HMCo #795s Snapper

Particulars

Construction_Record_Title.jpgName: Snapper
Type: Seawanhaka Fish Class
Designed by: NGH
Contract: 1916-1-10
Launch: 1916-4-8
Construction: Wood
LOA: 20' 9" (6.32m)
LWL: 16' (4.88m)
Beam: 7' 1" (2.16m)
Draft: 3' 1" (0.94m)
Rig: Gaff Sloop
Sail Area: 271sq ft (25.2sq m)
Displ.: 2,976 lbs (1,350 kg)
Keel: yes
Ballast: Lead outside
Built for: Roosevelt, W. Emlen
Amount: $875.00
Note(s) in HMCo Construction Record: Fish Class

Note: Particulars are primarily but not exclusively from the HMCo Construction Record. Supplementary information not from the Construction Record appears elsewhere in this record with a complete citation.


Model

Model #716Model number: 716
Model location: H.M.M. Model Room North Wall Right

Vessels from this model:
409 built, modeled by NGH

Original text on model:
"12 1/2' Buzzards Bay boy class 24 boats 1915 scale 1/10 size three [sic, i.e. four? #806, #813, #815, #817?] boats 1916
16' w.l. Oyster Bay "Fish Class" 23 boats 1916 scale 1/12 size sections 1/13 lengths 3 1/2 added at bow on deck" (Source: Original handwritten annotation on model. Undated.)

Model Description:
"12'-1/2' lwl Buzzards Bay 12 1/2-class of 1915, HMCo's most popular creation with some 360 boats produced. Also, with change in scale and proportionally longer bow, the Fish class sloops of 1916 and beyond." (Source: Bray, Maynard. 2004.)

Related model(s):
Model XA2-1_01 by NGH (1914?); sail
Buzzards Bay 12 1/2
Model XA2-1_02 by NGH (1914?); sail
Fish Class


Note: Vessels that appear in the records as not built, a cancelled contract, a study model, or as a model sailboat are listed but not counted in the list of vessels built from a model.


Offsets

Offset booklet number(s): HH.6.146-6

Offset booklet contents:
12 1/2-footer class, Fish class (Cape Cod Shipbuilding Embargoed)


Offset Booklet(s) in Haffenreffer-Herreshoff Collection. Francis Russell Hart Nautical Collections, MIT Museum, Cambridge, Mass. (Restricted access --- see curator.)

Drawings

Main drawing Dwg 130-126 (HH.5.10436) Explore all drawings relating to this boat.

List of drawings:
   Drawings believed to have been first drawn for, or being first referenced to
   HMCo #795s Snapper are listed in bold.
   Click on Dwg number for preview, on HH number to see at M.I.T. Museum.
  1. Dwg 089-060 (HH.5.07084A): # 452 [Hatch] (1895-06-15)
  2. Dwg 025-089 (N/A): # 788 Class Lists (1915-01-29 ?)
  3. Dwg 065-064 (HH.5.04659); Rudder Hanging for # 743, Rudder and Hanging for # 744 Class (1915-02-15)
  4. Dwg 130-126 (HH.5.10436): Sails > 788 Class Seawanaka Corinthian Yacht Club (1916-01-23)
  5. Dwg 076-123 (N/A); Sewanhaka 16' Class 788 Class (1916-01-26 ?)
  6. Dwg 128-051 (HH.5.10167): Sails > 788 Class [Mainsail, Trysail] (1916-01-27)
  7. Dwg 081-117 (HH.5.06209): Spars for Seawanhaka, 16 ft. Class (1916-02-18)
  8. Dwg 074-062 (HH.5.05350): 12 and 16 lbs Anchors (1916-03-04)
  9. Dwg 148-000 (HH.5.12237): General Arrangement > Fish Class, Herreshoff 16 Footer [Internal Arrangement] (ca. 1931)
Source: Francis Russell Hart Nautical Collections, MIT Museum, Cambridge, Mass. Haffenreffer-Herreshoff Collection. Together with: Hasselbalch, Kurt with Frances Overcash and Angela Reddin. Guide to The Haffenreffer-Herreshoff Collection. Francis Russell Hart Nautical Collections, MIT Museum, Cambridge, Mass., 1997. Together with: Numerous additions and corrections by Claas van der Linde.
Note: The Haffenreffer-Herreshoff Collection is copyrighted by the Francis Russell Hart Nautical Collections of the MIT Museum in Cambridge, Mass. Permission to incorporate information from it in the Herreshoff Catalogue Raisonné is gratefully acknowledged. The use of this information is permitted solely for research purposes. No part of it is to be published in any form whatsoever.

