Shock Wave Dirk Pitt 13 - Shock Wave Dirk Pitt 13 - Shock Wave Dirk Pitt 13 - Shock Wave RAFT OF THE GLADIATOR January 17 1856 The Tasman Sea Of the four clipper ships built in Aberdeen Scotland in 1854 one stood out from the others. She was the Gladiator a big ship of 1256 tons 198 feet in length and a 34-foot beam with three towering masts reaching for the sky at a rakish angle. She was one of the fleetest of the clippers ever to take to the water but she was a dangerous ship to sail in rough weather because of her too fine lines. She was hailed as a “ghoster ” having the capability of sailing under the barest breath of wind. Indeed the Gladiator was never to experience a slow passage from being becalmed. Unfortunately and unpredictably she was a ship destined for oblivion. Her owners fitted her out for the Australian trade and emigrant business and she was one of the few clippers designed to carry passengers as well as cargo. But as they soon discovered there werent that many colonists who could afford the fare so she was sailing with first- and second-class cabins empty. It was found to be far more lucrative to obtain government contracts for the transportation of convicts to the continent that initially served as the worlds largest jail. The Gladiator was placed under command of one of the hardest driving clipper captains Charles “Bully” Scaggs. He was aptly named. Though Scaggs did not use the lash on shirking or insubordinate crewmen he was ruthless in driving his men and ship on record runs between England and Australia. His aggressive methods produced results. On her third homeward voyage Gladiator set