L. Francis Herreshoff TICONDEROGA


Sail Number: 100

Type: Ketch

LOA: – LOD: 71’11” / 21.92m – LWL: 65′10″ / 20.06m – Beam: 16′ 0″ / 4.87m – Draft: 7′ 9″ / 2.36m – Displacement: 108,288 lbs – Ballast 30,750 lbs – Sail Area: 2,897 sq ft – Design Number: 66 – Designer: L.F. Herreshoff – Built by: Quincy Adams YT, YD, Inc, Quincy, Ma – Year Built: 1936 – Original Owner Harry Noyes. – Engine: Detroit 4-53 – hp 128 – Flag: USA (US) – Location: Marine Traffic


 

Historical

A legendary classic sailboat designed by L. Francis Herreshoff for the intrepid yachtsman Harry Noyes, the 72-foot, clipper-bowed ketch was originally named Tioga II of Marblehead. Her second owner bought the boat, but not the name, and while doodling with pencil emblazoned with the brand name Ticonderoga, he saw the answer that kept intact both the letters and the intent of her original name. Over the decades there’s been a series of owners, each with a story all their own — some wore her down, others bestowed lavished refits.

L. Francis Herreshoff was the son of yacht designer Nat Herreshoff, often called “The Wizard of Bristol,” L. Francis, however, was an independent thinker. He demonstrated his independence by setting up shop in the design office of Burgess, Swasey & Paine, a gifted group of Boston naval architects, and arch competitors of his father.

Starling Burgess took the young Herreshoff under his wing and was certainly instrumental in his early career. The firm’s awareness of materials and structures as well as fair hull shapes helped L. Francis develop a keen eye for both grace and seaworthiness. Preceding Tioga of Marblehead, on Herreshoff’s drawing board was a ketch named Joann (eventually renamed Brigadoon), and the Tioga of Boston. Both boats were designed and built for Waldo Brown. It was Tioga of Boston that caught Harry Noyes’ attention, and before long he convinced Brown to sell him the ketch. After only one season he went directly to Herreshoff for a bigger, faster rendition of the 57-foot ketch, and an evolution in yacht design would yield revolutionary results.

Designed in a year, building began in 1936 at the Quincy Adams Yacht Yard in Massachusetts. Tioga of Marblehead was designed with performance in mind but rating rules had been ignored. Harry Noyes, a man of means, owned larger vessels for cruising purposes, and meter boats to satisfy his racing whims. Tioga was initially conceived as a family day sailer. As with all custom boat building projects, the art lay in the owner/client pas de deux, which, in this case, would prove to be more than a complex duet.

The building process was complicated by the fact that Noyes was both Herreshoff’s client, and the owner of the shipyard that would build the boat. Changes from the design, no matter how small, became major issues of contention — to the point where Herreshoff chose not to attend or was not invited to the launching. At one point, he was queried as to why there was such modest headroom and his response was quite straightforward. “The boat’s a day sailer, not a goddamned dance hall!”

The post-Depression era at the Quincy Adams Yacht Yard was a time when craftsmen were glad to have work, and they plied their skills as artisans rather than as assembly-line workers. Ti’s scantlings were lighter than the more crudely built vessels of the day, but her backbone was made of good Yankee white oak, and her planks of carefully chosen, bronze-fastened tropical mahogany. The Port Orford cedar decking would prove to be an inferior choice, and her new fangled hollow Sitka spruce spars would be too flexible. An extra layer of spruce would eventually be added at the Luders yacht yard in Stamford, Conn.

A big mistake was averted during the building process when the yard foreman insisted on keel bolts with nuts at both ends. Herreshoff’s design called for heavy lag bolts to be screwed into the antimony-treated lead. This procedure would soon fall out of favor due to the nasty habit of ballast keels pulling away from such a lag bolt attachment.

The day of the big event drew a crowd to the Quincy yard and just as the regal ketch began to slide down the tallow-slick ways, a gunshot-like crack signaled the collapse of the bracing. As Tioga of Marblehead began to exit the shed she rolled onto her side, hitting the water and unleashing 30,000 pounds of external lead and a force that brought the big ketch abruptly back onto her feet. Three crewmembers flew from one side of the foredeck to the other — whip-lashed by the boat’s substantial righting movement. The awe struck crowd were of two opinions — either this would be a very special boat, or bad omens were already at play.

