The Loch Sloy was built for Aitken, Lilburn & Co of Glasgow. She sailed
between Britain and Australia for more than twenty years. In that time
she established a reputation as a crack wool clipper. Windjammer, the
story of the clipper ship Loch Sloy is not an adventure nor is it a
romance or a tragedy, even though it contains elements of all three.The
ship, her captains, officers, crew and passengers, all those her sailed
upon her call out from the past to have their stories told. The Loch
Sloy's' keel was laid down in mid-1877. By August the construction of
the hull and deck fittings had been completed. After her first marine
survey, the masts were stepped in, and by the end of October the Loch
Sloy was all but complete. The clipper lasted twenty one years before
coming to grief on the jagged shore of Kangaroo Island during the
predawn hours of April 24th 1899. The final chapter of the Loch Sloy
like her unfortunate passengers and crew was buried beneath the ever
shifting sands of Maupertuis Bay.