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Cobalt has a portfolio of intellectual property in its field, having won a patent infringement lawsuit against Brunswick Corporation, parent company of Sea Ray Boats, over a popular "'retractable swim step', a partially submerged platform off the rear of the boat that allows boat passengers to easily enter and exit the water". [1]
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
This is a list of boat builders, for which there is a Wikipedia article. This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources .
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 ...
Monk continued to work at various boatyards in Seattle and eventually found his way to the Blanchard Boat Co. in 1925. He was hired as a shipwright , but soon began to design small boats. [ 2 ] : 2–3 His first large cruiser design, the 62 foot motor yacht Silver King , was built there in 1925 [ 5 ] : 12–14
In about 1886, Edward F. Lee established a shipyard on the west side Lake Washington. The Lee yard is believed to have built the following ships that worked Lake Washington and Puget Sound: the small steam scow Squak, Laura Maud, Elfin, Hattie Hansen (also known as Sechelt), and Mist. Other early steamboats on the lake were Kirkland and Mary Kraft.
Fireboats in Seattle, Washington image name launched retired notes Snoqualmie: 1891: 1935: First fireboat on North America's west coast. [1] Duwamish: 1909: 1985: Duwamish was originally built with a "ram" bow, so she could sink a blazing vessel before it set other vessels ablaze. [1] Currently a museum ship. Alki: 1927: 2013: Chief Seattle ...
The company's original shipyard was at Dockton, Washington, but later expanded to other locations.The company was active from 1904 to 1974 and built many vessels. Among the earlier vessels built by the company were the wooden propeller steamers Vashon, Verona (1910), Nisqually (later renamed Astorian) and Calista, both built in 1911, Florence J. (1914), F.G. Reeves, (1916), Vashona (later ...