EXCELSIOR

Excelsior LT472

Excelsior is one of the last surviving Lowestoft fishing smacks.


She was built in 1921 by John Chambers & Co of Lowestoft to trawl the southern North Sea. During the Depression of the 1930s she was sold to Norway. The Norwegians converted her to a motor coaster, removing her topmast and bowsprit and installing a wheelhouse on deck. She was used to transport general cargo around the Norwegian, Swedish and Danish coasts.


During the War she narrowly escaped being sunk when evacuating the townsfolk of Bodo, which was on fire. A bomb just missed her leaving her needing to be beached for re-caulking. 


In 1954 she was renamed SVINØR, after the beautiful island where she was owned. But by the 1970s the construction of new roads linking the Scandinavian coastal communities meant that the old coasters were no longer needed and SVINØR’s owners planned to retire.


John Wylson, when he was an architectural student, and wishing to break up the seven years of deskbound training, was looking for a former commercial sailing vessel to re-rig back to sail. Having worked up to relief skipper in the Home Trade he was helping a fellow student bring a fishing vessel back from Norway when he heard that the owners of a motor coaster called SVINØR were retiring. He returned to Norway the following summer to see her and bought her, sailing her back to Lowestoft just over 50 years after she had been built there as EXCELSIOR LT472 in 1921!” 

“Restoring Excelsior took 16 years and over 120 people worked on her during this time… Finally, in 1988, The Princess Royal commissioned Excelsior as a sail training ship and the following year she started a new career. ”


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Present day

After the creation of the National Historic Ships Register of Historic Vessels Excelsior was included as one of the ‘National Historic Fleet’ – a title presently bestowed upon just 202 ships!


In 2021, Excelsior celebrated her Centenary and was displayed at Lowestoft’s Heritage Quay between July and October. The public came onboard and discovered this piece of East Anglian Maritime History, talked to the crew and enjoyed a day’s sailing experience. Please contact us for information about our 2024 voyages.

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