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    One response to “26′ Tew Gaff Cutter (1937) – MARY HELEN”

    1. My name is David Tew , a distant American relation of Helen and John’s. It seems from your write-up that you’ve read Percy Mitchell’s book. I was sent a copy by a fellow who manages a website for Laurent Giles Vertue class sloops. I enjoyed it very much. He sent along this somewhat catty remembrance with the book:

      “In 1936 Jack Laurent Giles’s staff included a draughtsman called John Tew (who, it is thought, may have produced the lines for the Vertue on Giles’s behalf) and who designed a gaff cutter, slightly larger than Wanderer II, for himself and his fiancée Helen. The boat was built by Percy Mitchell in Port Mellon and christened Mary Helen. Over sixty years later Helen Tew famously sailed her across the Atlantic with her son.

      I met Helen Tew several times many years ago, when I started my research for the Hiscocks’ biography, and was delighted by her fiesty spirit. However, she also had a rebellious side, (as her father knew), and felt rather bitter that ‘her’ John worked for Jack Giles as an employee, rather than running his own show. She thought he was far too good for that, and indeed I think he did move on to become the yard manager at Napiers, the yard that built Eric Hiscock’s Wanderer II, whilst Andrillot was building at Moody’s. Anyway, she invented this myth about John drawing Andrillot’s lines but I don’t believe a word of it and have never seen the slightest proof that this was the case. She even claimed that her John came up with the ‘signature’ raised sheerstrake, but I think Giles is more likely to have absorbed this ‘pilot cutter’ characteristic from studying the working boat Dyarchy and when he lifted the lines of Jolie Brise in 1928. The boat he did draw, Mary Helen, is an interesting design, but much more of a floating cottage than the Vertues. Her midship section is quite different, much more beamy and the built-up topsides give the boat a completely different nature, in performance and looks. Like Helen’s father’s boat, I always think she looks a bit clunky but has a very spacious saloon for a boat of her length.

      Percy Mitchell did built one Vertue, called Island Spell V 30. Her ‘early’ low coachroof was replaced by a much later ‘standard’ coachroof and long doghouse. It’s inevitable, I suppose, that out of over 150 wooden Vertues that some would be ‘updated’ from time to time. There is a recent trend on your side of the Atlantic to do the opposite now, as two Vertues have had their 1960’s coachroofs and doghouses replaced with ‘retro’ pre-war styled, simple, low deck structures, although some still appear to run for’d of the mast.”

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