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Burgess and Stephens alternate
design for Ranger, 1936
Drawing:
©2004
CupInfo
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Genesis:
The J-Class was adopted for America's Cup
competition in 1928, looking forward to the next regatta in 1930. The
Class itself, though, dated back to the turn of the century when the Universal
Rule was adopted though no J-Class yachts had yet been built.
The Rule used a yacht's various dimensions to
calculate an equivalent rating in feet. Boats of equal rated lengths could
then race against each other directly without making other allowances for time
or distance sailed. Even though one yacht might have a longer length or
another yacht a larger sail area, their overall configurations had to produce a
rated length that met the Universal Rule for that class. Boats in Class J, more
commonly today termed J-Class yachts, were the largest constructed under the
Universal Rule. The Rule actually includes provisions for an even larger
type of boat, the I Class, though none were ever built. Inquiries made in
the 1930s for a Defense in the smaller K Class were rejected.
The J-Class were the first yachts in an
America's Cup match to be governed by a formal design rule. Previous
defenders and challengers were only restricted by minimum and maximum lengths
set forth in the Deed of Gift. Sir Thomas Lipton, challenging in 1930 for
the fifth time, had held earlier discussions with the New York Yacht Club in
hopes of adopting the Universal Rule for the previous America's Cup match,
intended for 1914 but delayed until 1920. Though an agreement to use the
rule was not reached for that match, the 1914 US boats, Vanitie and
Resolute, still roughly followed J-Class parameters.
Building Program:
There were only 10 J-class yachts designed and
built. Additionally, several yachts of closely related dimensions, mostly
23-Meter International Rule boats, were converted after their construction to
meet the rating rules of the J-Class.
Only the purpose-built Cup yachts, though, could
compete in the America's Cup. The "converted" J-Class yachts, while
acceptable for Class racing events, were not admissible for America's Cup
competition. Responding to issues that surfaced in earlier defenses, the
America's Cup rules required that all boats had to be sailed to the event on
their own bottom. Some critics pointed out the possibility that the
challenger might, as a result, be disadvantaged by being of heavier
construction than the defender. In order to avoid a situation that could
be perceived as an undue advantage, the NYYC eventually agreed that all
America's Cup J-Class yachts would be built to Lloyds A1 standards, ensuring
that defender and challenger met the same minimum construction specifications
(the nautical term is "scantlings"). Most existing yachts were not built
to such standards, so the Cup-eligible boats thus ended up heavier than the
ineligible J's.
(The issue of challengers having to build
heavier boats due to the ocean crossing was a popular, if uncertain, explanation
in the British press for the long string of American victories. In
practice, a number of challengers added internal bracing for the crossing, which
was then removed before racing. And on a few occasions defenders
subsequently made the crossing in reverse in search of competition following
their successful defense. The rule requiring that the challenger sail to
the event on her own bottom was actually instituted in response to a
super-lightweight challenger towed to the match through canals and rivers from
Canada.
The J-Class Yachts
Name |
|
|
Built |
Owner |
Designer |
Builder |
AC Role |
LWL |
LOA |
Disp.
(tons) |
SA |
Disposition |
Enterprise |
US |
J
1 |
1930 |
Aldrich
Syndicate |
W.
Starling Burgess |
Herreshoff Mfg. Co. |
1930
Defender |
80 |
120 |
128 |
7583 |
scrapped 1935 |
Whirlwind |
US |
J3 |
1930 |
Whirlwind Syndicate |
L.
Francis Herreshoff |
George
Lawley and Son, Boston |
|
86 |
130 |
|
7335 |
scrapped 1935 |
Yankee |
US |
J
2 |
1930 |
Yankee
Syndicate |
Frank
Paine |
George
Lawley and Son, Boston |
|
84 |
126 |
148 |
7288 |
scrapped 1941 |
Weetamoe |
US |
J
4 |
1930 |
Morgan
syndicate |
Clinton
Crane |
Herreshoff Mfg. Co. |
|
83 |
125.5 |
|
7550 |
scrapped 1937 |
Rainbow |
US |
|
1934 |
Harold
S. "Mike" Vanderbilt |
W.
Starling Burgess |
Herreshoff Mfg. Co. |
1934
Defender |
82 |
127.7 |
141 |
7535 |
scrapped 1940 |
Ranger |
US |
J
5 |
1937 |
Harold
S. "Mike" Vanderbilt |
W.
