
Alexander Stephens and Sons, built the steamer Neptune in December 1872, a wooden, screw, barque-rigged vessel of 684 gross tons, 616 under deck, 465 net; port of survey: Liverpool. Her owners were the Avalon Steam Ship Company, Ltd., (Job Brothers, managers), port of registry, St. John's. She had compound engines, two cylinders, 28 in. & 50 in. -30 in., 114 nominal horse power, built by Gourlay Brothers, Dundee.
The Neptune was engaged in the Newfoundland sealing industry and during her career brought in over a million pelts. In 1884, the Canadian Government chartered the Neptune for surveys in Hudson's Bay. There was a proposal that a railway be built from the prairies to the bay to open a new route for the export of grain.
An expedition set up ice observation posts and sought a potential railway terminus. Three years later, the Government of Canada chartered the Neptune for the winter mail run to Prince Edward Island. The scheme failed because although the vessel could withstand ice pressure, she was not an icebreaker. Early in this century, the Neptune returned to the Arctic to help establish Canadian sovereignty there. Eventually she sank in 1943 near St. John's. SG819