1934 Starling Burgess 35' (10.67 m)
Stonington, Maine, United States
LITTLE DIPPER
Little Dipper is a rare package for yacht of her vintage: stately, pedigree, exceptionally beautiful, but still comfortable, fast, seaworthy, and easily handled. She is offered for sale in excellent structural and aesthetic condition following an ’09-’10 refit.
- Antique and Classics / Cutter
- Sail
- Used
- Diesel
- Wood Hull
Description
Little Dipper
1934, Starling Burgess Cutter, 41’ LOA
Little Dipper is a 41’ LOA Starling Burgess cutter built by Joel Johnson in Bridgeport, CT in 1934. With her relatively plumb bow, slack bilges and sweeping sheer Little Dipper could easily be mistaken for a 19th century English cutter but her dynamic hull shape, beautifully tapered ballast keel, high ballast-displacement ratio and Bermudan rig identify her as a thoroughly modern, forward thinking 1930s yacht.
She was drawn at the height of Burgess’s career, during the downtime between the design of successful J-class America’s cup defenders Enterprise (1930) and Rainbow (1934). Burgess likely foresaw the eventual end of the big Universal Rule race boats on which he’d built his reputation and was already doing his homework, working on moderately sized, blue-water capable, cruiser-racers, when he was asked to draw Little Dipper.
The commission came from Buckminster Fuller, an eccentric 1930s futurist author, architect, designer, and inventor. The story goes that she was part of a ploy to get Burgess, one of the most talented aeronautical engineers of the era, to work on his revolutionary, aerodynamic Dymaxion concept car. Ploy or not Little Dipper was built and her owner and designer’s fascination with aeronautics is fully evident on close inspection.
Fuller’s ploy worked and Burgess went to work for the Dymaxion corporation in 1932. A boatbuilder named Joel Johnson began construction on Little Dipper in 1933 under Burgess’s supervision and at the very same Bridgeport, CT factory where the Dymaxion car was being developed.
Her construction was interrupted for a time, presumably because Burgess ran off with and eventually married the Dymaxion project patron Nannie Dale Biddle, much to Fuller’s chagrin. Little Dipper was eventually moved to City Island, finished off, fitted with an Alden designed rig and launched in 1934.
Fuller sailed her for a few years then sold her in 1936 to Elihu Root, a member of the America’s cup J-class Enterprise syndicate and patron of Burgess’s. She was later owned a man named Richard Baum who sailed Little Dipper extensively (engineless and mostly singlehanded) between New England and the Caribbean and documented it in his book By the Wind. As Llewelyn Howland noted in his biography of Starling Buress, for Baum, Little Dipper proved herself to be an almost perfect vehicle for fast, safe, handy and comfortable sailing and passage making.”
Little Dipper’s current owner found her languishing in Liberty, NJ in 2006, purchased her and brought her north to Brooklin, ME where she underwent a significant refit in ’09-’10 with the help of Eric Dow’s Boat Shop (see Refit Notes at the end of this listing description). She has cruised the Maine coast and been stored at Billings Marine in Stonington, ME ever since.
Little Dipper is a rare package for yacht of her vintage: stately, pedigree, exceptionally beautiful, but still comfortable, fast, seaworthy, and easily handled. She is offered for sale in excellent structural and aesthetic condition following an ’09-’10 refit with a new interior, a recently reconditioned Yanmar from Billings Diesel (2012), and a beautiful new set of Gambell and Hunter sails. A 2021 survey is available on request.
Data Sheet
Official Number: 1056757
LOA: 41' (12.50 Meters)
Type: Sail- Used
Year: 1934
Fuel Type: Diesel
Hull Material: Wood
Full Details
Principle Dimensions and Information
Designer: W. Starling Burgess
Builder: Joel Johnson
Year Built: 1934
LOA: 41' 0”
LOD: 35’ 0”
LWL: 28’ 0”
Beam: 8' 9"
Draft: 6’ 0”
Rig Type: Marconi Cutter
Auxiliary Propulsion: Yanmar diesel, Model 3GM, Horsepower 27HP
Fuel Capacity: 15 Gallons
Freshwater Capacity: 70 Gallons (approximate)
Blackwater Capacity: 16 Gallons
Hull and Deck Construction
Full keel with keel hung rudder underwater configuration
Lead ballast keel
White Oak hull structural members (stem, backbone, deadwood, sternpost, frames, floors, timbers, etc.)
Spanish Cedar planking above the waterline
Atlantic Cedar planking below the waterline
Bronze fasteners
New deck beams and 2-layer marine plywood deck over-laid with Dynel cloth set in Epoxy with painted (Awlgrip) finish.
Varnished Spanish Cedar cap rails, cabin sides, cabin back, bridge deck face, cockpit coamings steering chest hatch companionway sliding hatch, butterfly hatch and forward cabin hatch.
Finishes: Topsides: White, Deck: Buff-Tan, Bottom: Red Anti-Fouling
Deck Hardware
All hardware cast or fabricated bronze
Bronze sheet and docking cleats
Bronze dock line chocks
Bronze fairleads
Bronze stem fittings, chain plates and back stay tang
Bronze self-tacking staysail traveler
Bronze main sheet traveler
Bronze and shell block turning blocks
Interior Accommodations
Galley area to port and starboard of companionway
Two-burner Luke stove to port.
Stainless steel sink basin with manually supplied with cold water from bronze hand pump
Settee seating / berths port and starboard with storage in shelves and lockers above and outboard of the settee’s.
