Clara
Vessel numberHV000544
(not assigned)HT12148
Builder
Thomas Williams
Date1892
DimensionsVessel Dimensions: 8.84 m x 8.53 m x 2.44 m x 0.61 m (29 ft x 28 ft x 8 ft x 2 ft)
Terms
- Hobart
- substantially restored hull
- substantially modified deck
- substantially modified superstructure
- substantially restored layout
- substantially restored rigging
- substantially modified sails
- substantial modified gearbox
- substantially modified shaft
- yacht
- Tasmania
- internal
- lead
- non-operational
- decked with cockpit
- timber plywood
- oar
- tiller
- timber
- batten seam
- monohull
- round bottom
- full keel
- dagger board
- transom rudder
- auxiliary motor
- inboard
- diesel
- cutter
- gaff
- synthetic
- type/use
- sport/recreation
CLARA was intended to be a cruiser but was raced from time to time as well, and results show it won events in the early 1900s. In 1908 it was lengthened by 1.2 metres, (4 feet), and further results show CLARA winning or gaining a place in a number of weekend races and regatta events.
Around 1915 it is understood CLARA was converted to a motor launch with an enclosed cabin over the forward half of the cockpit, but seemed also to have small rig retained, or else added very soon after the conversion. It competed in a motor boat race in 1916.
WD Peacock died in 1921 and CLARA was sold as an auxiliary yacht with a 12 hp motor in 1922. No ownership details have been found, and CLARA is advertised again in the early 1930s, but it is not certain it was sold then either. At the close of the Second World War it was owned by a returned serviceman called Mr Clapstick, who sold it to JD 'Dick' Lucas in 1948. His son Jim became owner when Dick Lucas died, and kept it in the family until 1979. Douglas Hornsby then bought CLARA and it became part of the Vintage Boat Club of Tasmania. Michael Johnson bought it from Hornsby in 2002. The current owner acquired CLARA in 2010.
It has had a Wolverine and two Morris Navigator petrol engines installed during its different periods of ownership, but the original engine is unknown. From evidence of earlier images, a wheelhouse was added to the cabin prior to 1948, just clearing the boom from the small mainsail it carried. It has been in this curious and perhaps awkward configuration for some decades, but in 2012 the current owner is embarking on a significant restoration. When relaunched, CLARA will be a half decked centreboard sailing yacht again.
SignificanceCLARA is a yacht built in Tasmania in 1892. It underwent a conversion to a motor launch in about 1915, and has since remained as a motor launch and motor sailer with a small mast and rig fitted. It is one of the earliest extant yachts in Tasmania and Australia. In 2012 a project is underway to return the vessel to its earlier yacht configuration.
1914