Tuesday, October 29, 2019

1915 - Account of a Voyage From New York to Boston in a 12-Foot Dinghy Driven by an Outboard Motor

In 1915 Capt. Thomas Fleming Day, then editor of THE RUDDER magazine, conceived the idea of having an outboard cover the distance between New York City and Boston.

With the co-operation of the Evinrude Motor Company, Hans Mikkelsen and Oakley Fisher took upon themselves the job of driving the little boat over the long course.  Hans Mikkelsen was with the Evinrude company wearing many different hats over the years.


HE man who wanted to get to Boston in the worst way was told to take the Joy Line. 



The usual way is to take the New Haven Railroad or the Fall River Line, the one doing the distance in six hours, and the other in fourteen. 
In the passage I am about to chronicle it took much longer, but was a far more interesting and enjoyable trip than being Pullmaned or paddled to the city of beans. 

Why we chose to make this voyage in so small a craft with such unusual power is told in another chapter. You will also find a drawing and description of the Sea Pup in May and June numbers of this magazine, so it is unnecessary for me to give you other than the two principal dimensions. Length over all, 12 feet; extreme breadth, 4 feet 3 inches. The power was an Evinrude outboard motor, a regular stock model, using a magneto, nothing being altered in anyway to fit it for the long passage.  




In order to carry the fuel for the motor and food for the crew, it was necessary to have a nurse boat go along, and I intended to take Sea Bird for the purpose, but a few days before the start was planned she developed an obstinate leak which necessitated her being hauled out.  She would have been just the boat for the job, as her speed under power is about equal to that of the dinghy, so enabling the two to keep readily together.  Convoying another vessel is never a pleasant task, and it is especially arduous and wearying when your speed exceeds that of the convoy.  You are constantly obliged to stop or circle back so as not to lose sight of the charge.

What a miserable temper-breaking job it must have been in the sailing-ship days when men-o'-war convoyed big fleets of merchantmen from port to port. How the captain of a smart sailing frigate or sloop must have cursed at a rotten old tub that, elbowing along at a speed of two or three knots, kept the whole bunch waiting. He and all his crew must have rejoiced when at sun up the tortoise was missing, having foundered or been picked up by privateers during the night.

Convoying under power is a simpler and a more comfortable task, if the speed of all the vessels can be regulated to a uniformity.  Had we a nurse boat that could have been run at the same speed as the small boat, the voyage would have been deprived of most of its difficulties.  But owing to the big boat not being able to slow down to the dinghy's speed, we had to be constantly on the alert so as not to become separated from our convoy.

The nurse boat was a high-sided 40-foot cabin cruiser, powered with an old-fashioned two-cylinder, two-cycle motor that would run at full speed, but obstinately declined to be slowed down to anything less than five and one-half knots, the maximum speed being six and two-thirds. The nurse's name was Mayzi II, Captain Charles K. Sackett, and enrolled in the Robins Reef Y. C, of Bayonne, N. J.

Knowing what such a trip meant to a crew, especially if bad weather was encountered, it was my intention to have along at least eight—four to run the small boat and four the large—but as usual, when the time came to go, several who had volunteered backed out and left us short-handed. But having said I would start on such a day and hour there was nothing to do but go.



With sufficient crew we could have pushed right through without a stop, but owing to my being the only navigator on board, we were obliged to come to anchor so as to get a rest.  The Evinrude Company sent on Mr. Oakley Fisher to run the motor in the little boat, and another Evinrude man, Mr. Hans Mikkelsen, volunteered to go along and work in shifts with Fisher.  This they did alternately, driving the little boat all the way from New York to Boston. 

The success of the voyage is largely due to the pluck, skill and perseverance of these two boys and if any glory is to be earned by making this successful passage, it belongs to Fisher and Mikkelsen, who performed their duties like real sailors. When it is known that neither of these men had been over the course before, and. had had little or no experience on salt water it will be admitted that they showed courage in tackling the undertaking, and skill in carrying it through without a hitch. It cannot be expected that all will go as planned, but usually three-quarters of the planning turns out as promised, and the rest, while causing delay and extra work, does not prevent the adventure being successful.

It was half-past one when we left the Robins Reef Y. C., and started for the Battery, with Sea Pup in tow. My intention was to start at two o'clock, it being low water at Governors Island, and take the flood up the East River. The tide sets very strong in this river, both on the flood and ebb, and it is waste of time and money to buck it with a small or low-powered vessel. Owing to the docking and straightening of the banks it is getting worse, especially in the Blackwells Island channels. 

Our reason for starting from the Battery was twofold—first, that is the beginning of New 

York, and second, because I wanted to get some movie films which my good friend, Dr. Salisbury, had kindly offered to take for me.


When off the boat basin, which lies on the West Side of the old Castle Garden building, I told Captain Sackett to lay-to and wait until we got through with the cameras, and then we would come out and start. 

