HMCo #630s Pintail
Particulars
Later Name(s): Gossip (1908-1910), Gossip / Yolande (1911), Yolande / Lena (1912), Lena (1913-1940), Lena / Elena(1941-1945), Elena (1946-1955), Elena / Cockatoo II (1956), Cockatoo II (1957-1979)
Type: New York 30
Designed by: NGH
Contract: 1904-11-15
Launch: 1905-1-27
Construction: Wood
LOA: 43' 6" (13.26m)
LWL: 30' 0" (9.14m)
Beam: 8' 9" (2.67m)
Draft: 6' 3.5" (1.92m)
Construction Class and Number: #626-5
Rig: Sloop
Sail Area: 1,085sq ft (100.8sq m)
Displ.: 17,696 lbs (8,027 kg)
Keel: yes
Ballast: Lead outside
Built for: Belmont, August
Amount: $4,200.00
Note(s) in HMCo Construction Record: Sold to E. D. Morgan 7/23/08 + name changed to Gossip
Last year in existence: 1979 (aged 74)
Final disposition: Abandoned in 1979 enroute from Norway to the U.S.
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 location: H.M.M. Model Room South Wall Left
Vessels from this model:
18 built, modeled by NGH
Original text on model:
"30' NYYC class Nov. 1904 scale 3/4 No. 626, 627, 628, 629, 630, 631, 632, 633 and 635, 636, 637, 638, 639 [sic, also: #640, #642, #643, #647, #648]" (Source: Original handwritten annotation on model. Undated.)
Model Description:
"30' lwl New York Yacht Club 30-class sloops of 1905. Eighteen were built over the course of a single winter of which about half still survive. Anemone, NY-30 [#647] is in the Herreshoff Marine Museum's collection, awaiting restoration." (Source: Bray, Maynard. 2004.)
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.4.148
Offset booklet contents:
#626 - #633 inclusive [30' w.l. NYYC 30-class sloops].
Offset Booklet(s) in Haffenreffer-Herreshoff Collection. Francis Russell Hart Nautical Collections, MIT Museum, Cambridge, Mass. (Restricted access --- see curator.)
Drawings
List of drawings:
Drawings believed to have been first drawn for, or being first referenced to
HMCo #630s Pintail are listed in bold.
Click on Dwg number for preview, on HH number to see at M.I.T. Museum.
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Dwg 112-054 (HH.5.09346); Deck Capstan for Backstays and Jib Topsail Sheets (1899-12-26)
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Dwg 079-087 (HH.5.05896); Chainplates for # 560 to 567 (1901-09-18)
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Dwg 084-022 (HH.5.06470); Skylight for # 560 Class (1901-10-04)
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Dwg 092-054 (HH.5.07523); Side Step for 30' W.L. Class (1901-10-09)
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Dwg 093-040 (HH.5.07645): Cabin Table # 560 Class (1901-10-10)
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Dwg 095-046 (HH.5.07849); Mahogany Deck-House (1903-04-20)
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Dwg 093-048 (HH.5.07653); Cabin Table of Mahogany (1903-06-01)
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Dwg 110-026 (HH.5.08991); Travel[l]ers for Small Sail Boats (1903-12-09)
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Dwg 064-066 (HH.5.04542): Detail of Rudder and Stock (1904-02-01)
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Dwg 110-021 (HH.5.08986); Details Bowsprit Fittings (1904-03-03)
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Dwg 029-000 [029-F] (HH.5.02172); General Arrangement > Design for 26' Rating One Design Class, 40'-8" O.A., 30' W.L., 8'-8" Beam, 6' Draft (1904-10-07)
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Dwg 029-024 (HH.5.02120); General Arrangement > One Design Class 27' Rating, 43'-6" Overall, 30' W.L., 8'-10" Beam, 6'-3" Draft (1904-11-14)
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Dwg 130-095 (HH.5.10400); Sails > 626 Class NYYC. (1904-11-25)
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Dwg 025-030 (HH.5.01779); Construction List for # 626 Class (1904-11-29)
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Dwg 081-037 (HH.5.06125); Spars for # 626 and Class (1904-12-02)
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Dwg 111-063 (HH.5.09254); Bulkheads, Toilet Room and Galley (1904-12-03)
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Dwg 127-164 (HH.5.10032); Sails > Sails N.Y.Y.C. 27' Class (1904-12-04)
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Dwg 049-056 (HH.5.03732); Bilge Pump for # 626 Class (1904-12-08)
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Dwg 110-032 (HH.5.08997); Turnbuckles for # 626 Class (1904-12-12)
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Dwg 111-064 (HH.5.09255); Cabin Plan # 626 Class (1904-12-12)
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Dwg 068-065 (HH.5.04871); Compass Arrangement # 626 Class (1904-12-16)
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Dwg 076-061 (HH.5.05521); General Arrangement > 626 Class NYYC 27' Racing Length, 48'-6" O.A., 30'-0" W.L., 8'-9" Beam, 6'-3 1/2" Draft (1904-12-17)
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Dwg 091-099 [010-061] (HH.5.07373); Block and Metal List for # 626 Class, Casting List (1904-12-20)
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Dwg 064-072 (HH.5.04548); Rudder and Details # 626 Class (1904-12-22)
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Dwg 110-033 (HH.5.08998); Details for # 626 Class (1904-12-24)
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Dwg 035-033 (HH.5.02592); Chart of New York Yacht Club 30-Footers as Stored in Relation to Launching Ways (1905-03-27)
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Dwg 143-001 (HH.5.11864); Docking Plan for NYYC 27' Racing Length Class (1905-04-29)
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Dwg 092-064 (HH.5.07532); Hinges for Folding Berths (1905-05-09)
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Dwg 112-069 (HH.5.09363); Mainsheet Capstan for 1 1/2" and 1 3/4" Rope Used on 30 Footers N.Y.Y. Club (1905-12-05)
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Dwg 110-048 (HH.5.09013); Details of Changed Rig for # 626 Class (1905-12-11)
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Dwg 127-165 (HH.5.10033); Sails > Adios 626 Class Trysail (1916 ?)
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Dwg 128-056 (HH.5.10175); Sails > Cruising Sails for Nautilus NYYC 30 Footer (1917-03-09)
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Dwg 096-144 (HH.5.08096); Sails > Sail Plan for 626 Class (1923-06-06)
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Dwg 130-095 (HH.5.10401); Sails > 626 Class NYYC. (1925-12-31)
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Dwg 132-000 (HH.5.10777); General Arrangement > NYYC 30 ft. W.L. Class (1938-03-21)
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Dwg 076-061 (HH.5.05520); Construction Dwg > NYYC "30'" Class Sloop Sail Plan, Outb'd Profile and Midship Section (1956-08-12)
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
"[1905-01-05] Thu 5: Very fine & cold. Nearly calm. [Temperature] rang[ing from] 8deg. to 24deg. ... Began planking #630 [Pintail] in PM.
[1905-01-10] Tue 10: Fine W. Turned over #630 [Pintail] in forenoon.
[1905-01-27] Fri 27: Took #630 [Pintail] to lower cove lot and turned over #633 [Carlita].
[1905-05-10] Launched #625 Doris. [Also launched #630s Pintail as per drawing 35-33.]" (Source: Herreshoff, Nathanael G. Diary, 1905. Manuscript (excerpts). Diary access courtesy of Halsey C. Herreshoff.)
"Herreshoff Manufacturing Company
Bristol, R.I. October 8, 1904
Mr. N. D. Lawton
40 Wall Street, New York
My dear Mr. Lawton,
I have studied over your proposition for a restricted or one design class, and keeping well in mind your P. 1, I have worked out what seems to me the largest desirable boat to be easily handled with one paid hand. The w.l. and rating are larger than you have specified, but I think not too large to make a good wholesome boat. The w.l. of 30' is sufficient to make her come within the limits of the New York Yacht Club [for representation in the club]. The items of size are as follows. Length o.a. 40ft 8in. Length of w.l. 30ft. Mean length of quarter beam 28ft 5in. Approx. displacement 245 cu.ft. and with sail area 1000 sq.ft. rating w'ld be 26ft.
Mimosa III [#610s] has rating of about 28' and sail area of over 1100 sqft. also[?] obtain a boat of not more than 25 rating and keep her in good proposition the w.l. should be about 28 1/2 and sail 925.
I believe the larger boat as above would be more satisfactory. The inclosed b[lue] p[rint] [plan 'Design for 26' rating one design class, 40ft-8in o.a., 30ft w.l., 8ft-8in beam, 6' draft', M.I.T. no. HH.5.02172, dated October 7, 1904] will give you idea of room.
If this proposition is carried through, I would like very much to design the boats, and have them built at our shops, and if you can let me know which size seems most satisfactory and in what manner they would be built --- if single or double planked and if of yellow pine of mahogany, also about finish inside, if about like Bobtail [#579s] or more complete as like the Buzzards Bay Class --- we would be pleased to give you bids.
I understand there is a movement on foot to to[sic] modify the N.Y.Y. Club measurement rules and bring the rules of other clubs to be uniform with it. The plan is an excellent one and I hope will be carried though, but I hope the modifications will be well considered before being adapted, as I think they are not quite correct.
Yours sincerely,
Nath'l G. Herreshoff." (Source: Herreshoff, Nathanael G. [Letter to N. D. Lawton.] New York Yacht Club Archive. October 8, 1904.)
"Bristol, R.I.
October 11, 1904
N. D. Lawton, Esq.
40 Wall St, New York
Dear Mr. Lawton,
Yours of yesterday is at hand, and I have discussed the building of a class of boats with my brother and he has written you, which I inclose with this.
Double planking, in my mind is the best, that is double to below the turn of the builge[sic]. On the flat of the floor single planking seems to be just as good. As the boats are a size the younger generation would cruise in a good deal it appeared to us best to have them rather completely fitted inside to make them comfortable cruisers, and in as nice shape as the Buzzards Bay Class. Of course in racing together they will be on even footing but with boats rigged for light weather they would be at a disadvantage when the winds are light.