Starling Burgess and Olin Stephens II |
Bath
Iron Works |
1937
Defender |
87 |
135.5 |
166 |
7546
|
laid-up
1937; scrapped 1941 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shamrock V |
UK |
J K3 |
1930 |
Sir
Thomas Lipton |
Charles
Nicholson |
Camper
& Nicholson |
1930
Challenger |
81.1 |
119.8 |
134 |
7540 |
restored |
Endeavour |
UK |
J K4 |
1934 |
T.O.M.
Sopwith |
Charles
Nicholson |
Camper
& Nicholson |
1934
Challenger |
83.3 |
129.8 |
143 |
7561 |
restored |
Endeavour II |
UK |
J K6 |
1936 |
T.O.M.
Sopwith |
Charles
Nicholson |
Camper
& Nicholson |
1937
Challenger |
87 |
135.8 |
162 |
7543 |
laid-up
1938 |
Velsheda |
|
J K7 |
1932 |
W.L.
Stephenson (US) |
Charles
Nicholson |
Camper
& Nicholson |
|
83 |
|
|
|
survives |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other
Yachts |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Vanitie |
US |
|
1914 |
|
William
Gardner |
|
|
|
|
|
|
scrapped 1938 |
Resolute |
US |
|
1914 |
|
Nathanial G. Herreshoff |
|
1920
Defender |
74'11" |
106'4" |
|
8775 |
scrapped 1939 |
White
Heather II |
UK |
|
1907 |
W.L.
Stephenson (US) |
Fife |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
23M
yachts |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cambria |
UK |
K4 |
1927 |
Sir
William Berry |
William
Fife III |
|
|
80 |
135 |
|
|
survives |
Astra |
UK |
K2 |
1928 |
Sir
Mortimer Singer |
Charles
E. Nicholson |
Camper
& Nicholson |
|
|
|
|
|
survives |
Candida |
UK |
K8 |
1932 |
Hermann
Andreae |
Charles
E. Nicholson |
Camper
& Nicholson |
|
|
|
|
|
survives |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Britannia |
UK |
K1 |
1893 |
HRH
Prince of Wales |
George
L. Watson |
Henderson's on Clyde |
|
87'10" |
148'0" |
|
10,317 |
stripped and scuttled 1936 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Notes:
Enterprise |
Launched April 14, 1930.
Pioneered "Park Avenue" boom design. Spruce original mast replaced by
circular section double-skin duralumin mast built by Glenn L. Martin Co, May,
1930. Tobin bronze plating. Triple-headed rig. Trialed with retracting
spreaders. Adversely affected by rule changes for 1934 requiring full
accommodations for crew and winches located above decks. Broken up
September, 1935, at Herreshoff. Aldrich Syndicate: Harold Vanderbilt, Vincent
Astor, George Baker, George Whitney, Floyd Carlisle, E. Walter Clarke.
|
|
Whirlwind |
Launched May 7, 1930. Name:
"Whirlwind" was also the name of a clipper ship owned by syndicate member Landon
Thorne's family. Double-ended, inspired by Herreshoff's M-Class
Istalena. Mahogany planking over steel frames. Pine deck.
Spruce original mast replaced with duralumin. Led J's with double-headsail
rig. Electric wind-speed devices. Sold to Pynchon. Whirlwind Syndicate: Landon
Thorne, Alfred Loomis, Paul Hammond. Longest J-Class until 1937. Scrapped at
City Island, 1935.
|
|
Yankee |
Launched May 10, 1930. Yankee
Syndicate: John Lawrence, Charles Francis Adams, Chandler Hovey. Spruce original
mast. Tobin bronze plating. Triple-headed rig. Defense Trials,
1934, modified including bow entry, slightly longer waterline, and increased
sail area. Nearly beat out Rainbow for 1934 Defender. Sold to Gerard
Lambert, 1935. Sailed to England, 1935 (only US J to do so), racing
Lambert's schooner Atlantic and winning by 17 hours. Raced in
England, took eight first-place finishes in 32 races. Defense Trials,
1937, tested single-headed rig, mast step moved forward, lowered center of
ballast, larger mainsail. Sold for scrap by Lambert (reportedly for
$10,000) in April, 1941, Fall River, MA, with proceeds donated to war effort.