Documents

Nathanael G. Herreshoff

"[1916-01-07] Fri 7: Have note that class of 16 footers for Seawanhaka Club has materialized.
[1916-01-16] Sun 16: Fair & cold [in] AM, moderating in PM. The young people off skating. I work on drawings of 788 class most of [the] day. SW wind in PM.
[1916-01-19] Wed 19: Cold, W[est wind] & clear. ... [Have contract for] two more 16 footers [most likely No 8 #795s Snapper and No 9 #796s Shrimp given that NGH recorded an order for No 10 on the next day]. ...
[1916-03-09] Thu 9: Set up 8th 16 footer [apparently #795s Snapper]. ...
[1916-03-14] Tue 14: Calm & overcast. Thawing some. Turned over 8th 16 footer [apparently #795s Snapper] ...
[1916-04-08] Sat 8: Took 7 & 8 16 footer [apparently #794s Anchovy and #795s Snapper] out of shop.
[1916-05-19] Fri 19: Fine. Champlin's launch towed away 9 16 footers, bound for Oyster Bay at 3PM.
[1916-05-25] Thu 25: Champlin launch towed 2nd lot of 16 footers up Sound, leaving at noon. ... Very fine & warm. 75deg." (Source: Herreshoff, Nathanael G. Diary, 1916. Manuscript (excerpts). Diary access courtesy of Halsey C. Herreshoff.)

"Jan[uary] 1916. Fish.
No 788 & Class [#788s, #789s, #790s, #791s, #792s, #793s, #794s, #795s, #796s, #797s, #798s, #799s, #800s, #801s, #802s, #803s, #805s, #807s, #808s, #811s, #812s, #814s, #816s].
Keel sailing knockabout boats using same model as for 744 [#744s] class.
In making moulds use scale of 1" per ft (1/12).
For fore & aft measurements use scale 13" long for on foot (= 0.0769).
By common rule: Frame spaces = 9 3/4".
Timbers = 7/8" sq[uare].
Planking = 9/16 sq[uare].
Deduct in making moulds 1 7/16".
Deck = 1/2" + canvas.
Sheer heights are to top of deck.
Keel 1 5/16" (7/8" below rabbate).
Transom 1 1/8" thick.
Stem sided as per figures (1 3/8").
Sheer strake (moulded) 7/8".
[New page] #788 & Class. Lead.
Top of lead to follow under side of main keel from 1 1/2" aft of # 8 frame to 1 1/2" aft of # 14 frame, then in a diagonal straight line cutting # 18 frame, continuing to back of sternpost.
For increased depth see # s 14 - 15 - 16 - 17 & 18. Also 19 - 20 - 21 - 22 - 23 & 24 for back of rudder." (Source: Herreshoff, N.G. Penciled notes in Offset Booklet HH.6.146-6.] January 1916. Haffenreffer-Herreshoff Collection, MIT Museum, Cambridge, MA.)

"The following winter [1915-1916] proved a busy [one] and I had to carry on the work alone. Of the sailing craft, the eighty feet waterline steel schooner MARIETTE, the New York Yacht Club Forty Foot Class of eleven, the sixteen foot "Fish Class" of twenty-two [twenty-three boats built for the 1916 sailing season, plus three boats for the 1917 season, making a total of twenty-six], the Buzzards Bay Fifteen Foot Class of six, and several others were built." (Source: Herreshoff, N. G. "Some of the Boats I Have Sailed In." Written 1934. In: Pinheiro, Carlton J. (ed.). Recollections and Other Writings by Nathanael G. Herreshoff. Bristol, 1998, p. 73.)

Other Contemporary Text Source(s)

"The Seawanhaka-Corinthian Yacht Club has selected a design by Herreshoff for its new one-design class, the boats completed to cost $875. The principal dimensions are: Length over all, 21 feet; water line length, 16 feet; beam, 7 feet, and draught, 3 feet 3 inches. The committee in charge of selecting the design reports that eight boats have been ordered, but a contract cannot be closed for less than ten. It is expected that there will be orders for eighteen." (Source: Anon. "New Seawanhaka Class." New York Times, January 8, 1916, p. 10.)

