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  • Books
  • About
  • Yarns
    • The Gosford Easter Regatta
    • KISMET Trophies return to Sydney Flying Squadron
    • Part 2 of the Whereats: Alf "Toby" Whereat
    • The 1931 Queen of the Harbour Race
    • Brisbane Boatbuilder and Sailor JH Whereat
    • Viv Ebsary, Pioneering Biomedical Engineer and 18-Footer Skipper
    • The Lewellin Cup
    • Kathleen Farr, a Pioneering Lady Skipper
    • Fury: The Travels of a 16' Skiff
    • What Happened To All The Boats?
    • The Earliest 18-Footers
    • Fins and Centreboards
    • Bail Boy Billy
    • The Tom Keddie Memorial Shield
    • Auckland 1939- The Second World's Championship for 18-Footers
    • The First World's Championship for 18-Footers in 1938
    • The Story of ADVANCE's Coat of Arms
    • The Bish Bolton Story
    • Newcastle 10-Footers
    • Horses for Courses: Open Boats and Raters
    • The 1913 INTERSTATES and THE WESTANA GALE
    • The Port Macquarie Regatta
    • Why Did 18-footers Stay Gaff-rigged For So Long?
    • Centenary of Britannia 1919-2019
    • The Story of the Brisbane 22-Footers
    • Wee Georgie Robinson versus Chris Webb
    • The Anglo-Australian Shield
    • The Intercolonial Challenges of the 1890's
    • What's a Ringtail?
    • Mark Foy's Catamaran 1894
    • Sandbaggers and 18-Footers
    • Balmain Regatta
  • Mutt's Tales
  • 18-FOOTERS
  • Fleets
  • Videos
  • OOPS!
  • 24-Footers
  • 22-Footers
  • Models
  • People
  • West Australian 18-footers
  • Boatbuilding
  • The Boatbuilders
  • 16-Footers
  • 14-Footers
  • 12-Footers
  • 10-Footers
  • 8-Footers
  • 6-footers
  • Rigs and Sails
    • Square Rig on Open Boats
    • Selected Images
    • Gaff or Gunter?
  • Blog
  • Contact

The Open Boat Blog

Fun with Research!

6/19/2016

86 Comments

 
Being in Brisbane in May to sail Col Gillespie's Irene in the AHSSA Historical Ten Footers Championship (did no good), I spent a few days in the Norman Wright and Sons shed looking at some of the historical material Bill Wright has preserved. I measured and took the lines off 6 of the half-hull models that survive, some of which are pictured below.
The first one is Vanity an 18 footer from 1912, the second is JMH I a sixteen-footer from 1916 when 16's still had built heels, and the third is Taree the 18' World Champion in 1938. I've already drawn up  the second two, and there's still Vanity, Langham (18' 1915), JMH II (16' 1919?) and Marjorie ​(18' 1937) to go. Finding the heeled 16 was particularly exciting as a couple of months ago I was not aware that any models from that era had survived. But as often happens, another one emerged in Sydney at the Sydney Classic and Wooden Boat Festival in April, this time a Double Bay 16 footer built by the Messenger family named HSM. Once I get the lines off that it will be interesting to compare the Sydney and Brisbane boats. You can see on the models that the Brisbane bows are much fuller on deck.

While I was in Brisbane I also went around to the Brisbane Maritime Museum, and declining the offers of the keen volunteers to show me around the destroyer, headed straight to the skiff collection in the smaller shed.
The first photo is of a Sandgate ten footer, quite a different class from the Balmain Ten footers. The last photo is of the sixteen footer Fury which was returned to Brisbane about ten years ago after spending most of its life in San Diego California having been taken there by an American serviceman after the Second World War. The seven photos in the middle are all of a 12 footer Hurricane of 1937, an unusual boat for several reasons. It is planked in Huon Pine, a heavier timber than the almost universally used Australian cedar and it has a built heel, which disappeared in the 16's in the 1920's, in the 12's about the same time, and in the 18's in the early 1930's. And this is in spite of having been built by Watts and Wright who had been pioneers in heel-less skiff building in the 1930's! And more importantly it was a fast boat, being runner-up in the Australian Championship 1939-40. Most of the details of construction, layout and fittings are typical of the time.


86 Comments

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