Regarding racing rules I think it of great importance to have a limit of sail area in proportion to the principle[sic] hull factor. --- A rig that is most suitable for cruising along our coast in summer weather and not for racing in any particular location where the winds are light. If all boats were so restricted how much better racing would be! I think the riggs[sic] should be about like the [New York] 70s, Altair [#539s] and the Mimosa III [#610s], larger than the imported cutters, but less than the present limit in the NYYC rule. I would make it at 1.25L = sqrt(S) for vessels carrying topsails and 1.15L or possibly 1.12L = sqrt(S) in the smaller craft that are rigged without topsails.
This part[?] formula applied the [sic, i.e. to] the design now in consideration, it about 1050 [sqft] using 1.15 and 1000 using 1.12.
Very sincerely yours,
Nath'l G. Herreshoff. (Source: Herreshoff, Nathanael G. [Letter to N. D. Lawton.] New York Yacht Club Archive. October 11, 1904.)
"Bristol, R.I.
Oct. 12th 1904
Dear Butler
... About the onedesign. I know the beam is not large, but it was my intention to give the boats a good strong construction and beside a good lot of ballast, and get easy lines by having a liberal waterline length. A type more like Ingomar [#590s], that would stand up well in a breeze and yet move easily in light weather. They would not sail on their ear but have stability and good controll[sic], so you might sail her home in a three reef breeze without bothering to tie down.
I agree with you about the cockpit, an open low down one would be pleasanter for me, but there is no doubt but what the high one is the safer, and I take it they will be used more by the younger generation, who will of course cruise in them a good deal, and for their use the high cockpit is best. However I see no reason why part of the boats could have high and part low cockpits, and draw in to lots. If the class materializes I would like very much to design them and feel that I could get a satisfactory boat. I am not sure if I have been suggesting too large a boat or not, if I am please let me know, and keep me posted any way.
Yours sincerely
Nath'l G. Herreshoff ... " (Source: Herreshoff, Nathanael G. [Letter to Butler Duncan.] New York Yacht Club Archive. October 12, 1904.)
"Bristol, R.I.
Oct 19, 1904
My dear Mr. Lawton,
Referring to yours of 14th I think it would be best for you to determine just about what size and type of boats you want and the manner in which they are to be built, and then we would like to bid on the job. I know no reason why we cannot do a good class of work as cheaply as anyone who makes a living profit from it. As to cheaper work, or only partly finishing the boats, leaving it for someone else to furnish and complete I think we would not care to undertake it.
Yours sincerely,
Nath'l G. Herreshoff." (Source: Herreshoff, Nathanael G. [Letter to N. D. Lawton.] New York Yacht Club Archive. October 19, 1904.)
"Bristol, R.I.
Oct 19 1904
Dear Butler,
The head room under cabin top would be about 5ft 2in. I think under skylight of ordinary proportions not over 6in more.
To get standing room under skylights the house and skylight would have to be rather high for good looks.
Although looking clumsy, I think that is a matter of fashion rather than good taste. Please understand I have not been cutting off the ends, but lengthing[sic] the water line to get the surface a little more vertical and freer[?] from thumps from the sea. It may not add anything to the speed and costs nothing at all in the N.Y.Y.C. measurement rule, but will add a great deal to the seagoing qualities and to my eye makes a much better looking boat, and I believe most everyone will look at it that way after a fair trial under our rules.
I would not expect these boats to sail with the Alert [#581s], as Alert has a much larger rig and will sail away in light weather. In fresh breezes I think they should come with there time allowance. Under NYYC rules Alert would measure about 30ft racing length to about 26 for the proposed ones.
Yours sincerely
Nath'l G. Herreshoff" (Source: Herreshoff, Nathanael G. [Letter to Butler Duncan.] New York Yacht Club Archive. October 19, 1904.)
"... N.Y.Y.C. 30 [Name], 626+ [Building Number], 26.4 [Rating], 30 [Waterline], 29 [L = length at 1/4 beam as for Universal Rule], 8.7 [B = breadth of waterline as for Universal Rule], 6.29 [d = draft of water as for Universal Rule], 276 [D = displacement in cubic foot as for Universal Rule (= 17,632 lbs or 7.9 long tons)], 1085 [Sail Area], 1530 [Sail limit Present rule], -445 [Diff.], 1132 [Sail limit Proposed rule], 47 [Diff.], quite able [Notes] ..." (Source: Herreshoff, N. G. "Formula for Obtaining the Limit of Sail-Area in Yachts when Measured by the Universal Rule Formula." Bristol, R.I., July 13, 1907 with later additions. Original handwritten (in ink) document with penciled additions. Halsey C. Herreshoff Collection at the Herreshoff Marine Museum Item MRDE06_00080.)
"Coconut Grove, Fla - March 26 1931 {1931/03/26} Dear Francis ... I think the Newport 30s got thru their racing before the N.Y.Y.C 30s were built. I cannot recollect of their sailing togather. My impression is the Newports' might have been a little faster to windward & reaching in moderate to fresh breezes, and possibly in strong winds, for they soon found reefed boats were beaten by those with all sail, even in 2 or 3 reef breezes. ... I have not their dimensions with me, but as well as I can recollect, ... The NYYCs were; as designed, 43' 5" o.a. [over all] 30' w.l. [waterline] 8' 8" beam, 6' 3 1/2" draft. Wgt hull all above lead 5800 lbs. Rig 900. - Equipment & furnishings & c - 1850. Outside lead 9100. Total 17650. = 276 cu. [p2] The Newports had about 1000 sqft sail and the N.Y.Y.Cs 1085. ... Your affect - Father." (Source: Mystic Seaport Museum, L. Francis Herreshoff Collection, Box 17, Folder 7: Letter from N. G. Herreshoff to L. F. Herreshoff.)
"In 1905, thirty-four sailing yachts were built, including the Twenty Rater SONYA, and the New York Yacht Club Class of Thirty Footers (18 boats)." (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. 70-71.)
L. Francis Herreshoff
"In mentioning the smaller yachts of that time I must not fail to speak of the N.Y.Y.C. thirty-footers which came out in 1905: they were the fourth class of one-design thirty-footers Captain Nat designed, the other classes being the Newport Thirties, 1896; Buzzards Bay Thirties, 1902; Bar Harbor Thirties, 1903. The N.Y.Y.C. Thirties, I believe, were the first one-design class built by any one under the Universal Rule, and they were safe, sane, able craft making comfortable cruisers for their size, and a few of them accompanied the N.Y.Y.C. on its cruises during the next several years. Their principal dimensions were L.O.A., forty-three feet six inches; L.W.L., thirty feet; beam, eight feet ten inches; draft, six feet three inches. They had about one thousand square feet of sail area, and cost $4,000 complete with eighty-eight separate items of equipment, which seems amazingly cheap today, but these Thirties were probably the first boats built with a carefully planned system of quantity production. There were eighteen of them and they were built in what was called the middle shop of the Herreshoff Company, which was a new shop then, and that winter was given over entirely to building these Thirties. There were generally three of them side by side in this production row, the first one upside down over her molds being planked; the next one turned right side up having her deck laid and interior built; while the last one had been set on her lead and was being finished off and painted. After they really got in production these boats shifted along in this production line at the rate of one a week, or in other words one was completed each week and was taken away to the storage yard on a special wide-wheeled low gear hauled by four horses. Of course most all the parts of these boats were prefabricated, and there was a pattern for each plank and other principal parts which were gotten out about eighteen at a time. These Thirties were double planked with cypress inner planking and yellow pine outer planking set in shellac which seems to be a very good combination; while cypress is not often used for inner planking on account of its weight, it is a wonderful wood to resist rot.
When these Thirties were rigged I happened to be working with the rigging gang and remember well that we rigged one in seven minutes, which was done as follows. As the Thirty came down the track in her cradle to be launched we had her mast, with all its rigging attached and stopped down, hanging from a derrick right over where she would be as she floated off the cradle. Her boom, sheets, and other parts were on a scow alongside. When the Thirty moved under the derrick her mast was lowered in place and about six men leaped aboard, each knowing exactly what to do as we had previously rigged several just like her. Every part fitted perfectly, and after the pins of the turnbuckles were in place we rove off her sheets and halyards as if we were setting a spinnaker in a race. Those were the days when men knew how to do things and did them.
The New York Yacht Club Thirties had a remarkable queue of owners, many of whom had had much larger yachts. ...
It would be hard to get together at any time a class of better sailor men and they raced the Thirties very hard and had few protests. Soon after they came out it was found that it never paid to reef in a race, and the Thirties were certainly great sail luggers; they often carried full sail in winds of forty-five miles per hour.
This class is said to have raced more than any other. As they raced very actively the first ten years and fairly regularly the first thirty years, this statement is probably true. They are now forty-five years old and appear structurally sound with the topsides nearly as smooth as when new. These boats no doubt have given more fun for the money than any boats ever built for their annual expense has been small as they have required almost no repairs or alterations.
The Thirties were almost exactly alike when new and it was told that the one that came in last at the end of the first year came in at the head of the class some subsequent year. Many different ones have won the season's championship in their turn. Many one-design classes have come and gone since the New York Yacht Club Thirties were built, but none of them has begun to hold its popularity over as great a term of years. These New York Thirties are a monument to Captain Nat's genius in construction, and it is very likely that if any of their parts had been either larger or smaller, or of different material, they would not have stood so many years of hard driving." (Source: Herreshoff, L. Francis. The Wizard of Bristol. The Life and Achievements of Nathanael Greene Herreshoff, together with An Account of Some of the Yachts he Designed. New York, 1953, p. 272-274.)