As with most new boats, perfection may have been the target, but the mark did, in some ways, fall a little short. Most noticeable was the fact that Big Ti sat quite low on her lines, mostly due to what had been added during the building process, usually under designer protest. What started out as a large but simple day sailer, had shouldered the extra weight of a generator, bronze radiators and boiler-fired heating system, a large refrigerator and deep freeze, two showers, and a cast iron bathtub, along with large tanks for water and fuel.

Despite these few shortfalls, the big ketch proved herself more than a decent day sailer, and before long Noyes and a long list of subsequent owners were planning for the next ocean race she would enter — and more often than not, finish in-the-money. Line honors and course records began to stack up in 1936, and 30 years later, Ti was still at it — setting the record for the Los Angeles to Honolulu Race. In between, she carved tracks in the ocean between Tahiti and Copenhagen, not just arriving at those landfalls but setting course records for offshore races. Her long waterline and split rig made her a reaching machine and despite her low freeboard, a very seakindly sailboat.

Decades of being driven hard and put away wet takes a toll on any vessel, and Ti’s first crucial refit came after she took on a coat of gray paint and did her service in World War II. Years of patrol duty off the East Coast turned a fine yacht into a worn out work boat — and with her return to civilian life came the ongoing challenge of keeping an aging yacht fit for sea.

Perhaps Ti’s best patron was owner Bob Voit who shouldered a full restoration done at Southampton Yacht Services in England in 1988. The refit estimate was twice what he had paid for the vessel, and included 90 new frames and replanking from the waterline up. Below the waterline the planking had been done by Spencer’s yard in Florida some years before. The deck beams and decks were also to be replaced and a new Munford interior was painstakingly fitted. New systems were also added to the list, and the bottom line rolled in at over $900,000, a bargain in today’s rates.

Tom Reardon, Ti’s pro skipper for the last 21 years, points to a few key factors done during this refit that have really helped the boat to stand up to the test of time. The first was prompted by the industry’s wise avoidance of white lead, a product that worked well between layers of double-planked hulls, but not in the humans who handled the toxic substance. In lieu of the lead, the yard chose a new polyurethane sealant called 5200, manufactured by 3M. The crew slathered on this miracle whip, coating the space between the double-planked hull. Its rugged adhesive quality and its elasticity proved to be the perfect product for the job. Another wise decision was to build a one-inch thick Bruynzeel plywood sub-deck, and then glue rather than mechanically fasten one-inch teak on top. The rock solid results have kept the deck and hull from working, and today the boat is still going strong thanks to that 1988 restoration.

Just as Bob Voit proved to be a true benefactor and aid to Ticonderoga’s longevity, her current owner, Scott Frantz, also sees the big ketch as a floating national treasure. He has worked hard to keep this classic yacht thriving in her golden years. During his ownership he’s cruised Ti in the Mediterranean, raced her in the Caribbean and done Down East club cruises in New England. Swapping seasons between the tropics and New England, Ticonderoga is based out of Antigua in the winter and home-ported in Greenwich, Conn., during the summer.

Short-handed passagemaking has been facilitated by Ti’s split rig and fairly low aspect ratio sail plan. There are no furling headsails or in-spar reefing systems, simply conventional piston hanking jibs set on the foredeck under sail covers. Each is hanked to an individual stay and ready to be hoisted. The mainsail is more than 1,200 square feet, but Reardon points out that he can sail locally “with a crew of three and me,” and ups the team by two when making a passage to or from the Caribbean.

Ticonderoga is a living legend that’s still going strong, and her story is replete with the lure of the sea, the feel of a wooden hull and the tales of the characters who have kept her on course.