"AFTER long and careful deliberation, the special committee of the Seawanhaka-Corinthian Y. C. selected the design submitted by Herreshoff for their new One-Design Class.
The boats are intended to be comfortable to sail in, of the knockabout type, in which seaworthiness and safety are looked to more than racing speed. The sail area is small, but the form under water is, in the opinion of Mr. Herreshoff, an easy one to drive, and the rating under the rules will be low in comparison with ordinary boats of this size.
Forward of the mast will be a watertight bulkhead, with airtight ventilating plugs, of size sufficient to keep the boat afloat if filled with water. There will be a coaming about 5 inches high around the after end of the cockpit, giving a minimum freeboard of 2 feet. The floor of the cockpit will be nearly 6 feet long and there will be a seat on each side and one at the after end having a locker underneath.
The equipment will include sails as shown, together with a spinnaker of usual proportions, sail covers, anchor,cable and mooring line, oars and rowlocks, bilge pump,bucket, bailer-sponge or mop, boat-hook, liquid compass, brass lantern, foghorn, lead and line, two life-preservers and boom crutch. The cost complete will be $875, delivered at Bristol, R. I.
The principal dimensions are approximately:
Length o. a. 21 feet 0 inches = 6.401 meters
Length l. w. l. 16 feet 0 inches = 4.877 meters
Breadth 7 feet 0 inches = 2.137 meters
Draught 3 feet 3 inches = 0.991 meters
Freeboard at bow 2 feet 11 inches = 0.887 meters
Freeboard, least --- to top coaming. 2 feet 0 inches = 0.609 meters
Sail area --- mainsail and jib 262 square feet = 24.340 sq. m.
Lead ballast --- all outside 1,200 lb" (Source: Anon. "New Seawanhatta One-Design Class." The Rudder, March 1916, p. 105-107.

"Twenty one-design yachts for members of the Seawanhaka-Corinthian Yacht-Club are now receiving their finishing touches in the yards of the Herreshoff Company at Bristol, R. I. and will be added to the fleet of the club at their Oyster Bay anchorage about the middle of next month. These new craft are the latest design by Mr. Herreshoff for the so-called knockabout type. While the design in construction was to secure seaworthiness and safety rather than extreme racing speed ----- a sort of kindergarten racer for the younger of the amateur helmsmen --- Mr. Herreshoff has assured the members of the club that the form under water is one which will give such an amount of speed with small sail area as to furnish the liveliest kind of sport with absolute safety to the skippers, as the crafts are unsinkable, even if filled with water.
The new class will make its first appearance on May 30 [1916]. All the craft have been named for some one of the fish tribe, that owned by Albert Strauss, which has been christened Manatee, after the Florida amphibian. The complete list of owners and names of the craft are:
Commodore, Howard C. Smith's Bluefish [#790s], ex-Commodore Daniel Bacon's Volador [#792s], W. H. Appleton's Pompano [#797s], Dr. L. F. Bishop's Tarpon [#801s], Charles R. Crane's Bonita [#805s], R. T. Crane, Jr.'s Porpoise [#798s], Henry R. Hayes's Periwinkle [#802s], De Forest Hicks's Barracuda [#803s], J. P. Morgan's Shark [#791s], W. Emlen Roosevelt's Snapper [#795s], Samuel T. Shaw's Grunt [#799s], H. L. Smith's Skate [#808s], Cecil P. Stewart's Eel [#811s], W. A. W. Stewart's Shrimp [#796s], Albert Strauss's Manatee [#788s], H. S. Shonnard's Cod [#789s], Francis M. Weld's Anchovy [#794s], Alexander M. White's Whitebait [#793s], A. R. Whitney, Jr.'s Sabalo [#800s], and Bertram G. Work's Sardine[#807s].
The boats measure 16 feet on the water line and 21 over all, and have a beam of 7 feet and a draught of 3 feet 3 inches. They carry 202 square feet of sail and are ballasted with 1,200 pounds of lead, all on the outside. Spinnakers of the usual proportions will be carried. The craft cost $875 each, and were assigned by lot to the twenty owners, who took the output from the design and then selected the names for their craft." (Source: Anon. "New One-Design Yachts. Score of Novel Boats in Seawanhaka-Corinthian Fleet." New York Times, April 29, 1916, p. 8.)

"George Nichols, of the Special Committee of the Seawanhaka-Corinthian Yacht Club, has received a letter from Captain Nat. G. Herreshoff, designer and builder of the club's new one-design class, stating that all twenty boats of the class originally ordered will be fitted and ready for delivery to the club's representative on Saturday, May 20 [1916]. The club committee will arrange to have them towed to the Oyster Bay anchorage of the club and delivered to members on the evening of Friday, May 26, when the clubhouse will be formally opened for the season with a reception and dance.
This late delivery will give the owners of the new boats little time to get acquainted with their craft before the day set for their first race, May 30, but unless something goes amiss they will have their initial competitive test on that day.
Three members of the club who neglected to get their orders for the new design placed in time for delivery with the first lot, have decided to order boats with delivery about the first of July." (Source: Anon. "New Boats Ready May 20. Seawanhaka One-Design Class to Race Ten Days Later." Boston Daily Globe, May 14, 1916, p. 18.)

