Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Bluebird of Chelsea

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Name
  
Bluebird

Class and type
  
motor yacht

Draught
  
4 ft 3 in (1.30 m)

Length
  
16 m

Displacement
  
20,870 kg

Status
  
in service

Beam
  
11 ft (3.4 m)

Launched
  
1931

Weight
  
23.4 tons

Draft
  
1.3 m

Bluebird of Chelsea wwwadlsorgukt1sitesdefaultfilesimagesBlue

Propulsion
  
twin screws & petrol engines,later Perkins diesels

Builder
  
John I. Thornycroft & Company

Allan read s bluebird of chelsea


Bluebird of Chelsea, formerly Bluebird, is a motor yacht originally built for Sir Malcolm Campbell.

Contents

Allan read s bluebird of chelsea


Ownership by Sir Malcolm Campbell

She was built in 1931 by Thornycrofts of Southampton, as a twin petrol-engined wooden carvel-built motor yacht.

Bluebird of Chelsea Bluebird of Chelsea Burnham Yacht Harbour

Campbell sold her after three years, as his motor-racing experience made him wary of the fire risks of petrol engines aboard. He was also highly superstitious and believed a gypsy warning that, "his death would come from the water". In hindsight, this may have applied more to his son Donald.

Dunkirk and World War II

Bluebird of Chelsea Model Boat Display River Cruiser 39Bluebird Of Chelsea39 Flickr

She had three further owners before being requisitioned by the Admiralty at the outbreak of World War II. Soon she was on her way with the flotilla of "little ships" to Dunkirk. Not without two false starts though, first due to engine trouble and then over-crowding. Her return from Dunkirk was even more fraught: after first refilling the fuel tanks with water, then fouling her screws on debris, she returned under tow.

Bluebird of Chelsea Bluebird of Chelsea previously Blue Bird Association of Dunkirk

Her later wartime service was spent in Scotland performing transport work for the RASC, then later on the South coast around Weymouth and Gosport.

Bluebird of Chelsea Bluebird of Chelsea Oostende Voor Anker

Her history after this is sketchy, although she was renamed Blue Finch and found herself on the Atlantic coast of the South of France.

Survival today

Bluebird of Chelsea Bluebird of Chelsea previously Blue Bird Association of Dunkirk

In 1984 the Chelsea art dealer Martin Summers discovered her in France and decided to restore her. Some initial work in France made her apparently fit for a single-engined Channel crossing, but once again another engine failure meant that she returned from France under tow.

Bluebird of Chelsea Bluebird of Chelsea previously Blue Bird Association of Dunkirk

H & T Marine (Hiscock and Titterington) of Poole performed an extensive restoration, to the very highest quality. After re-launch in 1986 she now lies alongside Cadogan Pier in Chelsea. Her condition today continues in this fine tradition.

Modelling

Two 1/12 scale models of Bluebird of Chelsea were featured in a magazine cover article.

A double-sided 1/24 scale plan feature by David Metcalf was included in a Model Boats magazine series in 1989.

References

Bluebird of Chelsea Wikipedia


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