 

Provenance (The Wall of Remembrance – The Owners, Crew & Notable Guest):

Owner/Guardian: (1936) – Harry Noyes, Marblehead, Mass.
Owner/Guardian: (1942) – War service, U.S. Coast Guard (submarine patrol)
Owner/Guardian: Allen Pinkerton Carlisle and John Hertz Jr., father founded Hertz Rent-A-Car.
Owner/Guardian: (1963) – Robert Johnson, Oregonian lumberman purchased vessel for $50,000 (vessel became known as Big Ti, transformed into a famous ocean racer.
Owner/Guardian: (1971) – Ken & Fran MacKenzie
Owner/Guardian: Bob Voit
Captain: Tom Reardon
Deckhand: Johan Bouvin
Deckhand: Curtis Barton
Owner/Guardian: (1993) – Scott and Icy Frantz

 

 

L. Francis Herreshoff TIOGA II


Sail Number: 100

Type: Ketch

LOA: – LOD: 71’11” / 21.92m – LWL: 65′10″ / 20.06m – Beam: 16′ 0″ / 4.87m – Draft: 7′ 9″ / 2.36m – Displacement: 108,288 lbs – Ballast 30,750 lbs – Sail Area: 2,897 sq ft – Design Number: 66 – Designer: L.F. Herreshoff – Built by: Quincy Adams YT, YD, Inc, Quincy, Ma – Year Built: 1936 – Original Owner Harry Noyes. – Engine: Detroit 4-53 – hp 128 – Location: Marine Traffic – Flag: USA (US)


 

Historical

A legendary classic sailboat designed by L. Francis Herreshoff for the intrepid yachtsman Harry Noyes, the 72-foot, clipper-bowed ketch was originally named Tioga II of Marblehead. Her second owner bought the boat, but not the name, and while doodling with pencil emblazoned with the brand name Ticonderoga, he saw the answer that kept intact both the letters and the intent of her original name. Over the decades there’s been a series of owners, each with a story all their own — some wore her down, others bestowed lavished refits.

L. Francis Herreshoff was the son of yacht designer Nat Herreshoff, often called “The Wizard of Bristol,” L. Francis, however, was an independent thinker. He demonstrated his independence by setting up shop in the design office of Burgess, Swasey & Paine, a gifted group of Boston naval architects, and arch competitors of his father.

Starling Burgess took the young Herreshoff under his wing and was certainly instrumental in his early career. The firm’s awareness of materials and structures as well as fair hull shapes helped L. Francis develop a keen eye for both grace and seaworthiness. Preceding Tioga of Marblehead, on Herreshoff’s drawing board was a ketch named Joann (eventually renamed Brigadoon), and the Tioga of Boston. Both boats were designed and built for Waldo Brown. It was Tioga of Boston that caught Harry Noyes’ attention, and before long he convinced Brown to sell him the ketch. After only one season he went directly to Herreshoff for a bigger, faster rendition of the 57-foot ketch, and an evolution in yacht design would yield revolutionary results.

Designed in a year, building began in 1936 at the Quincy Adams Yacht Yard in Massachusetts. Tioga of Marblehead was designed with performance in mind but rating rules had been ignored. Harry Noyes, a man of means, owned larger vessels for cruising purposes, and meter boats to satisfy his racing whims. Tioga was initially conceived as a family day sailer. As with all custom boat building projects, the art lay in the owner/client pas de deux, which, in this case, would prove to be more than a complex duet.

The building process was complicated by the fact that Noyes was both Herreshoff’s client, and the owner of the shipyard that would build the boat. Changes from the design, no matter how small, became major issues of contention — to the point where Herreshoff chose not to attend or was not invited to the launching. At one point, he was queried as to why there was such modest headroom and his response was quite straightforward. “The boat’s a day sailer, not a goddamned dance hall!”

The post-Depression era at the Quincy Adams Yacht Yard was a time when craftsmen were glad to have work, and they plied their skills as artisans rather than as assembly-line workers. Ti’s scantlings were lighter than the more crudely built vessels of the day, but her backbone was made of good Yankee white oak, and her planks of carefully chosen, bronze-fastened tropical mahogany. The Port Orford cedar decking would prove to be an inferior choice, and her new fangled hollow Sitka spruce spars would be too flexible. An extra layer of spruce would eventually be added at the Luders yacht yard in Stamford, Conn.

A big mistake was averted during the building process when the yard foreman insisted on keel bolts with nuts at both ends. Herreshoff’s design called for heavy lag bolts to be screwed into the antimony-treated lead. This procedure would soon fall out of favor due to the nasty habit of ballast keels pulling away from such a lag bolt attachment.

The day of the big event drew a crowd to the Quincy yard and just as the regal ketch began to slide down the tallow-slick ways, a gunshot-like crack signaled the collapse of the bracing. As Tioga of Marblehead began to exit the shed she rolled onto her side, hitting the water and unleashing 30,000 pounds of external lead and a force that brought the big ketch abruptly back onto her feet. Three crewmembers flew from one side of the foredeck to the other — whip-lashed by the boat’s substantial righting movement. The awe struck crowd were of two opinions — either this would be a very special boat, or bad omens were already at play.

As with most new boats, perfection may have been the target, but the mark did, in some ways, fall a little short. Most noticeable was the fact that Big Ti sat quite low on her lines, mostly due to what had been added during the building process, usually under designer protest. What started out as a large but simple day sailer, had shouldered the extra weight of a generator, bronze radiators and boiler-fired heating system, a large refrigerator and deep freeze, two showers, and a cast iron bathtub, along with large tanks for water and fuel.

Despite these few shortfalls, the big ketch proved herself more than a decent day sailer, and before long Noyes and a long list of subsequent owners were planning for the next ocean race she would enter — and more often than not, finish in-the-money. Line honors and course records began to stack up in 1936, and 30 years later, Ti was still at it — setting the record for the Los Angeles to Honolulu Race. In between, she carved tracks in the ocean between Tahiti and Copenhagen, not just arriving at those landfalls but setting course records for offshore races. Her long waterline and split rig made her a reaching machine and despite her low freeboard, a very seakindly sailboat.

Decades of being driven hard and put away wet takes a toll on any vessel, and Ti’s first crucial refit came after she took on a coat of gray paint and did her service in World War II. Years of patrol duty off the East Coast turned a fine yacht into a worn out work boat — and with her return to civilian life came the ongoing challenge of keeping an aging yacht fit for sea.

Perhaps Ti’s best patron was owner Bob Voit who shouldered a full restoration done at Southampton Yacht Services in England in 1988. The refit estimate was twice what he had paid for the vessel, and included 90 new frames and replanking from the waterline up. Below the waterline the planking had been done by Spencer’s yard in Florida some years before. The deck beams and decks were also to be replaced and a new Munford interior was painstakingly fitted. New systems were also added to the list, and the bottom line rolled in at over $900,000, a bargain in today’s rates.

Tom Reardon, Ti’s pro skipper for the last 21 years, points to a few key factors done during this refit that have really helped the boat to stand up to the test of time. The first was prompted by the industry’s wise avoidance of white lead, a product that worked well between layers of double-planked hulls, but not in the humans who handled the toxic substance. In lieu of the lead, the yard chose a new polyurethane sealant called 5200, manufactured by 3M. The crew slathered on this miracle whip, coating the space between the double-planked hull. Its rugged adhesive quality and its elasticity proved to be the perfect product for the job. Another wise decision was to build a one-inch thick Bruynzeel plywood sub-deck, and then glue rather than mechanically fasten one-inch teak on top. The rock solid results have kept the deck and hull from working, and today the boat is still going strong thanks to that 1988 restoration.

Just as Bob Voit proved to be a true benefactor and aid to Ticonderoga’s longevity, her current owner, Scott Frantz, also sees the big ketch as a floating national treasure. He has worked hard to keep this classic yacht thriving in her golden years. During his ownership he’s cruised Ti in the Mediterranean, raced her in the Caribbean and done Down East club cruises in New England. Swapping seasons between the tropics and New England, Ticonderoga is based out of Antigua in the winter and home-ported in Greenwich, Conn., during the summer.

Short-handed passagemaking has been facilitated by Ti’s split rig and fairly low aspect ratio sail plan. There are no furling headsails or in-spar reefing systems, simply conventional piston hanking jibs set on the foredeck under sail covers. Each is hanked to an individual stay and ready to be hoisted. The mainsail is more than 1,200 square feet, but Reardon points out that he can sail locally “with a crew of three and me,” and ups the team by two when making a passage to or from the Caribbean.

