boat
Pet, No. 9 Pilots and the work functions of the
maritime pilot go back to
Ancient Greece and
Roman times, when incoming ships' captains employed locally experienced
harbour captains, mainly local
fishermen, to bring their vessels safely into port. Eventually, in light of the need to regulate the act of pilotage and ensure pilots had adequate insurance, the harbours themselves licensed pilots for each harbour. Although licensed by the harbour to operate within their
jurisdiction, pilots were generally self-employed, meaning that they had to have quick transport to get them from the port to the incoming ships. As pilots were often still dual-employed, they used their own
fishing boats to reach the incoming vessels. But fishing boats were heavy working boats, and filled with fishing equipment, and so a new type of boat was required. Early boats were developed from single masted
cutters and twin masted
yawls, and latterly into the specialist
pilot cutter. These were effectively light-weight and over-powered single-masted boats with large, steeply angled keels, making them
deep draft under power and shallow draft in lighter sail. If legend is to be believed, the first official
Bristol Channel pilot was barge master George James Ray, appointed by the Corporation of Bristol in May 1497 to pilot
John Cabot's
Matthew from
Bristol harbour to the open sea beyond the
Bristol channel. In 1837 Pilot George Ray guided
Brunel's
SS Great Western, and in 1844 William Ray piloted the larger
SS Great Britain on her maiden voyage. ==Use by country==