I agree completely about Mr. Crothers's book. It's a masterpiece - and that chapter on deck plans has done quite a service to everybody who has any interest in American clippers. For decades art galleries, museums, collectors, and researchers have been looking at old pictures of clipper ships without being able to identify them. Many people thought for a long time that there was such a thing as a "generic" deck layout for American clippers. Mr. Crothers has shown that such was not the case. Just about every old painting or drawing (if it represents a real ship at all accurately) can now be identified on the basis of his drawings. It turns out that scarcely any of those wonderful ships had identical deck layouts.
Incidentally, a paperback edition of the book came out not long ago - at about half the price of the hardback original. That book has my enthusiastic recommendation. I'd suggest that anybody with any interest at all in American clipper ships snap it up. It looks like the sort of book that goes out of print fairly quickly.
I've always had mixed reactions to Chapelle's manifesto about "models that shouldn't be built." I'm just as tired as he was of seeing dubiously-researched Santa Marias, Golden Hinds, and Bonhomme Richards. But I also think that reconstructions based on careful, scholarly research can be extremely valuable. Such ships as the Mayflower II and Elizabeth II have considerably enhanced our understanding of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century naval architecture and seamanship. And the reconstructed Greek trireme Olympias has caused historians to rethink many of their most basic assumptions about ancient naval warfare.
In any case, Chapelle wasn't talking about stunts like the Revell "Beagle" or "Stag Hound." In those cases we're not talking about poorly-researched attempts to represent vessels for which accurate information isn't available. There's more than enough reliable, contemporary information to build a genuine scale model of either of those ships. What's in the Revell Stag Hound box is not a bad reconstruction of an obscure ship. It's a reasonably accurate model of another, conspicuously different ship, with a few completely spurious alterations thrown in to fool the consumer.
One thing that bothers me about that sort of marketing ploy is the completely different standards that seem to be applied to different realms of the hobby. One of Revell's earliest aircraft kits was a B-29. Suppose that kit had reappeared with a couple of different parts in a box labeled "B-17"? (Hey, man - they're both airplanes, they're both bombers, they're both built by Boeing, and they both have blue and white insignia. How many people will know the difference?)
On the other hand, beggars can't be choosers. It would be nice if we could suggest that Powder Monkey go down to the hobby shop and trade in the Stag Hound for a Flying Cloud. That's not an option; so few plastic sailing ships are left on the market today that I can easily sympathize with anybody who decides to make the best of what he can find.
Youth, talent, hard work, and enthusiasm are no match for old age and treachery.