Casilda
Vessel numberHV000781
Sail NumberV10
Date1915
DimensionsVessel Dimensions: 14.17 m × 1.62 m, 19.31 tonnes (46.5 ft × 5.3 ft, 19 tons)
Terms
- original hull
- partially restored deck
- original superstructure
- original layout
- partially restored rigging
- substantially modified sails
- substantially restored gearbox
- substantially restored shaft
- Fishing vessel
- Hobart
- Tasmania
- timber
- timber planked
- timber planked
- monohull
- overhanging stem
- overhanging transom
- round bottom
- batten seam
- full keel
- dagger board
- keel hung rudder
- internal
- lead
- full decked
- wheel
- yawl
- synthetic
- timber
- auxiliary motor
- diesel
- operational
- floating
- fishing
- type/use
- builder
- vessel use
CASILDA spent about 60 years as a commercial fishing vessel initially on Tasmanian East Coast mostly scale fish and cray fishing and then from the 1950s it worked in Storm Bay and the D'Entrecasteaux Channel with scallop fishing.
Sold out of the trade the late 1970s it has since become a yacht but remains completely unaltered from the fishing boat configuration. CASILDA was an early member of the now defunct Vintage Boat Club of Tasmania. A new lower mast was fitted in the mid-1980s following a dismasting in 1983.
SignificanceCASILDA is a wooden fishing vessel built in Tasmania in 1915. it was built by Walter and James Rattenbury at Dunalley near Port Arthur for their own use as a fishing boat. It was operated commercially for six decades, and then became an auxiliary yacht. However, CASILDA’s fishing boat configuration remains completely intact and unaltered, and CASILDA is probably the most authentic of its type extant.
c 1880
c 1934