“I find it hard to believe someone bent DOWN the original gunwale.”
Maybe that’s exactly what they did. The ten laminate stem clearly indicates that reshaping of the stem likely took place – shortening it, and reshaping its curve to meet up with inwales (can you tell if they are original in length, or have they been shortened at all?).
The most forward rib in your pictures appears to be wider at the top than is usual – suggesting that it has been shortened somewhat, as would be necessary if the sheer line were lowered. It is harder to tell about the second rib top – it may be a bit shorter, resulting in the very tight fit of the rib into the inwale socket.
I have only a few scraps of the original inwales on my Morris, and they were loose in the bottom of the boat when I got it, but as the pictures show, the tops of the ribs and the inwale sockets are pretty uniform in size all along. Not so clear in the pictures is that the rib tops are not really snug in the inwale sockets – there is a bit of play in the fit. (But given the condition of my canoe, that may not be representative of the original construction. In the pictures, the inwale scraps are being held close to their original location, but only approximate how they would have fit when built in place -- there is a poor attempt at a replacement deck in the way that keeps them from being properly fit.)
In your pictures, the first rib top is somewhat wider than I would have expected, but if it has been cut shorter, it would be wider, and I would guess that the inwale socket was made wider to accommodate it. The second rib top, which would have been cut less short, looks closer to standard size – but maybe it was whittled down a bit to fit the socket?
I’m not an expert on Morrises – but I would guess that your canoe tips suffered the fate of many canoes stored on the ground – the stem tips and deck ends rotted away. And I would guess that in being repaired – “enthusiastically” – the stem profile was lowered and reshaped, and the inwale and the first couple of rib tops were played with to make everything fit.
I’ve also attached a couple of pics of the “L” shaped bolts that were used to hold the thwarts in place. One of my inwale fragments had one of the bolts. As installed, the top of the bolt, sunk into the inwale, would have been covered by the top rail that completed the closed gunwale system.
Greg