|
Fully
Assembled - Not a kit
Museum
quality model
20" L
x 4" W x 29" H
Plank
on frame construction (a
painstaking process
where each individual
plank is added to the
hull of the ship model
one at a time)
Built
with rare, high quality
woods
Hand
painted, the actual
colors of the
Enterprise yacht
Built
with rare, high quality
woods, no plastic parts
Fabric
sails with detailed
stitching
The
model rests perfectly on
a wood base.
To
build this ship,
extensive research was
done using various
sources such as museums,
drawings,
paintings and copies of
original plans
and photos of the actual
yacht.
HISTORY:
After the end of
World War I, America's
Cup racing resumed with
a new set of rules
designed to balance hull
length, sail area, and
hull shape to produce
safer and more seaworthy
boats. Designers also
replaced the traditional
gaff-rigged topsail and
mainsail with a single
triangular sail that
rose straight to the top
of the mast, known as a
Bermuda or Marconi rig.
In the late 1920's, a
large jib, known as a
Genoa, was added. These
developments found
application to the huge
racing yachts known as
the J-class of boats
which were designed to
have a 75 to 87 foot
water line. Nothing like
them had ever been seen
before; no yachts so
awesome have been built
since. Only 10 of these
soaring beauties were
ever built. The great
depression made them
obsolete because of
their cost. But during
the heyday of
international cup
racing, they represented
the epitome of the
racing yacht. They were
designed to sacrifice
simplicity for speed,
requiring large crews,
special tackle, and
geared winches. Their
parachute spinnakers, as
large as 18,000 square
feet, were the largest
sails ever made. Sir
Thomas Lipton announced
that he would challenge
again for the America's
cup in 1930 and ordered
the construction of a
J-class boat designated
as Shamrock V. Four
syndicates of Americans
responded by
commissioning, at great
cost, their own
contenders.
Starling Burgess led
the effort for one of
the New York syndicates.
He promptly engaged the
Wizard of Bristol, Nat
Herreshoff, dean of
American yacht
designing, as his
adviser. Together, they
designed the largest and
fastest racing machine
ever seen and named her
the Enterprise. This
great and gorgeous
J-boat was eighty feet
long at the water line
and sported a heavy keel
with two centerboards.
Her great 162-foot mast
tapered from one and
one-half feet at the
base to nine inches at
the top. It was made of
two hollow tubes of
aluminum and was
supported by a large
array of stays and
rigging. Below deck she
had two dozen winches
for handling lines.
Enterprise made short
work of the other three
would-be defenders of
the Cup and was chosen
to take on Shamrock V
off Newport, Rhode
Island. There, in
September 1930, she went
on to win a clean sweep
of four races,
maintaining the 80 year
record of uninterrupted
possession of America's
Cup.
|