An Impressive Line Up

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An Impressive Line Up

An Impressive Line Up

the sender of the photo will be disclosed later, might give the game away.

Left to right – who can ID the 4 launches, #4 will be a challenge but if you get the other 3 then the 4th should ‘follow’.
Location is Katherine Bay.

Harold – for you to win you will have to name the dinghy as well 🙂

Seagull

SEAGULL – a classic 4 Sale

A lot of people say your mad owning a classic boat, if thats true, owning two must make you certifiable.
CYA member Paul Burton is bucking the market trend that normally goes like this – Yacht > Launch > Camper Van > Die. Paul is going from a classic launch back to a classic yacht, well to be 100% correct a motorsailer.
The upside of Paul’s flip/flop is his rather nice 1953 ex Navy Launch ‘Seagull’ is for sale.
As you would expect from a vessel that has been in service, she was very well presented & an ideal classic for someone looking for an affordable (<$50k), easily handed, low maintenance, economical classic for exploring the Hauraki Gulf.
Powered by a 52hp Volvo Seagull runs on the smell of an oily rag e.g. $3-5 an hour.

Now unless you are Tony Stevenson, no one wants to own 2 classic boats so it would be an understatement to say that Paul is a motivated vendor. If you are interested, contact Paul to discuss the many options as to how you could own Seagull.

Viewing is available at Bayswater Marina until July 5th, then on the hard at Devonport Yacht Club.

Paul Burton 021 876 496 E: paulburton@hotmail.co.nz

A twist – the CYA member selling the classic yacht Paul is buying, is buying a classic launch, so its all a merry-go-round. Maybe I should be a broker? in fact I am……. now who do I send the invoice to 🙂

Lady Pat

LADY PAT

Lady Pat (30’9”  x 9’ x 2’9”) was built by the Lane Motor Boat Company for Mr P Walker of Papatoetoe. She is pictured above undergoing her sea trials, where she achieved a top speed of 11 knots.
Harold Kidd advises that Lady Pat owned for many years in the 1960s and 1970s by H E Goldsboro of Meadowbank  and was powered with a Chrysler Crown. In 1973 she was owned by R. Parr of Church St, Devonport , a member of DYC, the best little yacht club in the world 🙂

Update 30/06/2014 – The 2 photos below were sent to me by Chris Manning & show Lady Pat at Mana Marina  in 2014, in fact I think as of now. Check out the chat in the Comments section – her current owner, Philip Simpson has questioned if the b/w photo is in fact the Lady Pat below – your thoughts – I think it is.

 

Kotare

KOTARE

Designed by Bill Couldrey and built by Frank Wilkins, launched in 1961, Kotare is a ,28′ kauri planked launch, currently based in Kerikeri.
A CYA member is looking for more information on her past & present.

Bonito

BONITO

photo & info sourced by Ken Ricketts

Built in 1960 by Carl Augustin  for Dr Lindsay Brown of Auckland.

She is 34 ft long with 10ft 6 beam & was originally fitted with an 86 hp 6 cyl Ford Diesel with direct drive to a 14 x 14 propeller & cruising at about 14 knots & a top speed of 17 knots. In 1961 she was fitted with a 2 to 1 reduction gear driving a 20 x 27 propeller which took her to an economical cruising speed of 17 knots at 2 to 3 gallons of fuel per hour & top speed of 22 knots. – just shows the differences a reduction gear can make.

Any updates on her history, photos & present whereabouts would be appreciated.

Bonito

Bonito

Harold Kidd Update

I last saw BONITO in Mangonui in 1999 when she was owned by Jimmy Osborne who had owned her for nearly 20 years. After Dr. Lindsay Brown, who kept her until at least 1967, she was owned by P. Noakes of St. Stephens Ave in 1973.

Mystery Launch 24/06

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Mystery Launch 24/06

Mystery Launch 24/06

The above photo, according to its tag on Pictures-past was taken in 1946 & the launch is nudged into the causeway between Rangitoto Island & Motutapu Island.

Its a big ask but is anyone prepared to have a go at ID’ing her?. The square windows may help.

Yvonne

YVONNE
Where Is She Now?

Photo 2006 Mahurangi Regatta ex Jason Prew

All I know is that I saw her a couple of years ago hauled out at the Te Atatu Boat Club & last year I snapped a photo of her leaving the Viaduct Basin one afternoon.
Its claimed that she is possibly built by Lanes c.1924 – and I can hear Harold Kidd going “and weren’t  they all” when he reads this 🙂

She may have been a CYA boat in the mid / late 2000’s.