"The first one-design class built under the rule was the New York Yacht Club's Thirties. The Thirty is what they were rated, not their waterline length. Their general dimensions were LOA 43'6"; LWL about 29'; beam 8'10"; draft 6'3". Some people, and Lloyds Register, have thought these boats were 30' WL, but that is not so. They were called 30-footers because their rating was 30'. They cost $4,000.00, and I assume that several of them sold for higher figures during their long life. One of the reasons the Thirties were so cheap was that there were eighteen of them built at once. They were built in a carefully planned system of quantity production with four of them in the production line. After production settled down these boats took one month to produce, and were turned out at the rate of one a week. They even had a pattern for each plank, and, as the Herreshoff Company made all of the hardware and sails, there was no holdup in waiting for parts made by others. The builders also had the advantage of having built five or six other one-design classes. Although the Thirties were built cheaply they must have been built well for it is said some of them raced more races than any type of boat ever built, and I am told some of them are quite sound now at the age of fifty-seven years. They have probably given more pleasure and sport for the money than any yachts.
It was found in their first year of racing that it never paid to reef in a race, and these little ships carried whole sail in heavy squalls and raced during storms. The Thirties went on many New York Yacht Club runs in their early years. They were very small vessels compared to the fleets before 1917. They were very much alike in dimension and speed, perhaps more so than any class ever built, and if I remember a-right after all these years, one of the best helmsmen on the Sound bought the one which came in last in their first year's racing and brought her in first at the end of the next year. This is not so strange for, although few people seem to realize it, slight variation in size and shape have much less influence on the speed of a vessel than such things as the condition of the yacht and her sails, while helmsmanship and tactics used in the race are of much greater importance. Thus in one-design classes the same few yachts win day after day with tiresome monotony, and the indifferent or second-class sailors should never compete in one-design classes but should always race in open classes where occasionally they have a chance to win if they have a yacht that is either generally superior or a one-weather boat that has an advantage under certain conditions." (Source: Herreshoff, L. Francis. An Introduction to Yachting. New York, 1963, p. 165.)
Other Herreshoff Family
"Herreshoff Manufacturing Company
Bristol, R.I.
Oct. 11, 1904
Mr. N. D. Lawton, Esq.
40 Wall St,
New York, N.Y.
Dear Sir:-
Referring to the correspondence with our Mr. N. G. Herreshoff and blue print submitted you, we would be pleased to design and build for you and your associates, eight or more fast cruising sloop yachts, each having the following general dimensions:-
Length over all 40ft 8in.
Length on water line 30ft.
Beam 8ft 8in.
Draft 6ft.
To be constructed throughout in the very best manner and of the best materials of their respective kinds. The outboard planking to be double. Main deck to be left bright or covered with canvass as may be preferred.
Deck house to be of mahogany. Inside finish to be in white with mahogany trimmings.
To have water closet, basin, stove, cushions, mattresses, pillows, bed clothing and a moderate quantity of dishes.
Yacht to be rigged complete, having hollow mast, gaff and boom. Each yacht to have a Mainsail, # 1 Jib, # 2 Jib, Balloon Jib and Spinnaker.
All painting and varnishing to be done in the most thorough manner. Bottom to have the Herreshoff Anti-Fouling paint. To be painted white above water line and to have a gilt name on stern. The boats to be steered by a tiller. Each boat to have one anchor with suitable cable, deck lines, 2 fenders and 4 life preservers. Also running and anchor lights and spirit compass with light.
If ordered soon we can build a lot of eight boats for the sum of Thirty-five Thousand Two Hundred ($35,200.00) dollars. First payment to be Eighty-eight Hundred ($8800.00) dollars, payable upon the signing of the contract. Second payment to be Eighty-eight Hundred ($8800.00) dollars, payable when the first four boats are completed. Third payment to be Eighty-eight Hundred ($8800.00) dollars, payable when the second four boats are completed. The fourth and final payment to be Eleven Hundred ($1100.00) dollars on each boat, when it is delivered alongside of our dock at Bristol, R. I.
Yours respectfully,
Herreshoff Mfg CO.
John B. Herreshoff. Prest.
[Signed for JBH:] N.B.S. [Newell B. Sheldon].
[With hand-scribbled calculation in lower left corner: 8 / $35200.00 - $4400.00.]" (Source: Herreshoff, John B. [Letter to N. D. Lawton.] New York Yacht Club Archive. October 11, 1904.)
Other Contemporary Text Source(s)
"Bristol, R. I., Nov. 5. 1904. ... The Herreshoffs are preparing to build new boats in the 30-foot classes." (Source: Anon. "X.P.D.N.C. Is A Flyer." Boston Herald, November 6, 1904, p. ?.)
"August Belmont has chosen Pintail as the name for his new 30-foot one-design boat [#630s], one of the eighteen built by the Herreshoffs for members of the New-York Yacht Club. Pintail is a species of northern duck, and the sharp tailed grows of the Rocky Mountains are also called pintails. 'Banzai,' the Japanese exclamation, equivalent to our 'Hooray' is the name Newbury D. Lawton has chosen for his 30-footer [#640s], and Henry F. Lippet, the owner of the crack 60-footer Weetamoo, has called his new boat [#632s] Tobasco. The owners drew lots for the boats, and then named them. They expect to enjoy some spirited racing as soon as the season opens." (Source: Anon. "Yachting. Naming the 30-Footers." New York Tribune, April 5, 1905, p. 7.)
"[License issued to vessel under 20 tons. Pos. 216:]
Pintail, sloop yacht, of Bristol.
Built at Bristol, 1905.
8 tons; 34 ft. x 9 ft. x 5.3 ft. [Register length x breadth x depth.]
No specifications shown.
Lic[ensed] ([as] yacht) May 9, 1905. Owner: Herreshoff Manufacturing Company of Bristol. Master: N. G. Herreshoff, Bristol.
Surrendered [license] June 9, 1905 at New York. ([Record at:] C[ustom] H[ouse, Providence])." (Source: Survey of Federal Archives, Work Projects Administration. Ships Documents of Rhode Island. Bristol. Ship Registers and Enrollments of the Port of Bristol - Warren Rhode Island, 1941, s.v. Pintail.)
"No. 10352 --- For Sale --- (See illustration). Pole-mast keel sloop, New York Y. C. 30-foot class, designed and built by Herreshoff Mfg. Co., 1905. A-1 construction throughout --- double planking, bronze bolts and copper fastenings, mahogany deck trimmings. About 5 tons lead on keel. Cabin, gives 5 ft. 9 in. headroom, has two transoms and two berths; clothes lockers at after end. Interior finish mahogany and white. Forward of cabin on port side is toilet room with patent flush w. c. and folding wash-basin. Opposite is galley, fully found. Two berths in foc'sle for crew, although one man can take care of boat. Her equipment is more complete than generally found on yachts this type, including Herreshoff and Ratsey mainsails, new 1905 and 1907 respectively; jib, No. 2 jib (former new 1907), storm jib, balloon jib, spinnaker and trysail, all in good condition. Tender, Herreshoff capstan, binnacle and compass, anchor and cable, cushions, curtains, etc.; in fact, fully equipped for cruising. This class offers splendid qualities for racing and cruising, as well as day sailing. Yacht and equipment in first-class condition. Price reasonable. Inspectable New York. Apply to Stanley M. Seaman, 220 Broadway, New York. [Note: Though not identified by name, the accompanying photo shows her as Pintail. Pintail was subsequently 'Sold to E. D. Morgan 7/23/08 + name changed to Gossip' as per a note in the Herreshoff Construction Record.]" (Source: Anon. [For Sale Ad.] Rudder, March 1908, p. 182.)
"... Gossip was formerIy Pintail, which has recently been purchased by E. D. Morgan. ..." (Source: Anon. "New York Y. C. Cruise." Forest and Stream, August 15, 1908, p. 264.)
"... The New York Yacht Club 30 footer Gossip has been sold by E. D. Morgan of the New York Yacht Club to Lloyd C. Griscom. Mr. Griscom has changed the boat's name to Yolande and expects to race her all summer in the class. ..." (Source: Anon. "Many Yachts Change Hands." New York Sun, July 30, 1911, p. C11.)
"... The roster of the yachts which will race this year, as compiled by Frank Bowne Jones, Vice President of the association [Yacht Racing Association of Long Island Sound], is headed by six of the New York Yacht Club fifty-footers, all of which were in seclusion last year, and from these all the way down through the list come classes which have provided able competition in these events in the past.
The list of the boats by classes, with sailing number and owner's name, follows : ... New York 30-Footers, D. R. Richardson, Secretary --- 1, Alera [#626s], F. W. Belknap; 2, Silhouette [ex Ibis #627s], R. H. Amberg; 4, Houqua [ex Maid of Meudon #629s], W. G. Low Jr.; 5, Lena [ex Pintail #630s], O. Reid; 7, Alice [ex Tabasco #632s], G. Davis; 9, Amorita [ex Adelaide II #635s], F. B. Bragdon; 11, Oriole [#637s], S. C. Pirie; 12, Rowdy [ex Neola ll #638s], H. L. Curry; 13, Minx [#648s], W. H. Hoffman; 15, Banzai [#640s], E. Lang; 16, Nautilus [#642s], M. E. Hatfield; 18, Adois [sic, i.e. Adios ex Anemone II #647s], F. L. Richards; 19, Mizpah [ex Cara Mia #639s], D. R. Richardson. ..." (Source: Anon. "N. Y. Fifty-Footers Head Yachting Roster." New York Times, May 24, 1921, p. 23.)
"HAVING passed through their twentieth racing season, it may be said that the New York Yacht Club Thirty-footers offer the finest example in American racing annals of what it means to have a good class hold together. Leaving the building ways at the famed Herreshoff yards at Bristol in the spring of 1905, eighteen of these fine racing sloops took a lively part in the sport of that season. Now, a score of years later, we find that sixteen of the 'Thirties' were in commission during the past season and that many of them took part in the racing and cruising throughout the season on Long Island Sound. Considering the age of the class, this is truly a remarkable showing. ...
