The beautiful 1885 steam yacht “Amazon” is
currently visiting Ramsgate Royal Harbour as the guest of the Maritime Museum.
“Amazon”, once the property of Arthur Lowe of
Dad’s Army fame used to be a regular visitor to Ramsgate in the 1970’s, when
many riotous parties were held onboard with other members of the cast,
including local resident John Le Mesurier.
On Sunday (17th June) the Museum played host
to a visitation from a large group of Kent mayors, all of whom spent an
entertaining morning looking at the fascinating displays of maritime history
and the famous ocean-going steam tug which is on display in Smeaton’s drydock.
Amazon (1885)
This distinctively British screw schooner was built at Southampton in 1885 from designs by the
renowned Dixon Kemp. Kemp intended her to be 'fast and a good seaboat' and her
successful sea trials were recorded in his definitive Yacht
Architecture (First Edition, 1885).
Carvel planked in teak and pitch pine on oak
frames, with alternate wrought iron strap floor reinforcement, bronze
fastenings, lead keel and copper sheathing, Amazon's survival reflects
the high quality insisted upon at build - her hull is still largely
original. She has not had a
‘restoration’, just necessary repairs.
She is the real thing.
Her builder and first owner, Tankerville
Chamberlayne, Esq., a gentleman of local standing, personally superintended her
construction by his own 'Arrow Yard' at Northam on the River Itchen. Amazon's original engine and boiler
were supplied by the adjacent works of Day, Summers and Company.
Amazon was used
for summer cruising, to attend sailing regattas along the south coast of
England, and to visit France. Having been prepared appropriately for the
occasion of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee Royal Fleet Review in 1897, she
was shortly after sold to a prominent French yachtsman and was based at St.
Malo as Armoricain until 1900, when she returned to British
ownership.
Already too old (and with a coal-fired compound
engine no doubt thought to be rather too old-fashioned) for the First World
War, she remained in south coast ports as a private yacht. A new owner took her to London and after 52
years of service her original engine and boiler were removed on her conversion
to diesel in 1937.
During the Second World War she became an unpowered
houseboat lying in a west London Yacht Basin.
Encouraged by his surveyor's positive report, the actor Arthur Lowe, who
bought her as a houseboat in 1968, fitted her out for sea again. At first his private yacht, she pursued a
successful charter business in family ownership after his death in 1982, before
migrating to the north of Scotland in 1990. She was sold to the current owners
at the end of 1996.
Amazon is today
used as a family yacht, from 1997 to 2009 based at Malta in the Mediterranean.
In February 2009, at 124 years of age, Amazon departed
Malta, motor sailing via Gibraltar, the Canary Islands, the Cape Verde Islands,
Barbados, St Vincent & the Grenadines, St Lucia, Antigua & Barbuda and
Bermuda to New England.
In 2011, at 126 years of age, Amazon re-crossed
the North Atlantic Ocean, taking the rougher ‘northern route’ from St John’s,
Newfoundland, Canada to Bantry Bay in Ireland in August.
On 4 June 2012, Amazon was the only vessel attending the Queen’s
Diamond Jubilee Pageant on the River Thames that had also been present at
Spithead on 26 June 1897 to witness the Royal Fleet Review for Queen Victoria’s
Diamond Jubilee – a truly unique ‘double’!
Amazon’s dimensions are:
- 83 ft waterline, 102 ft hull, 114 ft over spar
(c.25m / 30m / 34m)
- Beam - 15 ft 6 ins (c.4.6m)
- Draught - maximum 8 ft 3 ins (aft) (c.2.5m)
What a beautiful old lady she is.
ReplyDeleteShe does look wonderful
ReplyDeleteDoes anyone know how long she will be in Ramsgate?
ReplyDeleteSadly, I believe she is leaving next week.
DeleteThanks.
ReplyDeleteSaw her in Cowes yesterday beautiful
ReplyDelete