"Twenty of the new one-design 16-foot knockabouts, built by Herreshoff for the members of the Seawanhaka-Corinthian Yacht Club, were to be delivered to their owners last Friday. These boats will be known as the 'fish' class, as each boat will be named after some fish.
The stormy weather of the past week prevented many of the racing craft at Herreshoffs being delivered to their owners, as such weather never fails to delay fitting out of old racers and the rigging of new yachts. Bristol Harbor in front of Herreshoffs boatshops seems a forest of masts, the boats extending from Lawless pier to Walkers Cove, with the majority the sloops of the 40 and 50 foot classes." (Source: Anon. "Yachts and Yachtsmen. Notes of the Week's Log." Boston Daily Globe, May 21, 1916, p. 48.)

"For the proper identification of the racing yachts of the Long Island Sound Yacht Racing Association it is necessary to know the various racing numbers used. For our readers' guidance we append the following table issued by the secretary of the association: ...
Seawanhaka Fish Class
[#788s] 1, Manatee, Albert Strauss
[#802s] 4, Periwinkle, M. G. Foster
[#790s] 5, Blue Fish, Edmund Putney
[#791s] 6, Shark, J. F. Bermingham
[#789s] 7, Cod, Chas. E. Pettinos
[#794s] 8, Anchovy, F. M. Weld
[#793s] 10, Whitebait, A. N. White
[#803s] 11, Barracuda, V. S. Merle-Smith
[#792s] 12, Veladore, George Nichols
[#795s] 14, Snapped, W. E. Roosevelt
[#796s] 15, Shrimp, F. D. M. Strachan
[#797s] 16, Pompano, Chas. G. West
[#800s] 17, Sabalo, Dr. U F. Bishop
[#807s] 18, Sea Robin, H. W. DeForest
[#811s] 20, Eel, Wm. Loeb, Jr.
[#814s???] 21, Fly, Arthur Iselin
[#816s] 22, Sculpin, Nelson Burr
[#819s] 24, Minnow, T. S. Williams
[#820s] 26, Cockle, S. R. Outerbridge and R. Harvey
[#821s] 27, Tuna, J. H. Ottley
[#???s] 28, [No Name] C. O'D. Iselin." (Source: Anon. "Long Island Sound Racing Numbers." The Rudder, July 1923, p. 66.)

Other Modern Text Source(s)

"The season of 1916 was active indeed, marked by the appearance of a great small racing class, the Herreshoff Fish Boats, and a Cruising Race Week in company with other clubs but sponsored by Seawanhaka. An enterprising Race Committee published a little booklet of the racing results, which gives us an unusually clear record.
First mention of the Fish Class appears in the minutes of an October 1914 Trustees Meeting. From among several designs submitted, they chose a Herreshoff model to cost about $1000, similar to a boat HerreshofT had built for former Commodore Benedict. Due to financial depression the next year, Seawanhaka members did not order any boats and the cheap Nut Class boats may have been substitutes. However, in the winter of 1915-16 a class of 18 Herreshoff Fish Boats were built for Club racing. A Special Fish Class Committee, which consisted of William H. Appleton, Secretary, Daniel Bacon, Henry R. Hayes, George Nichols and Franklin Remington, published an excellent circular describing them. They were 21 feet overall, 16 waterline, 7 beam, and 3 feet 3 inches draft, with 262 feet of sail area in a gaff mainsail and club jib. There was also a proportionate spinnaker. They were short-ended, able little vessels, with all their 1200 pounds of ballast outside, a large open cockpit, and a watertight bulkhead forward of the mast. As the committee pointed out, they were ideal for teaching children to sail, pleasure sailing, and Saturday racing. They were very popular elsewhere, especially at Mattapoisett in Buzzards Bay, where the smaller but very similar Herreshoff 12-footers have raced in large classes for many years at various clubs. W. Butler Duncan is said to have owned an earlier model, which influenced the selection of the class, and David Duncan raced Nahma in it. The names of original boats and their owners follow:
SEAWANHAKA CORINTHIAN SIXTEENS (FISH CLASS )
Shark [#791s] --- J. P. Morgan
Pompano [#797s] --- W. H. Appleton
Skate [#808s] --- H. L. Smith and John Good
Grunt [#799s] --- Samuel T. Shaw
Manatee [#788s] --- Albert Strauss
Periwinkle [#802s] --- Henry R. Hayes
Bluefish [#790s] --- Howard C. Smith
Cod [#789s] --- H. S. Shonnard
Anchovy [#794] --- F. M. Weld
Whitebait [#793s] --- Alexander M. White
Barracuda [#803s] --- De Forest Hicks
Volodor [#792s] --- Daniel Bacon
Snapper [#795s] --- W. Emlen Roosevelt
Shrimp [#796s] --- W. A. W. Stewart
Sabalo [#800s] --- A. R. Whitney, Jr.
Sardine [#807s] --- Bertram G. Work
Eel [#811s] --- Cecil O. Stewart
Nahma [#812s] --- David Duncan
During the 1916 season the Fish Class Periwinkle (H. R. Hayes) won the First Series prize and the Leland Cup, which was successfully defended against Appleton's Pompano. Samuel T. Shaw's Grunt won the Second and Third Series and a Maxwell Cup. The Ladies' Race was won by Miss Nourse in Barracuda. Nearly every Saturday there were large racing classes of over twelve boats, and the Fishes may be called a success from the beginning. The Club charged Fish owners only $20 to haul, store and put the yachts back into the water in the spring, together with their moorings. A new cradle cost $13 and a HerreshofT winter cover $23. The boats themselves cost $925." (Source: Parkinson, John, Jr. The Seawanhaka Corinthian Yacht Club. The Early Twentieth Century. 1897-1940. New York, 1965, p. 105-106.)

