Cdr. Erick Erskine Campbell Tufnell (1888-1978)
Cdr. Erick Erskine Campbell Tufnell (1888-1978)

The Thermopylae under full sail

Details
Cdr. Erick Erskine Campbell Tufnell (1888-1978)
The Thermopylae under full sail
signed and inscribed ''Thermopylae' (lower left) and 'E.Tufnell' (lower right)
pen and black ink and watercolour heightened with white
14 x 20in. (35.6 x 50.8cm.)

Lot Essay

Thermopylae, registered at 947 tons, was built by Walter Hood of Aberdeen in 1868. A splendid seaboat, she acquired her reputation for speed on her maiden voyage - a record run from Gravesend to Melbourne in 60 days - and thereafter lived up to this promise throughout her career, first in the China tea trade and then on the Australian wool run. Eventually bought by the Portuguese government in 1896 for use as a training ship, she was renamed Pedro Nunes but only survived until 1907 when she was sunk as a derelict. Considered by many to have been the fastest clipper of them all, some experts believe her to have been the fastest commercial sailing vessel every launched. Whatever the truth of these claims, she was, and has remained, one of the legends of the age of sail.

More from Maritime

View All
View All