George Lennox Watson

George Lennox Watson

GLW Portrait

Portrait from an Ogden's Cigarette Card
Born 30 October 1851
Glasgow
Died 12 November 1904 (1904-11-13) (aged 53)
Glasgow
Nationality British
Occupation Architect
Practice G.L. Watson & Co.
Design HMY Britannia, Shamrock II, Rainbow,

George Lennox Watson (30 October 1851 – 12 November 1904) was a Scottish naval architect. He was born in Glasgow, son of Thomas Lennox Watson, a doctor at the Glasgow Royal Infirmary, and grandson of Sir Timothy Burstall, engineer and entrant at the 1829 Rainhill Trials.

Early life

As a young boy in the late 1850s Watson often spent holidays at Inverkip on the Firth of Clyde, where through his friendship the local skipper William Mackie he developed his passion for yachts and resolved to make naval architecture his living. At the age of 16 Watson became an apprentice draughtsman at the shipyard of Robert Napier & Son in Glasgow.[1]

Career

During his training at Napier’s yard Watson was at the early stages of using theories of hydrodynamics as influences in yacht design. After practising at J&A Inglis, Shipbuilders, in 1873 (at the age of 22) Watson set out to found the world's first yacht design office dedicated to small craft.[2] His first design, Peg Woffington featured an unorthodox reverse bow which undoubtedly drew attention to the young designer.[3] Successes followed with yachts such as Vril and Verve which were built for a growing client base of wealthy Clyde industrialists. Notable examples include the Coats family of Paisley and the Allan Brothers of the famous Scotch-Canadian shipping line.

Watson's successes on the proving ground of the Clyde soon attracted larger commissions from more high-profile clients such as the Vanderbilt family, Earl of Dunraven, Sir Thomas Lipton, the Rothschild family, Charles Lindsay Orr-Ewing, Whitaker Wright and Wilhelm II, German Emperor. Commissioning amongst others, four America's Cup challengers and the largest sailing schooner of its time, Rainbow.

Amongst his work in yacht designs Watson designed extensively for the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) with his boats becoming renowned for their seaworthiness and durable qualities. In 1887 Watson became chief consulting Naval Architect to the RNLI,[4] a position which G.L. Watson & Co. Directors would fulfil through to the late 1960s.[5]

Watson designed 432 yachts, lifeboats and other vessels during his 32-year career, an output which averages one new build launched every 3.5 weeks. Of those he designed the following are particularly noteworthy.

Steam yachts

Sailing yachts

Britannia

Watson's most famous design was commissioned by Edward Prince of Wales, subsequently King Edward VII, and had a long and successful career passing to his son King George V. HMY Britannia remains the most successful racing yacht of all time, with a racing career spanning 43 years.[6]

The America's Cup

Watson's involvement in the America's Cup was long running and manifested itself in four cup challengers; the Thistle for the Scottish syndicate headed by Sir James Bell,[7] two yachts named Valkyrie for Lord Dunraven, and Shamrock II for Sir Thomas Lipton.

Watson's yachts were met with a range of successes and competed in typically controversial Cup contests but never managed to win the trophy. Thistle was sold to Kaiser Willem of Germany; Valkyrie II was sunk in a collision with the cutter Satanita (Joseph M. Soper, 1893) on the Clyde.[8] Both the large cutters, Valkyrie III & Shamrock II were broken up following their defeats.

Personal life

In the early years of his adult life Watson was devoted his company as well as close friends and family. He had little time for courting and it was not until his later years that Watson courted and married Ms Lovibond of Putney, London.[9] Their wedding was described as "a gathering of the most fashionable people in society".[10] Only 18 months after their wedding, and shortly after the birth of his daughter, Ellen Marjorie (Madge). Watson succumbed to "Coronary Asthma" and died on 12 November 1904, aged 53.

Legacy

As sole partner at the time of his death, Watson entrusted the company to the hands of his Chief Draughstman James Rennie Barnett,[11] who went on to design the firm's largest and most famous luxury steam yachts for the social elite.[12] Barnett also furthered Watson's lifeboat work successfully developing the world's first self-righting lifeboat.[13]

Subsequently, the firm passed through the hands of three further managing directors, before a brief hiatus in the early 1990s. The firm is now based in Liverpool and is engaged in the design, restoration and replica builds of large yachts. The company still holds the original design archive which was temporarily housed in the Mitchell Library in Glasgow.

References

  1. Leather, J., 'Watson 120 Years of Leadership in Yacht Design: The G.L. Watson Story', Classic Boat, January 1993.
  2. RINA Membership Applications, RINA Archive
  3. George Lennox Watson (1894), "The Evolution of Yacht Design", Yachting Volume I, Badminton Library of Sports and Pastimes, Longmans, Green & Co, London, pp. 50–101
  4. Watson, G.L., Transactions of the Institute of Naval Architects, 1890.
  5. Cameron, I., Riders of the Storm, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2002
  6. Irving, J., The Kings Britannia, Seeley Service & Co. Ltd, London, 1937.
  7. Paterson, L., The Auld Mug: The Scots and the America's Cup, 1st edition, Neil Wilson Publishing, Glasgow, 2007.
  8. "The yacht Valkyrie sunk" (PDF). New York Times. 6 July 1894.
  9. Leather, J., 'Watson 120 Years of Leadership in Yacht Design: The G.L. Watson Story', Classic Boat, January 1993.
  10. The Times, May 1902
  11. J. R. Barnett, Last Will and Testament, National Archives of Scotland.
  12. Barnett, J.R., Smart, G.W, Stewart, J., Fifty Years of Yacht Designing, University Press, Glasgow, 1924.
  13. Barnett, J. R., Modern motor-Lifeboats of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution, 1st Edition, Blackie, Glasgow, 1933

Bibliography

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