Galatea (yacht)

Galatea was the unsuccessful Scottish challenger of the sixth America's Cup race in 1886 against American defender Mayflower.

Galatea
British yacht Galatea.
Yacht club Royal Northern Yacht Club
Nation United Kingdom
Designer(s)John Beavor-Webb
LaunchedMay 1885
Owner(s)Lieutenant William Henn, R.N.
Fatesold for scrap January 1912
Racing career
America's Cup1886
Specifications
Length31.22 m (102.4 ft) (LOA)
26.45 m (86.8 ft) (LWL)
Beam4.57 m (15.0 ft)
Draft4.16 m (13.6 ft)
Sail area675.45 m2 (7,270.5 sq ft)

Design

Galatea, a gaff cutter, was designed by John Beavor-Webb and built in 1885 for owner Lieutenant William Henn, R.N. of the Royal Northern Yacht Club.

The all-metal Galatea had a steel frame, a lead-filled steel keel, and a riveted steel-planked hull, painted white. The deck was teak.

Career

Galatea was launched in May 1885. After a series of mostly losses in British races, the owner and his wife sailed to New York in the summer of 1886.

Galatea lost both races in the September 1886 America's Cup in New York to the American defender Mayflower. During these 1886 voyages, Galatea had a monkey named Peggy on board as a mascot. The monkey became ill and died and was buried in Brooklyn, NY.[1]

Following his defeat, Henn challenged General Paine of the Mayflower to a private rematch, and in the spring of 1887 was defeated again. Galatea won the Queen's Jubilee Cup Royal Nova Scotia Yacht Squadron Regatta in Halifax N.S. 20 August 1887.

From 1888 until 1894, Mr. and Mrs. Henn lived aboard Galatea in Britain. Following Lt. Henn's death in 1894, Mrs. Henn continued to live aboard the yacht until her death in 1911.

In January 1912, the Galatea was sold for scrap and broken up.

Galatea afterdeck
gollark: I don't think you know what never stopping means, but great.
gollark: It's ideal for high-uptime systems due to the lack of garbage collector - making for consistent performance with no GC spikes - and elegant error handling via algebraic data types.
gollark: Have you considered rewriting it in Rust (programming language)?
gollark: Worrying.
gollark: Even a nonorbital one, perhaps.

References

  1. "The Galatea's Mascot Dead". The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. 2 December 1886.

Media related to Galatea (ship, 1886) at Wikimedia Commons


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.