Sails, Skippers and Sextants (eBook)
256 Seiten
The History Press (Verlag)
978-0-7524-6805-1 (ISBN)
George Drower is a writer and historian. He is the author of the acclaimed Britain's Dependent Territories and the Overseas Territories Handbook; a number of political biographies; and articles on garden history for The Times, The Sunday Times, Traditional Homes and House & Garden. He has previously written the successful Boats, Boffins and Bowlines and Sails, Skippers and Sextants for The History Press.
1
SAILING PIONEERS
King Charles II, Yacht Racer
The monarch who pioneered yachting in England initially found it expedient to have some first-hand knowledge of small boat sailing because of an abrupt change in his constitutional circumstances. The trouncing of his army by Oliver Cromwell at the Battle of Worcester in early September 1651 caused Prince Charles (later King Charles II) to become a fugitive, desperate to escape capture by the parliamentary forces. Determined to flee the country, he travelled incognito for six weeks until he reached the Sussex coast at Shoreham. There an unscrupulous skipper called Nicholas Tettersell, who owned a coal brig called Surprise, agreed to sail him over to France for 60 pieces of silver. The 34-ton Surprise being no bigger than a fishing boat, and with a crew of two, it is likely that Charles had to do some of the crewing himself.
On the continent the exiled prince eventually found refuge in the Netherlands, most notably at Woerden Castle near Utrecht. Charles had learnt that in Holland it had become the done thing for wealthy personages to own pleasure boats and he used the stairs leading from his rooms in the castle down to the river (which later became known as the King’s Steps) to enable him to go off sailing. In such a watery country, the so-called jaghts – from a Dutch word meaning hunt or chase – which had evolved from fast fighting ships, offered a superb means of travel. Some of the nimbler ones were used for sport, and during the winter frosts they could even be fitted with runners and used as iceboats!
Although in fact Charles had never sailed in yachts before his exile, he had already acquired some other practical knowledge of sailing. In September 1649, during a visit to Jersey, he had learnt to sail in a frigate. It was said that he would enthusiastically take the helm for a few hours at a time and could only with difficulty be persuaded to relinquish it.
Having been restored to the throne of England in the early summer of 1660, Charles prepared to return home. On the Breda to The Hague section of his ceremonial journey his Dutch hosts supplied an escort of thirteen formal yachts. The magnificently ornate yacht that Charles himself sailed on belonged to the Board of Admiralty at Rotterdam. So impressed was Charles with the boat that he remarked to the Burgomaster of Amsterdam that he might order one of the same style immediately he arrived in England, to use on the Thames. However, the Burgomaster was so mindful of Charles’s new importance that he offered to arrange for his city to acquire and present to the new king a very similar vessel that had only recently been completed in Amsterdam for the Dutch East Indies Company.
In August 1660 the yacht Mary duly arrived in the Thames, and at 5 o’clock in the morning she tied up at Whitehall Palace. Charles eagerly leapt aboard to inspect her. She was virtually a small Dutch warship: 52ft long, with a 19ft beam and a displacement of 100 tons, 8 guns and a crew of thirty; and with her ‘wooden wing’ leeboards raised she had a draught of 5ft. She had been embellished with carved and gilded ornamentation. Even Samuel Pepys assumed Charles had been impressed by these enhancements when noting in his diary the king’s delight at the interior of the yacht: ‘one of the finest things that I ever saw for neatness and room in so small a vessel’. But there was more to Charles than his fun-loving image suggested; he was also shrewd and competitive. According to Pepys, by November the distinguished naval shipbuilder Peter Pett had been instructed by the king ‘to make one to outdo this for the honour of his country’. In so commissioning the building of the first ever English racing yacht, Charles was establishing a precedent of yacht design requiring the attentions of the best marine architects.
At Deptford Pett constructed a yacht remarkably like the Mary, but with one crucial difference. This involved doing away with the bulky and cumbersome leeboards (whose purpose was to resist lateral drift), instead having a deeper, 7ft draught. Called Katherine, in honour of Charles’s bride-to-be Catherine of Braganza, she was launched in the following April. Not long afterwards the Anne, a yacht virtually identical to Katherine and built for Charles’s brother James, Duke of York, took to the water at Woolwich. Trials had showed that Katherine’s fine underwater form meant she was quicker than the leeboarder Mary, and also went closer to windward.
The new yachts provided the royal brothers with an opportunity for some sporting rivalry, and they duly arranged a race for a prize of £100. This historic event in yachting history took place on 1 October 1661 and was chronicled by the diarist John Evelyn (effectively making him the first yachting correspondent). In the first part of the contest, from Greenwich to Gravesend, the winds were contrary and Anne made the best use of the ebb tide to win. It was quite a festive event. Evelyn recorded: ‘There were divers noble persons on board, his Majesty sometimes steering himself.’ In the interval the king’s barge and kitchen-boat were in attendance to supply copious food and drink. Charles did much better on the return section of the race, levelling the series by steering Katherine to win the return to Greenwich. It can be assumed that the Dutch raced yachts in the Netherlands but there is no written evidence for this and thus the 1661 contest on the Thames became the first authentically recorded yacht race.
