The Assembly theme this year is Solo Canoes and Remembering Tom MacKenzie which may be generating a lot of excitement in the market for small canoes. Two interesting 11 foot solo canoes which shipped to Abercrombie & Fitch in the 1920s have sold recently.
The oldest known 11 foot canoe from Old Town is a "Spcl Sign" or special sign model that shipped in 1915. This was probably made for display and not for paddling. A decade appears to have elapsed before another "Special" shipped to Philadelphia. An 11 foot version of the Fifty Pound model was added to the 1926 catalog and yet another "Special" shipped to Abercrombie & Fitch in New York during March of 1926. This canoe has survived and is shown in the pictures below.
The next known example shipped in 1927. The 11 foot version of the Fifty pound model was not listed in the 1928 and 1929 catalogs. It returned in the 1930 catalog but the width had increased from 34 inches to 35 and one half inches. The width went up again to 36 inches in the 1948 catalog. Short and narrow canoes are notoriously tender so this probably was intended to improve the stability. These were never a high volume model and the estimates at http://www.wcha.org/catalogs/old-town/models.html indicate that less than a thousand were built.
There are more pictures to share so this story will continue in a response below.
The oldest known 11 foot canoe from Old Town is a "Spcl Sign" or special sign model that shipped in 1915. This was probably made for display and not for paddling. A decade appears to have elapsed before another "Special" shipped to Philadelphia. An 11 foot version of the Fifty Pound model was added to the 1926 catalog and yet another "Special" shipped to Abercrombie & Fitch in New York during March of 1926. This canoe has survived and is shown in the pictures below.
The next known example shipped in 1927. The 11 foot version of the Fifty pound model was not listed in the 1928 and 1929 catalogs. It returned in the 1930 catalog but the width had increased from 34 inches to 35 and one half inches. The width went up again to 36 inches in the 1948 catalog. Short and narrow canoes are notoriously tender so this probably was intended to improve the stability. These were never a high volume model and the estimates at http://www.wcha.org/catalogs/old-town/models.html indicate that less than a thousand were built.
There are more pictures to share so this story will continue in a response below.
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