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Gjøa boat model

Gjøa was the first ship to be sailed through the entire Northwest Passage. Roald Amundsen and his six companions accomplished this in 1903-06.



On 28 March 1901 Roald Amundsen signed the contract to buy the Gjøa. The shipyard Tromsø Skipsverft put in extra strengthening of the hull, lengthened the ice sheathing down to the keel. In May 1902 the Gjøa was given a 13 HP Dan hot-bulb motor. This was one of the first petrol engines to be installed in a Norwegian vessel.



The Gjøa left Kristiania on 16 June 1903, and became the first ship to sail through the entire Passage. Amundsen served as the expedition leader and Gjøa's master. His crew were Godfred Hansen, a Danish naval lieutenant and Gjøa's first officer; Helmer Hanssen, second officer, an experienced ice pilot who later accompanied Amundsen on subsequent expeditions; Anton Lund, an experienced sealing captain; Peder Ristvedt, chief engineer; Gustav Juel Wiik, second engineer, a gunner in the Royal Norwegian Navy; and Adolf Henrik Lindstrøm, cook.The expedition arrived in Nome, Alaska on 30 August 1906. Gjøa anchored in San Francisco on 10 September 1906 and was met with enormous enthusiasm from the inhabitants there.

 The Gjøa belongs today to the Fram Museum.

We can build this primarily wood model of the Gjøa in any scales. For a quote, send us an email Services@ModelShipMaster.com

Don't be fooled by some junks out there that are for sale for under $1,000. Numerous errors an the most obvious is the colors on the hull. How they missed the wide black stripe is so puzzling. The hull itself is too shallow and the draft (the red paint part) is way too low. The rudder is too long. There's no indication of the two boats and their davits on the sides. The mast system is a so wrong and there's no watch station on  it. Deck parts is a mess. There are so many more but it would be a waste of time on junks. 

Learn more about the Gjøa boat here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gj%C3%B8a