Charles had a natural aptitude for sailing and according to Pepys, ‘he possessed a transcendent mastery of all maritime knowledge, and two leagues travel at sea was more pleasure to him than twenty on land’. He put this expertise in nautical matters to practical effect: he reballasted Katherine with 4 tons of lead musket shot to improve her performance, and ensured that she and Anne were rigged as cutters with gaff mainsails of a type commonly used in England, rather than with Dutch-style spritsails. An opportunity to test the sea-going qualities of the new yachts offered itself during the summer of 1662 when they were sent on a mission in the English Channel, but they were driven back by a heavy storm in which they proved themselves excellent sea-boats. Pepys recalled: ‘All ends in the honour of the pleasure-boats, which had they not been very good boats could never have endured the sea as they did.’
In 1661 the Dutch presented Charles with yet another yacht, the Bezan. Just 34ft long and of only 35 tons, she had a large mainsail with a short gaff and two headsails, which contributed to her reputation as a fast mover. As with the Mary, Charles ordered Peter Pett to build a boat to surpass her. The king himself helmed the new yacht in a race against the Bezan, skippered by the Duke of York, on the Thames – and lost. Nevertheless all these experiences were eventually put to good use in 1683 with the building of the Fubbs, whose name derived from an old English affectionate term meaning ‘chubby’. It was apparently chosen in honour of the Duchess of Portsmouth, who at the time was Charles’s favourite mistress. Reputedly designed by the king himself, the yacht had a sumptuous state room, richly decorated with carved oak and boasting a great four-poster bed adorned with gold brocade. Although better known for her pleasure activities, Fubbs proved to be the fastest of all Charles’s yachts, partly because of her large sail area, but more especially because of her ketch rig. Charles did not, as has sometimes been claimed, invent the ketch rig, but its use in Fubbs certainly helped to make it respectable.
By the time he died in 1685 Charles II had owned an astonishing twenty-eight yachts, several of which he personally raced and arranged to be handed over to the Royal Navy for general service. A boat for which he retained a particular affection was the Surprise, the chirpy coal brig which had carried him to freedom. After the Restoration the 30-footer was sought out and purchased from her Shoreham owner; then, having been smartened and renamed The Royal Escape, she was kept for occasional trips on the Thames.
Prince Charles’s voyage in the Surprise is commemorated each summer by the Royal Escape Race, from Brighton to Fecamp, organised by the Sussex Yacht Club, www.royalescaperace.co.uk.
John Cox Stevens and the New York Yacht Club
The most influential character in American yachting was himself from a nautical dynasty. Colonel John Stevens III, in expanding his family’s merchant shipping and property development empire, had bought land in New Jersey on which came to be built the city called Hoboken. Working from his mansion at Castle Point, a rocky promontory, overlooking the Hudson River and Manhattan Island, the colonel devoted his time to making experiments and inventions for the common good. He persuaded Congress to protect American inventors, and subsequently legislation was established which became the foundation of American patent law. Assisted by three of his children, in 1804 he built a propeller-driven steamboat to provide a ferry service across the Hudson to New York. Although it was revolutionary, he forfeited the claim of inventing the world’s first workable screw propeller because the system could not be developed as the vessel was underpowered. Inspired by the Hoboken climate of creativity, one son Robert went on to become an engineer and an ingenious naval architect, while another, Edwin, became a railway pioneer. To them is due the credit for...
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 30.9.2011 |
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Verlagsort | London |
Sprache | englisch |
Themenwelt | Literatur ► Biografien / Erfahrungsberichte |
Literatur ► Romane / Erzählungen | |
Natur / Technik ► Fahrzeuge / Flugzeuge / Schiffe ► Schiffe | |
Geschichte ► Teilgebiete der Geschichte ► Technikgeschichte | |
Technik | |
Schlagworte | A History of Sailing in 50 Inventors and Innovations • A History of Sailing in 50 Inventors and Innovations, Boats, Boffins and Bowlines, first transatlantic crossing, navigation lights, history of sailing, sail, boat, dame ellen macarthur, francis chichester, claire francis, americas cup, cloud classification, propellers, sailors, seamen, sailing pioneers, dame ellen macarthur, francis chichester, claire francis, the americas cup, technology, mechanisms, navigate, cloud classification, screw propellers, radio telephones, tide measurement • Americas Cup • boat • Boats • Boffins and Bowlines • claire francis • cloud classification • dame ellen macarthur • first transatlantic crossing • Francis Chichester • history of sailing • mechanisms • NaviGate • navigation lights • propellers • radio telephones • Sail • sailing pioneers • sailing pioneers, dame ellen macarthur, francis chichester, claire francis, the americas cup, technology, mechanisms, navigate, cloud classification, screw propellers, radio telephones, tide measurement, the stories of sailing inventors and innovations • Sailors • screw propellers • seamen • Technology • the americas cup • tide measurement |
ISBN-10 | 0-7524-6805-7 / 0752468057 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-7524-6805-1 / 9780752468051 |
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