Shamrock (yacht)
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Shamrock and Columbia in 1899 | |
| Yacht club | |
|---|---|
| Nation | |
| Designer(s) | William Fife III |
| Builder | J. Thorneycroft & Co. |
| Launched | 26 June 1899 |
| Owner(s) | Sir Thomas Lipton |
| Racing career | |
| Skippers | Captain Archibald "Archie" Hogarth |
| America's Cup | 1899 |
| Specifications | |
| Displacement | 156.9 metric tonnes |
| Length |
|
| Beam | 7.46 m (24.5 ft) |
| Draft | 6.15 m (20.2 ft) |
| Sail area | 1,214.30 m2 (13,070.6 sq ft) |
Shamrock was a racing yacht built in 1898 that was the unsuccessful Irish challenger for the 1899 America's Cup against the United States defender, Columbia.
Shamrock was designed by third-generation Scottish boatbuilder, William Fife III, and built in 1898 by J. Thorneycroft & Co., at Church Wharf, Chiswick, for owner Sir Thomas Lipton of the Royal Ulster Yacht Club (and also of Lipton Tea fame).[1] However her draft was too great for construction at Chiswick and she was built at Millwall.[2]
Shamrock (also known as Shamrock I, to distinguish her from her successors) was built in 1898 under a shroud of secrecy, and christened by Lady Russell of Killowen at its launch on 26 June 1899.[3] Shamrock featured a composite build, with manganese-bronze bottom and aluminium topside clinkerbuilt over a steel frame and a pine decking.[4]