"The first 16 footers were designed and built by N. G. Herreshoff in 1916 for the Seawanhaka Corinthian Yacht Club of Oyster Bay, Long Island. These boats were known as the Fish class. A total of twenty three boats were built for the 1916 sailing season, seventy five years ago this year. The first nineteen boats were delivered in January of 1916 at a cost of $875. The second group of four were delivered April 11, 1916, the last three of which were at a cost of $925. Three additional boats were delivered for the 1917 season, bringing the fleet to a total of twenty six. All of the Seawanhaka fleet carried fish names, a gaff rig and were trimmed with oak, but were built without the characteristic Herreshoff moulded sheer strake. A half round oak rub rail was used on these boats, likely as a cost savings measure. The top strake was white cedar, the same as the normal planking. The transoms, rub rail, coamings, and toe rail were all oak. The Seawanhaka sail numbers appear to have been consecutive, but not in the sequence of the hull number assignments from the Herreshoff yard. The sail numbers were preceded by the letters 'SC'.
The Fish boat was designed at the request of the Seawanhaka selection committee 'to be a safe and seaworthy boat in varying weather conditions, ideal for teaching children to sail, for pleasure sailing and Saturday racing.' The design developed by Nat Herreshoff was an enlarged version of the 1914 Herreshoff 12 footers with a small cuddy cabin forward of a very large cockpit. The longitudinal scaling ratio was thirteen to ten and the transverse was twelve to ten. An additional 3 1/2 inches was added to the bow after scaling accounting for the proportionately longer overhang. Communications from the committee indicate that the decision to purchase the fleet was delayed a year, but then went forward based on a price of $875." (Source: Meyer, Richard. "Herreshoff 16 Foot Class History." (History written on the occasion of the 75th anniversary of the Fish Class.) Norwell, Massachusetts, January, 1991. In: http://www.herreshoffregistry.org/doc/Fish_History_Meyer.pdf, retrieved August 19, 2010.)

Archival Documents

"N/A"

"[Item Transcription:] As you know, for the last year, some members of the Seawanhaka Club have been asking for a new one-design class to take the place of our present Crane design fifteen-footers.
At a meeting last night various plans were discussed, and it was suggested that it would be an advantage to have boats just like your one-design fifteen-footers that we might have inter-club racing with the Beverly Yacht Club, etc. For our use, however, it would probably be better to have the lead a little lower, and no centre board. With this change I suppose the boats would be near enough together so that knowledge of local conditions would be likely to offset any difference in the boats themselves. Several other plans were also discussed, and the type was not decided on.
I feel sure however, that your boats would have the preference, if the price were not too high.
The intention is to decide on a type of boat during the next 2/3 weeks and then to canvas the members to see who will build. If we could get fifteen or more subscribers, the Class would go through; otherwise the present boats, of which there are about that number in commission, but pretty soft, would be continued. Would it be agreeable to you to build that number of boats, and at what price ---the order to be given by Oct. 1st for delivery the following Spring?
A keel boat of the general type of the one you built Commodore Benedict [#732s SADIE] would seem to me preferable in model, and if the matter could be swung that way, would it be practical to build a Class of such reduced size as to bring the price about the same as a fifteen-footer?
I have just spent an hour this morning with George Cormack, who is now in conference with the America's Cup Committee, so I trust we may get something definite before long. [This appears to relate to the Fish Class of which 19 boats (#788s, #789s, #790s, #791s, #792s, #793s, #794s, #795s, #796s, #797s, #798s, #799s, #800s, #801s, #802s, #803s, #805s, #807s, #808s) would be ordered on January 10, 1916 for Seawanhaka YC members.)" (Source: Nichols, George. Letter to N.G. Herreshoff. Halsey C. Herreshoff Collection at the Herreshoff Marine Museum Item MR_05500. Correspondence, Folder 19, formerly 135. 1914-08-11.)


