News

The Cutty Sark in September 2020, taken from the water by customer John Vanderploeg “You could be sitting next to someone and not be sure where they’ve been or what they’ve been doing, and ...
Members of the Coopah Refugee Run Club helped to design the medal and long-sleeved T-shirt for finishers at next month’s half ...
"She's romantic." The Queen was joined by the Duke of Edinburgh who has a long association with the vessel, co-founding the Cutty Sark Soceity in 1951 to safeguard the ship.
Trustees of the Cutty Sark say they hope the repair work will guarantee the clipper's survival for at least the next 50 years, and HSBC has agreed to sponsor the Trust to ensure the ship's future ...
The Cutty Sark is open every day except for the three around Christmas, and adult admission is £13.50. There's a bundle for a bit more that gets you into the famous Greenwich Observatory (where ...
FIVE years ago the 19thcentury tea clipper the Cutty Sark displayed at Greenwich seemed to have been utterly destroyed in a fire. On Wednesday the Queen will reopen the ship after an astonishing ...
The Cutty Sark was devastated by fire in May 2007 but a £50 million ($81 million) restoration project has seen the historic vessel returned to its previous majestic glory.
Cutty Sark gets a brand new figurehead: Ship's latest mascot is more beautiful, less angry version of scantily-clad witch 'Nannie' In Robert Burns's poem Tam O'Shanter, Nannie Dee's lack of ...
The Cutty Sark, listed Grade I, is the world's only surviving tea-clipper. The ambitious restoration plan calls for the ship to be raised eleven feet off the ground, allowing a glassed-over ...
The Cutty Sark has been famous for over fifty years, ever since the 19th-century merchant clipper was transformed into a floating maritime museum. But it was scheduled for for some badly needed ...
The Cutty Sark was devastated by fire in May 2007 but a £50 million ($81 million) restoration project has seen the historic vessel returned to its previous majestic glory.