has visited many ports in North America so people can see and explore it. The ship still travels to ports in the eastern and middle parts of the United States with its sister copy, Pinta. In September 2020, during Hurricane Sally, the ship broke free from its dock in Pensacola, Florida and later ran aground in Pensacola Bay.

Copies of Niña and Pinta were also built in Valença, Brazil using the same old methods. Other copies can be found in Andalusia, Spain, at El Puerto de Santa María and at the Wharf of the Caravels in Palos de la Frontera. There was once a copy in Corpus Christi, Texas, but it sank in April 2017 during Hurricane Harvey.

A famous restaurant in San Francisco called Bernstein's Fish Grotto was made to look like Niña.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Niña (ship), available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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