"[Item Description:] Penciled table, untitled, with data for OA, Extreme Beam, Breadth at wl, Draft, Freeboard, Displacement, Lead, and sail area for 15 footer [#503s class], OLEANDER [#710s], SADIE [#732s] and 'Proposed' [design] --- the latter being 24ft LOA, 19.3.LWL, 6ft 11in beam, 3500lbs displacement of which 2000lbs are lead and a sail area of 320sqft. Undated (might this be in response to George Nichols letter dated August 11, 1914 asking for a reduced SADIE-like design for the Seawanhaka Corinthian Yacht Club for what would become the Fish Class? 19 boats (#788s, #789s, #790s, #791s, #792s, #793s, #794s, #795s, #796s, #797s, #798s, #799s, #800s, #801s, #802s, #803s, #805s, #807s, #808s) would be eventually ordered on January 10, 1916 for Seawanhaka YC members)." (Source: Herreshoff, N.G. (creator). Penciled Table. Halsey C. Herreshoff Collection at the Herreshoff Marine Museum Item MRDE03_01150. Folder [no #]. No date (1914-08-11 or later ??).)


"[Item Description:] Ink on paper sailplan and plan view titled '16 foot Class' with list of particulars '21ft o.a. 16ft w.l. 7ft Beam. 3ft 3in Draft. 262sqft Sail. Scale 3/8in. Dec[ember] 1915'. [Fish Class of which 19 boats (#788s, #789s, #790s, #791s, #792s, #793s, #794s, #795s, #796s, #797s, #798s, #799s, #800s, #801s, #802s, #803s, #805s, #807s, #808s) would be ordered on January 10, 1916 for Seawanhaka YC members. Published in Rudder of March 1916, p. 106.]" (Source: Herreshoff, N.G. (creator). Sailplan. Halsey C. Herreshoff Collection at the Herreshoff Marine Museum Item MRDE08_03390. Folder [no #]. 1915-12.)


"[Item Description:] Penciled sailplan sketch of a Fish Class [#732s, #788s, #789s, #790s, #791s, #792s, #793s, #794s, #795s, #796s, #797s, #798s, #799s, #800s, #801s, #802s, #803s, #805s, #807s, #808s] boat titled in lower right corner '20 1/2ft oa. 16ft w.l. Scale 3/8'. With list of particulars 'Oa 21ft. 16ft'. Beam 7ft. Draft [question mark]. From model of 12 1/2 footer [at] 1in per ft except lengths increased 9/12in using 13in cale and frame spaces 9 3/4in. Dis[lacement] 46cuft = 2940lbs. Lead = 1370lbs. Sail area 262[sqft]. By rule (265)[question mark]. Rating ... 13.05'. With scantling calculations. With sail area calculations (210 + 51 = 261sqft). On inside of envelope from Dupont Magazine to 'Mr. Herreshoff. Herreshoff Mfg. Co. Brsitol, R.I'. On verso four penciled detail sketches. Undated, this may well be the original sketch which lead to the design of the Fish Class (the offset booklet entry for the class is dated January 1916 --- the same time that the first boats were contracted for --- and figures in the offset booklet appear to match the numbers on this sketch)." (Source: Herreshoff, N.G. (creator). Penciled Sketch. Halsey C. Herreshoff Collection at the Herreshoff Marine Museum Item MRDE05_00290. Folder [no #]. No date (1916-01 ???).)


