contender designed by William Fife The Herreshoff Manufacturing Company's early work centered on steam-powered vessels, such as SY Stiletto built in 1885 and sold to the US navy in 1887 having been converted into a torpedo boat USS Stiletto). This was small but fast (23 knots). Other sister ships by Herreshoff for the Navy were USS Lightning, USS Cushing, USS Du Port, USS Porter, USS Cushing, USS Twin and USS Talbot. By the 1890s the Herreshoffs turned to the design and construction of yachts for wealthy American clients, including
Jay Gould,
William Randolph Hearst,
John Pierpont Morgan,
Cornelius Vanderbilt III,
Harold Stirling Vanderbilt,
William Kissam Vanderbilt II,
Harry Payne Whitney and
Alexander Smith Cochran. Herreshoff boat production incorporated power tools that increased productivity at a high level of quality, using craftsmen that received the highest boatbuilder wages in the state of Rhode Island. Herreshoff was noted as an innovative sailboat designer of his time. His designs ranged from the
12½, a 16-foot (12½ foot waterline) sailboat for training the children of yachtsmen, to the 144-foot
America's Cup Reliance, with a sail area of 16,000 square feet. He received the first US patent for a sailing
catamaran. The firm built the America's Cup winning Cup yachts
Enterprise (1930), and
Rainbow (1934), designed by
Starling Burgess. Every winning America's Cup Yacht from 1893 to 1934 was built by the Herreshoff yard. The 123-foot
Defender featured
steel-framing,
bronze plating up to the waterline and
aluminum topsides to achieve a lighter and faster boat. This combination of materials had been pioneered in the French fresh-water racing yacht
Vendenesse, which had been described in a
New York Times article and caught the attention of the Vanderbilt Americacup syndicate. In salt water,
Defender was subject to
galvanic corrosion, which limited its durability in water.
Defender won the America's Cup in 1895 over Lord Dunraven's
Valkyrie III, and she was used as an effective trial-horse for Herreshoff's new Cup defender
Columbia in 1899. She was broken up in 1901. Those of the 2,000-plus designs by Herreshoff that survive are sought by connoisseurs of classic yachts. Herreshoff S-Class sailboats, designed in 1919 and built until 1941, are still actively raced in
Narragansett Bay, Buzzards Bay and Western Long Island Sound (
Larchmont, New York). His 12½ design of 1914 is still being built and raced in New England as well. The New York 30 is well regarded as a one-design racer/cruiser. ==World War II==