The Voyage Alone in the Yawl "Rob Roy"

by John Macgregor

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Riveting tale of a 1,500-mile voyage on a 21-foot sailboat in 1867, undertaken in response to a "Boat Exhibition" and regatta staged by Napoleon III to encourage the youth of France to explore the rivers and streams of their native land. This rapturous account became known as "the book that launched a thousand ships."

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John MacGregor's books on canoe-touring were a huge hit in Victorian England, and led thousands of his contemporaries (most famously Robert Louis Stevenson) to take up canoeing. He also did a lot to popularise small-boat sail cruising with this 1867 account of a cruise in the English Channel in a little 21ft yawl, which he had had specially designed to be sailed by one person.

By the standards of modern sailing boats the Rob Roy looks rather awkward and impractical — the tiny cabin which is only usable when not under way; the very short cockpit that seems to have been designed to cause maximum backache; the outdoor galley; the undersized sails and heavy double-skinned hull; the single fixed keel that causes problems in tidal show more harbours.MacGregor didn't invent small-boat sailing, of course: several times during his voyage he mentions meeting other sailors who've completed long voyages in small craft (including three men who sailed a rubber liferaft across the Atlantic to drum up business for its American manufacturer). But MacGregor and his designer chum clearly put a lot of thought into it, and you can see him working out improvements all through the voyage (things like more efficient stoves, binnacle lights that don't blow out, quick-release cleats for the jib-sheet ...).

Apart from its interest as a document in the development of sailing as a middle-class recreation, the book is also great fun to read. MacGregor was clearly very much in the Victorian tradition of the muscular Christian and practical philanthropist. Whenever he gets the chance, he dishes out copies of the New Testament and Pilgrim's Progress to fishermen, dock-workers and the crews of the ships he meets. In between his thoughts on binnacles and cookery at sea, we're more than likely to get a short reflection on Science vs. Religion, the reasons for the poverty problem in England, the weaknesses of Roman Catholic doctrine, etc. More reflective than George Borrow, more sane than his imitator E.E. Middleton, but a true Victorian down to the top-hat he keeps in the fore-peak for "state occasions".
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Author Information

4 Works 69 Members

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Ransome, Arthur (Introduction)

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Common Knowledge

Original title
The voyage alone in the yawl "Rob Roy" : from London to Paris, and back by Havre, the Isle of Wight, South Coast, & c
Original publication date
1867
People/Characters
John MacGregor
Important places
London, England, UK; Paris, France; Le Havre, Normandy, France; Isle of Wight, England, UK; English Channel
Epigraph
[None]
Dedication
[None]
First words
John MacGregor was one of those men who, like some actors, seem to have a magnetic attraction for limelight and live their whole lives in a glare of publicity.

John ("Rob Roy") MacGregor.
It was a strange and pleasant life for me all the summer, sailing entirely alone by sea and river fifteen hundred miles, and with its toils, perils, and adventures heartily enjoyed. The two preceding summers I had paddled alo... (show all)ne in an oak canoe, first through central Europe, and next over Norway and Sweden; but though both of these voyages were delightful, they had still the drawback, that progress was mainly dependent on muscular effort, that food must be had from shore, and that I could not sleep on the water.

Chapter I.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)We may begin in faith, and continue in hope, but the greatest of the three is charity in - THE END
Publisher's editor
Ransome, Arthur
Original language
English

Classifications

Genres
Nonfiction, Sports and Leisure, Travel
DDC/MDS
797.1Arts & recreationRecreation, sports, and performing artsAquatic and air sportsBoating
LCC
GV822 .R6 .M3Geography, Anthropology and RecreationRecreation. LeisureRecreation. LeisureSportsWater sports: Canoeing, sailing, yachting, scuba
BISAC

Statistics

Members
37
Popularity
777,304
Reviews
1
Rating
½ (4.50)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
5
ASINs
3