Harold Kidd Input

I can’t find the exact provenance for YVONNE but she was in existence in January 1924. Her long term owner (and possibly her first owner) was Andrew Ernest Graham of Browns Bay, later Takapuna. He was a painter and decorator by trade and kept YVONNE in Milford Creek. Later he moved to Te Aroha and sold YVONNE to H. Henderson in 1930. Henderson sold to B.G. Gribbon in 1936. In 2001 she was pretty derelict at Te Atatu but was nicely overhauled by Tony Broughton to her present state.
The story is that she was built by Lanes and that is entirely likely, but she could just as well have been built by any number of Auckland builders from, say, 1912 to to 1924 and may even have started life as a flushdecker under a different name.

PS However, I think she was brand new in January 1924 when she was scratch boat in the Anniversary Regatta launch race for launches under 7 knots, indicating probably that she had not raced before. The following year she was in the race for 7 to 9 knots but broke down..

The Rise and Fall of an Australian Boat Building Family

I came across this gem of a story buried in a posting on the USA WoodenBoat forum – It first appeared on an aussie website called ‘Australian Family Stories’. I’m sure its full of misinformation but it is one of the better tales I have read & has a kiwi link. It involves drug running, organised crime, murder, a tiger shark, an attempted suicide and a murder! We live a very sheltered life in NZ compared to our cousins across the ditch – the runabout photo was just to get your attention – read on, you wont be disappointed  🙂 Alan H

The Rise and Fall of a Boat Building Family by Kay Koenig

Yesterday I was asked to research the Holmes family who were boat builders at Lavender Bay. With a little research what a fascinating story developed.

Members of the Holmes family had been building boats in England and in the USA from the 1700’s.   Whether some of their descendants migrated to the southern colonies is a matter of debate. However, one William Holmes travelled to New Zealand around 1850. He is reported to have been a potter, not a boat builder. Whatever the case, he sired a boat building dynasty.  His three sons, James, John and William settled in Devonport. They won a government tender to run a ferry service between Devonport and Auckland and in 1864, built the paddle steamer, Waitemata, the first ferry to be built in the town. The brothers operated the Waitemata Steam Ferry Company. When the company went bankrupt in 1867, they renamed the Waitemata, Enterprise 2, established a new company, the North Shore Steam Ferry Company, and continued their business.  This flourished. To suitably accommodate the ferry passengers, a private hotel was built.  This hotel, the Flagstaff, was quite a resort and even included a bathing beach.  The Holmes brothers continued to build boats and operate the ferry service until well into the twentieth century.

William’s son, also William, migrated to Australia. He worked for a time as a bridge builder in Victoria and then moved to Sydney in the 1870’s. Once in Sydney he followed his father’s trade as a boat builder. Initially he worked with the firm of Warbrick & Payne who had established a boat-building workshop in Lavender Bay.  Then he struck out on his own at McMahon’s Point. William’s enterprise was hugely successful.  His nameplate was attached to boats all over Australia and up into the islands to the north.   He built large luxury yachts such as Minota, Apache and Bona, (now Boomerang, a proud member of Sydney’s heritage fleet).  He built launches that were used by missionaries to travel between the islands of Melanesia. He built boats designed for racing on Sydney Harbour, including ten footers and fourteen footers. He skippered several of these and won many trophies.  His eighteen footer, Arawa, won three championship races in one season.

William Holmes was the first boat builder in Sydney to construct speedboats. In 1905 he build the Gee-Wiz and later the Fairbanks which won the first Australasian speedboat championship. William built a hydroplane and was still operating his business, building boats and winning races when he died in 1923.

William’s eldest son, Reginald also entered the boat building industry. His workshop was in Lavender Bay at the bottom of Crescent Street. He built launches and speedboats. Like his father, he was a successful and well-respected businessman.

It was the mid 1930’s. The Harbour Bridge had been completed and Sydney was just dragging itself out of the Depression. People were looking for cheap entertainment. Fun piers and aquariums were popular.  In order to boost his business, the proprietor of the Palace Hotel in Coogee put a four metre tiger shark into an indoor swimming pool at the hotel. On Anzac Day 1935 the shark had a large audience.  About 4 o’clock in the afternoon, it became agitated and vomited. Amongst the fish it disgorged was a rat, a bird and a human arm, complete with tattoo.  The reputation of the Holmes family was about to be tarnished.