Ticonderoga is a living legend that’s still going strong, and her story is replete with the lure of the sea, the feel of a wooden hull and the tales of the characters who have kept her on course.

 

Provenance (The Wall of Remembrance – The Owners, Crew & Notable Guest):

Owner/Guardian: (1936) – Harry Noyes, Marblehead, Mass.
Owner/Guardian: (1942) – War service, U.S. Coast Guard (submarine patrol)
Owner/Guardian: Allen Pinkerton Carlisle and John Hertz Jr., father founded Hertz Rent-A-Car.
Owner/Guardian: (1963) – Robert Johnson, Oregonian lumberman purchased vessel for $50,000 (vessel became known as Big Ti, transformed into a famous ocean racer.
Owner/Guardian: (1971) – Ken & Fran MacKenzie
Owner/Guardian: Bob Voit
Captain: Tom Reardon
Deckhand: Johan Bouvin
Deckhand: Curtis Barton
Owner/Guardian: (1993) – Scott and Icy Frantz

 

 

Torsten Sörvik TEJST

Photo Credit: Peter Kane

Sail Number: SWE 166

Type: D-Canoe Variant

LOA: 19.68′ / 6.0m – LOD: 19.68′ / 6.0m – LWL: 18.89′ / 5.76m – Beam: 4.92′ / 1.5m – Draft: .52′ / .16m – 4.23′ / 1.29m – Keel: Centerboard – Designer: Torsten Sörvik – Built By: Sörvik Boat & Wood (SBT), in central Gothenburg. – Gross Displacement: 837 lbs / 380kg – Ballast: 396 lbs / 180kg – Mast: Carbon – Sail Area: 139.9 sq ft / 13m2

Historical:

Designed was basis of the D-canoe, using modern materials, advanced construction technology and high quality standards, with an emphasis on speed with good manageability. Cockpit, sail handling and trimming features are planned for maximum ease of use.

Builders Website

 

 

Bruce King TAURUS


Sail Number:

Type: Cutter

LOA: 38’0” / 11.58m – LOD: 34’0” / 10.36m – LWL: – Beam: 11’6” / 3.50m – Draft: 6’6” / 1.98m – Displacement: 13,000 lbs – Ballast: – Hull material: Cold molded – Sail Area: – Designer: Bruce King – Built by: McClelland Yachts, Kenora Ontario – Year Launched: 1984 – Current Name: Taurus – Original Owner: Private – FLAG: – Location: Lake of the Woods

 

Historical:

Owners comments – “Taurus is the smallest of the series of designs Bruce King released that follow the look of Herreshoffs Ticonderoga. The larger boats are well known, Whitehawk, Whitefin. She has the same cold molded construction, level of outfit and overall quality. Built in Kenora Ontario in the early 80’s, she still sails her original home of Lake of the Woods and docks at the same harbour she was built at.”

Jim Mcclelland, later built a sister to Taurus called Lancashire Rose which Tad Robert Yacht Design drew a modified interior for.

 

Provenance (The Wall of Remembrance – The Owners, Crew & Notable Guest):

Owner/Guardian:

  • Owner/Guardian: (1984-2016) – Private
  • Owner/Guardian: (2016-current) – Craig Bjarnason

 

Resources

Tad Roberts Yacht Design – New Design and Consulting
Owner/Guardian: Craig Bjarnason

 

 

Albert Strange TALLY HO


Sail Number: 5

Type: Gaff Cutter

LOA:
LOD: 47ft 6in / 14.47m – LWL: 44’1″ / 13.43m – Beam: 12’10” / 3.91m – Draft: 7’0″ / 2.13m – Ballast Keel 4.78 tons – Internal Ballast 8 tons – Thames Measurement 30 tons – Sail Area: 1374 / 127.64 m2 – Original Name: Betty – Original Owner: Charles Hellyer of Brixham – Year Launched: 1909 – Designed by: Albert Strange – Design Number: 96 – Built by: Stow & Son of Shoreham under Lloyd’s survey – Hull Material: Wood

