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  2. Thompson Brothers Boat Manufacturing Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thompson_Brothers_Boat...

    The transition from wood to fiberglass at all the Thompson operated boat firms was difficult. The family resisted the switch and felt that any high quality wooden boat could out perform, outlast, and outsell fiberglass; however, the 1960s consumer shied away from wood and purchased fiberglass or aluminum pleasure boats, and sales plummeted. [6] [7]

  3. Spaulding Wooden Boat Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spaulding_Wooden_Boat_Center

    The Spaulding Marine Center in Sausalito (2007) The working boatyard at Spaulding Marine Center Spaulding boatyard at night. The Spaulding Marine Center, (formally the Spaulding Wooden Boat Center), in Sausalito, California, is a living museum where one can go back in time to experience the days when craftsmen and sailors used traditional skills to build, sail or row classic wooden boats on ...

  4. Wooden boats of World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wooden_boats_of_World_War_II

    Both new wood and steel hull tugs were built. The largest wooden hull tugboat was the 148-foot (45 m) V3-S-AH2. One of the smaller wooden hull tugboats was the 58-foot (18 m) V2-M-AL1, of which 35 were built. Most V2-M-AL1 tugboats were sent to England for the war efforts under the lend-lease act. Tugs served across the globe during Work War II.

  5. Cape Dory Yachts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cape_Dory_Yachts

    Cape Dory Yachts was a Massachusetts-based builder of fiberglass sailboats, powerboats, and pleasure trawlers which operated from 1963 to 1992. It also produced a small number of commercial craft. It also produced a small number of commercial craft.

  6. Hunter Marine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunter_Marine

    Hunter Marine was an American boat builder, now known as Marlow-Hunter, LLC, owned by David E. Marlow.The company did produce the Mainship powerboat brand. Marlow also owns and manufactures the Marlow Yachts brand consisting of long range power cruisers in the 37 to 110 foot range.

  7. Center for Wooden Boats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Center_for_Wooden_Boats

    The Center for Wooden Boats (CWB) is a museum dedicated to preserving and documenting the maritime history of the Pacific Northwest area of the United States. CWB was founded by Dick Wagner in Seattle in the 1970s and has grown to include three sites; the South Lake Union campus in Lake Union Park, the Northlake Workshop & Warehouse at the north end of Lake Union, and The Center for Wooden ...

  8. Hacker-Craft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hacker-Craft

    Hacker-Craft's logo, hand-painted in gold leaf on the side of a mahogany runabout. Hacker was born in Detroit, Michigan on May 24, 1877. For four years, while working at his father's business as a bookkeeper, he attended night school and took a correspondence course in order to become an accredited marine designer.

  9. Canadian Power Boat Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Power_Boat_Company

    Canadian Power Boat Company was a manufacturer of motor torpedo boats and similar craft in Canada during World War II. A prototype 70-foot boat was built by Hubert Scott-Paine 's British Power Boat Company and shipped to Canada in 1940. [ 1 ]