- Hoy (boat)
A hoy was a small
sloop -rigged coasting ship or a heavybarge used for freight. The word derives from theMiddle Dutch "hoey"Precisely what it was like and what its use, changed with time. In the fifteenth century it might be a small
spritsail -rigged warship like acromster . Like the earlier forms of the French chaloupe, it could be a heavy and unseaworthy harbour boat or a small coastal sailing vessel. (Latterly, the chaloupe was a pulling cutter - nowadays motorized.)Principally, and more so latterly, the hoy was a passenger and/or cargo boat. From an English point of view, it was particularly one working in the
Thames Estuary and southernNorth Sea in the manner of theThames sailing barge of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. However, the name originated in the Netherlands and from there, a slightly different vessel did the same sort of work in similar waters. In 1495, one of thePaston Letters included the phrase, "An hoye of Dorderycht" (a hoy ofDordrecht ), in such a way as to indicate that such contact was at that date, no more than mildly unusual.In the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, English hoys plied a trade between London and the north
Kent coast which enabled middle classLondon ers to escape the city for the more rural air ofMargate , for example. This trade was much expanded by the introduction of the early steamers. This happened when the barges were taking over the cargo coasting trade on the short routes, so the hoys fell out of use.Before the development of steam engines, the passage of boats in places like the Thames estuary and the estuaries of the Netherlands, required the skilful use of tides as much as of the wind.
ee also
* [http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/39/Aelbert_Cuyp_001.jpgEast Indiaman and hoys off Dordrecht (17th century)]
*On the French coast, a similar but generally faster vessel type, which continued its development until later was known as the "chasse-marée ". Its centre of operations was the Breton coast and it specialized in carrying fresh seafish to market. It was normally rigged as a three-mastedlugger .External links
* [http://www.pepysdiary.com/p/2705.php References to the use of the word]
* [http://www.nmm.ac.uk/mag/pages/mnuExplore/ViewLargeImage.cfm?ID=BHC0972 The boat in the right foreground here is an English hoy of about 1700]
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