 

Historical Synopsis

Tally Ho is a 107-year old English sailing yacht designed by Albert Strange in 1909. A gaff cutter, 47’ on deck, she is a well-known and an important historic vessel. She was built by Stow & Son of Shoreham under Lloyd’s survey to the highest class. But after many adventures and attempts to save her, Tally Ho was left unused for decades in Brookings Harbor, a remote Oregon port. In 2018, Leo Sampson Goolden, a young British wooden boat builder and professional sailor, bought Tally Ho and moved her to Sequim, Washington on the Olympic Peninsula. He is in the midsts of a major rebuild project from the keel up and is documenting his efforts in a Web series on YouTube. Leo’s goal is to complete the rebuild within the next 18 to 24 months and sail a fully restored Tally Ho back to the UK.

 

Historical:

At 47ft 6in loa and 30 tons tm, Betty was the largest transom-sterned boat designed by Albert Strange. She was built for Charles Hellyer of Brixham, who had fishing interests in that port, as well as in Hull, where he owned one of the first steam trawler fleets, and was a member of the Humber Yawl Club. Betty was built by the well-known and reputable yard of Stow & Sons at Shoreham, Sussex to Lloyd’s highest class. The ’midship section drawing shows the hull was to be planked in American elm below the waterline, with teak above. The commentary which accompanied the publication of the design in The Yachting Monthly in 1910 remarks that Hellyer required a yacht in which he could ‘cruise in comfort whilst indulging in deep-sea fishing’. This explains the barrel windlass forward of the mast and perhaps the unusually clear flush deck. It continues:

“The transom stern, rather unusual in a yacht of this tonnage, was adopted in deference to the wishes of the owner, in order that she might lie in the crowded harbour of Brixham in the smallest possible space.”

The boat has had a colourful career. When Hellyer commissioned Strange to design the larger Betty II of 50ft waterline in 1913 Betty was sold, and in 1927 passed into the ownership of Hugh Grosvenor, Lord Stalbridge, who renamed her Tally Ho. The photograph by Beken of Cowes shows her at this period under racing canvas, with the short pole mast changed to a taller fidded topmast rig, and sail area increased by some 400 sq.ft. or about 20%. Her celebrated win of the 1927 Fastnet Race in storm conditions is related later. Alf Loomis, crewing on the Alden schooner La Goleta, wrote of it:

“At the time, this contest between Tally Ho and La Goleta was characterised as the hardest fight between two yachts that had ever been sailed in English waters over so long a cåourse and under such heavy weather conditions.”

There is less recorded of Tally Ho in the following decades, although the delightful photographs from the Clark family album show her at the outset of a year-long transatlantic cruise in 1958. It seems that she completed more than one trans-Atlantic trip after the Second World War, whilst still based in the Southampton area. Then, in 1967, New Zealander Jim Louden set out in Tally Ho from England heading for home, via the Panama Canal. He paused to charter for a few months in the Caribbean and then sailed on single-handed to Rarotonga, in the Pacific, which he reached in July 1968. Here he was offered a charter to fetch 20 tons of copra from the island of Manuae (Hervey Islands), 120 miles to the northeast. With a young lad as crew, he reached the offing during darkness and hove to waiting for dawn. As they slept, the current carried the yacht down onto the island, where the surf lifted and drove her onto the coral reef and stove in her port side amidships.

She was eventually dragged off the reef, after seven tons of lead ballast had been removed from her bilge and her cabin filled with empty oil drums. As she came off, she rolled over and was dismasted, also losing her rudder and bowsprit. But the drums kept her floating just awash and, in that condition, she was towed the 120 miles back to Rarotonga, something of a tribute to the strength of her original deck construction. In Rarotonga she was rebuilt over a period of years, during which time she changed hands, and eventually she found her way, via Tahiti and Hawaii, to the west coast of the United States. There, with aft wheelhouse and twin trolling poles rigged on the mast, she went to work periodically, under the name Escape, fishing for tuna and salmon out of Brookings Harbor, Oregon. During this ownership, in the 10 years between 1977 and 1987, Dave Olson sailed some 20,000 miles in her, twice to the Marquesas, to Tahiti, a frequent visitor to Hawaii, even Pitcairn.