A roster of the original owners of the Thirties contains names that have loomed large at times in American yachting. ... Pintail (5) [was initially owned by] August Belmont. ...
While the Thirty-footers with their gaff mainsails may not be as fast as some of the more modern vessels with Marconi rig, when on the wind, they possibly make up for this deficiency when reaching or running. They are fine heavy weather boats, and no better demonstration of their ability in this direction could be had than was given by Lena, sailed by Ogden Reid, on the day of the King's Cup off Newport, August 22, 1923. This was a very heavy day, the wind from north and northwest blowing from 35 to 45 miles with a big sea running. Although the conditions were such that the schooners and larger sloops had all the wind and sea they wanted, Lena sailed over the 30-mile ocean course without mishap and won a special prize. Capt. Reid was congratulated for his pluck in taking the little sloop out under such conditions. Lena was originally the Pintail (No. 5), built by August Belmont for his son, August Belmont, Jr. She was sold by the Belmonts to former Commodore E. D Morgan, who raced her under the name Gossip; then became the property of Lloyd C. Griscom (Yolanda), and in 1913 was purchased by her present owner. ...
In gathering data for a record of this truly remarkable yacht racing class the writer received valuable assistance from W. P. Stephens, recorder of the Yacht Racing Association of Long Island Sound, and Harry L. Maxwell. The following complete list of the Thirties and their many owners was compiled from the records of Mr. Stephens: ...
5. Pintail. Built for August Belmont (August Belmont, Jr.). 1909, E. D. Morgan (Gossip) --- 1912, Lloyd C. Griscom (Yolanda) --- 1913, Ogden Reid (Lena). ..." (Source: Lawrence, Seabury. "The New York Thirties. An Interesting Sketch of America's Most Famous One-Design Class." Yachting, January 1925, p. 28-30.)
"The following is a complete list of the Thirties, with record of their various changes of names and of owners: ...
5. Pintail. Built for August Belmont (August Belmont, Jr.). 1909, E. D. Morgan (Gossip) --- 1911, Lloyd C. Griscom (Yolanda) --- 1913, Ogden Reid (Lena). 1927, name of yacht (Lena). ..." (Source: Schoettle, Edwin J. "The New York Thirties." In: Sailing Craft, New York, 1928, p. 579-588.)
"N. Y. Y. C. 30-FT. CLASS Secretary S. C. Pirie
[#626s], NY-1, Alera, Howard P. Whitney, Jr.
[#627s], NY-2, Liza, D John Dallett
[#628s], NY-3, Atair, Charles T. Stork
[#629s], NY-4, Interlude, Melville R. Smith
[#630s], NY-5, Lena, Ogden Reid
[#632s], NY-7, Alice, Gherardi Davis
[#633s], NY-8, Mermaid, Leo Friede
[#635s], NY-9, Amorita, Howard C. Brokaw
[#636s], NY-10, Linnet, Charles H. Talcott
[#637s], NY-11, Oriole, S. C. Pirie
[#648s], NY-13, Phantom, A. H. Renshaw
[#640s], NY-15, Banzai, Edmond Lang
[#642s], NY-16, Taurus, W. L. Inslee
[#643s], NY-17, Phyrne, J. P. Morgan" (Source: Anon. "Racing Numbers Long Island Sound Yacht Racing Association." Rudder, August 1928, p. 102.)
Other Modern Text Source(s)
"... To attempt a complete history of these amazing old yachts would be a prohibitive and probably a thankless undertaking. But here are a few details from their life stories: ...
No. 5. Built as Pintail for August Belmont, later E. D. Morgan's Gossip, Lloyd Griscom's Yolanda and Ogden Reid's Lena, she is now owned by William Winberg, Jr . of Waltham, Mass, and sails out of Marblehead and Sands Bay. ..." (Source: Taylor, William H. "The Thirties Are Fifty. A Salute To The First Class Of One-Design Racing Yachts To Reach The Half Century Mark." Yachting Magazine, March 1955, p. 55-57, 120-122.)
"... When purchased, Cockatoo was gaff-rigged, had an engine and was named Elena. 'The owner was Capt. William Winberg of Marblehead, Mass.,' Bergeson said. 'The late George Owen, a good friend who was an M.I.T. professor and a leading naval architect (he taught many of today's designers), talked me into putting a modern rig into her. For the first time he designed a rig for a boat other than his own hull design. ..." (Source: Rendel. John. "61-Year-Old Yacht Shows her Durability. Cockatoo II, Built by Herreshoff, Stands up to New Foes." New York Times, August 14, 1966, p. 181.)
Maynard Bray
"By the time the eighteen New York 30s were ordered by New York Yacht Club members in the fall of 1904, the Herreshoff Mfg. Co. was well equipped to build them, having already delivered about a dozen each of the somewhat similar Buzzards Bay 30s and the Bar Harbor 31s. Still, it seems remarkable that all eighteen New York 30s could be built in such a short time and on such short notice. The first boat, in fact, was tried out only six weeks after the contract was executed, and all eighteen were ready in time for their first race at the end of May 1905.
The popularity and longevity of the New York 30s is astonishing. Naturally, racing was most active before World War I, when the boats were still quite new and were similarly rigged. Fifty-one races, for example, were held in the first season. However, the class was still active in 1930, its twenty-fifth year, and many were still racing when their Golden Jubilee was celebrated in 1955.
When WoodenBoat magazine honored the New York 30s on the occasion of the seventy-fifth anniversary of the class (1980), some two-thirds of the fleet ... could still be accounted for! It is a record unsurpassed, and substantiates why the New York 30s are considered by many to be the all-time favorite of the racer/cruiser one-designs.
Created under the aegis of the Universal Rule that calls for measuring waterline length at some distance (one-fourth of the boat's beam) out from the centerline, the New York 30s were leaner lined than their predecessors, especially forward. This made them more seakindly (the hulls pounded less when sailing to windward) and generally more desirable. For eighty-five years now, New York 30s have been raced and sailed in all kinds of weather, and, with their original gaff-sloop rigs, enjoyed a reputation for never having to be reefed, no matter how hard it blew. In her seventy-third year, Cockatoo II (New York 30 #5, ex-Pintail), was daringly sailed --- singlehanded, in fact, by her owner Lloyd Bergeson --- across the Atlantic to Norway. Had Cockatoo II not had the bad luck to fall off a wave and take a fatal blow to her hull on the return trip, she'd still be with us.
NGH was right when, after completion of the New York 30 half model in the fall of 1904, he wrote, 'I am well pleased with it. It has been more pleasure to work on, as I have not had the restraint of getting the biggest boat possible for the waterline length.... They have a good lot of ballast and, I believe, will be mighty good boats.' " (Source: Bray, Maynard and Carlton Pinheiro. Herreshoff of Bristol. Brooklin, Maine, 1989, p. 77.)
Archival Documents
"N/A"
"[Item Description:] Penciled pantograph hull sections with pinpricks and displacement curves titled 'N.Y.Y.C. 30ft w.l. class. Nos. 625 - 6 - 7 - 8 - 9 - 30 - 1 - 2 [sic, i.e. #626s, #627s, #628s, #629s, #630s, #631s, #632s, #633s and eventually also #635s, #636s, #637s, #638s, #639s, #640s, #642s, #643s, #647s and #648s] Nov[ember 20, 1904'. With calculations relating to rating and quarter beam length, sail area ('S = 1105[sqft] = limit for S with 27 rating'), displacement total (275 1/2cuft = 17650lbs, displacement variations (325.4[cuft = 20825lbs] at 3in deep or 31.55[ft] w.l. and 229.8[cuft = 14707lbs] at 3in light or 28.40[ft] w.l.) , and wetted surface (309sqft). On verso (with 'Herreshoff Manufacturing Company. Established 1861. Incorporated 1879' letterhead) another set of (probably earlier) penciled hull sections with calculations arriving at a total of 286cuft = 18300lbs." (Source: Herreshoff, N.G. (creator). Pantograph Hull Sections. Halsey C. Herreshoff Collection at the Herreshoff Marine Museum Item MRDE04_01820. Folder [no #]. 1904-11-20.)
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"[Item Description:] Penciled pantograph lead sections titled '626 Class 30ft. [New York 30 class: #626s, #627s, #628s, #629s, #630s, #631s, #632s, #633s and eventually also #635s, #636s, #637s, #638s, #639s, #640s, #642s, #643s, #647s and #648s]. Scale 1/4 & 1/6. Nov[ember] 27, 94[sic, i.e. 1904]'. With calculations and note 'Required 9100lbs with c.g. at .573 of w.l.' and concluding with note 'Final result ... = 9130lbs with c.g. .573 of w.l.'. Calculations show three trials to arrive at final result." (Source: Herreshoff, N.G. (creator). Pantograph Lead Sections. Halsey C. Herreshoff Collection at the Herreshoff Marine Museum Item MRDE04_08030. Folder [no #]. 1904-11-27.)
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"[Item Description:] Printed list titled 'List of Equipment. New York Yacht Club One Design Thirty Foot Class Built By Herreshoff Manufacturing Company' [NY-30 Class: #626s ALERA, #627s IBIS, #628s ATAIR, #629s MAID OF MEUDON, #630s PINTAIL, #631s DAHINDA, #632s TABASCO, #633s CARLITA, #635s ADELAIDE II, #636s LINNET, #637s ORIOLE, #638s NEOLA II, #639s CARA MIA, #640s BANZAI, #642s NAUTILUS, #643s PHRYNE, #647s ANEMONE, #648s MINX]." (Source: MIT Museum, Hart Nautical Collections, Haffenreffer-Herreshoff Collection Item HH.6.072. Equipment List. Box HAFH.6.2B, Folder One Design 30 Foot. No date (1905 or later).)
