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Genesta

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Yacht club
  
Royal Yacht Squadron

Owner(s)
  
Sir Richard Sutton

Skippers
  
John Carter

Length
  
29 m

Beam
  
4.57 m

Nation
  
United Kingdom

Fate
  
broken up in 1900

Launched
  
1884

Displacement
  
127,900 kg

Designer
  
John Beavor-Webb

Genesta httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Builder
  
D. and W. Henderson and Company, Glasgow, Scotland

The escape that killed magician genesta


Genesta was the unsuccessful English challenger in the fifth America's Cup in 1885 against the American defender Puritan.

Contents

Design The cutter Genesta was designed by John Beavor-Webb and built by the D&W Henderson shipyard on the River Clyde in 1884, for owner Sir Richard Sutton, 5th Baronet, of the Royal Yacht Squadron, Cowes, Isle of Wight, England. She was built of oak planking on a steel frame. Genesta was skippered by John Carter. She was measured 81 feet 7 inches (24.87 m), weighing 80 tons.

Sham genesta


Career

After a strong showing in the British yacht races in 1884, Sutton crossed the Atlantic Ocean to New York during the summer 1885 aboard Genesta. Upon arrival, designer Beavor-Webb refused to let anyone see his yacht before the America's Cup race, beginning the tradition of secrecy that has persisted to this day.

After the Cup races, Sutton and Genesta won the Brenton Reef Cup, the Cape May Challenge Cup, and, upon returning to Britain, the first Round Britain Race in 1887, covering the 1,590-mile (2,560 km) course in 12 days, 16 hours, and 59 minutes. Genesta was sold and converted to a yawl by the 1890s, and was finally broken up in 1900.

References

Genesta Wikipedia