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  2. Kennebec Boat and Canoe Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kennebec_Boat_and_Canoe...

    Grant's brother worked for the E.M. White Canoe Company and his sister was married to White. In 1930, Grant left Kennebec to found the Skowhegan Boat and Canoe Company whose canoes closely resemble those of Kennebec. [2] Walter Grant's prior connection to Morris suggests a reason for similarities between the canoes of Kennebec and B.N. Morris.

  3. Chestnut Canoe Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chestnut_Canoe_Company

    Trappers Canoes: A loose grouping of smaller canoes that has changed over the years. This class includes lower grade pleasure canoes and the Bantam, which is a 2nd grade version of Bobs Special. Cruisers Canoes: Designed to go fast, these models are narrower, more rounded across the bottom and have finer lines than other models. The Guides ...

  4. Peterborough Canoe Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peterborough_Canoe_Company

    Canoes from the Peterborough Canoe Company were sold as far away as Europe. [3] In 1915, the company bought one of its competitors, the William English Canoe Company. In 1923, it merged with a New Brunswick canoe maker, the Chestnut Canoe Company, and became Canadian Watercraft Ltd. Another Peterborough firm, the Canadian Canoe Company, was ...

  5. Sprint canoe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sprint_canoe

    A sprint canoe is a canoe used in International Canoe Federation canoe sprint. It is an open boat propelled by one, two or four paddlers from a kneeling position, using single-bladed paddles. [ 1 ] The difficulty of balance can depend on how wide or narrow the canoe is, although regularly the less contact a canoe has with the water the faster ...

  6. Pacific Northwest canoes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_Northwest_canoes

    In 1937 Betty Lowman Carey became the first white woman to row single-handed the Inside Passage of British Columbia in a dugout canoe.. In 1978 Geordie Tocher and two companions sailed a 3½ ton, 40 foot (12 metre) dugout canoe (the Orenda II), made of Douglas Fir, and based on Haida designs (but with sails), from Vancouver, Canada to Hawaii to add credibility to stories that the Haida had ...

  7. Coastal trading vessel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coastal_trading_vessel

    Coastal trading vessels, also known as coasters or skoots, [1] are shallow-hulled [citation needed] merchant ships used for transporting cargo along a coastline. Their shallow hulls mean that they can get through reefs where deeper-hulled seagoing ships usually cannot (26-28 feet), but as a result they are not optimized for the large waves ...

  8. Old Town Canoe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Town_Canoe

    Old Town Canoe Company is a historic maker of canoes in Old Town, Maine. The company had its beginnings in 1898, in buildings constructed in 1890 for a shoe business, and was incorporated in 1901. The company had its beginnings in 1898, in buildings constructed in 1890 for a shoe business, and was incorporated in 1901.

  9. Fur brigade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fur_brigade

    Fur brigades were convoys of canoes and boats used to transport supplies, trading goods and furs in the North American fur trade industry. Much of it consisted of native fur trappers , most of whom were Métis , and fur traders who traveled between their home trading posts and a larger Hudson's Bay Company or Northwest Company post in order to ...