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"[Item Description:] Penciled pantograph hull sections and calculations titled 'N.Y.Y.C. 30ft [#626s, #627s, #628s, #629s, #630s, #631s, #632s, #633s, #635s, #636s, #637s, #638s, #639s, #640s, #642s, #643s, #647s, #648s]. Measured June 22 [1908] for measurements sent by [N.Y.Y.C. measurer] W[illiam] Hallock of 'DAHINDA' [#631s] June 17 vis. o.a. 43.5 / 1[?]7.03 / 96.10 / wl. 30.37'. No year, but June 17, 1908 Hallock date is confirmed by an entry NGH made in his NY30 design notebook." (Source: Herreshoff, N.G. (creator). Pantograph Hull Sections. Halsey C. Herreshoff Collection at the Herreshoff Marine Museum Acc. 2004.0001.0395. WRDT04, Folder 34, formerly MRDE08. 1908-06-22.)
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"[Item Transcription:] I am sending you herewith a copy of a letter which I have received from the Secretary of the Eastern Yacht Club.
If not too much trouble, could you give me the dimensions, etc. asked concerning the 'PUCK' [#465s], 'VANISH' [#177p], and also the 'GOSSIP' [#630s]?
I certainly expected to have been to Bristol before this, but there seems to have been no end of circumstances to prevent.
Going to town has been one very important factor, as I have not been fortunate enough to escape even one week so far this summer. I hope, however, to get up to Bristol before leaving Newport. The summer would seem quite unnatural without such a trip." (Source: Morgan, E.D. Letter to N.G. Herreshoff. Halsey C. Herreshoff Collection at the Herreshoff Marine Museum Item MR_38560. Correspondence, Folder 76, formerly 62. 1908-09-16.)
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"[Item Transcription:] Yours of the 9th has been received, since which time, however, I have been away.
I am not quite certain whether I gave a definite order for new mainsails for the thirty footer [#465s PUCK or #630s GOSSIP ex-PINTAIL] and the two fifteen footers [#587s WHISPER and #588s ECHO] or not. If not, will you kindly put the order in for me, using your judgment about the weight of duck, also please renew the awnings with the blue canvas.
I am glad that the weakness of the timbers [in #465s PUCK] was found out as repairing now will prevent its going any further.
I am very sorry indeed to hear of the illness of Miss deWolf, and hope ere this she is much better and that you no longer feel anxious about her.
I think we will go to Newport about the 8th or 9th of July, and I shall look forward with much pleasure to seeing you again." (Source: Morgan, E.D. Letter to N.G. Herreshoff. Halsey C. Herreshoff Collection at the Herreshoff Marine Museum Item MR_38620. Correspondence, Folder 76, formerly 62. 1909-06-18.)
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"[Item Description:] Handwritten (in ink) rating rule-related table on two pages with dimensions LOA, LWL, overhang fore & aft, mean length, freeboard fore & center & aft, breadth deck & w.l., draft, cube-root (displacement), 1st mast mean length, 1st to 2nd mast, J, P1, H1, B1, G1, V1, T1, P2, P2a, H2, B2, Q2, Y2,T2, sail area, sqrt(SA), sqrt(SA - NYYC Rule) for #605s RELIANCE, #499s COLUMBIA, #725s RESOLUTE, #529s MINEOLA, #663s ISTALENA, #666s AVENGER, New York 50s (#711s, #712s, #713s, #714s, #715s, #716s, #717s, #720s, #721s), #411s GLORIANA, #685s ADVENTURESS, #617s COCK ROBIN II, #586s NELLIE, #709s JOYANT, #708s CORINTHIAN, #670s SENECA, Bar Harbor 31s (#592s, #593s, #594s, #595s, #596s, #597s, #598s, #599s, #600s, #601s, #602s, #603s, #604s), New York 30s (#626s, #627s, #628s, #629s, #630s, #631s, #632s, #633s, #635s, #636s, #637s, #638s, #639s, #640s, #642s, #643s, #647s, #648s), Newport 29s (#727s, #728s, #737s), #691s MORE JOY, #446s ALERION II, Buzzards Bay 550s (#733s, #734s, #736s, #738s, #741s), #617s COCK ROBIN II, #493s JILT, #732s SADIE, #460s KILDEE, Buzzards Bay 15s (#503s Class), Buzzards Bay 12 1/2s (#744s Class), #703s FLYING CLOUD, #669s ELEANOR, #722s KATOURA, #692s WESTWARD, #657s QUEEN, #719s VAGRANT II, #698s VAGRANT, #663s ISTALENA, and #743s HASWELL. With penciled note 'Measurements in ft & inches. Results in ft & decimals'. Undated (the youngest boat on this list is from 1914/1915 and this was probably prepared in preparation for NGH's sail area rating rule of 1914/1915)." (Source: Herreshoff, N.G. (creator). Handwritten Table. Halsey C. Herreshoff Collection at the Herreshoff Marine Museum Item MRDE15_00100. Folder [no #]. No date (1914 / 1915 ?).)
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"[Item Description:] Seven mimeographed pages with race results of the Cruise of the New York Yacht Club of 1922. Races: Astor Cups off Newport, R.I. on August 2d, 1922. 1st Run Newport to Mattapoisett on August 3, 1922. 2dt Run Mattapoisett to Vineyard Haven on August 4, 1922. 3rd Run Vineyard Haven to Provincetown on August 5, 1922. 4th Run Provincetown to Gloucester on August 7, 1922. 5th Run Gloucester to Marblehead on August 8, 1922. Among the finishers were schooners #719s VAGRANT II, #698s QUEEN MAB ex-VAGRANT I, #663s IROLITA ex-ISTALENA, #827s OHONKARA and #772s MARIETTE, New York 50s #721s CAROLINA, #711s ISTALENA ex-VENTURE, #720s ACUSHLA ex-HARPOON and #717s BARBARA, New York 40s #776s ROWDY, #777s ZILPH, #804s SQUAW, #774s MISTRAL, #779s SALLY ANN ex-JESSICA, #781s PAMPERO and #773s MONSOON ex-MAISIE, New York 30s #629s COUNTESS ex-MAID OF MEUDON, #648s MINX, #632s ALICE ex-TABASCO, #640s BANZAI, #637s ORIOLE and #630s LENA ex-PINTAIL, as well as cutter #586s BUTTERFLY ex-NELLIE." (Source: NYYC (creator). Race Results. Halsey C. Herreshoff Collection at the Herreshoff Marine Museum Item MR_72340. Measuring and Measurement Rules (Box 2), Folder B2F01, formerly MRDE15. 1922.)
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"[Item Transcription:] Printed pamphlet titled 'Racing Rules. New York Yacht Club. 1924'. Incl. a printed 'List of yachts, the measurements of which are on file with the Race Committee. July, 1924.
Schooners
D 7 FLYING CLOUD
D 10 IROLITA [#663s ex-ISTALENA]
C 5 MARIETTE [#772s ]
E 14 NOMAD
F 22 NORKA
C 2 OHONKARA [#827s ]
D 8 PRINCESS [#658s ex-IROLITA II]
E 9 QUEEN MAB [#698s ex-VAGRANT I]
E 16 SHAWNA
C 12 SONNICA
C 7 VAGRANT [#719s ]
FF 1 WANDERER IX
D 22 WILDFIRE [#891s ]
Fifty Class
N.Y. 52 ANDIAMO [#716s ex-SAMURI]
N.Y. 55 CAROLINA [#716s ]
N.Y. 53 IROQUOIS II [#721s ]
N.Y. 54 MYSTIC [#715s ex-GRAYLING]
N.Y. 56 SPARTAN [#716s ]
Forty Class
N.Y.Y.C. 8 BANSHEE [#782s ex-PAULINE]
N.Y.Y.C. 2 COCKATOO [#775s ex-DOLLY BOWEN]
N.Y.Y.C. 12 IRIS [#777s ex-ZILPH]
N.Y.Y.C. 6 MISTRAL [#782s ]
N.Y.Y.C. 7 PAMPERO [#775s ]
N.Y.Y.C. 9 ROWDY [#777s ]
N.Y.Y.C. 3 SALLY ANN [#779s ex-JESSICA]
N.Y.Y.C. 10 SHAWARA [#782s ]
THIRTY CLASS
N.Y. 18 ADIOS [#647s ex-ANEMONE]
N.Y. 1 ALERA [#647s ]
N.Y. 7 ALICE [#632s ex-TABASCO]
N.Y. 15 BANZAI [#647s ]
N.Y. 8 CAROLITA [#633s ex-CARLITA]
N.Y. 4 COUNTESS [#629s ex-MAID OF MEUDON]
N.Y. 14 FIJI II [#639s ex-CARA MIA]
N.Y. 5 LENA [#630s ex-PINTAIL]
N.Y. 12 MINX [#638s ex-NEOLA II]
N.Y. 11 ORIOLE [#637s ex-ORIOLE]
N.Y. 13 PHANTOM [#648s ex-MINX]
0 Class
L.O. 1 GEORGIA
L.O. 4 GREY DAWN
L.O. 5 MAISIE
L.O. 3 NIMBUS
Various Classes
N 2 ALICE
N.Y. 58 BARBARA [#717s ] (Aux. Sloop)
P 1 BUTTERFLY [#586s ex-NELLIE]
M 15 LADRONE [#634s ex-SUZETTA III] (Aux. Yawl)
N.Y. 51 REVERY [#720s ex-ACUSHLA] (Aux. Yawl)
M 6 VENTURA [#717s ]
K 3 WINSOME [#717s ] (Aux. Ketch)'.
Of 49 yachts listed (including 11 NY30s, 8 NY40s and 5 NY50s plus 2 NY50s and 1 NY70 out of class) 37 or 75% were designed and built by Herreshoff." (Source: New York Yacht Club (creator). Printed Pamphlet. Halsey C. Herreshoff Collection at the Herreshoff Marine Museum Item MRDE08_01830. Folder [no #]. 1924.)