 The basin has two entrances, and a float inside, but despite the protection of the walls, it is a bobbly place, owing to the swell thrown in by the constantly passing craft. Luckily, this day it was unusually smooth. We found the camera men and scribes waiting for us, and after a few words of instruction, started in circling around so the film artists could get what they wanted.

We then took on one of the crew, a few dress-suit cases, and other stuff that had been forgotten in the morning. The Pyrene Company very kindly sent down an extinguisher to carry in the boat, which we were all glad to get, as we never feel entirely safe unless equipped with that fire-fighting device. This summer there have been an unusual number of boat fires, several serious ones, entailing loss of life. Nine-tenths of these are the result of smoking. Careless use of matches. It would be a good idea to make every man who insists upon smoking on or in a motor boat carry a Pyrene extinguisher strapped to his waist, so he could put out the fires he starts with his widely flung matches.   
(Do I spy an embedded ad here? Nothing like a free fire extinguisher I bet!)

It was three o'clock when through with the camera men, and we shot out of the basin to pick up the nurse boat. She was nowhere to be seen, so supposing she had gone on up the East River, we rounded the Battery and motored off up that stream. The little boat was heavily burdened, there being three of us, three dress-suit cases and ten gallons of gasoline, but she ran dry through the ferry wash, making good time, with the young ebb helping along. 





Owing to the many bridges and tunnels, the river is not the watery hell it used to be when dozens of ferry boats cut across from side to side. Now, you see very few of these boats, and some of the lines have been wholly abandoned, the slips and houses falling to ruins. So the old order changes; what will put bridges and tunnels out of employment?

It took Sea Pup one hour and twenty minutes to make Hell Gate, a distance of seven miles. She had good weather all the way up, the wind being Southeast, and so off the Long Island shore. The river is not the pleasantest of pastures when the wind blows up or down, against the current. Not seeing anything of our nurse, we decided to go into Pot Cove, land and telephone to the Battery and find out why the delay. 




Just as we got through planning, Mayzi II came whizzing around Halletts Point, and without stopping, went on upstream. It was not until the Brothers were passed that she stopped and awaited our coming. We then heard the tale of woe.

Instead of laying-to outside, the nurse went into the police pier and made fast, and was promptly run into by a police patrol boat that smashed her steering gear. This was the cause of the delay. We now transferred the baggage and with one man, started off the little boat, with instructions to follow in our wake.



I had arranged a set of whistle and flashlight signals, the little boat having one set and the big boat the other.  These consisted of numbers, for instance, 23 was go ahead; 43 come aboard. These proved good meat on several occasions.  The boat was fitted with a small flag pole; on this she carried a white lantern by night.  During the day we put a small piece of canvas on it as being so low it was difficult to keep her in sight in a seaway.

We passed Fort Schuyler at 5:45 p. m., and entered Long Island Sound for the first long run of some ninety miles to Race Rock.  Off Stepping Stones we hoisted our lights, and passed Execution at seven o'clock, one hour behind the time fixed in the schedule.  So far, all had gone well, the wind light, the sea smooth, and the sky clear. 

We were due at Stratford at 2 a. m., and arrived on time, the Sea Pup making over 4 knots and the motor running fine. You could hear its rhythmic song for a mile or more, and this, with the light, enabled us to keep track of the small craft.  The motor on the big boat was giving trouble, and about ten miles East of Port Jefferson, it lay down and refused to start.  Investigation showed that the batteries were dead, having died naturally, after two seasons' work. 


At the same time a thick fog settled down. Luckily, Mikkelsen, who was running the Sea Pup, seeing the big boat stop, and the fog, came back, and we took his line, or else he surely would have lost us. There was nothing to do but let the hook go. This we did after running South far enough to be out of the track of the night boats. Now came a scraping up of batteries. By sacrificing both our binnacle lights and two extras we got six cells for the engine, and found it would spark enough to set the mill a-going.

Preparation—that is the keynote of success.  Preparation for emergencies; meaning always having ready at hand a duplicate or substitute for what is lost or fails.  Yet how few ever take the trouble to have spares aboard!  Not once, but half a dozen times, I have seen boats crippled by neglecting to have spare parts of the ignition outfit on hand. Here were we, delayed for several hours through this neglect, and obliged to go back ten miles to a port to buy batteries.

As soon as daylight made, I sent the small boat off ahead, and began creeping and nosing through the fog to find the Port Jefferson breakwater.  The first thing was to pick up the shore and find out where we had fallen upon it.  We gradually shoaled the water until the beach came right aboard, with not six inches under the keel.  All these Long Island beaches look much alike, and it was only after running up and down it for a mile or two we decided it was about 5 miles to the East of the breakwater entrance, and turned the boat bow West again.  

At last, we picked up the black buoy off , and ran in until the bell sounded right ahead.  The vapor was so thick I could not see the tower until within fifty feet of the rocks.  The little boat had gone in ahead of us, and made the village all right. 