"[Item Transcription:] [Typewritten memorandum:] Memo regarding towing 16 footers. Main tow line to be 50 fathoms of 3in rope.
6 Boats painters hitched to main tow line at intervals of 6 fathoms, first to be 80 fathoms from towing end.
7th boat towing by 1 3/4in rope, 6 fathoms, fastened to end of main tow line and mast.
8th boat and 9th boat towing by l 1/2in or 1 3/4in rope, 10 fathoms each, fastened to mast of boat ahead and to own mast.
Have staves around mast just under boom where tow line is made fast in boats Nos. 7, 8 and 9. Have all tow lines with chafing gear at bow chocks large enough so it cannot jump out.
Towboat to have anchor with cable bent to tow line ready to drop in case boats have to be stopped.
Trip line 20 fathoms long and float attached to crown of anchor.
All boats with lanterns fitted and lighted if start is made in night.
Man in each of the 6 first boats. 6th boat to tow row boat.
Stop tow line up to quarter of each of first 6 boats with yard of single
part of marline before starting, which is expected to break after tow starts.
This is to keep main tow line on intended side. 1st, 3rd and 5th boats with painter in port bow chock and made fast to deck cleat. The tiller lashed 2in to port.
2nd, 4th and 6th boats with painters in starboard bow chocks and made fast to deck cleat. The tiller lashed 2in to starboard.
7th, 8th and 9th boats tow line in port bow chocks and made fast to the mast. Tow lines of 8th and 9th boats made fast to mast of boat ahead, and with lashing to each quarter eye to hold it over middle of stern, with proper shaffing gear. [Note: Nineteen new boats [#788s, #789s, #790s, #791s, #792s, #793s, #794s, #795s, #796s, #797s, #798s, #799s, #800s, #801s, #802s, #803s, #805s, #807s, #808s] of the new Fish Class were brought to Oyster Bay in May 1916. A first batch of nine boats was towed by Champlin's launch on May 19, a tenth boat (#792s Volador) was sailed by Daniel Bacon on May 21, and the remaining nine boats were again towed by Champlin's launch on May 25, 1916.]" (Source: Herreshoff, N.G. (creator). Memorandum. Halsey C. Herreshoff Collection at the Herreshoff Marine Museum Item MRDE03_00880. Folder [no #]. Undated (ca 1916-05-18).)


"[Item Description:] Penciled sketch showing 9 boats on a towline. With notes '1st tow. 6 boats towing by their own painter. 3 boats tandem' and 'Second tow thus'. On verso of an opened envelope from Pantechnicon to NGH in Bristol marked 'Towing 16 footers'. Note: Nineteen new boats [#788s, #789s, #790s, #791s, #792s, #793s, #794s, #795s, #796s, #797s, #798s, #799s, #800s, #801s, #802s, #803s, #805s, #807s, #808s] of the new Fish Class were brought to Oyster Bay in May 1916. A first batch of nine boats was towed by Champlin's launch on May 19, a tenth boat (#792s Volador) was sailed by Daniel Bacon on May 21, and the remaining nine boats were again towed by Champlin's launch on May 25, 1916." (Source: Herreshoff, N.G. (creator). Penciled Sketch. Halsey C. Herreshoff Collection at the Herreshoff Marine Museum Item MRDE03_00920. Folder [no #]. Undated (ca 1916-05-24).)


Note: This list of archival documents contains in an unedited form any and all which mention #795s Snapper even if just in a cursory way. Permission to digitize, transcribe and display is gratefully acknowledged.


Registers

1999-2000 Register of Wooden Boats (#123.1)
Name: Dolphin
Owner: Herreshoff Marine Museum (P.O. Box 450, Bristol, RI 02809); Port: Bristol, RI
Type & Rig Fish class, Keel sloop
LOA 20-9; LWL 16-0; Extr. Beam 7-1; Draught 3-1
Sail Area 270
Builder Herreshoff Mfg. Co.; Designer N.G. Herreshoff; Built where Bristol RI; Built when 1916
This may be either one of these boats: #788s, #789s, #792s, #793s, #795s, #796s, #797s, #798s, #799s, #800s, #801s, #802s, #803s, #805s, #807s, #808s, #811s, #812s, #814s, #816s

2007 WoodenBoat Register
Name: Dolphin
Owner: Herreshoff Marine Museum; Port: Bristol, RI ; Port of Registry: Bristol, RI
Type & Rig Fish class, Keel sloop
LOA 20-9; LWL 16-0; Extr. Beam 7-1; Draught 3-1
Sail Area 270
Builder Herreshoff Mfg. Co.; Designer N.G. Herreshoff; Built where Bristol RI; Built when 1916
This may be either one of these boats: #788s, #789s, #792s, #793s, #795s, #796s, #797s, #798s, #799s, #800s, #801s, #802s, #803s, #805s, #807s, #808s, #811s, #812s, #814s, #816s

Source: Various Yacht Lists and Registers. For complete biographical information see the Herreshoff Catalogue Raisonné under Data Sources. Note that this section shows only snapshots in time and should not be considered a provenance, although it can help creating one.

