dseielstad
Curious about Wooden Canoes
I have a puzzle I'm hoping somebody might help me solve.
I purchased a 16ft W/C canoe - purported to be a Rushton - from Door County Wisconsin area from somebody who had gotten it from an antique auction in Missouri. The painter fitting on it is stamped "Rushton". So that's a pretty compelling story, right?
So it was generically ID'd as a Rushton from the 1930's. That's certainly wrong since Rushton ceased after 1917.
I have not tried removing varnish from the inner stem ends, but neither appear to have any numbers stamped into them.
The sheer strake/plank on both sides doesn't appear to be unusually wide, which would generally be characteristic of Rushton's.
The front seat is lowered, mounted on cleats attached to the ribs which is characteristic. But then the rear seat (trapezoidal) is also mounted on cleats just an inch or so down below the inwales, and no obvious holes/plugs are visible in the inwales, so the rear cleat mounted seat was likely original.
Inwales appear to be the closed 2-piece form recessed for each rib (Grade A style or in a different source as Grade CD, but maybe not Deluxe grade?).
The beautiful "long" decks (which TBH are probably what forced me to buy the boat) are only ~24", single-piece decks of (possibly) mahogany, but not the 30" long capped decks which are represented in catalogs and other photos I've found.
Also strange is that the standard Rushton IG heart shaped deck is not hidden under the long deck.
The boat has wood outer stems (Deluxe grade?) and keel, and bow & stern heights are ~22" (so not an American Beauty).
The half-rib flooring looks typical Rushton.
The 2 thwarts shape/cross-section look typical Rushton...but again no stamped Rushton company impression is visible on top or bottom that I can find.
It's a beautiful boat, and enough to suggest it is probably a Rushton. And I'm guessing it's possibly 1915-1917 end of production era. I don't know if the post-Rushton builders (Whistle Wing? St. Lawrence Boat?, others?) that had Indian Girl forms would have made higher grade canoes on them, but I just don't know enough about the finer details of Rushton canoes from ~110 years ago to pin this down as probably an Indian Girl built between 1900-1930's.
Any ideas for more details or clues that might better identify or narrow down this boats origins? Thanks.
Donald
I purchased a 16ft W/C canoe - purported to be a Rushton - from Door County Wisconsin area from somebody who had gotten it from an antique auction in Missouri. The painter fitting on it is stamped "Rushton". So that's a pretty compelling story, right?
So it was generically ID'd as a Rushton from the 1930's. That's certainly wrong since Rushton ceased after 1917.
I have not tried removing varnish from the inner stem ends, but neither appear to have any numbers stamped into them.
The sheer strake/plank on both sides doesn't appear to be unusually wide, which would generally be characteristic of Rushton's.
The front seat is lowered, mounted on cleats attached to the ribs which is characteristic. But then the rear seat (trapezoidal) is also mounted on cleats just an inch or so down below the inwales, and no obvious holes/plugs are visible in the inwales, so the rear cleat mounted seat was likely original.
Inwales appear to be the closed 2-piece form recessed for each rib (Grade A style or in a different source as Grade CD, but maybe not Deluxe grade?).
The beautiful "long" decks (which TBH are probably what forced me to buy the boat) are only ~24", single-piece decks of (possibly) mahogany, but not the 30" long capped decks which are represented in catalogs and other photos I've found.
Also strange is that the standard Rushton IG heart shaped deck is not hidden under the long deck.
The boat has wood outer stems (Deluxe grade?) and keel, and bow & stern heights are ~22" (so not an American Beauty).
The half-rib flooring looks typical Rushton.
The 2 thwarts shape/cross-section look typical Rushton...but again no stamped Rushton company impression is visible on top or bottom that I can find.
It's a beautiful boat, and enough to suggest it is probably a Rushton. And I'm guessing it's possibly 1915-1917 end of production era. I don't know if the post-Rushton builders (Whistle Wing? St. Lawrence Boat?, others?) that had Indian Girl forms would have made higher grade canoes on them, but I just don't know enough about the finer details of Rushton canoes from ~110 years ago to pin this down as probably an Indian Girl built between 1900-1930's.
Any ideas for more details or clues that might better identify or narrow down this boats origins? Thanks.
Donald
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