At this time she was still in remarkably good condition for a boat of her age and usage. But when Dave Olson wanted to move on, a new owner could not be found and she languished in Brookings Harbor for some years. It was during this period that the Albert Strange Association became aware of Tally Ho, and that she was potentially running into trouble. In 2008 the Port of Brookings sold her at auction to a local artist, fisherman and shipwright, Manuel Lopez, who formed a charitable foundation and set out to restore her, with the idea of making her a show-piece for Brookings. Manuel did extensive work on the hull, but sadly died in early 2010 without having got her back in the water.

With the loss of Manuel’s driving force, Tally Ho found herself again ‘in limbo’, with storage fees accumulating which the charitable foundation had no means to pay. By late 2012 the Port was preparing to foreclose on her again, and there was a real danger that she would have to be broken up. It seemed to be in the nick of time that the Association, in a renewed effort, contacted the Port Manager, and a plan of action was initiated. With the full and generous cooperation of the Port Manager and members of the foundation that Manuel Lopez had set up, a plan was agreed. The Port offered to prepare a piece of ground and move Tally Ho away from the busy working area she had occupied, and to waive overdue charges. The Association formed a wholly owned UK limited company for the sole purpose of holding title to the boat, and through which it would pay storage fees at a very reasonable rate.

Pat Kellis, a retired waterman in Brookings, who lives in the vicinity, undertook to thoroughly shore and cover the boat to protect her from the ravages of summer and winter weather. The ASA embarked on a campaign to raise awareness of Tally Ho, and locate that person, or perhaps syndicate, with the passion and resources sufficient to get her back on the water. Jeff Rutherford, a very experienced yacht restoration specialist from Richmond, California, kindly inspected her and gave us his preliminary assessment of her condition and a projection of possible restoration costs.

Throughout her long life of cruising, racing, fishing, injury, repair and neglect, she has retained her all-important shape and not inconsiderable degree of structural integrity—a great testament to the quality and strength of her original construction.

 

Provenance (The Wall of Remembrance – The Owners, Crew & Notable Guest):

Owner/Guardian: (1909 – 1912) – Charles Hellyer of Brixham (Betty)
Owner/Guardian: (1912) – Lord Stalbridge (Tally Ho)
Owner/Guardian: (1967) – Jim Louden
Owner/Guardian: (1977 – 1987) – Dave Olson
Owner/Guardian: (2008 – 2010) – Manuel Lopez
Owner/Guardian: (2012) – Manuel Lopez Foundation/ASA (Albert Strange Association)
Owner/Guardian: (2018) – Leo Goolden

 

Comment:

Tally Ho looks deceptively small in the drawings. Had she the counter stern and more raked bow that usually balanced it at this period, her overall length on this waterline would have been something like 60ft, and indeed, her accommodation and performance are what one would more commonly expect from a yacht of that length.

 

 

Leo’s Evaluation

When Leo went to look at her he was astounded by the amount of work to do. But he was also surprised to find that the planks were mostly in very good condition, and that the huge keel timber was solid teak.

 

Current Restoration

Connecting with the Washington state traditional sailing community, Leo was very generously offered the use of a piece of land and a workshop for the project. The Albert Strange Association, (who eventually sold the boat to Leo for just £1), offered to contribute towards the cost of moving her from. Adding his own funds to pay the balance of the moving costs, Leo had Tally Ho shipped 600 miles to Sequim, WA. He constructed a boat shed to enclose her, started recruiting volunteer help, cleaned up and organize the workshop, provisioned the loft as his living space, and installed a small kitchen to cook his his meals. He was off.

 

Leo Goolden’s website is http://sampsonboat.co.uk/support-tally-ho/
Tally Ho website… https://www.yachttallyho.com
A lot more info and photos… https://www.yachttallyho.com/index.php/about-tally-ho

 

Comments

 

Russ Wetzel – December 17, 2022

Tally Ho’s hull and deck have been completely re-done and the entire project has moved to Port Townsend, WA as of July, 2021. check out the progress. Link above.