Deep-water sail

Author(s)

    • Underhill, Harold A.

Bibliographic Information

Deep-water sail

by Harold A. Underhill

Brown, Son & Ferguson, 1963

[2nd ed]

Other Title

Deepwater sail

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Note

Previous ed. 1952

Description and Table of Contents

Description

A book for all students of sail and lovers of the windjammer, dealing with the sailing ship of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The types covered range from the small craft of Tasmania to the Bluenose ships of Canada, from the "Onker" barques and barquentines of the Baltic to the schooners of the Pacific Islands; "Country Wallahs" of the Indian Ocean and schooners of the Levant. Among the many sets of plans providelans provided are such ships as the little Tasmanian clipper Harriet McGregor. The Blackwall frigate True Briton, the composite clipper Torrens and famous iron clippers. The big ships are represented by the beautiful Queen Margaret, the five-master France, the four-master Kommodore Johnsen and that well-known grain ship Parma. Size 248X178 mm. 387 pages. Over 200 illustrations and 28 folding plates. "I think it is one of the finest books I have ever purhased on old-time sailing craft".-Dempsey E. Forsythe, Baltimore, U.S.A.

Table of Contents

Introduction Development and Design Small Fore-and-Afters Topsail Schooners and Small Barquentines Brigs, Brigantines and Snows Barquentines and Small Barques Ships The Big Full-Rigger Big Barques and Barquentines Big Schooners and Wood Barquentines Oddities Deck Fittings and Details

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Details

  • NCID
    BA44741179
  • ISBN
    • 085174172X
  • Country Code
    uk
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Glasgow
  • Pages/Volumes
    xxix, 302 p., [100] leaves of plates
  • Classification
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