George Steers (August 15, 1819 โ September 25, 1856)[1] was a designer of yachts best known for the famous racing yacht America. He founded a shipyard with his brother, George Steers and Co, and died in an accident just as he was landing a major contract to build boats for the Russian Czar.
George never learned the trade of ship carpenter, but rather built vessels based on the design concepts he worked out for himself in his youth, growing up as a shipbuilder's son.[3] He became a journeyman for William H. Brown, in whose service he assisted in building the Arctic and another of the Collins steamers.
Designer of famous racing yacht America
Between 1841 and 1850, Steers built many yachts which were well known in their day. In 1845, Steers went into business with a partner under the name of Hathorne & Steers, at the foot of North First street, in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. In 1849, George Steers designed the pilot boatMary Taylor, with a radical new design in a schooner. The firm was closed in 1849.[4]
George Steers is perhaps best known as the designer of the most famous racing yacht of all time, the schooner yacht America (1851), for which the America's Cup is named. No doubt influenced by the Mary Taylor and Grinnell, and the ship designs of fellow New Yorker John W Griffiths, the aptly named America established the American naval architecture of the day.[7]
He also built one full-sized ship, the clipper shipSunny South, which was sold to foreign owners after a voyage around Cape Horn to San Francisco, and captured in the Mozambique Channel in 1860 with a cargo of over 800 slaves.[8]
List of boats built by Steers include:
William G. Hagstaff Pilot Boat (1841) built for the New Jersey pilots[9]
On 25 September 1856, George Steers, while driving a pair of horses to Glen Cove, Long Island, in order to bring home (91 Cannon St.) his wife, who had been visiting, was thrown from his wagon and mortally wounded. He was only 37 years old. He had just negotiated for $1,000,000 worth of boats for the Czar of Russia.[3][15][16]He left a son behind him.
A procession of 800 citizens was followed by lodges of the Masonic Order, including the Mariner's Lodge (400 men), and 70 carriages of friends and relatives.[17] Steers is interred at Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York.