Genesta, 1885

£25.00

Genesta: lost to Puritan
Detail below
c. 33 x 23 cm (13 x  9 in) STANDARD size
This mage is a scan
Mail: the same cost for 1 up to any 10 prints see Shipping & Returns

In stock

Free shipping on orders over £60!

  • Disc Satisfaction Guaranteed
  • Disc No Hassle Refunds (see Shipping and returns)
  • Disc Secure Payments
GUARANTEED SAFE CHECKOUT
  • Stripe
  • Visa Card
  • MasterCard
  • American Express
  • Discover Card
  • PayPal
  • Apple Pay

Description

Genesta:
Club: Royal Yacht Squadron, Cowes, Isle of Wight, UK;
Designer: John Beavor-Webb
Builder: D & W Henderson, Glasgow, Scotland;
Launched: 1857;
Rig:  Cutter, converted to yawl
Owner: Sir Richard Sutton
Skipper: John Carter
141 Tons; Length: 96′ 6″ (29.4 m); Beam: 15′  (4.6 m); Draught: 13′ (4 m);
Sail area: 7,150 ft² (664 M²);

Genesta was the unsuccessful English challenger in the fifth America’s Cup in 1885 against the American defender Puritan. Designed by John Beavor-Webb the cutter Genesta was built by the D&W Henderson shipyard on the River Clyde in 1884, for owner Sir Richard Sutton, 5th Baronet, of the Royal Yacht Squadron, Cowes, Isle of Wight, England. Oak Planking mounted on a steel frame she measured 81 feet 7 inches (24.87 m), weighing 80 tons. Skippered by John Carter, after performing well in British races, Sutton crossed the Atlantic in the summer of 1885. Beavor-Webb placed a veil of secrecy over his yacht before the America’s Cup race, beginning the tradition of secrecy which was finally removed for the 2017 event by the organisers. Designed by Edward Burgess, Puritan was built at the George Lawley & Son yard in Boston, Massachusetts and launched May 26, 1885. Puritan was an early combination of American and English designs with some of the depth of a cutter but beam and power of a sloop. It was built and skippered by John Malcolm Forbes. (Beavor-Webb moved to the US where he designed steam yachts, including JP Morgan’s famous Corsair).

Additional information

Weight 0112 kg
Dimensions 33.5 × 23.5 cm