oldfrank
Well-Known Member
Joggled timbers are/were steamed and cut to fit the plank lands inside clinker boats. The process is fairly unusual - it implies building the hull 'back to front' - i.e. you have to put the timbers in beside the moulds before the planking, instead of planking up around moulds and then fitting the timbers last. Certainly this would make an open beach boat hull more resistant to the 'wringing' effect that could be imposed by anything up to three masts. Conversely, the absence of gaps around the lands to let the water out increases the tendency to rot and makes the timbers virtually impossible to replace in later life.
In these parts, most surviving vesells with joggled timbers were built by the Beeching family at Great Yarmouth. James Beeching came from a Bexhill family with smuggling connections and built fast boats at Hasting until he went into bankruptcy in 1816. He then moved across the water to Flushing, where he continued to build fast boats that at least owed some of their income to smuggling. I've no idea what she looked like but my personal favourite amongst his Flushing boats was christened Big Jane. He eventually returned to Great Yarmouth and began to build beach yawls and fishing boats and eventually produced a lifeboat for Capt. Manby of Gorleston. Beeching went on to design a lifeboat that won the Duke of Northumberland's £100 prize in 1850 and subsequently quite a number of 'Norfolk & Suffolk' type lifeboats etc. All that have survived had 'joggled timbers' and this includes vessels built by his sons at the Gt. Yarmouth yard that became Beeching Bros and closed in 1919.
Now for my question. Does anyone have any history on joggled timbers? It doesn't seem to have a local base - could this be something that Beeching imported from either Hastings or Flushing? Any clues?
Elderly But Slightly Perplexed Frank
PS. John Leather doesn't mention joggled timbers in his book 'Clinker Boatbuilding', althought the oracle at the bottom of the cliff says that Howard I. Chapelle does in his 1946 work entitled 'Boatbuilding'. Might it be a construction method that died out in the UK but continued in the far-flung provinces? Grateful for any advice on this conundrum.
In these parts, most surviving vesells with joggled timbers were built by the Beeching family at Great Yarmouth. James Beeching came from a Bexhill family with smuggling connections and built fast boats at Hasting until he went into bankruptcy in 1816. He then moved across the water to Flushing, where he continued to build fast boats that at least owed some of their income to smuggling. I've no idea what she looked like but my personal favourite amongst his Flushing boats was christened Big Jane. He eventually returned to Great Yarmouth and began to build beach yawls and fishing boats and eventually produced a lifeboat for Capt. Manby of Gorleston. Beeching went on to design a lifeboat that won the Duke of Northumberland's £100 prize in 1850 and subsequently quite a number of 'Norfolk & Suffolk' type lifeboats etc. All that have survived had 'joggled timbers' and this includes vessels built by his sons at the Gt. Yarmouth yard that became Beeching Bros and closed in 1919.
Now for my question. Does anyone have any history on joggled timbers? It doesn't seem to have a local base - could this be something that Beeching imported from either Hastings or Flushing? Any clues?
Elderly But Slightly Perplexed Frank
PS. John Leather doesn't mention joggled timbers in his book 'Clinker Boatbuilding', althought the oracle at the bottom of the cliff says that Howard I. Chapelle does in his 1946 work entitled 'Boatbuilding'. Might it be a construction method that died out in the UK but continued in the far-flung provinces? Grateful for any advice on this conundrum.