Kathryn Klos
squirrel whisperer
Initially, I began researching the connection between BN Morris and CJ Molitor for an article in "Wooden Canoe" that is becoming book-length, due to "one thing leading to another".... or, "for every question I have, I will discover three additional questions and the first question I had may not be answered."
I will copy a very interesting piece of information found in "The Canoeist's Catalog" by Bill and Fern Stearns, copyright 1978. The portion I will quote comes from an article by Fern Sterns, titled "Three Maine Giants". This is a portion of a letter written by Charles B. King:
"My grandfather, Charles A.Morris, started building canoes when he was about 16 years old. He started upstairs in a shed chamber in the house I lived in for 58 years. As he expanded, a canoe shop was built next to the house; it was three stories high and about 50' by 80' --- the first Morris Canoe factory. Later he and his brother built the factory located where the Stucco Lodge in Veazie is now. The large building that stands there now was the canoe company's office. The company was first named the Veazie Canoe Company but was later named the B.N. Morris Canoe Company. I vaguely remember the factory-- I had been up there many times, but I was only eight years old when it burned down in 1920. My son, who lives in Waterville, has my Morris canoe-- it is 62 years old and still has the original canvas on it.
"In 1926 and 1927 I used to help my grandfather in his old factory (a three-story building on a lot behind where Red's Market now stands in Veazie) as he built racing canoes without any canvas on them. He finished them in natural finish; they could only weigh between 62 and 64 pounds-- no more, no less. They were made for the Old Town Canoe Company, as they did not have the men to do the job right."
So--- In 1978 there was a BN Morris canoe that was 62 years old--- circa 1916--- and IF we knew the serial number, more light might be shed on all Morris serial numbers and how they relate to dating the canoe.
And-- I am fascinated by this older Morris brother who stands in the shadows... and the boats he made for Old Town... what do we know of them?
This coming summer, Denis Kallery and I hope to venture from Upper Michigan to Maine, and our agenda grows larger. I know others have tried to track down Morris information, and maybe we'll hit similar brick walls.
In looking through old issues of "Wooden Canoe", I've noticed that, at one time, those with Morris canoes were asked to send the serial number and model type to someone who was trying to make a registry of sorts. Does anyone know how far that venture got, and if anything was determined?
Thanks--
Kathy
I will copy a very interesting piece of information found in "The Canoeist's Catalog" by Bill and Fern Stearns, copyright 1978. The portion I will quote comes from an article by Fern Sterns, titled "Three Maine Giants". This is a portion of a letter written by Charles B. King:
"My grandfather, Charles A.Morris, started building canoes when he was about 16 years old. He started upstairs in a shed chamber in the house I lived in for 58 years. As he expanded, a canoe shop was built next to the house; it was three stories high and about 50' by 80' --- the first Morris Canoe factory. Later he and his brother built the factory located where the Stucco Lodge in Veazie is now. The large building that stands there now was the canoe company's office. The company was first named the Veazie Canoe Company but was later named the B.N. Morris Canoe Company. I vaguely remember the factory-- I had been up there many times, but I was only eight years old when it burned down in 1920. My son, who lives in Waterville, has my Morris canoe-- it is 62 years old and still has the original canvas on it.
"In 1926 and 1927 I used to help my grandfather in his old factory (a three-story building on a lot behind where Red's Market now stands in Veazie) as he built racing canoes without any canvas on them. He finished them in natural finish; they could only weigh between 62 and 64 pounds-- no more, no less. They were made for the Old Town Canoe Company, as they did not have the men to do the job right."
So--- In 1978 there was a BN Morris canoe that was 62 years old--- circa 1916--- and IF we knew the serial number, more light might be shed on all Morris serial numbers and how they relate to dating the canoe.
And-- I am fascinated by this older Morris brother who stands in the shadows... and the boats he made for Old Town... what do we know of them?
This coming summer, Denis Kallery and I hope to venture from Upper Michigan to Maine, and our agenda grows larger. I know others have tried to track down Morris information, and maybe we'll hit similar brick walls.
In looking through old issues of "Wooden Canoe", I've noticed that, at one time, those with Morris canoes were asked to send the serial number and model type to someone who was trying to make a registry of sorts. Does anyone know how far that venture got, and if anything was determined?
Thanks--
Kathy