Hi Doug,
The link that I found that has a list of the clippers' demises is:
http://www.flyingclippers.com/panam.htmlA coles notes version reads:
- By the 1950's all surviving clippers were scrapped
The following are aircraft that crashed, sank, or were lost and whose airframes might still be in existance, but underwater:
SIKORSKY S-42- NC-823M "West Indies Clipper" sank 1947 at Antilla Cuba
- NC-824M "Un-named" crashed Port of Spain, Trinidad 1935
- NC-15376(A) "Dominican Clipper" Accident in San Juan Harbor 1941
- NC-16734(B) "Pan American Clipper II" Lost at Pago Pago, Samoa 1938
- NC-16735(B) "Bermuda Clipper" Sunk at Hong Kong Harbor 1941
MARTIN M-130- NC-14714 "Hawaiian Clipper" Lost east of Manila 1938
- NC-14716 "China Clipper" Crashed, Port of Spain, Trinidad 1945
BOEING B-314- NC-18601 "Honolulu Clipper" sunk in Pacific Ocean 1945
- NC-18603 "Yankee Clipper" sank River Tagus near Lisbon, Portugal 1943
- NC-18612(A) "Capetown Clipper" sunk by the U.S. Coast Guard 1947
It sure would be nice to find one. Happy hunting to whoever would like a big challenge.
Cheers,
David
Don't forget the three Sikorsky VS-44's that were built in 1941. They may not have been "Clipper" ships per se, but they were certainly the pinnacle of the type...and only one, commercial civilian, US built, flying boat still exists, and that's at the New England Air Museum.