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Enlarge Baltimore Harvey Clipper Limited 36
Ships fully assembled & comes with a wood display stand

Baltimore Harvey Clipper Limited 36"

Item:B1603C
Dimensions:36" L x 11" W x 28" H
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Baltimore Harvey Clipper Limited 36" Description

    SOLD FULLY ASSEMBLED

    Ready for Immediate Display - Not a Model Ship kit 

    Capture the spirit and pride of the renowned Baltimore clipper ships famously used by traders, merchants, smugglers, privateers and pirates alike with the museum-quality features and finely-crafted details in this Limited Edition scale replica tall ships model. Through devoted attention to historical accuracy, every detail on these tall ship models authentically matches Baltimore clippers of the era surrounding the War of 1812. Serving as the centerpiece of a meeting room, office or den, or perhaps setting a proud nautical tone for a corporate boardroom or family living room, these Limited Edition model tall ships are certain to inspire an indomitable winning spirit. 

    36" Long x 11" Wide x 28" High (1:45 scale)

    • Built from scratch by master artisans
    • Individual wooden planks used in plank-on-frame hull construction
    • High quality woods include cherry, birch, maple and rosewood
    • Museum Quality features not available in other model tall ships under $3,000 or any kit
      • Real copper-strip plated hull (not painted on) like the actual Cutty Sark (done to prevent shipworms from destroying the wood hull)
      • Greatest attention paid to every detail
    • Extensive rigging featuring more than 100 blocks and deadeyes
    • Amazing Details, including:
      • Planked deck with nail holes
      • Authentic scale lifeboats
      • Numerous deck and hull details, such as painted railings, capstans and other deck features, detailed deckhouses plus much more
      • Cannon accurately tied to deck to reduce recoil
      • Additional nautical items such as cannon balls, barrels, rope coils and more cover the decks
      • Masterfully stitched, heavy canvas sails hold shape and do not wrinkle
      • Taut rigging with varied thread gauge and color with scores of triple deadeyes
    • Meticulous painting accurately matches actual Baltimore clippers of the era
    • Limited production run only 50 of these tall model ships
    • Certificate of Authenticity individually numbered and signed by HMS Founder and Master Builder Richard Norris
    • Wooden display base features four arched dolphins
      • Pictured with marble base (available for purchase)
    • Extensive research of original plans, historical drawings and paintings as well as actual photographs ensures the highest possible accuracy

Baltimore Harvey Clipper Limited 36" History

    The Baltimore Clipper is one of the best known sailing vessels in existence today, with its rakish silhouette distinctive from a distance. The Baltimore Clipper has been involved in privateering, piracy, smuggling, slave trading, and there are a number of modernized Clippers sailing today on both coasts of America.

    Originally known as a Virginia-built boat, the fast and lean craft that was built at Fells Point and other locations evolved over time, emphasizing speed, weatherly sailing abilities, and handling over everything else. A Baltimore Clipper type can best be defined by extremely tall and raking masts, very little rigging, low freeboard, great rake at both the stem and stern, with the keel featuring a great amount of drag from front to rear. A Baltimore Clipper features a great deal of deadrise, and slack bilges. They had a decent amount of beam for their length and were flush-decked for easy handling of guns and sails.

    Influenced by the French luggers and their refined construction methods, as well as the deep and powerful Bermuda sloops with their incredible windward abilities, the early Baltimore Clippers were used by the American navy during the Revolution with great success. They were so far in advance of their times that there was no comparison with other vessels of the same time. Whenever the Royal Navy managed to capture a Clipper, the Royal Surveyors would take their lines off for study and use them in building the Royal Navy's series of experimental brigs.

    It was the War of 1812 that made the Baltimore Clipper what it is today. Over time the hullform became more and more evolved, with a finer entry and more powerful midsections. The rig evolved as well, with the basic design being a two-masted topsail schooner able to spread a massive amount of sail, with her rigging supported primarily by her massive bowsprit and bobstay. An unfortunate trend with the later types was to pitchpole or capsize at anchor. Running with the wind blowing from behind, the sails would press the Baltimore Clipper's bow down farther and farther. With her sharp lines forward the bow wouldn't provide enough buoyancy to counteract the force of the sails, and the ship would be driven bodily under. There was a recorded incident in the Royal Navy of an experimental brig built along Baltimore Clipper lines that pitchpoled (capsized end over end) while running in a gale.

    The slave trade became the new calling for the Baltimore Clipper after the War of 1812 left a number of privateers partially-built with no owners in sight. Because the design had evolved so far during the war, it was now incapable of carrying bulk cargo in any large amount, rendering it useless as a freighter. However, because of the pressure on nations to stop the slave trade, it was no longer possible to use large vessels for slaving, as they were too easy to catch and took too long to gather enough slaves for a full cargo. The Baltimore Clipper, now even more extreme, was perfect. It was found that slaves did not strain or stress the hull as a bulk cargo would, and the ship type launched forth on another evolutionary cycle.

    As a slaver, the Baltimore Clipper was built to sail as well as it could in the weather conditions of the slaving routes with the amount of weight usually carried, with speed emphasized over all. The interior of the hull was obviously different, now specialized for slaving, while the hull went through an increase of deadrise, draft, sharper waterlines for more speed, larger masts and yards for more sail area, and lighter weight. Because the Baltimore Clipper was no longer the pursuer in engagements, she became specialized for sailing under the most favorable of conditions, and more extreme in form and execution.

    It was this extreme nature that spelled the end for the Baltimore Clipper as a commercial vessel. With no wars calling for privateers, and the slave trade forbidden, the Baltimore Clipper had no usefulness. She was too sharp and fine to carry a cargo, and too extreme for comfortable yachting. A few were used in the opium trade, and most of the Baltimore Clipper traits influenced the design of pilot boat schooners and other fast vessels.

    The design underwent a revival during the 1970s, with a replica built to the lines of Chasseur, one of the largest and most successful of the Baltimore Clippers, a ship that, during the War of 1812, claimed to hold all of England under blockade. The original Pride of Baltimore was a successful ship, but she met a tragic end in 1986 during a white squall. A modern rendition of the Baltimore Clipper type was commissioned, and the Pride of Baltimore II was born, using current wood boat-building techniques. She is still sailing today, although it must be noted that she suffered a partial dismasting at one point when her bobstay snapped, letting her bowsprit break which caused the foremast to go by the board.

    Other topsail schooners built along Baltimore Clipper lines were Lynx and Amistad, and Californian on the western coast. Howard Chapelle theorized that built to modern standards, with intelligent use of ballast and sail cutting, the Baltimore Clipper type would create a modern yacht of incredible speed and seaworthiness.


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