U.S.S. Constitution "Old Ironsides"

1812

Now the oldest U.S. warship still in commission.
Constitution was larger and more heavily armed than the standard frigate. Her 22-inch thick live oak hull protected by copper sheathing famously rebounded a cannonball during an engagement with the British frigate HMS Guerriere during the War of 1812, earning her the nickname "Old Ironsides".

Dispatching April 2025

 

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Specifications & Features

Your exquisitely detailed U.S.S. Constitution

U.S.S. Constitution

This exceptional premium model has been meticulously developed over more than two years, employing the unique ‘Shipyard’ construction technique (also known as 'Arsenal'). This innovative approach faithfully recreates the traditional shipbuilding methods of historic vessels, delivering an unparalleled level of authenticity and realism. It’s one-of-a-kind craftsmanship that brings the past to life with remarkable detail and precision.

Utilizing new technology and innovation we can now create a museum-quality model kit that preserves the essence and charm of the ship that once sailed the seas.

Materials are of the highest quality and durability including woods such as mahogany, oak and walnut, and decorations of photo-etched brass.

Crafted at 1:76 scale, this model has been created in the most extraordinary detail, with opened hand-sewn cotton sails and rigging from braided cotton threads of different thicknesses allowing you to take your modelling passion to the next level.

The kit comes with measurement templates to facilitate precise construction, plus downloadable instructions with over 800 full-colour images to explain the construction process in detail.

Video guides to building the model will also be available.

Specification

Scale: 1:76
Length: 47” (1,200 mm)
Width: 16” (411 mm)
Height: 36” (924 mm)
Number of parts: 9,000 approx.

Construction type: Shipyard (Arsenal)

Finish: Complete or exposed hull
Decoration: Bare wood or painted. Paint kit included.

Features

  • 32 guns on mahogony carriages
  • 22 carronades
  • Five longboats
  • Hand-stitched cotton sails with bolt ropes

Materials:

Wood used: Oak, Mahogany, African Walnut, Lime

  • SOLID OAK - Frames, Deck Beams, Interior Planks
  • SOLID MAHOGANY - Stem, Keel, Sternpost, Rudder Blade, Ornaments, Cannon Carriages, Wheels, Stern Gallery
  • CASTING AND BRASS - Ornamentation, Cannons, Supports, Stern Gallery
  • COTTON - Sails meticulously hand-stitched with bolt ropes, dyed, and braided threads

It's all in the detail

Outstanding detail at 1:76 scale

Deck planking

Beautifully smooth and even lime wood (basswood) planking on the deck.

Weathered detail

Decorations in brass-plated metal with aged, brass-finished colouring.

Oak frames

'Shipyard' hull construction technique follows that of the original ship.

Beautiful wood finish

Hull planking is made from basswood and mahogany - beautiful enough to leave unpainted!

Detailed canons

Brass finished canons on mahogany carriages with brass and cotton fixings.

Rigging

Full cotton rigging kit with sails hand-sewn with bolt ropes, dyed, and braided threads.

Full and extensive instructions

A new modeling technique

Unlike other wooden ship model kits which have an unrealistc construction method for inside the hull, this premium model kit of the U.S.S. Constitution is built on a rib-structure below decks to recreate the same construction method as used in the shipyards of the period.

You can now build a model that follows historically correct construction methods, know as the 'shipyard' or 'arsenal' technique.

The shipyard/arsenal method of wooden model shipbuilding refers to a highly detailed and authentic approach to constructing wooden ship models, typically replicating historical ships with great precision. This method originated in the dockyard models of the 17th and 18th centuries, often built by craftsmen in naval arsenals (hence the name) to represent ship designs for approval by naval authorities.

Instead of using a solid block or simplified skeleton, the hull is built with individual frames, as on a real ship, using high-quality woods similar to those used in the original ships. This involves constructing each rib of the ship's framework separately and accurately.

The effect is so appealing you might choose to display your model with the internal oak structure – keel, transverse frames and cross-ship deck beams – left exposed, or more traditionally with the hull sealed using the basswood and mahogany planks - the choice is yours!

Whichever finish you choose, the measurement templates and full-colour instruction images will guide you confidently through the process.

Plans

1:1 scale printed elevation and plan drawings

Photo instructions

Over 800 images to make construction as simple as possible

Paints

Display the model in bare wood or paint it with included paint kit

Your buying options

When you place your order we will send your first pack with the first stages of your kit to build your model. Following this, you will be sent another pack every month for 11 months. You will be charged monthly.

Alternatively, you may choose the 24-month plan click here for more details.

(S&H cost per pack: USA $9.99; Canada & Mexico $19.99)

We ship worldwide. Your order will be in US$

Dispatching April 2025

PACK 1 ONLY $74.99

then $149.99 per month

PACK 1 ONLY $74.99

then $79.99 per month

U.S.S. Constitution

200 years of the U.S.S Constitution

October 21, 1797 – Third launch attempt into Boston Harbor succeeds.

1798–1801 – Quasi-War with France

1803–1805 – The First Barbary War was America's first foray into diplomatic negotiations as a new sovereign nation. Constitution arrived in Triploi in 1803 and served as the Mediterranean Squadron flagship.

1812–1815 – During the War of 1812 against the British, Constitution outran a large British squadron and defeated four Royal Navy ships leaving a profound and lasting legacy.

1821–1828 – Constitution patrolled the Mediterranean protecting vital trade routes and American diplomatic interests.

1830 – Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote a poem in defense of plans to dismantle Constitution resulting in the Navy to quickly order the ship's repair.

