A well detailed static display scale model of the S.Y. Corsair (1890)
VAT rate of 17.5% is payable on hammer price plus … Read more
A well detailed static display scale model of the S.Y. Corsair (1890)

Details
A well detailed static display scale model of the S.Y. Corsair (1890)
with masts, booms, rigging, radio aerial, anchors and anchor davits, winch, deck lights, panelled and glazed deck houses, open bridge with wing bridges with helm, telegraphs, binnacle, deck rails, companionways, ventilators, stayed funnel with two safety valve extension pipes and whistle, two signal guns in stepped carriages, bell, aft helm and binnacle, five ship's boats in davits with interior detailing, accomodation ladder and other details. The hull, finished in black, green and varnish with 'gilded' boot top, single shaft and four blade propellor and rudder is mounted on two turned brass columns and display base -- 45 x 88in. (114.5 x 223.5cm.)
See illustration
Special notice
VAT rate of 17.5% is payable on hammer price plus buyer’s premium. COLLECTION AND STORAGE CHARGES

This lot must be cleared by 1.00 p.m. on the Friday following the sale. If it is not cleared, it will be removed to the warehouse of:-
Cadogan Tate Fine Art Removals Limited
Cadogan Tate Ltd. Fine Art Services Cadogan House 2 Relay Road London W12 7JS Telephone: (020) 8735 3700 Facsimile: (020) 8735 3701
Lots will be available for collection following transfer to Cadogan Tate from the Monday following the sale and every week-day from 9.00 a.m. to 1.00 p.m. and 2.00 p.m. to 5.00 p.m.

PLEASE NOTE THAT THERE WILL BE NO CHARGE TO PURCHASERS WHO COLLECT THEIR LOTS WITHIN ONE WEEK OF THE SALE.

On the Friday one week after the sale, a transfer and administration charge of £17.50 per lot will be payable and a storage charge of £3.00 per lot per day will then come into effect. These charges are payable to Cadogan Tate and are subject to VAT and an insurance surcharge.

Lot Essay

In all, the American financier J. Pierpont Morgan owned four successive steam yachts named Corsair, the second of which, and the one which achieve the most publicised war career, was designed by J. Beavor-Webb and built by Neafie & Levy in 1890. Constructed of steel and rigged as a screw schooner, she was registered at 560 tons gross and measured 241½ feet in length with a 27 foot beam. Powered by a triple expansion engine fired from two Scotch boilers, her single screw gave her a top speed of 17 knots and she proved a highly successful acquisiton for her owner. Morgan treated her like another of his homes and once he was elected Commodore of the New York Yacht Club in 1897, he used her even more frequently than before.

In April 1898, Morgan sold Corsair (II) to the U.S. Navy and she was converted into the dispatch vessel and patrol gunboat U.S.S. Gloucester. Ordered to the Caribbean where the Spanish-American War had just begun, she served with great distinction during the attacks on the harbours at Santiago de Cuba and Guanica (Puerto Rico), and returned home with an enviable record. Apart from a brief spell as a training ship with the New York Naval Militia, she remained in service with the U.S. Navy until they sold her in 1919, shortly after which she was wrecked in a Florida hurricane.

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