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Łucja Małgorzata (fr. Lucie-Marguerite) is a French sailing ship that was launched around 1860 at the shipyard in Fecamp, Normandy. The ship was 25 meters long and 6.4 meters wide. The displacement reached approx. 100 tons and the maximum speed - approx. 7 knots. Initially, the ship's crew consisted of 5 people, but after 1882 it was increased to 12 people. Łucja Małgorzata was originally designed and launched as a typical lugger for catching fish and seafood. The unit operated mainly in the waters of the English Channel and - less frequently - the North Sea. In 1882, Łucja Małgorzata was purchased by the Polish traveler Stefan Szolc-Rogoziński, who planned to go to the waters of the Gulf of Guinea on this ship. For this purpose, the ship was adapted to seagoing voyages at the shipyard in Le Havre, and in the period December 1882 - April 1883, the Szolc-Rogoziński expedition was carried out, reaching Cameroon. Interestingly, in May 1883, the ship was sold to German merchants, and shortly thereafter, the ship was sunk as a result of a storm in the Embassy Bay in southwestern Cameroon.
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