Concordia yawl explained

The Concordia yawl is a class of wooden yawl sailboats; it was designed in 1938 by the naval architect C. Raymond Hunt with input from Llewellyn and Waldo Howland, Clinton Crane, Fenwick Williams and Frank Paine.[1] Earlier that year, the Colin Archer-designed Norwegian pilot cutter, Escape, belonging to Llewellyn Howland's family, was destroyed by the Great Hurricane of 1938. Howland subsequently commissioned the Concordia Company, which he had founded in 1926 and at the time was run by his son Waldo, to design and build a replacement. Howland wanted a sailboat that could be used for both cruising and racing and withstand the heavy wind and choppy waters of Buzzards Bay; thus the Concordia design number fourteen, a 39'10" yawl, was created.

There were 103 Concordias produced between 1938 and 1966, making the Concordia yawl class the largest class of large one-design wooden sailboats.[2] The first four Concordias were produced in Massachusetts. Concordia commissioned the Abeking & Rasmussen shipyard in Lemwerder, Germany, to build the remaining 99 (26 of them as a 41' Model).[3] 102 of the 103 Concordias are still in existence today.[4]

Over the years, the Concordia yawl has won numerous races including the prestigious Newport Bermuda Race (1954 and 1978), the Annapolis Race (1955), at Cowes Week (1955) and the Marblehead to Halifax Ocean Race (1955 and 1997).

The Concordia yawls Arapaho, hull #85 and Irian, hull #70 (both 41' models), appeared in the movie Message in a Bottle.

Concordia yawl specifications

Specification Measurement
Length overall39'-10"
Length waterline28'-6"
Beam (extreme)10'-3"
Draft5'-8"
Ballast (iron keel)7700 lbs.
Displacement18,000 lbs.
Sail area (fore triangle, mainsail and mizzen)690square feet.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Howland, Waldo (1984). A Life in Boats: The Years Before the War. Mystic, Connecticut: Mystic Seaport Museum. .
  2. Howland, Waldo (1988). A Life in Boats: The Concordia Years. Mystic, Connecticut: Mystic Seaport Museum. .
  3. Gribbins, Joseph, Peter Gow, and Elizabeth Meyer (1988). Concordia Yawls the First Fifty Years. Newport, RI: Dreadnaught Company.
  4. Baker, Edward. "And All the Boards Did Shrink", Forbes, July 23, 1990.