John Spencer (boat designer) explained

John Alfred Spencer (6 July 1931 – 4 March 1996)[1] was a New Zealand boat designer.

Biography

Spencer was born in Melbourne[2] and moved to Eketāhuna in 1933. He spent most of his life in New Zealand.[3]

In the 1950s, Spencer established a boatbuilding workshop on Bute Road in Browns Bay, Auckland, where he pioneered construction techniques for lightweight flyer boats and yachts.[4]

He was a well-known designer of sailing boats of all sizes, including the Cherub, Javelin (NZ),[5] Firebug and Flying Ant classes of sailing dinghies. His designs used thin plywood, hard chines, a vertical stem and stern and light displacement. The minimum weight for a Cherub hull was and a Firebug is .[6]

Spencer's most famous design was arguably the 62-foot hard-chined Infidel, later known as Ragtime, which he designed and built for Tom Clark, a New Zealand industrialist. Ragtime was launched in late 1964 and went on to win the 1967 Auckland Class A Championship. Eventually sold to US owners, Ragtime won the 1973 and 1975 Honolulu Transpac Races, the 2008 Transpac Tahiti Race, and Division II of the 2008 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race.

Notes and References

  1. News: Maker famed for quick ply boats . 14 March 1996 . Evening Post . 5 . Peter . Kitchin.
  2. http://www.uk-cherub.org/doku.php/people/john_spencer John Spencer - a brief biography
  3. http://www.firebug.co.nz/images/acrobat/download/js_obituary.pdf John Spencer - obituary
  4. North Shore heritage – North Shore area studies and scheduled items list: volume 2 parts 6+ . Heike . Lutz . Theresa . Chan . Heritage Consultancy Services . . 2011 . 7 July 2023.
  5. http://javelins.org/category/history/john-spencer/ Javelin class designer
  6. Web site: Firebug. Sailboat Data. 3 December 2015.