I got the idea to share this after reading the SS
Avantura thread for building a 15mm pulp steamer and the suitably pulp ships thread. A good pulp gaming ship needs to be small enough to fit on the table but look big enough to pass as an ocean-going vessel; I think a lighthouse tender or mail ship suits that role perfectly as it’s built for a smaller cargo. You would still need to drastically smash it down to fit on a table, but I think it’s a good starting point.
My reference here is the Scottish-built
Meiji Maru. It was built in 1874 as a two-masted topsail iron schooner with twin steam engines by Napier Shipyard in Glasgow, Scotland for the Japanese government. Its primary job was tending lighthouses, but also acted as a mail ship and courier for government missions. It became a training ship in 1897 and in 1898 or 1901 was re-rigged to its current configuration.
If interested, I wrote more about it here:
https://www.wayfarerdaves.com/?p=6174It’s hard to get
Meiji Maru’s full (playable) length not counting the bowsprit, which was shorter upon completion, so I’m going off her original length for making her a game piece. At construction, she was 223 feet (68 meters) long and had a beam of 30 feet (9.1 meters); her draft was 22 feet (6.7 meters). I’m a writer, photographer, artist, war veteran, balut enthusiast, and historical exhibit curator, but I’m not a math magician. By my math, in 1/56 scale that would be about 48 inches long and about 6.3 inches wide. I think it could be “smushed” into a more manageable length like 36 inches and potentially be widened out by an inch for gaming and still look like a realistic ship.
To do your own math, or maths for those in the UK, the stats and history can be found here:
https://kaiyou-juku.org/siryou/Meijimaru.pdfMeiji Maru itself is still with us because the Emperor Meiji graced it with his presence in 1876 thereby creating a national holiday (Ocean Day and I’m not joking) and in turn it became a training ship after a 20 year career. I’d imagine other vessels just like her where still working long past this time into the 20th century so reasonably could make for good “old” pulp tramps and such. What do you guys think? Does anyone want to give this a try?
For a comparable sized ship,
Star of India has a 212 foot deck (LOD), 35 foot beam, and 21.5 foot draft, though it out masses
Meiji Maru by 300 tons (1300 tons vs 1010 tons at time of construction).

Schematic onboard the ship as she is now.



These photos were taken moving from bow (front) to stern (back):

Looking aft from the bow

Looking aft at the pilot house

Looking forward from the pilot house

Looking to the bow from behind the pilot house
Looking aft

Stern

Meiji Maru has two decks; this is the only one open to the public. Below and aft of the pilot house are the guest cabins and galley.

Forward of the pilot house is the cargo hold; it was later used as a classroom.