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Concordia yawl just under 40′ long
WB No. 151
SOLD, seeking current photo and information


No image available

This Concordia yawl, No. 4, just under 40′ long, appeared in WB No. 151. She went to Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for restoration and is still a work in progress.





83′ passenger ferry, ex–sardine carrier
WB No. 218
STILL AVAILABLE


PAULINE photo by Maynard Bray

Billings Diesel & Marine of Stonington, Maine, after rebuilding her hull, has had to take over ownership of PAULINE. The cost of completion became too much for the owner, and he had to abandon his dream. So here we have a good hull without an installed engine, and a superstructure that needs considerable work. But the remaining work could be accomplished afloat, saving drydocking fees and eliminating the risk of drying out from an extended period ashore.





40′ Green/Doucette Novi Boat
WB No. 206
WITH NEW OWNERS


BONNY BRIDE photo by Maynard Bray

Just as we were putting the final touches on this article, we found out that BONNY BRIDE had been donated to Jon Johanson’s International Maritime Library. Jon will continue searching for a new owner, one who will surely appreciate that she’s planked with cedar imported from Maine instead of Nova Scotia pine, and is better built than most. She has room to spare in both the cockpit and cabin—and is in decent structural condition. Perhaps it won’t be too long until we see BONNY BRIDE afloat again. 





42′ Hand/Herreshoff power cruiser
WB No. 183
STILL AVAILABLE


LITTLE GULL II photo courtesy Tucker Reynolds

No prospective buyer as yet has satisfied owner Tucker Reynolds’s criteria: someone who he feels will do the boat justice. Luckily, Little Gull is inside Tucker’s shed—on ice, as it were—so there’s no rush. We believe someone, someday will come along, take the boat under his or her wing, and give her the restoration she needs. Having a boat designed by William Hand and built by Herreshoff makes her unique. What a pedigree! She’s practical as well, having good accommodations, a handsome appearance, and the performance you’d expect from her designer and builder.





45′ William Hand motorsailer
WB No. 149
SOLD, seeking current photo and information


No image available

She sails from Bristol, Rhode Island, as PROMISE.





36′ Clement lobster yacht
WB No. 222
BEING RESTORED


MADDY SUE photo by Douglas Brooks

Jan Rozendaal so enjoyed restoring Mashnee with George Darling that he came back for more by buying MADDY SUE. As with MASHNEE, the work is being done in Darling’s Charlotte, Vermont, shop. Recent photos show her getting a new transom, some laminated sister frames, and floor timbers. A new engine to replace the old Chrysler gas one is also being planned.





34′ Fishers Island 23
WB No. 196
RESTORED


CRUSADER photo 1 by John Hutchison

Persistence paid off, both in acquiring CRUSADER and in restoring her. Present owner John Hutchison missed out the first time around, but kept in touch with the man who first bought her (based on “Save a Classic”), and ultimately was able to acquire her before any work had commenced. John then undertook a thorough restoration by himself over several years. Although he is not a professional boatbuilder, his skill is evident in the photos he took while the work was going on. Before CRUSADER, John had built a lovely Coquina, a Nat Herreshoff design, for himself.





70′ Trumpy houseboat
WB No. 176
DESTROYED


Photo 1 by Caitlin Underwood

Trumpy maestro Jim Moores (see WB No. 207 for "Trumpy Man: How Jim Moores became Florida's go-to guy for restoration;" WB No. 176 for "Save A Classic: IBIS: A Trumpy-Mathis houseboat") saved the deckhouse of IBIS, though her hull was cut up by another firm. The deckhouse now serves as an office at the North Carolina branch of Moores Marine.





48′ Commuter yacht
WB No. 165
STILL AVAILABLE


Commuter yacht FORTUNA III photo 1

48′ Commuter yacht FORTUNA III





78′ Herreshoff cutter/ketch
WB No. 162
STILL AVAILABLE


VAYU as DORIS

There’s not much of this yacht that’s salvageable, but that’s not unusual among many restorations. Besides very deep pockets, one would need vision to imagine what she could become—or to visualize what she was originally. Brian Amble of California had the vision, but not the wealth. But he did acquire her and make a start. As the largest all-wood sailing yacht ever built by Herreshoff, and as a genuine, topsail-carrying sloop (or cutter, if you will), VAYU (or more properly, DORIS, the yacht’s original name), fully restored, would be a show-stopper.



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