Tender: Utility
|
|
Weetamoe |
Launched May 10, 1930. Name:
"Weetamoe" was an American Indian Queen; Tobin bronze plating.
Triple-headed rig. Morgan Syndicate: George Nichols, J.P. Morgan, Cornelius
Vanderbilt, Arthur Curtiss James, George T. Bowdoin, Henry Walters, Gerard
Lambert. Cost estimated at $300,000 for hulls, rig, and sails.
Narrowest of the four 1930 US boats. Sold to Fredrick Henry Prince, October,
1930. Hull modified for 1934, including larger and heavier keel; believed
to be slower, later restored to original configuration. Weetamoe also
raced in the off-years between defenses. 1930 Tender: Emblane.
|
|
Rainbow |
Last Herreshoff-built America's Cup
boat. Duralumin mast built by Glenn L. Martin Co. Adopted bending
boom design. Bar rigging. Scrapped August, 1940, Fall River, MA.
Reportedly brought $12,000.
|
|
Ranger |
Design based on Burgess's scheme
derived from models tested in Stevens Institute towing-tank during partnership
work with Olin Stephens; final design has elements of both men's ideas; design
lines established by August, 1936; keel laid December, 1936; cost $500,000;
steel hull, flush riveted; heat-treated steel rod shrouds; translucent
bakelite deck inserts; lost mast on delivery cruise off Cape Cod; replaced with
new in 21 days; used wheel, rigging and sails salvaged from Rainbow and
Enterprise (same No. 1 main was used on all three); Vanderbilt's 3 J's
all used the tender Bystander, which also served the 12M defender
candidate Vim in 1958, and challengers Gretel (1962) and Dame
Pattie (1967); Launched May 11, 1937; Bath Iron Works Hull #
172; built at cost; funded solely by Vanderbilt; named for US frigate Ranger
commanded by John Paul Jones; largest displacement J-Class; Hauled at end of
1937 and never sailed again. Sold for scrap May, 1941, bringing $12,000.
|
|
Shamrock V |
Built at Camper & Nicholson yard in
Gosport. Mahogany planking over steel frames, yellow pine deck; teak stem,
stern posts, and counter-timbers; hollow spruce mast, elliptical section; lower
sail area but greater rig height relative to other J's; Extensively tuned up in
England before 1930 Challenge; Sold to Sopwith 1932; modified by Sopwith
including hull and rudder; Sold to Sir Richard Fairey; Sold to Mario Crespi
post-war; Sold to Piero Scanu 1962; renamed Quattrofoglio (spelling
uncertain but roughly "Four Leaf" in Italian as a play on her original name);
ketch-rigged?; Appeared in movie "Swept Away"; Rebuilt at C&N 1967-70; Sold to
Lipton Tea Co. 1986, donated to Newport Museum of Yachting; Restored under
Elizabeth Meyer 1989, rig, bulwarks, deckhouse rebuilt to original; sold to
Newport Yacht Restoration School 1995; sold to Newport Shamrock V Corp 1998;
refit 2000 at Pendennis, under Gerard Dykstra; sold to Marcos de Maraes, Brazil.
Lipton had a 23M yacht also named Shamrock, sometimes confused with his
America's Cup boats. The 23M was broken up in 1933.
|
|
Endeavour |
Steel hull, Steel mast, originally
"North Circular" bending boom, later "Park Avenue" boom; Originated use of
double-clewed "quadrilateral" jib; Sold to Herman Andrae; Chartered to Sopwith
for 1936; Broke loose from tow mid-ocean returning to England, missing and
feared lost, September 1937; Laid up 1937 Camper & Nicholson; Sold for scrap
1947 to Charles Kerridge Limited, intent to scrap keel for lead content, but
hull reprieved; sat as abandoned hulk for decades; sold for 10 pounds in 1970's;
owned by British Maritime Trust 1973-77; John Amos and Graham Jack 1978-80; John
Amos 1980-83; restoration started; sold to Elizabeth Meyer 1984; restored by
Meyer, with Gerard Dykstra as designer, work completed at Royal Huisman and
re-launched in 1989; sold to Dennis Kozlowski (2000), yacht based in Newport,
RI; sold to Cassio Antunes (2006) for reported $13.1 million USD, apparent plan
to base in Cayman Islands and Cascais, Portugal.
|
|
Endeavour
II |
Launched June 8, 1936.
