The Cutty Sark, the historic ship and tourist attraction in London’s Greenwich, is undergoing a major conservation project, which will culminate at the end of next year with a visitor centre and ...
Seventy years after Cutty Sark made its final voyage, historians are now looking to hear from anyone who remembers the day it was towed into its final location. The British tea clipper ship was ...
Originally intended to transport tea from China to Britain in the 1870s, the 900-tonne Cutty Sark was built in 1869 by Scott & Linton in Dumbarton. As one of the last tea clippers to be constructed, ...
[First look] Grimshaw’s £50 million overhaul of the Cutty Sark museum in Greenwich, London re-opens next week Visitors will now be able to walk beneath the 143-year-old, Grade-I listed tea clipper and ...
One of Britain’s most cherished maritime treasures will complete a miraculous rise from the ashes when it reopens to the public later this week. The Cutty Sark was devastated by fire in May 2007 but a ...
As part of the capital’s rich and diverse culture, Londoners are lucky enough to have four UNESCO World Heritage Sites right on their doorsteps. One of these gems sits on the south bank of the Thames ...
When Cutty Sark first hoisted her sails on the River Clyde in 1869, the Suez Canal had just opened and the British Raj was still in its infancy. The nippy tea clipper quickly became one of the world’s ...
When the sleek, beautiful tea clipper Cutty Sark was launched in 1869, built for speed to beat the competition and get the precious early tea harvest back to the European market, she was named for the ...
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