Cutty Sark | ||
Clipper ships were born in the shipyards of Baltimore around 1820. They had completely new and original naval characteristics, still emulated today by marine designers. These included a long and narrow hull, a sharp, cutting bow, a low freeboard, a streamlined stern, and a deep draft. 22nd November
1869, a beautiful little clipper ship of 963 tons gross was launched at
Dumbarton on the Scottish Clyde. On that day, she was given a name that
was to become renowned throughout the seafaring world, and destined to
win a place in the hearts of British seamen, coming second only to Nelson's
own immortal H.M.S. Victory and that was Cutty Sark. She was built for
John 'Jock' Willis, a seasoned sailing ship master who had 'swallowed
the anchor' and set up as a fleet owner in the Port of London - where
he became better known as "White Hat Willis". His previous vessels
had not had the performance results he wanted and his ambition for the
Cutty Sark was for her to be the fastest ship in the annual race to bring
home the first of the new season's tea from China. Although her early years under her first master, Captain George Moodie, saw some sterling performances, fate was to thwart her owner's hopes of glory in the tea trade: in the very same year of her launching, the Suez Canal was opened, allowing steamers to reach the Far East via the Mediterranean, a shorter and quicker route not accessible to sailing ships, whose freights eventually fell so much that the tea trade was no longer profitable. So Cutty Sark's involvement in the China run was short lived, her last cargo of tea being carried in 1877. For the next
several years, she was forced to seek cargoes where she could get them,
and it was not until 1885 that she began the second (and more illustrious)
stage of her career. The ship's heyday was in the Australian wool trade,
which was overseen by Captain Richard Woodget, from 1885 to 1895. Here
was a virtuoso mariner who 'played' the Cutty Sark like the responsive She laboured steadfastly for her new masters for almost three more decades, regularly trading between Oporto, Rio, New Orleans and Lisbon, in the service of Portugal's colonial possessions. Dismasted in a storm in the Indian Ocean in 1916, she was re-rigged as a barquentine to carry less sail, a decision necessitated by a wartime shortage of spar timber. In 1920 she was sold again, this time becoming the Maria do Amparo. In 1922,
she underwent a refit at London's Surrey Docks. On her journey home from
that refit, she was driven into Falmouth Harbour by a Channel gale. There Upon Capt. Dowman's death in 1938, his widow presented the newly restored clipper to the Incorporated Thames Nautical Training College at Greenhithe on the Thames, where the vessel remained until after the Second World War, when the college acquired a larger steel-built ship for its cadets. Once more, Cutty Sark became 'surplus to requirements'. Lengthy discussions
ensued over her future which ultimately led to her being towed to a mooring
off Greenwich in 1951. Eventually, the Cutty Sark Society
|
Copyright
© 2004 Joe Soran |