Supplement

From the 1920 and earlier HMCo Index Cards at the MIT Museum
  • Note: The vessel index cards comprise two sets of a total of some 3200 cards about vessels built by HMCo, with dimensions and information regarding drawings, later or former vessel names, and owners. They were compiled from HMCo's early days until 1920 and added to in later decades, apparently by Hart Nautical curator William A. Baker and his successors. While HMCo seems to have used only one set of index cards, all sorted by name and, where no name was available, by number, later users at MIT apparently divided them into two sets of cards, one sorted by vessel name, the other by vessel number and greatly expanded the number of cards. Original HMCo cards are usually lined and almost always punched with a hole at bottom center while later cards usually have no hole, are unlined, and often carry substantially less information. All cards are held by the Francis Russell Hart Nautical Collections of the MIT Museum in Cambridge, Mass.
From the 1931 HMCo-published Owner's List

Name: Snapper
Type: J & M
Length: 16'
Owner: Roosevelt, W. E.

Source: Herreshoff Manufacturing Company. "A Partial List of Herreshoff Clients." In: Herreshoff Manufacturing Company. Herreshoff Yachts. Bristol, Rhode Island, ca. 1931.

From the 1930s L. Francis Herreshoff Index Cards at the Herreshoff Marine Museum
  • Note: The L. Francis Herreshoff index cards comprise a set of some 1200 cards about vessels built by HMCo, with dimensions and / or ownership information. Apparently compiled in the early 1930s, for later HMCo-built boats like the Fishers Island 23s or the Northeast Harbor 30s are not included. Added to in later decades, apparently by L. F. Herreshoff as well as his long-time secretary Muriel Vaughn and others. Also 46 cards of L. F. Herreshoff-designed vessels. The original set of index cards is held by the Herreshoff Marine Museum and permission to display is gratefully acknowledged.
From the 1953 HMCo Owner's List by L. Francis Herreshoff

Name: Snapper
Type: 16' J & M
Owner: W. E. Roosevelt
Row No.: 637

Source: Herreshoff, L. Francis. "Partial List of Herreshoff-Built Boats." In: Herreshoff, L. Francis. Capt. Nat Herreshoff. The Wizard of Bristol. New York, 1953, p. 325-343.

From the 2000 (ca.) Transcription of the HMCo Construction Record by Vermilya/Bray

Month: Jan
Day: 10
Year: 1916
E/P/S: S
No.: 0795
Name: Snapper
LW: 16'
B: 7' 1"
D: 3' 1"
Rig: J & M
K: y
Ballast: Lead O.
Amount: 875.00
Notes Constr. Record: Fish Class
Last Name: Roosevelt
First Name: W. E.

Source: Vermilya, Peter and Maynard Bray. "Transcription of the HMCo. Construction Record." Unpublished database, ca. 2000.

Note: The transcription of the HMCo Construction Record by Peter Vermilya and Maynard Bray was performed independently (and earlier) than that by Claas van der Linde. A comparison of the two transcriptions can be particularly useful in those many cases where the handwriting in the Construction Record is difficult to decipher.

Research Note(s)

"Sail. no. 14 in 1923 as per a Long Island Sound Yacht Racing Association sail number summary in The Rudder, July 1923, p. 66." (Source: van der Linde, Claas. October 18, 2015.)

"Launch date signifies the date vessel was taken out of the shop." (Source: van der Linde, Claas. October 30, 2012.)

"Built in 89 days (contract to launch; equivalent to $10/day, 33 lbs displacement/day)." (Source: van der Linde, Claas. January 16, 2024.)

"Sail area actual 271.2. By NYYC rule 285.7." (Source: Herreshoff, N. G. "Fish Class. 788 Class." Design and construction notes, dated Jan. 1916.) Also: "262 feet of sail area in a gaff mainsail and club jib" (Source: Parkinson, John, Jr. The Seawanhaka Corinthian Yacht Club. The Early Twentieth Century. 1897-1940. New York, 1965, p. 105-106.)

"Displ. 46.5 cuft. = 2975lbs." (Source: Herreshoff, N. G. "Fish Class. 788 Class." Design and construction notes, dated Jan. 1916.)

Note: Research notes contain information about a vessel that is often random and unedited but has been deemed useful for future research.

Note

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Citation: HMCo #795s Snapper. Herreshoff Catalogue Raisonné. https://herreshoff.info/Docs/S00795_Snapper.htm.