Resolute (yacht)

Last updated
Resolute
Resolute 1914.jpg
Resolute circa 1914
Yacht clubBurgee of the New York Yacht Club.svg  New York Yacht Club
NationFlag of the United States.svg  United States
Designer(s) Nathanael Greene Herreshoff
Builder Herreshoff Manufacturing Company
Launched1914
Owner(s) Henry Walters syndicate
E. Walter Clark (1925–)
Racing career
Skippers Charles Francis Adams III
Notable victories1914 defender trials
1920 America's Cup
America's Cup1920
Specifications
TypeMonohull
Displacement105.5 short tons (95.7 t)
Length106 ft (32 m) (LOA)
75 ft (23 m) (LWL)
Beam21 ft (6.4 m)
Draft13 ft 9 in (4.19 m)
Sail area8,650 sq ft (804 m2) [1]

Resolute was a yacht designed and built by Nathanael Greene Herreshoff for a syndicate of New York Yacht Club members headed by Henry Walters to contend the 1914 America's Cup. [2]

Contents

Design

Resolute was the last Cup defender to be designed by Herreshoff.

History

Resolute was christened by Grace Vanderbilt and launched on April 25, 1914. In the 1914 America's Cup defender selection trials, skippered by Charles Francis Adams III, she beat Vanitie and Defiance . [2] In so doing, she beat the America's Cup course record off Sandy Hook by sailing 30 miles in 3:16:41. [3] However, the outbreak of World War I caused the America's Cup races for 1914 to be postponed. [2] The race was finally held during the 1920 America's Cup.

Resolute leading Vanitie at start of first elimination race off New Haven 1920. RESOLUTE leading VANITIE at start of first elimination race.png
Resolute leading Vanitie at start of first elimination race off New Haven 1920.

In 1920 the America's Cup was reconvened and Resolute again prevailed in selection races before successfully defending the Cup in July, once more with Adams at the helm. [2] Resolute lost the first two matches before recovering to defend the cup 3–2 against Shamrock IV. [2] Robert Wales Emmons, Jr. was the manager of the yacht in 1920. [4]

In 1925 Resolute was sold to E. Walter Clark of Philadelphia. [2] [5] Her racing career lasted another ten years, and in 1930 Resolute again participated in the America's cup selection races, albeit as a "trial horse" against which the potential defenders could be judged.

Robert F Kennedy named his Wianno Senior Resolute in 1964, after the America's Cup yacht.

Related Research Articles

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nathanael Greene Herreshoff</span> American naval architect

Nathanael Greene Herreshoff was an American naval architect, mechanical engineer, and yacht design innovator. He produced a succession of undefeated America's Cup defenders between 1893 and 1920.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">J Class (yacht)</span>

The J Class of racing yachts were built to the specifications of Nathanael Herreshoff's Universal Rule. The J Class is considered the apex of the era when the Universal Rule determined eligibility in the America's Cup.

The Universal Rule determined a yacht's eligibility to race in the America's Cup from 1914 to 1937 and for this the J-class was chosen. Boats built according to the rule reached their peak in the large J-class yachts. This Rating Rule is intended to calculate a rating for yachts, which can then be used to calculate its Time Correction Factor (T.C.F.) in order to have disparate yachts racing against each other. The first boat said to be built under the universal rule was Herreshoff's Doris built in 1905.

<i>Reliance</i> (yacht)

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<i>Defender</i> (1895 yacht)

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<i>Vigilant</i> (yacht)

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">1920 America's Cup</span>

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Whirlwind was a 1930 yacht of the J Class built as a contender for the New York Yacht Club's defence of the 1930 America's Cup. She was ordered by a syndicate headed by Landon Ketchum Thorne, designed by Lewis Francis Herreshoff, and built by Lawley & Son. Whirlwind was unsuccessful in her bid to become the Cup defender, an honor that went to Enterprise. She never sailed again after the Cup races, and was scrapped in 1935.

Weetamoe was a 1930 yacht of the J Class built as a contender for the New York Yacht Club's defence of the 1930 America's Cup. She was ordered by a syndicate headed by Junius Morgan, designed by Clinton Hoadley Crane, and built by Herreshoff Manufacturing Company. Weetamoe was unsuccessful in her bid to become the Cup defender, an honor that went to Enterprise. She continued to sail for a few years afterwards, before being scrapped in 1937.

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References

  1. "Challenger and Defenders of the America's Cup". Scientific American : 622–623. June 5, 1920.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Resolute". Americas Cup. Archived from the original on 2012-03-31.
  3. "Resolute Beats All Cup Course Records". New York Times . June 11, 1914. Retrieved 2010-10-15.
  4. "Robert Emmons 2d, Yachtsman, is Dead". New York Times . April 19, 1928. Retrieved 2011-04-26.
  5. "E.W. CLARK, BANKER AND YACHTSMAN, 88; Head of Philadelphia Firm Dies --Owned Resolute After It Defended America's Cup". The New York Times. April 5, 1946. Retrieved 27 January 2012.