Questi servizi e tecnologie sono indispensabili per il funzionamento di Herando e consentono, ad esempio, funzionalità rilevanti per la sicurezza. Inoltre, tramite questi cookie possiamo riconoscere se desideri rimanere connesso al tuo profilo, così da rendere i nostri servizi disponibili più rapidamente in caso di nuova visita.
Senza questi cookie il sito non può funzionare correttamente. La disattivazione non è quindi possibile.
| Nome cookie | Fornitore / durata | Finalità |
|---|---|---|
| herando | Herando / Sessione | Necessario per mantenere l’accesso dell’utente. Consente l’accesso alle aree protette senza nuovo login. |
| herando-backend | Herando / Sessione | Garantisce l’autenticazione nell’area backend e il controllo degli accessi alle funzioni protette. |
| frontend | Herando / 2 ore | Necessario per mantenere le sessioni nel frontend ed evitare un nuovo login. |
| frontend_cid | Herando / 2 ore | Associa la sessione corrente all’ID di consenso nell’area frontend. |
| cc | Herando / 1 anno | Memorizza le tue impostazioni di consenso ai cookie. |
| cid | Herando / 1 anno | Memorizza un ID univoco per documentare il tuo consenso ai cookie. |
| _GRECAPTCHA | Google reCAPTCHA / 6 mesi | Protegge il sito da accessi automatizzati, spam, frodi e abusi. |
Base giuridica:
Il trattamento si basa sull’art. 6, par. 1, lett. f) GDPR (legittimo interesse a un funzionamento sicuro ed efficiente del sito) nonché su § 165, c. 3 TKG (AT) / § 25, c. 2 TTDSG (DE).
Per migliorare ulteriormente i nostri servizi, raccogliamo dati anonimizzati per finalità statistiche e di analisi. Grazie a questi dati possiamo, ad esempio, misurare il numero di visitatori e l’efficacia di determinate pagine del nostro sito web e ottimizzare i nostri contenuti.
Fornitori:
Google Ireland Limited, Dublino, Irlanda
Meta Platforms Ireland Ltd., Dublino, Irlanda
Finalità:
Analisi del comportamento degli utenti, misurazione della copertura, ottimizzazione dei contenuti e valutazione dell’uso delle singole pagine.
Dati trattati:
Indirizzo IP (ridotto/anonimizzato), informazioni su dispositivo e browser, durata visita, visualizzazioni di pagina, interazioni, URL di provenienza.
Base giuridica:
Consenso ai sensi dell’art. 6, par. 1, lett. a GDPR.
Trasferimento verso paesi terzi:
Possibile trasferimento verso paesi terzi (es. USA). Fornitori certificati EU-US Data Privacy Framework.
Periodo di conservazione:
Fino a 14 mesi salvo diversa indicazione.
| Nome cookie | Fornitore / durata | Finalità |
|---|---|---|
| _ga | Google Analytics / 2 anni | Identificazione degli utenti unici |
| _gid | Google Analytics / 24 ore | Analisi del comportamento degli utenti |
| _gat_* | Google Analytics / 1 minuto | Limitazione della frequenza delle richieste |
| _gat_UA-* | Google Analytics / 1 minuto | Controllo della trasmissione dei dati |
| OTZ | Google Analytics / 1 mese | Informazioni aggregate sul traffico del sito |
| AEC | Google / 6 mesi | Protezione da spam, frodi e abusi |
| NID | Google / fino a 10 anni | Integrazione di contenuti esterni (es. YouTube) |
| _fbp | Meta (Facebook) / 6 mesi | Analisi delle visualizzazioni di pagina |
| datr | Meta (Facebook) / 9 mesi | Sicurezza e prevenzione delle frodi |
| locale | Meta (Facebook) / 1 settimana | Memorizzazione della lingua |
| oo | Meta (Facebook) / 13 mesi | Memorizzazione dello stato di opt-out |
| sb | Meta (Facebook) / 11 mesi | Identificazione del browser |
| m_pixel_ratio | Meta (Facebook) / Sessione | Test delle prestazioni del sito |
Puoi revocare il tuo consenso in qualsiasi momento tramite le “impostazioni dei cookie”.
143.261,55 €
Company Rightboat Ltd
England head office
Fareham Innovation Centre
Merlin House, 4 Meteor Way,
Daedalus Drive
Lee-on-the-Solent PO13 9FU
United Kingdom
info@rightboat.com
www.rightboat.com
| Marke | – |
| Modell | Classic |
| Tipo di imbarcazione | Altro |
| Categoria | Yacht a motore |
| Motori | 1 |
| Potenza | 200 PS |
| Carburante | Diesel |
| Anno di costruzione | 1938 |
At Henley Sales and Charter we are privileged to present a vessel of extraordinary provenance and presence, White Marlin, later HMS Fervent, is not simply a Dunkirk Little Ship, she represents a defining chapter in the story of British motor boating.
Ordered by an Armenian sugar broker and completed by Thornycroft at Hampton on Thames on the eve of war, she never reached her original owner. Instead, she was requisitioned by the Ministry of War Transport and commissioned into the Royal Navy as HMS Fervent, serving as the communications boat for the Officer Commanding convoys at Dover.
During the Dunkirk evacuation she became the launch of the Senior Naval Officer under Lieut. Cdr. W.R.T. Clemments and was among the last naval vessels to leave the harbour. Among her crew was Douglas Kirkaldie, coxswain of the Ramsgate lifeboat Prudential, mentioned in despatches. Few vessels can speak so quietly yet so powerfully of courage and duty.
She later travelled north to Archangel supporting the Russian convoys, was damaged in service, repaired and eventually returned home. Rescued from neglect at Strood by Col. F.A. Sudbury of Tate and Lyle, she was restored by Thornycroft and went on to serve as the company’s communications launch, carrying guests from Tower Pier to the Albert Dock refineries.
Today she has been sympathetically restored to her original open centre cockpit configuration and remains a rare and compelling example of early motor yacht design.
The beauty of a Dunkirk Little Ship lies in its individuality, no two are the same. They range from humble lifeboats to gentleman’s cruisers and working barges. Yet White Marlin stands apart. She represents the very future of boating at the moment it began to take shape. In 2026 we mark 200 years of recognised power boating, the gradual transition from sail to mechanical propulsion, and it was boats like White Marlin that refined and defined what we now see across marinas worldwide. She is not a production boat, she is a one off. And one offs are the prototypes that shape history.
Built by Thornycroft, one of the great shipyards of her era, she embodies a period when craftsmanship, engineering and aesthetics combined to push boundaries. She was modern for her time, forward thinking, beautifully proportioned, and she still evokes that same sense of purpose and confidence with not only traditionality but a fashionable retroness.
Vintage craft are not old in today’s world, instead they inspire, none more so than a Dunkirk Little Ship. I know of at least one Dunkirk Little Ship purchased and restored because, by chance, its owner had been invited aboard White Marlin as a young man in the early 1990s. That first experience never left him. Twenty five years later he rescued the lifeboat Lady of Mann from dereliction and now owns his own and very different Little Ship. These are the connections that vintage vessels create, they stir something lasting.
White Marlin is a rare opportunity. She is presented in good order with a survey report available. There is scope for light personalisation should a new custodian wish to make their mark and yet she remains fundamentally sound, authentic and rich in character.
She offers not only history and charm, but also performance, a reassuring turn of speed when required and the unmistakable presence of a vessel built at the dawn of serious motor yachting.
Opportunities to acquire a Dunkirk Little Ship of this calibre, condition and performance are exceptionally scarce.