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MV Malibu is a 100-foot (30 m) motor yacht built in 1926. She was designed by Ted Geary and built by N. J. Blanchard Boat Co., [2] Seattle, Washington.. Construction is of Douglas Fir sawn frames on 16 in (410 mm) centers, planked with 2.5 in (64 mm) Port Orford yellow cedar.
Lotus is a motor yacht, launched in 1909 in Seattle, Washington. [1] Lotus was employed as a pleasure vessel on Puget Sound , and in the waters of British Columbia and southeastern Alaska . Lotus was of a unique design and is now on the National Register of Historic Places .
MV Westward is an 86-foot (26 m) motor yacht, [2] "arguably Seattle’s most famous motor yacht," [3] originally constructed in 1924 by Ted Geary for inventor Campbell Church, Sr., [4] and currently owned by Bill Bailey. [3] Her home port is Friday Harbor, Washington and she is listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places [5]
Seattle 100 30.5 181 123 1909 O Abe Perkins: 106794 prop misc 1890 Seattle 32 9.8 14 8.0 1920 A Aberdeen: 106544 stern psgr 1888 Aberdeen: 78 23.8 98 84 1901 O Aberdeen: 209852 prop whaler 1912 Seattle 88 26.8 1949 D A.B. Graham: stern psgr 1898 Puget Sound 126 38.4 Acme: 107460 prop tug 1899 Seattle 60 18.3 31 21 B Active [3] 1232 side 1849
Ships built in Seattle (3 C, 214 P) T. ... Pages in category "Ships built in Washington (state)" The following 29 pages are in this category, out of 29 total ...
The lookout tower of the first Seattle Yacht Club house can be seen over the building bearing the sign "King & Winge." On the right the sternwheeler Vashon has been hauled up on the marine railway. The King and Winge Shipbuilding Company was an important maritime concern in the early 1900s on Puget Sound. The shipyard was located at West ...
Aug. 18—A boat company in Washington appears to be struggling financially. Destination Yachts was once a locally owned operation producing large houseboats for use throughout the nation. At one ...
The yacht's original owner was Edward W. Hopkins, heir to the wealth of his uncle, Mark Hopkins, for whom the Mark Hopkins Hotel is named. [3] In 1896 Hopkins was a member of the San Francisco and the Pacific yacht clubs. [4] In 1906 Hopkins sold the yacht to Chester Thorne of Tacoma and the yacht thereafter came to be based in Puget Sound.