Thomas C. Gillmer Explained

Thomas C. Gillmer
Nationality:American
Birth Date:July 17, 1911
Birth Place:Warren, Ohio
Death Date:December 16, 2009
Death Place:Annapolis, Maryland
Education:U.S. Naval Academy
Spouse:Ruth Newsome
Discipline:Marine Engineering
Practice Name:Thomas Gillmer, Naval Architect, Inc.
Significant Projects:Ship Hydromechanics Laboratory (U.S. Naval Academy)
Significant Design:Pride of Baltimore and Kalmar Nyckel

Thomas C. Gillmer (1911–2009) was a naval architect and the author of books about modern and historical naval architecture. He was born in Warren, Ohio on July 17, 1911.

Early life

At his family's summer cottage near Lake Erie in Ohio, he learned to sail a 14-foot sloop by himself. He graduated from Warren High School, then attended the U.S. Naval Academy.[1]

Career

After graduating from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1935, he served aboard the light cruisers USS Raleigh (CL-7) and USS Savannah (CL-42) in the Pacific and Mediterranean.

In 1941, he joined the Marine Engineering Department at the Naval Academy. During World War II, he served as an instructor of Ship Construction and Damage Control at the U.S. Naval Academy. He resigned his commission with the Navy in 1946 to join the Academy's faculty as a professor and became chairman of the First Class Committee of the Marine Engineering department. (Note: The Marine Engineering Department became the Division of Engineering and Weapons in 1970 which contained the Naval Systems Engineering Department. Naval Systems later became the current Naval Architecture and Ocean Engineering Department.) During the 1950s, Professor Gillmer established the Ship Hydromechanics Laboratory in Isherwood Hall which consisted of an 85' × 6' × 4' towing tank, an 18' × 22' × 4' intact and damaged stability demonstration tank and a small circulating water channel.

After retiring from the Naval Academy in 1967, Gillmer continued living in Annapolis, where he pursued a career as the architect of sailing vessels and an author on the subject. In 1969, he established the engineering firm Thomas Gillmer, Naval Architect, Inc. in Annapolis. His designs included modern yachts and replicas of historic sailing ships.[2] He worked with artist Melbourne Smith on the design of the Pride of Baltimore in 1976, the Pride of Baltimore II in 1986, and the Kalmar Nyckel in 1997, and brought Capt.Iver Franzen into his firm in 1986 to assist with the latter two projects, among others.[3] The Navy hired Gillmer and Franzen to evaluate the condition of the USS Constitution prior to the vessel's restoration in 1997.

The Allied Seawind Ketch, designed by Gillmer in 1962, was the first fiberglass-hulled yacht to circumnavigate the Earth.

Gillmer designed and built his own house in Annapolis in 1947, where he lived for more than 60 years. He was married for 62 years to the former Anna Derge. After her death in 1999, he married Ruth Newsome, who was his wife until he died on December 16, 2009.[4]

Bibliography

Books

Video

Vessel designs

Historic sailing ship replicas

Vessel designYear designedOverall lengthType
Pride of Baltimore197690 feetTopsail Schooner
Lady Maryland[5] 1979104 feetPungy Schooner
Pride of Baltimore II1986157 feetTopsail Schooner
Kalmar Nyckel199793 feetPinnace

Sailboats

Vessel designYear designed
Blue Moon 231943
Blue Water 241961
Allied Seawind Ketch1962
Allied Seawind Sloop1962
Sirenita 301965
Privateer 261966
Privateer 351968
Aries 321972
Seawind Mk 32 Sloop1975
Seawind Mk 32 Ketch1975
Roughwater 331975
Southern Cross 311977
Southern Cross 281978
Southern Cross 351978
Passage 241979
Southern Cross 391981
Weatherly 321983
Source of table data:[6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Thomas C. Gillmer. Frederick N. Rasmussen. December 25, 2009. The Baltimore Sun. December 29, 2009.
  2. Web site: About Thomas C. Gillmer, N.A.. Privateer 26 website. December 22, 2009.
  3. Web site: Kalmar Nyckel Ship Specifications. Kalmar Nyckel Foundation website. February 1, 2010. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20100507090534/http://www.kalmarnyckel.org/aboutshipspecs.asp. May 7, 2010.
  4. Web site: Thomas C. Gillmer. The Bowie Glade-News. December 18, 2009. December 30, 2009. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110712215334/http://www.hometownbowie.com/obituaries/2009/12/3662/Thomas-C-Gillmer.html. July 12, 2011.
  5. Web site: Lady Maryland. Living Classrooms. December 28, 2009. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120223083304/http://www.livingclassrooms.org/Facilities/LadyMD.html. February 23, 2012.
  6. Web site: Sailboats Designed by Thomas Gillmer. June 7, 2019. SailboatData.com.