From 1851 or earlier another type of clipper ship was also being built, the
medium clipper. In the mid-1800s, shipbuilders in
Medford, Massachusetts began building what would become the medium clipper ship. They "quietly evolved a new type (of ship) of about 450 tons burden which, handled by eighteen officers and men, would carry half as much freight as a British-Indianman of 1500 tons with a crew of 125, and sail half again as fast." Most owners wanted ships that could do all kinds of work and the "finest type" then being built was the Medford or Merrimac
East Indiaman. An example would be the
Columbiana built in Medford in 1837, or Jotham Stetson's ship the
Rajah, 531 tons, 140 feet long which was constructed in the previous year. Ships built in Medford "have more fast California passages to their credit, considering the number they built, than those of any other place." Two early examples of the medium clipper are the
Antelope of Boston (1851): "The design of her model was to combine large stowage capacity with good sailing qualities"; and the
Golden Fleece (1852): "In the form of her ends she is of the medium model." The medium clipper, though still very fast, had comparatively more allowance for cargo. After 1854 extreme clippers were replaced in shipbuilding yards by medium clippers. A 1910 history of the clipper related: "...a fine class of ships, known as medium clippers, was constructed, some of which proved exceedingly fast, and remarkable passages continued to be made. Many of these medium clippers would be considered very sharp and heavily sparred vessels at the present time." == Alternative definition ==