Skiff

The term skiff is used for a number of essentially unrelated styles of small boat. Traditionally these are coastal or river craft used for leisure or fishing and have a one-person or small crew. Sailing skiffs have developed into high performance competitive classes.

Etymology

The word is related to ship and has a complicated etymology: "skiff" comes from the Middle English skif, which derives from the Old French esquif, which in turn derives from the Old Italian schifo, which is itself of Germanic origin (German Schiff). "Ship" comes from the Old English "scip", which has the same Germanic predecessor. An even older root may be found in the Greek "σκάφος" (vessel).

Traditional boats—United Kingdom

Boulter's Lock, Sunday Afternoon by Edward John Gregory shows skiffs among other craft coming out of the lock

The term has been used for a number of styles of craft round the United Kingdom, often small river and sea going craft. They varied from double ended rowing boats to small sailing boats. The poet John Milton refers to a 'night foundered skiff' in Paradise Lost as early as 1670. There are references to skiffs on the River Thames (as a result of accidents) as early as 1812[1] and 1824 at Oxford.[2] In August 1815, the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley was taken on an expedition by skiff from Old Windsor to Lechlade by Charles Clairmont and Thomas Love Peacock.[3] He subsequently settled at Marlow where he regularly rowed his skiff through the locks.[4] Shelley later drowned sailing in a skiff off the coast of Italy. It was also used in the Lady of the Lake by Sir Walter Scott.

The Thames skiff became formalised as a specific design in the early part of the 19th century. It is a round-bottom clinker-built rowing boat that is still very common on the River Thames and other rivers in England. Rowing skiffs became very popular in Victorian Britain and a skiff journey up the River Thames features in Three Men in a Boat by Jerome K. Jerome,[5] These skiffs could carry a sail and could be used for camping. Although general usage has declined, skiffs are still used for leisure and racing. During the year, skiffing regattas are held in various riverside towns in England—the major event being the Skiff Championships Regatta at Henley.

Akin to the skiff is the Yoal or Yole which is a clinker built boat used for fishing in the Orkney and Shetland Islands. The boat itself is a version of the Norwegian Oselvar which is similar to a skiff in appearance, while the word is cognate with Yawl. The French Yole is a leisure craft similar to the Thames Skiff and is translated as "Skiff", while the French Skiff translates to a Single scull. In Dutch and German, "Skiff" also means a single scull, while Czech Skif refers to sculling boats in general.

Traditional boats—Americas

Classic flat-bottom skiff in Maine.

In American usage, the term is used to apply to small sea-going fishing boats. It is referred to historically in literature in Moby-Dick by Herman Melville[6] and The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway.[7] The skiff could be powered by sails as well as oars.

One usage of skiff is to refer to a typically small flat-bottomed open boat with a pointed bow and a flat stern originally developed as an inexpensive and easy to build boat for use by inshore fishermen. Originally designed to be powered by rowing, their form has evolved so that they are efficiently powered by outboard motors. The design is still in common use today for both work and pleasure craft. They can be made of wood or other materials. There is a similar style of craft in Central America and Mexico, generally called a panga.

Piracy and smuggling

Captured Somalian pirates with their skiff

The term skiff has been applied to motorized boats of small size and construction used as sea-going vessels for piracy or drug-smuggling.[8]

Racing sailing boats

Modern 12ft Skiff at speed.

The skiff with a sail has developed into specific sailing boats bearing the name "skiff". In Sydney, Australia, the term was used for a number of racing classes (sizes from 6 ft to 23 ft have existed). These were originally heavily crewed and canvassed boats that were relatively short for the canvas and crew carried and were developed from working boats of the time. This style of boat is still active in the form of Historical 10 foot and 18 foot classes.

The skiff classes developed to become much lighter and faster with relatively smaller (but still very large by any other standards) rigs and smaller crews. 12ft Skiff, 16ft Skiff, and 18ft Skiff classes are raced in that form. With two crew on the 12 footer and three on the 16 and 18 these are still heavily crewed boats for their size.

Because the modern 18s have such a high profile, the term skiff is widely used internationally to refer to other high-performance sailing dinghy classes, mostly featuring asymmetrical spinnaker and trapeze which have been strongly influenced by modern skiffs. Examples include: Cherub Skiff, International 14, 29er, and 49er. These boats tend to be less heavily crewed in relation to their length than the traditional Australian Skiff Classes. The term is even used for some single-handed boats like the Musto Performance Skiff which are far removed from the heavily crewed original boats.

The SKUD 18 is a two-person keelboat which claims strong influence from skiff development.[9] This made its debut in the 2008 Paralympic Games.

In the International Moth class the term skiff is used to distinguish designs that have an essentially vertical bow from scow designs, which have a broadly horizontal bow.

References

  1. "Master John F. Hope, son of John Hope, Esq. of Harley Street, was drowned on Wednesday in the River Thames, near Eaton. He was amusing himself in a skiff near the bridge, with some other Eton Scholars...". Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 6 June 1812 Wednesday's and Thursday's Posts
  2. "Mar 18 J Harvey esq a commoner of Wadham College. As he was rowing in a skiff between Iffley and Oxford..." The Gentleman's Magazine March 1824
  3. James Bieri Percy Bysshe Shelley: A Biography: Youth's Unextinguished Fire, 1792–1816 University of Delaware Press, 2004 ISBN 0-87413-870-1
  4. Paul Goldsack River Thames: In the Footsteps of the Famous English Heritage/Bradt 2003
  5. Jerome, Jerome K. Three Men in a Boat (To Say Nothing of the Dog). Bristol: Arrowsmith, 1889
  6. Melville, H., Moby-Dick; or, The Whale. New York: Harper and Brothers, 1851. xxiii, 635 pages. Published probably on November 14, 1851.
  7. Hemingway, Ernest (1952). The Old Man and the Sea. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. Hardcover: ISBN 0-684-83049-3, paperback: ISBN 0-684-80122-1
  8. Various news reports, collected on Google News. Retrieved 4 January 2011.
  9. SKUD 18
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