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"[Item Transcription:] [Printed circular, two sheets of paper:] New York Yacht Club The Cruise 1927
Additional Racing Instructions Run From Huntington To New London—16Th August
In case of no wind at Huntington at the proposed time of the Start on the 16th August, the following signals will be made by the Flagship: etc. ... [Plus printed circular:] New York Yacht Club
List of yachts, measurement certificates of which were on file with the Race Committee on August 1, 1927, which will be valid for the Cruise.
SCHOONERS: C Class
C 2 OHONKARA [#827s]
C 7 VAGRANT [#719s]
C 3 VANITIE
D Class: D 25 ADVANCE
D 7 CONSTANCE
D 22 WILDFIRE [#891s]
D 5 LYNX
E Class: E 4 AURELIA
E 9 QUEEN MAB [#698s]
E16 SHAWNA
F Class: F3 CURLEW
F 4 MARY ROSE [#954s]
F 1 PLEIONE [#714s]
F 11 CACHALOT
G Class: S.C. 11 CLYTIE
S.C. 12 NADJI
S.C. 9 NOKOMIS
S.C. 6 SEVEN SEAS
G 1 WANDERER IX
G 7 MALABAR VII
H Class: H 3 FLYING FISH
H 2 ADVENTURER
KETCH: H 7 ANGELICA
SLOOPS
J Class: J 1 KATOURA [#1050s]
L.0. Class: L.0. 1 GEORGIA
L.0. 4 GREY DAWN
L.0. 5 MIRAGE
L.0. 3 NIMBUS
M Class: M 5 CAROLINA [#721s]
M 3 CHIORA [#713s ex-IROQUOIS II]
M 38 DOLLY
M 4 IBIS [#715s ex-GRAYLING]
M 1 PRESTIGE [#1058s]
M 6 SPARTAN [#712s]
10 Meter Class: 10M 9 BLAZING STAR
10M 7 BRANTA
10M 4 CYTHERA
10M 11 DRAGON
10M 8 ESQUILA
10M 6 NARCISSUS
10M 14 NAUTILUS
10M 10 RAEBURN
10M 12 REDHEAD
10M 10 REVENGE
10M 13 SHAWARA
10M 3 SYNTHETIC
10M 1 TWILIGHT
10M 5 VALENCIA
N Class: N 2 ALICE
P Class: P 1 BUTTERFLY [#586s ex-NELLIE]
50 Class: N. Y. Y. C. 52 ANDIAMO [#716s ex-SAMURI]
40 Class: N. Y. Y. C. 42 COCKATOO [#775s ex-DOLLY BOWEN]
N. Y. Y. C. 50 MARILEE [#955s]
N. Y. Y. C. 46 MISTRAL [#774s]
N. Y. Y. C. 47 PAMPERO [#781s ex-PAMPARO]
N. Y. Y. C. 45 TYPHOON [#773s ex-MAISIE]
N. Y. Y. C. 49 ROWDY* [#776s]
30 Class: N. Y. 1 ALERA [#626s]
N. Y. 7 ALICE [#632s ex-TABASCO]
N. Y. 9 AMORITA [#635s ex-ADELAIDE II]
N. Y. 15 BANZAI [#640s]
N. Y. 4 INTERLUDE [#629s ex-MAID OF MEUDON]
N. Y. 5 LENA [#630s ex-PINTAIL]
N. Y. 11 ORIOLE [#637s]
N. Y. 13 PHANTOM [#648s ex-MINX]
N. Y. 17 PHRYNE (Rig changed to jib-headed mainsail.) [#643s]
Q Class: F. I. S. 3 CHANCE [#1059s]
F. I. S. 1 CYRILLA II [#1054s]
F. I. S. 2 JUDY [#1055s]
F. I. S. 4 MAMEENA [#1060s]
YAWLS M Class: N. Y. 51 REVERY [#720s ex-ACUSHLA]
M 1 RUGOSA II [#983s]
... August 1, 1827. [Compared to the equivalent list from 1924 the number of boats has increased from 49 to 73, while the number of Herreshoff-built yachts has shrunk from 37 to 32 or 44%.] [Incl envelope from Race Committee NYYC to NGH, labeled in red 'Rating & allowance' and postmarked August 4, 1927.]" (Source: NYYC. Correspondence (circular) to Members. Halsey C. Herreshoff Collection at the Herreshoff Marine Museum Item MR_73330. Measuring and Measurement Rules (Box 2), Folder B2F07, formerly MRDE15. 1927-08-01.)
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"[Item Description:] Penciled pantograph hull sections with pinpricks and radials titled 'NYYC 30 [#626s, #627s, #628s, #629s, #630s, #631s, #632s, #633s, #635s, #636s, #637s, #638s, #639s, #640s, #642s, #643s, #647s, #648s] for model for N.Y.Y.C. Apr[il] 1958, scale 3/8in = 1ft'. With no further notes or calculations. (NYYC has two New York 30 half-models made by ASdeWH, one from 1905, the other inscribed on its back with 'this model by A. Sidney DeW. Herreshoff. June 1958')." (Source: Herreshoff, A. Sidney deW. (?) (creator). Pantograph Hull Sections. Halsey C. Herreshoff Collection at the Herreshoff Marine Museum Item MRDE04_06570. Folder [no #]. 1958-04.)
① ②
Note: This list of archival documents contains in an unedited form any and all which mention #630s Pintail even if just in a cursory way. Permission to digitize, transcribe and display is gratefully acknowledged.
Further Reading
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Perry, Lawrence. "The New York Yacht Club One-Design 30-Footers." Yachting Magazine, February 1908, p. 71-74. (649 kB)
Document is copyrighted: No. Class appreciation including a good overview of NY30 design precedents, the boats and their races. Photos by James Burton, James Huntington and others. -
Lawrence, Seabury. "The New York Thirties: An Interesting Sketch of America's Most Famous One-Design Class." Yachting Magazine, January 1925, p. 28-30. (599 kB)
Document is copyrighted: No. Twentieth anniversary class appreciation. -
Davis, Gherardi. "A History of the The New York Yacht Club Thirty Foot Class." Manuscript, New York Yacht Club, ca. 1926. (285 kB)
Document is copyrighted: Yes. The best history of the NY30 class with detailed description of the interchange between N. G. Herreshoff and the New York Yacht Club as the boats were built. Written by then owner of Alice ex #632s Tabasco. -
Schoettle, Edwin J. "The New York Thirties." In: Schoettle, Edwin J. Sailing Craft, New York, 1928, p. 579-588. (1,734 kB)
Document is copyrighted: No known copyright restrictions. Class description and history. -
Taylor, William H. "New York Y. C. Thirty-Foot Class to Celebrate its Silver Jubilee. Twenty-Five Years of Active Racing Mark the 'Thirties' as One of the Best Classes Ever Built." Yachting, May 1929, p. 61-62, 112, 114. (2,169 kB)
Document is copyrighted: Yes. Tweny-fifth anniversary class appreciation. -
Slaughter, Sam C. "Class Will Tell. The New York Yacht Club 'Thirties' Celebrate Another Anniversary." Yachting, Vol. 66, November 1939, p. 43-45, 107-108. (2,665 kB)
Document is copyrighted: Yes. NY30 history and whereabouts summary, written by then owner of #626s Alera on the occasion of the 35th anniversary of the class. -
Taylor, William H. "The Thirties Are Fifty. A Salute to the First Class of One-Design Racing Yachts to Reach the Half Century Mark." Yachting Magazine, March 1955, p. 55-57, 120-122. (749 kB)
Document is copyrighted: Yes. Fiftieth anniversary class appreciation. -
Bray, Maynard. "The New York Thirties." Kiremidjian, David. "Then, But Mostly Now Also." Taylor, William H. "At 25, One of the Best Classes Ever Built." (Reprinted excerpts.) Taylor, William H. "A Salute to the First One-Design Yachts to Reach the Half-Century Mark." (Reprinted excerpts.) Davis, Gherardi. "How It All Began: An Extraordinary Chronology." (Reprinted excerpts.) Wooden Boat #35, July/August 1980, p. 20-34. (1,423 kB)
Document is copyrighted: Yes. New York 30 class portrait written on the occasion of the 75th anniversary of the class. Plans, photos, history, partial reprints of older class appreciations. -
Taylor, Roger C. "Fourth Book of Good Boats." Camden, Maine, 1984, p. 201-207. (717 kB)
Document is copyrighted: Yes. New York 30 class portrait. History, plans, photos, sailing characteristics with special emphasis on #630s Cockatoo ex-Pintail. Partial reprint of Taylor, Roger C. Recollections under Sail. Wooden Boat #35, July/August 1980, p. 27-29. -
Kiremidjian, David. "The Thirties Are Twice Fifty." Typescript, n. p., 2004. (118 kB)
Document is copyrighted: Yes. Copyright holder: David Kiremidjian. New York 30 class portrait with special emphasis on post-WW II vessel histories. -
Doyle, Bill. "New York 30 Class. 100 Years Young." In: Restoration Quarterly. International Yacht Restoration School: Newport, Fall 2005, p. 6, 8, 11. (213 kB)
Document is copyrighted: Yes. Short class history, NY30 whereabouts summary. -
Erwin, Daniel. "The New York 30s. A Century of One-Design Sailing." Wooden Boat #184, May/June 2005, p. 76. (5,324 kB)
Document is copyrighted: Yes. New York 30 class portrait written on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the class. Detailed vessel-by-vessel biographies. -
Bergeson, Lloyd. "To Norway Alone in Cockatoo II. Part I. Getting Underway: The Dream Becomes Reality." Crusing World, June 1979, p. 84-88. (352 kB)
Document is copyrighted: Yes. Account of single-handed voyage on New York 30 Cockatoo. -
Bergeson, Lloyd. "To Norway Alone in Cockatoo II. Part II. Fog, Gales, and Solitude must be Endured, Even Enjoyed in the Wide Atlantic." Crusing World, July 1979, p. 147-151. (657 kB)
Document is copyrighted: Yes. Account of single-handed voyage on New York 30 Cockatoo. -
Bergeson, Lloyd. "To Norway Alone in Cockatoo II. Part III." Crusing World, July 1979, p. ?.
