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This summer I bought my son Asher a wooden boat kit. Out of the box, the Sloop was mostly assembled although we still had to install a few parts and tension the rigging. For $39 this is quite a nice kit that can be instrumental in sparking an interest in boats and woodworking in the hearts of young children.

Editor’s note: The role of Christopher Columbus in bringing violence, slavery, forced religious conversion, and disease to the Americas is not something to celebrate. This piece focuses on the technical aspects of his ships and their journey.

There is no field of woodworking that puts wood – our material of celebration and choice, to the most extremes of tests, use, and abuse, as in the discipline of boat building. While wood in buildings and bridges need to carry the load and often protect the structure from the penetration of water from above, in traditional boat structures wood needs to withhold everything together, repel water from all directions and persevere blows and immense forces that are levied at it from all sides.

The art of making a boat from wood had been perfected over the centuries and reached its pinnacle moment in the 19th century.  The talented men (these days we can also see women joining in) that design and construct tall ships had phenomenal knowledge about wood species, what are the most adequate ways to incorporate them in the boat, and how to bring them together in a dependable manner to ensure that the ship is sound throughout the many years it will spend at sea. 

In the age of sail, a ship would have been constructed from different types of wood for each of its components. A strong, yet flexible wood, such as Live Oak for the keel, tall and straight Longleaf pine for the masts, teak for the deck plankings, lots of rot-resistant mahogany all over the place, and insanely hard and erosion resistant Lignum vita for pulley blocks.

I have always been fascinated by ships, their struggle through tempests, and their perseverance against the elements. And there are perhaps no more famous ships in the Western world than those of Christopher Columbus. The story of the three little vessels, led by a voyager who was convinced that he is destined to find China and India across the unknown Atlantic ocean is quite an achievement. Just the sheer technological feat of the Italian-born explorer who navigated kept the ships afloat, and found the way back to the old world, is worthy of examination. And then, from a woodworker’s perspective, there are the fascinating details about the Pinta, Nina, and Santa Maria and the arduous tests at sea that they and their wooden body had to withstand. 

Here is a 2006 documentary by WGBH on the life and travels of Christopher Columbus.

And in this video, we visit a replica of the Santa Maria at Erie’s Tall Ship Festival. 

 

The YouTube sphere is filled with beautiful videos that showcase the ways in which traditional wooden boats are built. Since I watch and subscribe to a few of these channels I thought that it might be interesting to highlight the Sampson Boat Co. channel. This is the brainchild of Leo Sampson Goolden, a boatbuilder, sailor, and writer from Bristol, England, who is restoring/reconstructing a beautiful yacht name Tally Ho in Port Townsend, Washington. Leo and a group of boat enthusiasts have been toiling on this magnificent project for more than three years now. Throughout this reconstruction voyage, this group of men and women have conducted remarkable research, forded immense fabrication challenges, and had to collaborate with craftspeople from near and far. They had to rediscover construction techniques that have been long forgotten and overcome immense difficulties. There is a lot to learn by watching the episodes, not just about woodworking, but also about metalworking and bronze casting and other elements of the long-forgotten trades that denoted an area of human achievements. Thankfully we have Leo Sampson Goolden and his dedicated supporters who preserve these past treasures and pass them on via the digital media to the next generations. 

Please enjoy this digital voyage. 

Tally Ho reborn Chapter one: 

And here is a link to one of the most recent videos that show lots of heavy lifting woodworking and the final stages of constructing a massive Scarf joint.


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Showing 5 comments
  • Rick Jackson

    Another example of a bunch of spineless “leaders”. Why don’t you folks keep to wood working and stop the preaching. As an aside, I didn’t want your software to save my password, becausr I won’t be needing it after reading this this craziness from a magazine that I used to admire.

  • nonpcwoodworker

    Well said Book Holder, I have been worried about the direction of Popular Woodworking since the editorial staff changes, and this editorial comment confirms some of my suspicions.

  • Robert Kruse

    I couldn’t agree more with the above comment. Keep YOUR politics out of it.

    • BLM_ACAB

      Seems the more “spineless” course would be to turn tail and deprive yourself of the substance of this and other articles about the craft. It’s pretty troubling to observe how thin-skinned and needlessly combative many woodworkers get about issues of social justice, which is vital in all communities. Demanding to be spared difficult HISTORICALLY VERIFIABLE truths about woodworking-related subject matter is weak and weird and unbecoming of good craftspeople. As irrelevant as it might seem to YOU to be reminded that, say, Columbus was not the sympathetic figure many grew up being taught he was, ignoring that history alienates woodworkers and potential woodworkers whose lives are impacted by his real legacy. Being able to acknowledge the connection between this article and that legacy, and to risk wounding the misplaced pride of reactionary readers takes far more conviction and strength than whining about having your feelings hurt.

      Great article! Might check out kits like this for my own kids. They seem very accessible.

  • Book Holder

    Dear Editor,

    I take great offense with your rhetoric of Christopher Columbus’ “role” as the “…bring[er of] violence, slavery, forced religious conversion, and disease to the Americas”! He was simply looking for an alternative route to the Far East, with the only way to pay for the endeavor being to engage in the mores of the day. Christopher was just a hapless player in a much harder and meaner time, but he was also rich with an invaluable possession … a dream!

    There was already plenty of ‘violence’ around the world, which was a key reason he sailed West. Also, anyone who doesn’t appreciate the homogeneous (assimilated) society we enjoy in America today only has to look to Europe’s constant bickering and wars to realize that, yes, a civil society wants others to try to join in their civil society. We can argue on the difficulty of doing so, even today, and more so in cultures and practices that were in effect more than 500 years ago.

    For example, slavery was a common practice in European and Eastern cultures, a source of wealth for that time and mindset, and still in practice today, though to a much smaller degree. You should know that indigenous inhabitants of the Americas engaged in tribal warfare and the taking of slaves; a budding mentality that grew as they slowly emerged from the ‘stone age.’ Put simply, man desires to covet property and wealth—a natural inclination that must be tempered!

    Thus, Christopher’s legacy, if one would consider on it for any length of time, is having opened exploration of the Americas, the spirit of adventure and promise of great wealth, and the communion with power brokers who could help one in achieving their wildest dreams. Many children of my era ruminated on these ideas, which had a galvanizing effect on our young psyches.

    Of course in those days, there was also the presence of great sacrifice and the uncertainty of losing one’s life. Though only a small player, Christopher’s inspired vision grew much greater than himself, which should be, yes, celebrated as the ‘glass half full’ rather than dwelling on the miasma of the lesser of man’s soul!

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