Dorade (yacht)

S/Y Dorade 2014 Bermuda Race
History
Name: Dorade
Owner: Roderick Stephens, Sr, New York, United States
Port of registry:  USA
Ordered: 1929
Designer: Olin Stephens of Sparkman & Stephens
Builder: Minneford Yacht Yard, City Island, New York
Cost: $28,000
Yard number: S&S 07
Laid down: 1929
Launched: 1930
Homeport: Newport Beach, California
Status: Active
General characteristics [1]
Displacement: 14.75 tons
Ballast: 18,000 lbs. Lead
Length: 52.0 ft (15.8 m)
Waterline: 37 feet 3 inches (11.35 m)
Beam: 10 feet 3 inches (3.12 m)
Draught: 8.0 ft (2.4 m)
Propulsion: 1 x Perkins: Diesel 40 hp (30 kW)
Rig: Yawl
Sail plan: 1,100 sq ft (100 m2)
Dorade was built 1929–1930 by the Minneford Yacht Yard in City Island, New York

Dorade is a yacht designed in 1929 by Olin Stephens of Sparkman & Stephens and built 1929–1930 by the Minneford Yacht Yard in City Island, New York.

Dorade 1931.

Dorade went on to place 2nd in the Bermuda Race later that year. The crew for its first race received the All-Amateur Crew Prize. However, it would a win in be the Transatlantic Race that would bring the boat its name. She completed a race that takes an estimated 3–4 weeks the race in just 17 days, earning her crew a parade upon the ship's return and a reception for Olin Stevenson hosted by the mayor of New York.

Olin Stephens, the designer, was skipper through 1932 when he handed the boat to his brother, Rod Stephens.[2] Led by Rod, Dorade sailed to victory in the 1932 Bermuda Race.[3] From Bermuda, Dorade sailed back to Norway, down to Cowes, England, and finally back to America after winning the Fastnet Race. The victory of the 1932 Fastnet Race was of substantial significance given the unusually severe weather, several ships feared missing as well as one recorded drowning among the events that unfolded.

In 2013, Dorade took first place (after applying her handicap) in the Trans-Pacific race that she had won in 1936.[4]

Major races

Dorade raced from the east coast 1930 through 1935, moving to San Francisco for several years, then on to Seattle in the late 1930s. She returned to the bay area from 1979 to 1984. Dorades home berth is now Newport Beach, California.

Restoration

See also

Sources

Footnotes

References

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