Account of single-handed voyage on New York 30 Cockatoo. -
Bergeson, Lloyd. "A Death In the Family." Unpublished typescript, Norwell, Mass., August 13, 1979. Together with an introduction by Anon. "One of the New York Thirties. The Unpublished Story of Cockatoo II as Recounted by Lloyd Bergeson in 1979.", dated March 25, 1997. In: http://www.ny30.org/pdfs/cockatooII_1979.pdf, retrieved October 31, 2011. (4,491 kB)
Document is copyrighted: Yes. Account of the loss of the New York 30 Cockatoo. -
Bergeson, Lloyd. "A Death in the Family. The Loss of Cockatoo II." Cruising World, January 1980, p. 102-105. (1,838 kB)
Document is copyrighted: Yes. Account of the loss of the New York 30 Cockatoo. -
Taylor, Roger C. "Recollections under Sail." Wooden Boat #35, July/August 1980, p. 27-29. (685 kB)
Document is copyrighted: Yes. Vessel portrait of #630s Pintail when owned by Lloyd Bergeson and named Cockatoo.
Images
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Further Image Information
Created by: Burton, James.
Image Caption: "8x10 glass negative photographed by James Burton on July 8, 1905. View of the New York 30' Class sloops ORIOLE, #11 and PINTAIL, #5, undersail, racing, starboard beam view on a slight port tack with PINTAIL is in the lead. The vessels are seen here during a race of the 30's by New York Yacht Club members Lyman Delano, owner of ORIOLE and August Belmont, the owner of PINTAIL. The New York 30' Class was a new class boat built by and designed by Herreshoff of Bristol, Rhode Island in 1905. Handwritten info. from negative edges: 'NYYC July 8 / Pintail & Oriole / 84.2920'. Handwritten info. from negative sleeve: 'B-84 / Sloop Pintail & Oriole'." [Photo of a photo. Note the short bowsprit which was used only in 1905. The photo was taken during the New York Yacht Club's regatta for the Glen Cove Cups.]
Negative Number: 84B
Image Date: 1905-7-8
Published in: Rudder, March 1908, p. 182.
Collection: Mystic Seaport Museum, Rosenfeld Collection, acc. no. B.1984.187.84.
Image is copyrighted: No
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Further Image Information
Created by: Anon.
Image Caption: "Mr. Ogden Reid at helm with his wife on deck of his NY 30 footer."
Image Date: 1924 ?
Published in: Davis, Gherardi. Alice and I Go Down East Again. New York, 1924, p. 7 [cropped detail only].
Collection: Claas van der Linde Collection.
Image is copyrighted: Yes, used with permission
Copyright holder: Claas van der Linde.
-
Further Image Information
Created by: Anon.
Image Caption: "Ogden Reid's N.Y. Thirty Lena."
Image Date: 1913----1923
Published in: Rudder, July 1923, p. 10.
Image is copyrighted: No
-
Further Image Information
Created by: Rosenfeld and Sons.
Image Caption: "Winner of Bennet Cup for Sloops Last Week. Ogden M. Reid's Lena."
Image Date: 1906----1915
Published in: New York Tribune, June 27, 1915, p. 13.
Image is copyrighted: No
-
Further Image Information
Created by: Rosenfeld and Sons.
Image Caption: "43.5' New York 30 Herreshoff sloop LENA, (built 1905) underway. Visible in image: starboard bow view of two sloops on a close reach port tack, both have gaff-rigged main sails and jibs raised, burgees flying from mainmasts, the leading sloop LENA (NY/ 5) flies a triangular burgee with white wedge with star in field, crew in cockpit, town and smaller boats in background. Typed on original negative sleeve: '11314-F' and handwritten: '10/1/23 / NY5 [crossed out] / Content / Box 1017'. [Note: This image was mistakenly identified by Mystic Seaport as showing the NY30 Lena ex Pintail. This is not a NY30. The image will eventually be deleted after an attempt to identify the vessel has been made.]
Negative Number: 11314F
Image Date: 1923-10-1
Published in: Rousmaniere, John. Sleek. Classic Images from the Rosenfeld Collection. Mystic, CT, 2003, p. 46. Also in: Rousmaniere, John. The New York Yacht Club. A History, 1844-2008. New York 2009, p. 143.
Collection: Mystic Seaport Museum, Rosenfeld Collection, acc. no. 1984.187.11314F.
Image is copyrighted: No known copyright restrictions
Registers
1905 Lloyd's Register of American Yachts (#1483)
Name: Pintail
Owner: August Belmont; Port: New York
Building Material Wood; Type & Rig K[eel] Sloop
Tons Gross 11.00; Tons Net 8.00; Reg. Length 34.0; LOA 43.5; LWL 30.1; Extr. Beam 9.0; Depth 5.3; Draught 6.3
Sailmaker Her. M. Co.; Sails made in [19]05; Sail Area 1080
Builder Herreshoff Mfg. Co.; Designer N. G. Herreshoff; Built where Bristol, R.I.; Built when 1905
1906 Lloyd's Register of American Yachts (#2337)
Name: Pintail
Owner: August Belmont; Port: New York
Official no. 201874 [sic]; Building Material Wood; Type & Rig K[eel], TC [Trunk Cabin], Slp
Tons Gross 11; Tons Net 8; LOA 43-6; LWL 30-0; Extr. Beam 8-10; Depth 5-6; Draught 6-3
Sailmaker H. M. Co.; Sails made in [19]05; Sail Area 1080
Builder Her. M. Co.; Designer N. G. Herreshoff; Built where Bristol, R.I.; Built when 1905
Pintail's Official No. is reported as 201874 which is most certainly wrong because this is #643s Phryne's number.
1912 Lloyd's Register of American Yachts (#3455)
Name; Former Name(s): Yolanda; Gossip, Pintail
Owner: Lloyd C. Griscom; Port: Oyster Bay, L.I.
Building Material Wood; Type & Rig K[eel], TC [Trunk Cabin], Slp
LOA 43-6; LWL 30-0; Extr. Beam 8-10; Draught 6-3
Sailmaker HMCo.; Sails made in [19]05; Sail Area 1103
Builder Herreshoff Mfg. Co.; Designer N. G. Herreshoff; Built where Bristol, R.I.; Built when 1905
1914 Lloyd's Register of American Yachts (#1714)
Name; Former Name(s): Lena; Yolanda, Gossip, Pintail
Owner: Ogden Mills Reid; Port: Milton Point, N.Y.
Building Material Wood; Type & Rig K[eel], TC [Trunk Cabin], Slp
LOA 43-5; LWL 30-0; Extr. Beam 8-10; Draught 6-3
Sailmaker R&L [Ratsey&Lapthorn New York]; Sails made in [19]13; Sail Area 1103
Builder Herreshoff Mfg. Co.; Designer N. G. Herreshoff; Built where Bristol, R.I.; Built when 1905
1917 Lloyd's Register of American Yachts (#1723)
Name; Former Name(s): Lena; Yolanda, Gossip, Pintail
Owner: Ogden M. Reid; Port: Milton Point, N.Y.
Building Material Wood; Type & Rig K[eel], TC [Trunk Cabin], Slp
LOA 43-5; LWL 30-0; Extr. Beam 8-10; Draught 6-3
Sailmaker R&L [Ratsey&Lapthorn New York]; Sails made in [19]17; Sail Area 1103
Builder Herreshoff Mfg. Co.; Designer N. G. Herreshoff; Built where Bristol, R.I.; Built when 1905
1920 Lloyd's Register of American Yachts (#1648)
Name; Former Name(s): Lena; Yolanda, Gossip, Pintail
Owner: Ogden M. Reid; Port: Milton Point, N.Y.
Building Material Wood; Type & Rig K[eel], TC [Trunk Cabin], Slp
LOA 43-6; LWL 30-0; Extr. Beam 8-10; Draught 6-3
Sailmaker R&L [Ratsey&Lapthorn New York]; Sails made in [19]17; Sail Area 1103
Builder Herreshoff Mfg. Co.; Designer N. G. Herreshoff; Built where Bristol, R.I.; Built when 1905
1923 Lloyd's Register of American Yachts (#1649)
Name; Former Name(s): Lena; Yolanda, Gossip, Pintail
Owner: Ogden M. Reid; Port: Milton Point, N.Y.
Building Material Wood; Type & Rig K[eel], TC [Trunk Cabin], Slp
LOA 43-5; LWL 30-0; Extr. Beam 8-10; Draught 6-3
Sailmaker R&L [Ratsey&Lapthorn New York]; Sails made in [19]21; Sail Area 1103
Builder Herreshoff Mfg. Co.; Designer N. G. Herreshoff; Built where Bristol, R.I.; Built when 1905
1925 Lloyd's Register of American Yachts (#1741)
Name; Former Name(s): Lena; Yolanda, Gossip, Pintail
Owner: Ogden M. Reid; Port: Milton Point, N.Y.
Building Material Wood; Type & Rig K[eel], TC [Trunk Cabin], Slp
LOA 43-6; LWL 30-0; Extr. Beam 8-10; Draught 6-3
Sailmaker R&L [Ratsey&Lapthorn New York]; Sails made in [19]21; Sail Area 1103
Builder Herreshoff Mfg. Co.; Designer N. G. Herreshoff; Built where Bristol, R.I.; Built when 1905
1930 Lloyd's Register of American Yachts (#2307)
Name; Former Name(s): Lena; Yolanda, Gossip, Pintail
Owner: Ogden Reid; Port: Milton Point, N.Y.
