Description:

Firth, Richard M.  (British, b. 1954)
American Yacht Vigilant Racing HMY Britannia on the Clyde 1894
Oil on canvas, 24" x 36"  , Signed, inscribed verso

In the summer of 1894, the American yacht Vigilant and the British royal yacht Britannia engaged in a series of exciting races on the Clyde. The races, part of the Clyde Fortnight, drew large crowds and intense public interest, particularly because Vigilant had previously won the America’s Cup and was now competing against Britannia, a highly successful and famous racing cutter. Britannia, built for King Edward VII when Prince of Wales in 1893, was undoubtedly the most famous racing cutter of them all. Hugely successful during her long life, she won 33 firsts out of 39 starts in her maiden season and competed against all the fastest yachts of the day. Sold in 1897—although bought back for cruising in 1901 by which time the Prince of Wales had succeeded to the throne—her second racing career really came into its own when King George V had her refitted for big class competitions in 1921. Under the king’s enthusiastic ownership, Britannia went from success to success. Despite being re-rigged seven times in all, her hull shape was so efficient that she remained competitive almost to the end and was only finally outclassed by the big J-class boats introduced in the mid-1930s. King George V died in 1936 and under the terms of his will, Britannia was stripped of her salvageable gear and scuttled off the southern tip of the Isle of Wight. Vigilant, 96 tons, was designed and built by the great Nat Herreshoff for a wealthy American syndicate headed by C. Oliver Iselin. Ordered in response to Lord Dunraven’s 1892 challenge for the America’s Cup, Vigilant won all three of the Cup races in October 1893 to retain the trophy in one of the closest finishes in the race’s history. After this triumph, she crossed the Atlantic for the 1894 season and there encountered Britannia against which she would sail so often in that golden summer. Many yachtsmen of the day considered her to be Britannia’s most worthy adversary and their duels were still being talked of long after the Prince of Wales had sold his yacht in response to the Kaiser’s obsessive jealousy.

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November 13, 2025 4:00 PM EST
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