Greatest LOA, tallest rig (158 ft. from deck). Flush-plated steel hull.
Steel framing, planking, mast, wood Park Avenue boom. Steel centerboard.
Pine decks. Launched and trialed in 1936 for 1937 challenge. Twice
dismasted in 1936 trials. Laid up 1937 Camper & Nicholson; Sold for scrap 1947
to Charles Kerridge Limited, intent to scrap keel for lead content. Hulk
remains to be broken up in 1968.
|
|
Velsheda |
Only J-boat not designed to compete
in America's Cup; Steel mast; reused material from smelting White Heather II's
keel; Ends modified 1935; Name combines Stephenson's daughters
Velma, Daphne, and Sheila; (laid up 25 years?); Restored Terry Brabant 1983,
maintaining very original condition; Sailed as charter; Sold to Swiss
owner, refit stalled for lack of funds; Laid up Gosport; Sold in 1996,
major refit 1996-7 at Southampton Yacht Services under Gerard Dykstra, interior,
CF rig, sails, modernized, but less authentic; Current owner Ronald de Waal. |
|
|
|
|
Vanitie |
A 1920 Defender Candidate,
Vanitie lost to Resolute in 1914 trials (defense postponed) and 1920
trials, losing 7-4 in final 1920 selection series. Owned by Alexander Smith
Cochran. Not designed as a J, but altered after construction to rate as a
J; not acceptable for AC as a J-Class yacht because lightweight, not Lloyd's A1.
Sold to Gerard Lambert, 1928. Trial horse 1930 and 1934 America's Cup defender
trials. Laid-up at Herreshoff Mfg. and scrapped there in 1938.
|
|
Resolute |
Converted to schooner rig in the
1920s; Not designed as a J, but altered after construction to rate as a J; not
acceptable for AC as a J-Class yacht because lightweight, not Lloyd's A1.
Sold to E. Walter Clarke. Laid-up at Herreshoff Mfg. and scrapped there in
1939. Beam 21'11", draft 13'9".
|
|
|
|
|
White
Heather II |
Converted to J rating in 1930.
Established Nicholson's reputation in big racing yachts.
|
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Cambria |
Cambria shares name with First
Challenger to a US Defender, 1870; Sold to Mike Sears (US, McDonnell-Douglas)
1972; Sold to Charlie Whitcombe (NZ) 1987; Sold to AUS restoration Group (Denis
O'Neil, John David, Iain Murray) 1994; refit `99?; for sale 2000 ($7.5 M); rated
as a J-Class, 2003, though she was not rated as such in the 1920s and 30s.
|
|
Astra |
Not designed as a J, but altered
after construction to rate as a J in 1931; raced well as J in light weather;
Sold to Sir Howard Frank; sold to Hugh Paul, 1930; sold to Italian ownership
1950, converted to Yawl rig; Gian Carlo Bussei led restoration 1987 at Cantieri
Navali Becooncini, La Spezia, Italy.
|
|
Candida |
Sailed poorly under J rating,
converted to yawl Norlanda by Nicholson for Italian Owner; restored 1989.
|
|
Britannia |
Launched April 20, 1893; Defeated
America's Cup Defender Vigilant in fleet racing on the Clyde, 1894; Built
for HRH Albert Edward, Prince of Wales; Sold to private owners, 1897;
Bought back in 1902, after the Prince had acceded to the throne as Edward VII;
Passed to his son George V after Edward's death in 1910; Rated after
construction as 23M; not designed as a J, but altered in 1931, converted to
"Marconi" rig, sail area 8,700 sf, triple-headed, and rated as a J; modified to
double-headed-rig and Park Avenue boom in 1935; Scuttled off the Isle of Wight
by Edward VIII, July 9, 1936, as per wishes of his father, George V, who did not
wish to see the yacht live on to a life of decline once he was gone.
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Disposition:
Conceived at the height of the
affluent 1920's, the J-boats arrived during the Great Depression. They
required enormous crews, and, despite expert attention to their technical
details, still broke an astonishing number of masts. While they were in
most regards the most advanced sailing yachts yet built, and they were
indeed powerful sailing thoroughbreds formed in sleek lines that can race the
pulse of almost every viewer, the glorious J's proved too extravagant for their
own good. Most had very limited sailing careers outside of America's Cup.
