- Home
- Attractions
- Cutty Sark
Cutty Sark
Last surviving tea clipper ship with interactive exhibitions about maritime trade and life at sea.
About
The world's last tea clipper rises majestically in Greenwich dry dock, where visitors walk beneath her gleaming copper hull. Built in 1869 for speed, this record-breaking ship raced tea from China in under 100 days. Her 32,000 square feet of sail and revolutionary design represent the pinnacle of wind-powered commerce.
Ship Exploration
Three towering masts reach 152 feet skyward, supporting 11 miles of rigging that 30-man crews handled in all weather. The innovative glass canopy reveals elegant hull lines from below. Teak decks lead through cramped crew quarters contrasting with the captain's relative luxury.
Interactive displays let visitors try Victorian navigation, knot-tying, and wheel steering. The lower hold recreates tea chest storage that built fortunes. Personal crew stories and the world's largest figurehead collection bring maritime life alive through preserved artifacts.
Living History
After tea trade ended, she set unbeaten Australian wool run records. The 2007 fire and restoration proved public affection for this survivor. Today's programs connect historic wind power to sustainable futures through hands-on education.
Café beneath the hull offers unique dining. Digital displays trace global trade routes that shaped modern commerce. Combined tickets with Greenwich attractions save money. Audio guides decode nautical terminology while family trails engage young sailors-to-be.