This thread will be the saga of the restoration of Waltham Canoe number 1119, which will hopefully be returned to its former glory (or alternatively, placed in the burn pile). Follow along if you dare!
I acquired this canoe in the spring of 2025, during a quest to locate a few canoes to be candidates as victims of a canvas canoe restoration class at the Wooden Boat School, taking place in September 2025.
Here is one of the photos I was sent by the couple who were selling it:
It was immediately obvious that the canoe was far from original. The rails and caps appear to be Douglas fir, there are odd copper caps on the decks, and the seats are just canvas slung between a couple of bars. The floor rack is obviously a later addition as well.
It has some positives at this point as well - Birdseye maple decks and thwarts, builders tag, outside stem, and the sheer line looks fair at least. It wasn't expensive so nothing to lose. Plus got to spend a few days vacationing in Portsmouth, NH, and we got to visit Tom and Jan Seavey.
Here it is in my own shop. I've removed the copper tip caps:
I acquired this canoe in the spring of 2025, during a quest to locate a few canoes to be candidates as victims of a canvas canoe restoration class at the Wooden Boat School, taking place in September 2025.
Here is one of the photos I was sent by the couple who were selling it:
It was immediately obvious that the canoe was far from original. The rails and caps appear to be Douglas fir, there are odd copper caps on the decks, and the seats are just canvas slung between a couple of bars. The floor rack is obviously a later addition as well.
It has some positives at this point as well - Birdseye maple decks and thwarts, builders tag, outside stem, and the sheer line looks fair at least. It wasn't expensive so nothing to lose. Plus got to spend a few days vacationing in Portsmouth, NH, and we got to visit Tom and Jan Seavey.
Here it is in my own shop. I've removed the copper tip caps: