Cutty Sark


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Cutty Sark
Giving me a bag of sea pottery and glass was a bad idea. I'm OBSESSED. So here's a tea clipper on a teacup shard, will make it in a necklace. Now I'm thinking of stories in fragments, tales about ships on sea-rounded porcelain and glass
The masts and rigging of the Cutty Sark at Greenwich
On 22nd November 1869 the clipper "Cutty Sark" was launched at Dumbarton on the River Clyde.
Cutty Sark was built for a firm of ship owners called Willis & Sons, headed by John ‘Jock’ Willis, whose ambition was that she be the fastest ship in the annual race to bring home the first of the new season’s tea from China.
She was designed by Hercules Linton, a partner in the Dumbarton firm of Scott & Linton. It is believed that he moulded the bowlines of Willis’s earlier vessel Tweed into the midship attributes of Firth of Forth fishing boats, creating a beautiful new hull shape that was stronger, could take more sail, and be driven harder than any other.
The company had never built a ship of this size before and ran into financial difficulties, eventually going bankrupt before she was completed. The final details of the fitting out had to be completed by William Denny & Brothers, Scott & Linton’s landlords and the guarantors for the completion of the work on the original contract.
Cutty Sark was towed to Greenock for final work on her masts and rigging. She was then taken to London to load her first cargo for China in 1870.
The ship was named after Cutty-sark, the nickname of the witch Nannie Dee in Robert Burns's 1791 poem Tam o' Shanter. The ship's figurehead, the original of which has been attributed to carver Fredrick Hellyer of Blackwall, is a stark white carving of a bare-breasted Nannie Dee with long black hair holding a grey horse's tail in her hand. In the poem she wore a linen sark that she had been given as a child, which explains why it was cutty, or in other words far too short. The erotic sight of her dancing in such a short undergarment caused Tam to cry out "Weel done, Cutty-sark", which subsequently became a well known catchphrase. Originally, carvings by Hellyer of the other scantily clad witches followed behind the figurehead along the bow, but these were removed by Willis in deference to 'good taste'. Tam o' Shanter riding Meg was to be seen along the ship's quarter. The motto, Where there's a Willis away, was inscribed along the taffrail. The Tweed, which acted as a model for much of the ship which followed her, had a figurehead depicting Tam o' Shanter.
Unfortunately for Willis, the launch of the Cutty Sark coincided with the opening of the Suez Canal and the growing popularity of steamships. Steam-driven ships could pass through the canal, whereas clipper ships like the Cutty Sark could not. That meant that steam, ships could cut thousands of miles off the trip to China to collect tea. The Cutty Sark, though one of the fastest clipper ships ever built, was outmoded almost before it sailed.
While the Cutty Sark's career in the tea trade was less than a success, her next career in the Australian wool trade was where she truly shone. From 1883-95 the ship made the Australian run, bringing wool exports back to London.
The Cutty Sark consistently outsailed her competitors, and she dominated the wool trade for over a decade, earning a reputation for exceptional speed on the 2-month voyage. She famously once overtook and passed the steamship Britannia, travelling at a rate of 17 knots.
But once more the steamship spoiled the Cutty Sark's career, and once the steam vessels made the Australian wool trade their own, the Cutty Sark was sold to a Portuguese company. From 1895-1922 the ship (renamed Ferreira) was a tramp vessel, carrying cargo between Portugal and the far-flung corners of the Portuguese Empire.
In 1922 the Ferreira put into Falmouth to repair damage suffered in a gale. A retired sea captain named Wilfred Dowman saw the ship and determined to buy her. Dowman restored the Cutty Sark to approximately how she had appeared during her days as a tea clipper.
The ship was used for naval training until 1951 when it was sent to London for the Festival of Britain. She might well have been scrapped following the festival, but the ship was saved by the National Maritime Museum and put into dry dock at Greenwich in 1954, beside the Old Royal Naval College.
In 2007 a devastating fire broke out aboard the Cutty Sark, and it appeared that the ship might be completely destroyed. Thankfully total disaster was avoided, but the subsequent restoration lasted until 2012.
The Cutty Sark is in permanent dry dock at Greenwich, London as a museum ship, check their web page here https://www.rmg.co.uk/cutty-sark/history
Montague Dawson (1890-1973) - Onward - the ‘Norman Court’
Oil on canvas. 40 x 50 inches, 101.6 x 127 cm.
Estimate: US$50,000-70,000.
Sold Hindman, Chicago, 10 May 2022 for US$75,000 incl B.P.
Purchased from Frost & Reed in 1963, the painting has passed down by descent until its sale here.
The tea clipper Norman Court was designed by William Rennie and built in the shipyard of A & J Inglis, Glasgow in 1869. Just under 198 feet in length, the ship operated on the same routes as her contemporaries Cutty Sark, Thermopylae and Taeping, winning the annual tea race in 1872 with a time of 96 days. Rerigged as a barque in 1878, the ship was sailing to Greenock from Java with a cargo of sugar in March 1883 when it was driven aground in Cymyran Bay, Anglesey, during a force nine gale. The crew took to the rigging to save themselves.
Attempts were made by lifeboats from Rhosneigr and Holyhead to reach the stricken vessel but were thwarted by the conditions. More than a day and night passed before the heroic rescue of 20 crewmen was made by the Holyhead lifeboat men in the Rhosneigr boat. Only two of the crew were lost. Remnants of the wreck can be seen at low tide.
Six years ago (gawd!) I posted a painting by Sir Frank Brangwyn entitled Wreck - the last resource which gives a feel for the plight of the crew.
Black Butler Translation Notes #278 - Tea Clipper - Note: There are no official translations for volume 28 - Yana Toboso ~ LoveAnimeHateReality
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