STORM FORCE
Classic Boat|April 2020
Kirawan famously won the windy 1936 Bermuda Race – now she’s restored and ready to do it again
CHRIS MUSELER
STORM FORCE
The steady thrush of a radiused, heavily planked bow and hull shouldering into the pitched, green waves of a gale will draw either high anxiety or faith from one 300 miles from any point of land. The crew aboard the cutter had only faith, and not fear during the 1936 Bermuda Race. Strong, southeast winds blew gale force for a week. Ten boats were disabled or withdrew, and most were blown 75 to 100 miles off the rhumb line from Newport. With enough of a forefoot to “keep a grip on the water”, according to The Rudder magazine that year, Kirawan never sagged more than 40 miles off.

The Philip Rhodes-designed 53-footer (16.2m) stood up to what is considered one of the most gruelling races to the ‘Onion Patch’ in history. Her deep hull and broad shoulders, combined with a unique hard dodger called a ‘dog-house’, allowed her crew to stay strong and efficient over 635 miles of ocean racing.

She was third across the line, though she was given time by 27 yachts in the fleet. Just an hour and change behind the much-larger Vamarie and Brilliant, she bested Olin Stephen’s masterpiece Stormy Weather, and won the overall trophy with owner Robert Baruch on the helm. This solidified the boat’s and designer’s reputation. The fractional cutter showcased design features that would have S&S (the pre-eminent yacht designers of the day) looking at the rare sight of a transom that wasn’t theirs.

In the 2000 race, Kirawan’s crew were in that same faithful position as her crew was 64 years before. “It was a close reach in 20 knots,” says yachting historian and author John Rousmaniere of the race. “With a double head rig and a full main, boy, was that boat stable.” But hours later, Kirawan’s planks began to spread open. “She’s a great boat in the Gulfstream. The only problem was she leaked like hell.”

This story is from the April 2020 edition of Classic Boat.

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This story is from the April 2020 edition of Classic Boat.

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