Cabin heater at foot of starboard berth.
Berths port and starboard in forward cabin
Marine toilet and holding tank on centerline forward between forward cabin berths.
Lighting. Ventilalation and Heating
On-deck navigational lighting
Gimbaled kerosene lamps (4ea)
Forward cabin opening hatch
Main cabin butterfly hatch
Companionway hatch
Bronze opening ports in cabin sides and front (3 ea.)
Bronze dorade vent cowl aft
Enameled solid fuel stove / cabin heater with Charlie noble exhaust chimney
Propulsion and Steering
Yanmar 3GM 27HP, fresh water cooled, diesel engine – reconditioned by Billings Diesel, installed in 2012
Yanmar ignition panel with tachometer, kill switch and audible engine alarms
Racor water separator type fuel filter.
Engine access from main cabin and cockpit.
Separate control levers for throttle and transmission
Stainless steel propellor shaft
Two-bladed bronze folding propellor (offset to starboard)
Original Edson bronze worm gear steering system
Eight spoke bronze steering wheel with bare teak spoke handles
Electrical System
12-Volt DC ship’s systems
Deep cycle Group 24 Batteries (2ea)
Rotary battery selector switch
DC circuit panel for control of individual electrical needs
Battery charging by engine alternator
DC outlet (1ea)
Spars and Rigging
Double spreader, masthead rigged, Marconi cutter configuration.
Solid Sitka Spruce laminated mast and boom
Douglas Fir staysail club
Douglas Fir bowsprit
Harken roller-furling for outer jib
1x19 stainless steel wire standing rigging (shrouds and stays) with bronze turnbuckle adjusters
New jumper stays, whisker stays and bobstay (2012-2013)
Recent running rigging (halyards and sheets)
Merriman primary winches
Sails and Canvas
Gamble and Hunter main sail (2018)
Gamble and Hunter Staysail (2018)
Gamble and Hunter Yankee (2018)
Above Gamble and Hunter sails in new condition
Older suit of Nat Wilson sails in fair condition
Mainsail cover
Interior cushions
Electronics and Navigation
Raymarine C80 chart plotter on companionway swing arm mount
Standard Horizon HX290 handheld VHF radio
Ritchie Power Damp helm compass
Tankage
1 x 15 gal. Polyethylene fuel tank under the cockpit
2 x (30-40 gal. estimated) Aluminum freshwater tanks under port and starboard berths
1 x 16 gal. Stainless steel black water tank in bow
Domestic Systems
P.E. Luke Heritage 2 burner propane stove
Columbia stove works solid fuel stove / cabin heater
Manually operated marine toilet with holding tank head
Ground Tackle
Fisherman style anchor
Appropriate chain and rode combination
Traditional, manually operated anchor windlass with cat heads port and starboard.
Dewatering Equipment
SPXFlow 220 GPH electric / automatic bilge pump
Bilge pump control switch by starboard companionway
Safety Equipment
Type 1 PFD’s (3 ea.)
Fire extinguisher, Type BC (1 ea.)
Handheld bugle type horn
2009-10 Refit Details
Replaced all but two deck beams
New marine plywood deck
Deck overlaid with Dynel cloth set in epoxy with painted (Awlgrip) finish
New sheer strakes
New bulwarks
New mast partners
Re-planked below the waterline
Keel bolt inspections (found good)
Replaced frame ends and sistered where necessary (21 frames)
Replaced aft end of cockpit house
Replaced cockpit and cockpit coaming
Replaced Sampson posts
Replaced wheel box hatch and forward hatch
Restored the original galley aft interior layout
Replaced ceiling planking from the midships bulkhead aft
All spars stripped of hardware, stripped to bare wood and revarnished with 9 coats
New Douglas Fir bowsprit and associated standing rigging
Listing MLS by Yachtr.com
Contact Us
For more information about this yacht please contact John Maxwell.
We look forward to working with you!
Brooklin Boat Yard
Center Harbor Road
Brooklin ME 04616 USA
Phone: 1-207-359-2236
Email: info@brooklinboatyard.com
Website: https://www.brooklinboatyard.com
Founded in 1960 by Joel White, Brooklin Boat Yard combines the longstanding tradition of Maine craftsmanship with modern technology to create world-class yachts that push the envelope of performance and grace.
John Maxwell
Broker
Center Harbor Road
Brooklin ME 04616 USA
Office: 1-207-359-2193
Email: brokerage@brooklinboatyard.com
John joined Brooklin Boat Yard in 2004. Using his expertise and experience in used boat brokerage sales he established a successful used boat brokerage operation. Also, in 2004 John started the development of a racing program for the Brooklin Boat Yard built 76’ Spirit of Tradition Goshawk resulting in podium finishes in the 2005 Marblehead to Halifax Race, the 2006 Newport to Bermuda Race and equally impressive performances in classic yacht regattas here in Maine and Southern New England.
John continues to race in local mixed fleet races and Classic Yacht Regattas mostly on boats built by Brooklin Boat Yard and notably as “the world’s oldest bowman” on the Brooklin Boat Yard built Eggemoggin 47 Lynnette from 2013 to 2021 and occasional guest appearances on sister-ship Lark.
Today, John continues to manage and expand the brokerage operation but can just as likely be seen out in the yard or on the water helping the rigging and yard crews in the busy Spring and Fall launching and hauling seasons.