Building Material Wood; Type & Rig K[eel], TC [Trunk Cabin], Slp
LOA 43-5; LWL 30-0; Extr. Beam 8-10; Draught 6-3
Sailmaker R&L [Ratsey&Lapthorn New York]; Sails made in [19]26; Sail Area 1103
Builder Herreshoff Mfg. Co.; Designer N. G. Herreshoff; Built where Bristol, R.I.; Built when 1905
1935 Lloyd's Register of American Yachts (#2596)
Name; Former Name(s): Lena; Yolanda, Gossip, Pintail
Owner: Ogden Reid; Port: Milton Point, N.Y.
Building Material Wood; Type & Rig K[eel], TC [Trunk Cabin], Slp
LOA 43-5; LWL 30-0; Extr. Beam 8-10; Draught 6-3
Sailmaker R&L [Ratsey&Lapthorn New York]; Sails made in [19]26; Sail Area 1103
Builder Herreshoff Mfg. Co.; Designer N. G. Herreshoff; Built where Bristol, R.I.; Built when 1905
1940 Lloyd's Register of American Yachts (#3329)
Name; Former Name(s): Lena; Yolanda, Gossip, Pintail
Owner: Ogden Reid; Port: Milton Point, N.Y.
Building Material Wood; Type & Rig K[eel], TC [Trunk Cabin], Slp
LOA 43-6; LWL 30-0; Extr. Beam 8-10; Draught 6-3
Sailmaker Ratsey; Sails made in [19]26; Sail Area 1103
Builder Herreshoff Mfg. Co.; Designer N. G. Herreshoff; Built where Bristol, R.I.; Built when 1905
1947 Lloyd's Register of American Yachts (#1672)
Name; Former Name(s): Elena; Lena, Yolanda, Gossip, Pintail
Owner: William Winberg, Jr.; Port: Marblehead, Mass.
Building Material Wood; Type & Rig K[eel], TC [Trunk Cabin], Slp
LOA 43-6; LWL 30-0; Extr. Beam 8-10; Draught 6-3
Sailmaker Ratsey; Sails made in [19]26; Sail Area 1103
Builder Herreshoff Mfg. Co.; Designer N. G. Herreshoff; Built where Bristol, R.I.; Built when 1905
1950 Lloyd's Register of American Yachts (#1885)
Name; Former Name(s): Elena; Lena, Yolanda, Gossip, Pintail
Owner: William Winberg, Jr.; Port: Marblehead, Mass.
Building Material Wood; Type & Rig K[eel], TC [Trunk Cabin], Aux Slp
LOA 43-6; LWL 30-0; Extr. Beam 8-10; Draught 6-3
Sailmaker Ratsey; Sails made in [19]26; Sail Area 1103
Builder Herreshoff Mfg. Co.; Designer N. G. Herreshoff; Built where Bristol, R.I.; Built when 1905
Engine Gas Eng. 4 Cyc. 4 Cyl 2 7/8 x 3 1/2. 1948; Maker Gray
Note: Pwr. Inst[alled] 1948
1955 Lloyd's Register of American Yachts (#2082)
Name; Former Name(s): Elena; Lena, Yolanda, Gossip, Pintail
Owner: William Winberg, Jr.; Port: Marblehead, Mass.
Building Material Wood; Type & Rig K[eel], TC [Trunk Cabin], Aux Slp
LOA 43-6; LWL 30-0; Extr. Beam 8-10; Draught 6-3
Sailmaker Ratsey; Sails made in [19]26; Sail Area 1103
Builder Herreshoff Mfg. Co.; Designer N. G. Herreshoff; Built where Bristol, R.I.; Built when 1905
Engine Gas Eng. 4 Cyc. 4 Cyl. 2 7/8 x 3 1/2. 1948; Maker Gray
Note: Power inst. 1948
1960 Lloyd's Register of American Yachts (#1591)
Name; Former Name(s): Cockatoo II; Elena, Lena, Yolanda, Gossip, Pintail
Owner: Lloyd Bergeson; Port: Noank, Conn.
Building Material Wood; Type & Rig K[eel], TC [Trunk Cabin], Ywl
LOA 43-6; LWL 30-0; Extr. Beam 8-10; Draught 6-3
Sailmaker HR&R - Larsen; Sails made in [19]57, [19]58, [19]59; Sail Area 830
Builder Herreshoff Mfg. Co.; Designer N. G. Herreshoff; Built where Bristol, R.I.; Built when 1905
Note: Alt[ered] from Slp. 1957. Eng[ine] Rem[oved] 1958
1967 Lloyd's Register of American Yachts (#1862)
Name; Former Name(s): Cockatoo II, Elena; Lena, Yolanda, Gossip, Pintail
Owner: Lloyd Bergeson; Port: Noank, Conn.
Building Material Wood; Type & Rig K[eel], TC [Trunk Cabin], Ywl
LOA 43-6; LWL 30-0; Extr. Beam 8-10; Draught 6-3
Sailmaker HR&R - van Zandt; Sails made in [19]57, [19]58, [19]59, [19]63; Sail Area 830
Builder Herreshoff Mfg. Co.; Designer N. G. Herreshoff; Built where Bristol, R.I.; Built when 1905
Note: Alt. from Slp 1957. Eng. rem. 1958
1970 Lloyd's Register of American Yachts (#1968)
Name; Former Name(s): Cockatoo II, Elena; Lena, Yolanda, Gossip, Pintail
Owner: Lloyd Bergeson; Port: Isle au Haut; Port of Registry: New London
Building Material Wood; Type & Rig K[eel], TC [Trunk Cabin], Slp/Ywl
LOA 43-6; LWL 30-0; Extr. Beam 8-10; Draught 6-3
Sailmaker van Zandt; Sails made in [19]66; Sail Area 830
Builder Herreshoff Mfg. Co.; Designer N. G. Herreshoff; Built where Bristol, R.I.; Built when 1905
Engine Gas Eng. 2 Cyc. 1 Cyl. 1968. 6 HP; Maker Vire
Note: Sail no. NY5
1975 Lloyd's Register of American Yachts (#1544)
Name; Former Name(s): Cockatoo II, Elena; Lena, Yolanda, Gossip, Pintail
Owner: Lloyd Bergeson; Port: Isle au Haut; Port of Registry: New London
Building Material Wood; Type & Rig Aux Slp
LOA 42-6; LWL 30-0; Extr. Beam 8-10; Draught 6-3
Sailmaker van Zandt and Hood; Sails made in [19]66 and [19]72, [19]73; Sail Area 830
Builder Herreshoff Mfg. Co.; Designer N. G. Herreshoff; Built where Bristol, R.I.; Built when 1905
Engine Gas Engine 1 Cy. [19]68. 6hp; Maker Vire
Note: Sail no. NY5 & 4755. I.O.R. 37.0'
Note the length 42-6 instead of 43-6: Bergeson had chopped off the stern to obtain a better IOR rating!
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: Pintail
Type: J & M
Length: 30'
Owner: Belmont, August
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: Pintail
Type: 30'
Owner: August Belmont
Year: 1905
Row No.: 527
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
Year: 1904
E/P/S: S
No.: 0630
Name: Pintail
LW: 30'
B: 8' 9"
D: 6' 3.5"
Rig: J & M
K: y
Ballast: Lead O.
Amount: 4200.00
Notes Constr. Record: Sold to E. D.Morgan 7/23/08 & Name changed to Gossip.
Last Name: Belmont
First Name: Aug
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. 5." (Source: van der Linde, Claas. May 2, 2008.)
"For more information about the New York 30 class, see ny30.herreshoff.info and the NY-30 Class Website." (Source: van der Linde, Claas. June 21, 2016.)
"Launch date signifies the date vessel was taken on low gear to cove for winter storage." (Source: van der Linde, Claas. November 4, 2011.)
"Built in 73 days (contract to launch; equivalent to $58/day, 242 lbs displacement/day)." (Source: van der Linde, Claas. April 21, 2024.)
"Sail area 1085 sqft from untitled two-page rating-rule-related table handwritten (in ink) by N. G. Herreshoff with multiple dimensions for the most important Herreshoff-designed yachts. Halsey C. Herreshoff Collection at the Herreshoff Marine Museum. MRDE15, Folder [no #]. Undated (the most recent boat dates 1914/1915 and the table was probably prepared in preparation for NGH's sail area rating rule of 1914/1915)." (Source: van der Linde, Claas. September 16, 2020.)
"[Sail area 1085 sq.ft.]" (Source: Herreshoff, N. G. "Formula for Obtaining the Limit of Sail-Area in Yachts when Measured by the Universal Rule Formula." Bristol, R.I., July 13, 1907 with later additions. Original handwritten (in ink) document with penciled additions. Halsey C. Herreshoff Collection at the Herreshoff Marine Museum Item MRDE06_00080.)
"Displacement 276.5 cu.ft. [= 17,696 lbs] from untitled two-page rating-rule-related table handwritten (in ink) by N. G. Herreshoff with multiple dimensions for the most important Herreshoff-designed yachts. Halsey C. Herreshoff Collection at the Herreshoff Marine Museum. MRDE15, Folder [no #]. Undated (the most recent boat dates 1914/1915 and the table was probably prepared in preparation for NGH's sail area rating rule of 1914/1915)." (Source: van der Linde, Claas. September 16, 2020.)
"[Displacement (276 cubic feet = 17,664 lbs).]" (Source: Herreshoff, N. G. "Formula for Obtaining the Limit of Sail-Area in Yachts when Measured by the Universal Rule Formula." Bristol, R.I., July 13, 1907 with later additions. Original handwritten (in ink) document with penciled additions. Halsey C. Herreshoff Collection at the Herreshoff Marine Museum Item MRDE06_00080.)
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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