SYW Boats for Sale

Search our brokerage boats

Latest issue

Latest issue
Fort Lauderdale Show Preview
The show’s best debuts and brokerage yachts.
Andrew Winch
We meet the designer.
Yogi
Proteksan’s Zen 60-metre.

 

Enduring J Class

Only ten J Class yachts were built before the Second World War stopped the movement in its tracks, but in the last 20 years these magnificent sloops have made an incredible comeback. Why has the J Class remained irresistable? David Glenn explains

Sopwith smokes his trademark pipe as he helms Endeavour



















T.OM. Sopwith smokes his trademark pipe as he helms Endeavour in a leg of the 1934 America's Cup

One of the most awe-inspiring sights in modern yachting is the Spirit of Tradition
fleet blasting off the start line at the Antigua Classic Yacht Regatta. It happens every year at the end of April. Chances are it will include at least two J Class yachts, hitting the line on the gun at full tilt, exploding through the cobalt blue Caribbean rollers at
anything up to 12 knots as they charge upwind. Watching Velsheda, Ranger, Shamrock V and Endeavour will bring a lump to your throat, such is the emotion generated by these beautifully proportioned 130ft racing machines with their carbon rigs driving 170 tonnes of steel, aluminium and teak towards the weather mark. It’s heady stuff.

Watching them is one thing; racing quite another matter. In 1999 I was aboard the rebuilt Velsheda, taking part in the Antigua Classic Regatta. I had a single task as part of a four-man team – to tend the forward starboard runner. Nothing else. “Let that go once we’ve tacked and the whole rig comes down,” warned skipper Simon Bolt, as another wall of water thundered down the leeward deck and tried to rip me from the winch.

Dressed in authentic off-white, one-piece cotton boiler-suits, which had to be worn with a stout belt “so there’s something to grab if you go overboard”, they were tough, adrenaline-filled days out. God knows what it was like up forward as massive spinnakers were peeled and headsails weighing a quarter of a tonne were wrestled to the  needle-sharp foredeck as the bow buried itself into the back of yet another wave. Sometimes you daren’t look.

But with the race won or lost, back on the dock the feeling of elation, fuelled by being part of the 36-strong crew aboard one of these extraordinary yachts, triggered a high like no other. You knew you were playing a role, no matter how small, in a legendary story that began in 1930, was halted by World War II and then defied the pundits by opening another chapter 20 years ago. Today with five Js in commission, all in racing trim, and at least two more new examples about to be launched, the J Class phenomenon is back.

Page 1: The Enduring J Class

Page 2: Why is the J Class so popular?

Page 3: Origins of the J Class

Page 4: Tactics - Britain vs USA

Page 5 - J Class resurgence

J CLASS PICTURE GALLERY