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You searched for: Year start: 1900Year end: 1910Place: is exactly 'Southwest Harbor'Subject: VesselsType: Reference
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Subject
Type
Place
  • Southwest Harbor
Date
  • none
Contributor
  • Southwest Harbor Public Library
Title Type Subject Creator Date Place Rights
Bonaventure - Dragger
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Reference
  • Vessels, Commercial Fishing Vessel, Net Fishing Vessel, Dragger
  • Southwest Harbor
  • In Copyright - Non-Commercial Use Permitted
Bonaventure - Dragger
Southwest Harbor Public Library
Description:
Bonaventure was a 90’ dragger designed by Cyrus Hamlin and built for the Novello family of Gloucester by Southwest Boat Corporation in Southwest Harbor. She was the first big dragger built there. See: Prybot, Peter K.. White-Tipped Orange Masts: Gloucester’s Fishing Draggers, 1970-1972, A Time of Change (The Curious Traveller Press, Gloucester, 1998), p. 63.
No-Name - Lobster Boat - Built for Louise (Webber) Jackson O'Brien
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Reference
  • Vessels, Boat, Lobster Boat
  • Southwest Harbor
  • In Copyright - Non-Commercial Use Permitted
Description:
Ralph Warren Stanley built this 26' lobster boat, for Louise O’Brien at his 1st shop at 376 Main Street, Southwest Harbor. Mrs. O'Brien used the boat for her employees, Julius “Judy” E. Mitchell (1902-1982) and his brother, George A. Mitchell (1915-1998) to go back and forth from Cranberry Island to her yacht. The lobster boat was later owned by boat builder James “Jimmy” Harold Rich (1932-2010).
Unnamed Boats Built by Rich & Grindle
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Reference
  • Vessels, Boat
  • Southwest Harbor
  • In Copyright - Non-Commercial Use Permitted
Unnamed Boats Built by Rich & Grindle
Southwest Harbor Public Library
Lobster Yacht
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Reference
  • Vessels, Boat, Lobster Boat
  • Southwest Harbor
  • In Copyright - Non-Commercial Use Permitted
Lobster Yacht
Southwest Harbor Public Library
Description:
The term "Lobster Yacht" denotes a pleasure boat built on the lines of a working lobster boat. The term is more commonly used "away" than on Mount Desert Island. This name describes the look of these boats in a world where so many working and pleasure boats resemble each other. Boat builders on MDI would probably not use this term so this database generally uses the term "pleasure boat" and leaves the viewer to make his or her own distinction. The following publications and many others use the term Lobster Yacht: - National Fisherman, Volume 70, 1989 - Understanding Boat Design by Edward S. Brewer and Ted Brewer, published by McGraw-Hill Professional, 1993 - The Illustrated Dictionary of Boating Terms: 2,000 Essential Terms for Sailors & Powerboaters by John Rousmaniere, W. W. Norton & Company, 1998 - Wooden Boat, Wooden Boat Publications, 2005 - Sorensen's Guide to Powerboats, 2 by Eric Sorensen, published by McGraw-Hill Professional, 2007 [show more]