Unfortunately, he died before work started and her subsequent owner, who planned to refit her and run her as a charter yacht, didn’t get much beyond the planning stage either.
In 2020, with no immediate prospect of the refit work being given the go-ahead and the risk that she might have to be scrapped instead, the yard offered to take on the project themselves.
It paid the owner a nominal fee for her title and now hopes to either restore her in-house with the help of sponsors or find a new owner willing to fund a full refit.
Although looking rather neglected in terms of paint and brightwork, Classic Works assures us she is far from beyond repair and could easily be returned to her original condition or discreetly modernised with the latest technology.
Her elegant hull with its distinctive plumb-bow and canoe-stern still look the part, her teak hull planks are mostly good, and she still has plenty of original equipment, including her twin Gardner engines, the engine-driven windlass and twin masts, plus a Vosper single-fin stabiliser that was added in the late 1940s.
Source: 80ft Dunkirk Little Ship in 'desperate need' of rescue (http://ht**://www.mby.c**/news/80ft-dunkirk-little-ship-in-desperate-need-of-rescue-130047)