Bear was built in 1874 as a sealer at the Panmure yard of
Alexander Stephen and Sons in
Dundee, Scotland. She was custom-built for sealing out of
St. John's, Newfoundland,
Bear was the most outstanding sealing vessel of her day, the lead ship in a new generation of sealers. Heavy-built with thick wooden planks,
Bear was rigged as a sailing
barquentine but her main power was a steam engine designed to smash deep into ice packs to reach seal herds. At the time of her arrival in St. John's, there were 300 vessels outfitted each season to hunt seals, but most were small
schooners or old sailing
barques. The new sealing ships represented by
Bear radically transformed the Eastern North Atlantic seal fishery as they replaced the hundreds of smaller sealing vessels owned by merchants in
outports around Newfoundland with large and expensive steamships owned by large British and Newfoundland companies based in St. John's. Owned at first by the Scottish firm W. Grieve and Sons, she was acquired in 1880 by R. Steele Junior.
Bear spent a decade sealing from St. John's. In 1884, the Steeles sent
Bear back to Scotland for a refit. ==American government service==