Ranger, whose 1937 cost was upwards of $500,000, was laid-up at the end
of her debut season and never sailed again. All of the American J's were
scrapped between 1935 and 1941. Most of the British J's were either abandoned or
scrapped.
When NYYC sought to revive the
America's Cup in the 1950s, there was a faction that favored returning to the
J-Class. Mike Vanderbilt even stated that not only would he like to see
the Cup contested in the large boats, but that if so he would consider
rebuilding a new Ranger to the design of the original. Still,
another faction hoped for smaller dual-use yachts that could be used in offshore
racing when the Cup year was ended. With cost estimates for a 1958-era J
starting around three million dollars, the impulse for a J-Class defense faded
away in the face of economic pressures and a compromise was reached to sail the
America's Cup in International Rule 12-Meters.
Endeavour in Newport, 2004
Photo
©2004
CupInfo |
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Out of nine America's Cup J's, only two survive
today: Shamrock V, the 1930 Challenger, and Endeavour, the 1934
Challenger. Velsheda, distinguished by being the only yacht built
as a J-class though not intended for America's Cup, is intact and sailing, too.
Of at least seven other boats that were rated as J's, two remain: Cambria,
and Astra. Cambria was originally a 23-Meter International
Rule yacht, but later altered to rate as a J. The surviving boats have all had
extensive restoration and re-building. Endeavour was rescued from near
oblivion, too delicate to move without structural reconstruction. |
The J-Class Resurgent
J-Class rigs today are no
longer built of wood or dur-alumin, but with modern lightweight composites.
Their sail technology is long past being canvas duck, and many other subtle
changes have been made to make the ongoing maintenance and operation of these
yachts a realistic proposition. Still, the J-Class owners have gone to
great lengths to insure the integrity of the boats. The J-Class is
self-administered, rather than governed by an outside organization as is the
case with almost all other classes. This allows the members to more easily
adapt the rules in order to serve the needs of these uniquely historic yachts.
Most of the surviving J's are
available for charter. Cambria was reportedly for sale in 2000.
Endeavour changed hands in 2006 for a reported $13.1 million USD, though
as her former owner Dennis Kozlowski said, "No one truly owns Endeavour.
She's a part of yachting history.''
Recreations, Replicas, and a
Tender:
For decades, most yachting
fans thought that we would never again see the likes of these boats again, the
few survivors would sooner or later fade away, and the whole history would be
reserved for books and fading photographs, but following the restoration of the
surviving hulls rumors grew throughout the late 1990's and early 2000's about
building "new" J's. In 2001, all of this dock talk began to become
reality:
Ranger
Wooden Boat magazine, March/April 2001, described a "Dutchman" who had
commissioned a new Ranger built to the original's plan. This
incredible rumor came true, and a piece of lost sailing history was brought back
to life. The new version of this "Superboat", as Mike Vanderbilt once
called her, was officially launched in October, 2003.
Designed by Studio Scanu and
Reichel-Pugh, and built by Danish Yachts, Skagen, Denmark, she is not an exact
replica of the original. Some would term her a re-interpretation, as a number of
changes were made including greater freeboard, and Ranger's original
designers did not participate in the project. The new Ranger first
competed head-to-head against other J's in Antigua, Spring, 2004. It took
some additional adjustment after launch by her owners and designers to seek the
proper trim that would make her float on her lines, an essential step in the
process of being officially rated a J-Class yacht. Visit the
Ranger Website for
more info.
J-Class Management
is also at work on a restoration of Bystander, tender to the original
Ranger.
Endeavour II
An Endeavour II replica is being built at Royal Huisman Shipyard, with a
planned 2008 launch date.
Gerard Dykstra and Partners is leading the project, which features a
lightweight Alustar (aluminum alloy) hull and carbon-fiber mast. See
additional photo at
Yachtspotter
|
|
Drawing: ©2008 Dykstra &
Partners
New J-Class Yacht Rainbow
(click image to view large
pdf) |
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Lionheart
Based on an unbuilt alternate design by Starling Burgess and Olin Stephens II
that was considered for 1937's America's Cup defender Ranger, this new
boat is being built at yards in the Netherlands for an expected 2008 launch.
