TJ - we should add that photos really help. There were many different wooden canoe manufacturers over the years, and some of them used very similar serial number formats and fonts. Old Town is perhaps the most recognized name in wooden canoes (at least in the US), so what's often believed to be an Old Town turns out to be built by another maker. A four-digit serial number could be a very early Old Town, but as is often seen in these forums, a 4-digit number often turns out to be from another maker.
Photos will provide a much better chance of accurate identification because even subtle differences in construction are key to identifying both the manufacturer and model from a given manufacturer. Best images include ones that show:
- the serial number itself (see how this help my canoe ID above)
- decks
- thwarts
- profile of the bow and stern of the canoe
- seats
- floor of the canoe
In the photo of the canoe above, we can see the relative length of decks and the shape of the deck cutout, the style of seats, the shape and spacing of the thwarts, the mechanism of attaching seats and thwarts to the gunwales, the fact that the gunwales are "open" rather than "closed", tell-tale screw holes where sponsons were once attached, a floor rack and its ghost in the canoe's finish, and other features that point to this particular canoe being likely an Old Town from the 1920s to 1930s (as it turned out to be). Color of a canoe might be original but that's one of the easiest and most common changes to old canoes, so exterior color is often not key in identification.
Looking forward to seeing your canoe #6924 identified.
Michael