1834 – Numerous voyages in the Mediterranean, Pacific, and World Cruise

1853 – H.N. Gambrill, a suspected slave ship, was the Constitution's last capture

September 21, 1897 – The ship returns to Boston to jubilation and celebration

October 21, 1897 – 100th Anniversary

1927–1931 – Restoration works took place followed by a National Cruise in a show of gratitude to the many people who contributed to the Save "Old Ironsides"Campaign.

July 10, 1976 – Constitution leads the Parade of Tall Ships, which included Queen Elizabeth II’s royal yacht, HMY Britannia.

June 27 – July 7, 1995 – A copper spike from USS Constitution is flown on the United States Space Shuttle Atlantis during its first rendezvous and docking with the Russian Space Station Mir.

July 21, 1997 – After 116 years, Constitution was strong enough to sail again under its own power. On July 27, in a captivating spectacle, Constitution sailed from Boston Harbor to Marblehead, Massachusetts. Hundreds of thousands of people worldwide witnessed the historic voyage.

October 21, 1997 – 200th Anniversary.

2007–2010 – Restoration work continued to return the ship to its appearance in the War of 1812.

October 28, 2009 – USS Constitution is designated America's Ship of State.

2012 – Bicentennial of the War of 1812.

Today U.S.S. Constitutution can be visited at the USS Constitution Museum located in the historic Charlestown Navy Yard in Boston, Massachusetts, USA.

Source and for further information: ussconstitutionmuseum.org

Technical Specification

Builder: Col. George Claghorn, Edmond Harrt's Shipyard

Service: United States Navy

Displacement: 1,900 tons today. Approximately 2,200 loaded in 1812.

Length: 207 feet on deck from billethead to taffrail on deck / 305 feet overall from bowsprit to spanker boom

Waterline: 175 feet

Beam: 43 feet 6 inches

Draft (aft): 22 feet 6 inches today / 24 feet fully loaded in 1812

Mainmast Height: 172 feet from spar deck to mainmast truck (the very top of the mainmast)

Sail Area: 48 sails (approximately 44,000 square feet)

Propulsion: 42,710 sq. ft. of sail on three masts.

Top Speed: 13+ knot

Crew in 1812: Approximately 450 total officers, sailors, and Marines

War of 1812 Armament:

  • Twenty-four 32-pound carronades on the spar deck with a range of 400 yards (4-8 crew per gun)
  • One 18-pound bow chaser on the spar deck
  • Thirty 24-pound long guns on the gun deck with a range of 1,200 yards (7-14 crew per gun)

War of 1812 Small Boats:

  • One 36-foot launch
  • Two 28-foot whaleboats
  • Four 28-foot cutters
  • One 25-foot gig

Old Ironsides

Oliver Wendell Holmes

Ay, tear her tattered ensign down!
Long has it waved on high,
And many an eye has danced to see
That banner in the sky;
Beneath it rung the battle shout,
And burst the cannon’s roar;—
The meteor of the ocean air
Shall sweep the clouds no more.

Her deck, once red with heroes’ blood,
Where knelt the vanquished foe,
When winds were hurrying o’er the flood,
And waves were white below,
No more shall feel the victor’s tread,
Or know the conquered knee;—
The harpies of the shore shall pluck
The eagle of the sea!

Oh, better that her shattered hulk
Should sink beneath the wave;
Her thunders shook the mighty deep,
And there should be her grave;
Nail to the mast her holy flag,
Set every threadbare sail,
And give her to the god of storms,
The lightning and the gale!

Extract of The Boat Forest by Rebecca McCray

Since 1976, the U.S. Navy has relied on white oak trees grown amid more than 50,000 acres of forest on the Naval Support Activity Crane in Crane, Indiana, to maintain the U.S.S. Constitution.

The storied warship is almost always undergoing some kind of repair or maintenance, according to Margherita M. Desy, the ship’s official historian employed by the Naval History & Heritage Command Detachment Boston. That ongoing maintenance requires very specific materials, and is the reason the Navy relies on white oak trees from Indiana.

“The procurement of appropriate wood for historic wooden vessels is actually quite an issue in the maritime world,” said Desy. “We’re all always looking for wood of the dimensions that we need.”

In the case of the Constitution, those dimensions are enormous: To be of use for the ship’s hull, the white oaks have to be at least 40 inches in diameter at their base, and at least 40 feet long from base to crown, according to Desy. They also have to be extremely straight.

When Old Ironsides was undergoing repairs in preparation for its 200th birthday celebration, the naval base sent 78 white oaks to the East Coast for the restoration.

In 2015, when the next restoration took place, the team selected 35 trees for the ship, escorting them to Boston.

Beyond keeping an eye for trees that might be candidates for the Constitution, the team at Crane are charged with an environmental mission - to protect an endangered species: the Indiana bat. During the summer months, these rare little bats roost under the bark of trees like the Shag Bark Hickory, or the shards of bark that loosen on dead trees. The team ensures the hickory are never cut down, and they sometimes intentionally kill damaged trees to create more habitat for the bats. They also refrain from cutting down any trees from April until October, when the bats head into caves to hibernate for the winter.

This delicate management and conservation of habitats and the broader forest ecosystem may not be what springs to mind for most people when they think of the armed forces, but the Department of Defense (DOD) is charged with tending to ecologically diverse landscapes across the country. While environmental conservationists and the military may seem like odd bedfellows, their goals are often intertwined even as their core missions diverge.

Read the full article by Rebecca McCray here

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This is not a toy. Not suitable for children under 14 years old due to small parts. Adult supervision required.

WARNING: Some parts are assembled using magnets. These magnets can cause serious injury if they are swallowed. Keep away from children. If you suspect a magnet has been swallowed, seek medical help straight away.