By: Donald McNarry FRSA In Port Jackson McNarry captures the awe-inspiring might and majesty of the four-masted iron-hulled sailing ships of the late nineteenth and...
By: Bobb Tomsett The Chesapeake Bay pilot boat schooner, designed to meet local needs in about 1730, gradually developed into a national and international type...
By: George R. Bullitt Considered the oldest one-design class in the country, these dinghies were first raced in 1885 and continue to be raced today....
By: Donald McNarry FRSA Named for the “Swedish Nightingale” Jenny Lind, is shown having just dropped her starboard anchor and is simultaneously sheeting home her...
By: Donald McNarry, FSRA A very well documented American ‘triangular trade’ merchant clipper-bowed brigantine of 111’, she had the classic designs of larger clipper ships...
By: Erik A.R. Ronnberg Jr. A successful and famous merchant clipper-bowed brigantine, NEWSBOY was designed by D. J. Lawler and built in 1854 by Brown’s...
By: Mark C. Wilkins 32’7" Oyster dredging sloop built 1891 in Smithtown, NY. Solid basswood hull with laid deck planking, built-up furniture and deckhouses of...
By: Erik A.R. Ronnberg Jr. Launched in 1882 at the Burnham Shipyard, Essex, Massachusetts, she was a ‘clipper’-bowed type fishing schooner from an original half...
By: Bernd Braatz Bernd Braatz completed this model in 2014. This replica of the famous mid-19th century 264' steam frigate was commissioned by the Naval...
By: Bernd Braatz Waterline presentation shows this classic colonial fishing schooner or ‘heal tapper’ of the type built in Marblehead or Beverly, Massachusetts circa early...
By: Roy O. Jenkins America's Cup Defender c. 1870, designed by R.F. Loper. Green bottom, white topsides, natural finish deck & mast stubs, mahogany backboard...