Cam Sailing Club |
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"Volunteer"
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(NB This page is under construction. More information and photos are to be added as they become available. In particular, it's hoped that more evidence will come to light to support the account of her origins, though it is certain that they were on the Thames.)
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Volunteer's orgins & designerRacing yacht Volunteer was built in 1894. She's a Thames half-rater, most probably designed by the brilliant and much respected yacht designer, Olympic sailing gold medal winner and official Naval Architect to the King of the Belgians, Linton Hope (1864-1920), who also commanded the Legion of Frontiersmen's Maritime Troop from Lowestoft during WW1.
Raters, including some designed by Linton Hope, still race at the Thames Sailing Club, on whose website there are descriptions and photos of other Linton Hope raters. In that list of descriptions of boats still sailed at the Thames Sailing Club, the name of Burgoine keeps cropping up. Charles Lovelace has been told that it's likely that one of the Borgoine brothers, Alfred Burgoine, built Volunteer. Alfred and his elder brother, Charles Burgoine, generally known as Charlie, designed and/or built many of the boats that were racing at the five sailing clubs on the non-tidal Thames in the 1890s. Their boatyard was at Hampton Wick, across the Thames from Kingston. At least one other racing yacht, Saucy Sally, was designed by Linton Hope and built by Alfred Burgoine; so it's certainly quite plausible that Volunteer was too. From the 1860s, when regular racing stated on the non-tidal Thames, innovations and technical improvements produced successive generations of ever faster boats beating the previous ones in the races. About 1892 a new type of racing boat appeared:
Volunteer was of this new skimming dish design, shallow and very fast. In Boat Sailing on the Upper Thames, from which the above is quoted, WF Jackson was so impressed with the skimming dish that, in his chapter on boats (Chapter 2), he wrote more on the skimming dish type than on all the other types together. (Chapter 1 is on the Thames sailing clubs, Chapter 2 on the history of the boats racing at these clubs and Chapter 3 details the trophies and races, including how the measurements were made to determine the rating handicap.) Volunteer's first sailing life, 1894-1971Volunteer was raced on the Thames (either at the Thames Sailing Club at Surbiton or the Upper Thames Sailing Club at Bourne End), until about 1900 when she was bought by N G Goddard of King's Lynn and sailed at the Ouse Amateur Sailing Club, including against the Cam Sailing Club in one of the first matches between the two clubs. She impressed members of the Cam SC team so that in 1904 Cam SC members, Messrs. Amps, Freeman and Piggott bought her and brought her to the Cam. Volunteer has been owned by members of the Cam SC ever since. In about 1915 she was bought by George Heath and Frank Evans, eventually passing to their sons Geoffrey Heath and Stanley Evans. They sold her to Frank and Mary Bendall, who sailed her in races till 1971. After a serious capsize in which the hull was probably strained, she had severe leaks and was laid up in a barn at the club. ![]()
Trophies Volunteer won 1913-1946
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Volunteer's Rebuilding by
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The angle of the coaming to the deck varies as it runs aft from the bow, so each successive knee has to match a different angle. This the aftmost knee on the port side. |
While Volunteer's frame is English oak, Charles imported Honduras cedar, which is extremely light, for the decks and hull planking and Honduras mahogany for the parts that needed particular strength, such as tabernacle and the knees used to fix the coaming to the deck. He used spruce for the mast and deck beams.
Charles tried Indonesian bamboo for the boom and gaff, but they were too heavy and were replaced with Chinese bamboo. In the end the only wood that was preserved from the original boat was her elegant transom.
He even made new wooden pulley blocks to keep Volunteer as she was originally.
He has been able to use the original metal parts, such as the heavy, pivoted, steel centreboard, the steel rudder, the tiller and the bronze deck fittings. The fastenings are copper and brass. The new standing rigging is stainless steel with hand-spliced ends. The running rigging is a hemp-like fibre, real hemp ropes of a suitable type no longer being available.
It's hard to believe that her original finish can have been as immaculate as that achieved in her restoration!
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Overall length Waterline length Beam Hull draft Draft with centreplate Hull displacement Centreplate weight Rudder weight Mast weight Mast height Sail area |
21'0 14'3" 6'0" 0'6" 2'9" 27 stone 8½ stone 1½ stone 1¾ stone 21'0' 225 sq ft |
378lb 119lb 21lb 24.25lb |
6.4m 4.34m 1.83m 0.15m 0.84m 171.5Kg 53.0Kg 9.5Kg 11.0Kg 6.4m 20.90 sq m |
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Page last edited 10 May 2008