Lionheart will be the longest J-Class yacht when completed.
See more including photos of the completed hull at the
Lionheart
Website and the story of sailing onboard including photos and videos
Cruising J-Class Style Aboard Lionheart at Yachting World
Designer: Hoek
Design
Builders:
Bloemsma Aluminiumbouw and
Claasen Jachtbouw BV
Svea
Tore Holm's unbuilt 1937 design, said by some to be faster in the test tank than
any of the original boats, is being pursued by
Hoek Design
Name To Be Announced
In late March 2008, reports of another replica about to begin construction
appeared on the
Classic Boat website. Whether this is one of the known projects,
such as Svea, above, or yet another replica about to become reality, such
as Rainbow, below, should become known shortly.
Rainbow
In late May, 2008, Dykstra and
Partners announced that a new build of the 1934 America's Cup Defender
Rainbow was underway, with an expected launch date of 2010.
Read the Press Release
Other
projects:
Hoek Design is also studying replicas of 1930's Enterprise and another
boat from Yankee designer Frank Paine. Yankee herself has
also been rumored as a new project, as well. Earlier reports of a
Ranger alternate-design carrying the name of Seawolf may have been
referring to the project that has become Lionheart, see above.
Whirlwind and Weetamoe are the only two designs of the original ten
J's that aren't known to be sailing, building, or under serious consideration as
of 2008. The J-Class website points out that there are 10 unbuilt J
designs from the 1930's, so the possibilities for more J-Class yachts are
intriguing.
Yachting World reported in
May, 2003, that construction was underway on a yacht replicating the
famous G.L Watson design Britannia. Photos showed a nearly
completed hull at Solombala Shipyard, in Arkhangel, Russia, and included
interviews with the yacht's owner Sigurd Coates of Norway. The design was
adapted by Cesil Stephansen from published plans. The original designer's
modern descendent company, G.L.Watson & Co., Ltd., has no involvement with the
Arkhangel boat. Little was been heard of this ambitious project for years,
until the yacht was finally launched only to become subject of a financial
dispute, trapping her in Russia until 2009, when she "escaped" to Norway.
In the Spirit
A similar project to return
elegant yachts to competitive racing, the W-class, was set in motion by Donald
Tofias, an American enthusiast. He commissioned naval architect Joel White
to design a new class with lines evocative of famous racing yachts like the New
York 50's and the J-Class. The first two boats, Wild Horses and
White Wings, were built in Maine of modern cold-molded wood construction and
launched in 1998. It is Tofias' aim that there will eventually be a whole
fleet of the beautiful W-class to regularly compete against each other.
The one-design W-76 is actually similar to the New York 50's. Tofias'
long-range plans involve a range of classes including 46, 62, 76, 105, and 130.
The 130's would be nearly identical in basic dimensions to the J-class. See the
W-Class Website.
Additional Links:
Chris Cameron onboard Ranger at Maxi
Yacht Rolex Cup, 2010:
Photo Gallery
Web Sites of Particular
Interest:
The J-Class
Association
J-Class Management, Inc.
Further
Notes:
K-Class:
The Royal London Yacht Club made and withdrew its inquiry for a K-Class
challenge in 1935. The intent had been to reduce costs, not the least of
which was hoped to be a lower velocity of mast replacement, but the K-Class line
of thought was rejected for several reasons. For one, the K-Class wasn't
so much smaller than the J-Class as to have clearly led to significant savings.
Additionally, no K-Class yachts existed on either side of the Atlantic while
several J's of various pedigree were available for testing, training, and racing
in 1935. Also a factor was that the NYYC was already actively considering
another challenge at the time the RLYC began their communication about the
K-Class and it was the NYYC's policy to consider only one challenge at a time,
in keeping with the Deed of Gift.
Sailing to the Event on Own
Bottom:
This provision of the Deed of Gift was at times strictly interpreted to the
the degree of making sure that the challenging yacht actually was under her own
sail while traveling to the match, not towed by another boat. Challengers
returning across the Atlantic after Cup matches concluded were sometimes towed
for convenience. Eventually the NYYC agreed at various times to permit towing
the yachts to the match, particularly when conditions were light, and in 1956,
for the coming of the 12-meter yachts in 1958, the Deed of Gift was amended to
eliminate the requirement.
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