Tuiga (D3) and Lulworth (2) in race. France, 2006
|
|
History | |
---|---|
United Kingdom | |
Name: | Lulworth |
Namesake: | Lulworth Castle |
Port of registry: | Guernsey |
Builder: |
|
Christened: |
|
Yacht designer: | Herbert William White (1919) Paul Spooner (2001) |
Burgee: | Royal Yacht Squadron (1920) |
General characteristics | |
Class and type: | British Big Class gaff-rigged cutter |
Displacement: |
|
Length: | |
Beam: | 6.60 m (21 ft 8 in) |
Draught: | 5.50 m (18 ft 1 in) |
Sail plan: |
|
Build: | mahogany planking on steel frames |
Lulworth is a racing yacht that was built in Southampton in 1920.
The boat's name comes from Lulworth Castle, which belonged to her second owner, Herbert Weld, whose grandfather was a charter-member of the Royal Yacht Squadron. The Lulworth (1920) was built by the White Brothers' Yard for Richard H. Lee, who wanted a racing boat to compete in the premier yachting league in Europe: the British "Big Class".
Shortages in the supply of premium spruce after World War I meant that Lulworth's original lower-mast was made of steel instead of wood. This constraint handicapped Lulworth greatly, leaving her trailing older, more famous Big Class racers like Thomas Benjamin Frederick Davis's Herreshoff-designed schooner Westward (1910), HMY Britannia I (1893) and Sir Thomas J. Lipton's Fife-designed 23mR Shamrock (1908).
Her gaff-rigged sail plan was updated several times to no avail, until America's Cup naval architect Charles Ernest Nicholson redesigned the rig with a wooden lower-mast and adjusted the keel balance. By 1924, Lulworth's flaws were corrected and she became an accomplished racer in all subsequent seasons of the Big Class: from 1920 to 1930, she took part in 258 regattas, taking 59 first places, 47 of which were after 1924.
The 1930 America's Cup in saw the arrival of the innovative J-Class designs that made all gaff-rigged yachts obsolete. Despite The Lulworth's early successes against the J-Class Shamrock V (1930) before the America's Cup, handicapping rules in the Big Class were ended and Lulworth's racing career was over. In 1947 Lulworth was saved from the scrap yard by Richard Lucas and his wife Rene. She was taken to Whites Shipyard for restoration and mud-berthed in the River Hamble where she served as a houseboat.