Stjernen (II)

Stjernen (The Star) is the present boat used by the King of Norway for short sea transport on official occasions. The 55-foot (17 m) pine boat was designed by Richard Gustav Furuholmen and built in 1935 by Anker og Jensen in Asker for merchant Nicolay Eger who named her Estrella. She was originally powered by a 75 hp Penta P62 but is now powered by a 320 hp Volvo Penta motor.

History
Norway
Name: Stjernen
Namesake: Stjernen I
Owner: King of Norway
Builder: Anker og Jensen
Launched: 1935
Acquired: 1945
In service: 1945
Identification:
General characteristics
Length: 55 feet (17 m)
Beam: 12 feet (3.7 m)
Propulsion: 320 hp Volvo Penta motor
Speed: 16 knots (18 mph; 30 km/h)
Complement: 4 (1 officer, 3 sailors)

Estrella was confiscated by the Germans during the German occupation of Norway and was at the disposal of Reichkommisar Josef Terboven. King Haakon VII of Norway had been promised a Royal Yacht when he accepted the Norwegian throne in 1905, but this would not come through until 1947 when he was given the HNoMY Norge. In 1945 the Royal Court therefore acquired Estrella and named her Stjernen after the previous Stjernen I which had also been confiscated by the Germans but was returned as a wreck. The present Stjernen is still in use by the King and his family and, like Norge, Stjernen is manned by a crew from the Royal Norwegian Navy. The crew consist of three seamen and one junior officer who live aboard 14 days at a time.

The names of the two Stjernens are somewhat complexe. From 1899 to 1940 the original Stjernen was named just Stjernen. In 1945 this boat was no longer operational and was no longer called Stjernen. This freed up the name for the present Stjernen which is also simply named Stjernen. When the old Stjernen was restored she was renamed Stjernen I and is also called Stjernen av 1899.

Sources

  • "A picture of the nameplate on the boat" (in Norwegian).
  • "Article from Risør Wood boat festival" (in Norwegian).
  • "Interview with the boat's commander on a classic motor boat forum" (in Norwegian). Archived from the original on 2013-01-03.
  • "Plans of the boat are available from the Norwegian Maritime Museum" (PDF) (in Norwegian).
  • "A short biography on Furuholmen" (in Norwegian).
  • "An article on a model of the boat" (in Norwegian). Archived from the original on November 13, 2011.


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