Boat builder, Reginald Holmes had a modern use for his speedboats. They sometimes did a night run, out through the Heads and along the coast to collect packages that were dropped overboard from passing ships. Homes had a secret life as a drug runner and dealer. He imported Cocaine and distributed it amongst the young crowd of Sydney.   Not content with boat building and drug dealing, Reginald and some of his mates decided to indulge in a little insurance fraud.

In 1932, Reginald mortgaged a life insurance policy to Albert Stannard for £4000. Stannard was a friend and fellow boat builder.  Holmes, Stannard and two other friends purchased an ocean going motor yacht, Pathfinder. They had a business venture involving the Pathfinder.  The caretaker of the boat was James Smith.

Smith was a part-time boxer, who lived in Balmain, and originally ran a billiard saloon. During the 1930’s he moved up in the world. He became a builder and his first contract was the construction of a block of units for Reginald Holmes. As the caretaker of the Pathfinder, Smith took the boat on a trip up the Central Coast in April of 1934.  It sank off the coast near Terrigal. Unbeknown to Holmes and his friends, Smith was a police informer and the police were very interested in the Pathfinder. They thought it was involved in the smuggling operation. After is sank, Stannard, Holmes and his cronies were so vigorously interviewed by the police. The insurance company was also suspicious. The claim for the sunken yacht, valued at £8,000, was not settled.

A police informer cannot remain undercover forever and by April 1935, Smith’s days were numbered.

The arm in the shark caused a sensation in Sydney. A photograph of the arm featured widely in the press and it was not long before the owner was identified by its tattoo of fighting boxers. The arm belonged to James Smith.

Once identification was made, it did not take police long to trace Smiths last movements. He had been drinking in a pub with Cronulla local, Patrick Brady. A taxi driver remembered Brady. He recalled that, very late one night in April, he had taken Brady to Reginald Holmes house in Lavender Bay. The police had their connection.

Initially Holmes denied knowing Brady.  Then he took one of his speedboats into Sydney Harbour, and in full view of people strolling along the shore, Reginald Holms shot himself in the head and tumbled into the water.  Miraculously he survived. He climbed back into the boat and sped off. The water police gave chase and for four hours they zigzagging in and out of ferries, large cargo ships and other harbour traffic.  Eventually Holmes surrendered. He confessed that Brady had visited him. Bearing the severed arm, Brady had tried to blackmail Holmes. Later, Holmes agreed to be a witness at the inquest into the death of James Smith.

In the early hours of the first morning of the inquest, Reginald Holmes was found dead in his car in Hickson Road, under the newly constructed Harbour Bridge. He had three bullets in his chest.

At his inquest, his wife testified that, on the day of his death, Reginald had withdrawn £500 from his bank account. When he had left home he had told her that he was meeting Albert Stannard at 2 o’clock.  Another witness identified Stannard, as the man who walked away from a car in Hickson Rd, on the evening that Holmes had died.

In the end, Reginald Holmes’ killer was never identified. It was thought that Holmes had ordered his own death and paid a hit man to do what he failed to accomplish. Without Reginald’s evidence, Brady was not convicted. In 1937 Albert Stannard purchased the Holmes boat business in Lavender Bay. It still operates today.

 

Copyright 2012 – Australian Family Stories

Ann Michelle

ANN MICHELLE

CYA members Janet and Bruce Pulman purchased Ann Michelle in July 2013 from Ken McDonald who had owned her for approx. 18 months, before he moved to Kerikeri. All the Pulmans know about owners prior to this is that she was owned by someone at Tanners Point for about 30 years, it has been suggested that she was built about 1952. The photo alongside the wharf, sporting blue paint is a ‘as purchased’ shot.
Any help would be appreciated in uncovering more about Ann Michelle. Hopefully with such a distinctive name someone will have rubbed up against her.

waitematawoodys network again provides the answers – very impressed 🙂

The two posts below will make the Pulmans happy.

Shamus Fairhall
I believe from Ken McDonald she is a Owen Wooly designed and built boat. Now berthed back at Owens old boat shed by the Panmure bridge ( Now Leader boat builders ). Great lines and a good example of Owen’s ” eye ” for proportion. Well done on the tidy up, looks great.

Des Workman
She was built by Owen Woolley for the Flecther family in Tauranga. Woolley built 3 x 26 fts. Anne was the last & best.My wife & I owned her for about 6 years & really loved her. I sold her about 1966 to someone from Tauranga. So I guess that would be the folk from Tanners Point.