How fog distorts objects! The white buoy off the entrance looked a hundred feet high; a man towered a gigantic creature.  Seeing things in a fog always brings into my mind those weird pictures of Dore's. Two gulls sitting on a chip of wood looked like two men in a skiff, and I was about to hail when the birds took flight and destroyed the illusion.

Long Island is blessed with a number of fine harbors, and of these Port Jefferson is one of the best.  It has been for many years a favorite Wintering place for yachts; many lying at anchor there season after season.  In the good old days a number of vessels were built in its yards, Port Jefferson sloops and schooners being famous along the seaboard, but at present there is little or no building going on. 






The town is directly North of Patchogue on Great South Bay, but while about nine miles apart, they are as far from each other as London from Cairo.  The island has no cross communication, except in one or two places, and the South Side and the North Side seldom meet.  East from Port Jefferson for forty miles there is no decent harbor, no towns of importance, and the land a sandy, scrub-covered waste, given up to huckleberries, deer and mosquitoes.
 



After getting the batteries, and 30 gallons of gasoline, so as to be sure not to run short, we put off outside to look for the little boat.  The fog was still thick on the Sound, though clearing on the bay. Soon we heard the Evinrude humming and Sea Pup showed up, minus one hand, he having jumped the ship.  As the deserter was the only relief I had at the wheel, it left me to do all the helming.

The water was dead smooth, the sun hot, and the fog passing away, we hoped, for good.  At 5:30 the mist began to shut down again, and we called the little boat alongside and looked for a harbor before it got too thick.  Saybrook being the nearest, we put in there, and came to anchor. I was well blown and glad of a chance to rest, having been without sleep for thirty-eight hours.

The morning dawned with promise of fine weather, and a long spell of it. The sun rose right out of the sea, his red round face cutting the horizon sharp as a sword edge.  The wind came out of the Northwest, a gentle zephyr, steadily growing, sure sign of a real breeze.  All hands were rested, and we determined to make a long day of it, and pick up some of the hours lost through fog.  

 The only spot on our happiness was a head tide, but head tide at the start usually means a fair one at the finish, but it held Sea Pup back considerably, so that it was eight o'clock before she passed New London and two hours later when Ram Island Light Vessel bore abeam.  Then came the turn, and in fifty-eight minutes she was off Watch Hill, doing over 5 knots.


Such weather! If it had been ordered, you couldn't have bettered it.  Clear as a bell; cool, strong breeze, and moderate sea.  We were making a grand run.  The little boat kept astern of us about half a mile, and when getting too far, we would circle back, and repass her.  Every two hours and a half she would stop for two or three minutes to refill the tank, but except to get rid of weed on the propeller, she ran along steadily without changing one small note of her song.

We saw for the first time a number of vessels, including a large schooner yacht, carrying all the muslin her spars could stretch.  This clipper was a beautiful sight, heeled to the rail, and going a good 10 knots.  The Sound, once so full of sail, is almost deserted of craft.  Some days you will voyage for forty miles without seeing a schooner, but this morning we saw a dozen run out of New London at the coming of the West wind, and start East through the Race.  It shows how utterly bad trade is when such a highway is almost deserted.  Coming back between Cuttyhunk and Watch Hill, we passed one solitary tow, and not another vessel of any size.

It will be some days before I forget that afternoon's run down the beach. Point Judith Breakwater was passed into at two o'clock, and here we shifted crews, and then set off for another leg to Cuttyhunk, passing the Light at 2:25.  The wind was blowing fresh and bit rough sea, but it bothered Sea Pup not one mite.  She was running along easy and dry, and her crew having the time of his life.

The mill on the nurse was an awful consumer of gas, so to save, we decided instead of circling back, to come to a halt and let the little boat run ahead for a mile or two, and go after her. We did this halfway betwixt Judith and Sekonnet, with almost dire results.  I waited for twenty-five minutes, then ran ahead, expecting to pick the convoy up on the course in a quarter of an hour, but after running a mile, we could see no Sea Pup.  



At last, after an anxious searching, the small bit of canvas looking like a shark's fin, could be seen far inshore, and we turned and ran up to meet it.  The cause of the boat getting so far off the course was the helmsman sitting on the starboard side of the sternsheets, and the tendency to pull the helm towards him, rather than to shove it away, consequently the boat constantly worked to port.  It was difficult to see so small a craft unless she was ahead of the sun; when between you and the sun, at any distance she was invisible.  

At seven o'clock it was dark, and I was busy trying to locate the Hen and Chickens Light Vessel when the mill gave up again, and we came to a stop; so after trying for sometime to start, I ordered the hook let go and Sea Pup given the forty three. She came alongside, and we settled down for the night.



This run from Saybrook to Hen and Chickens in twelve hours was a good day's work—the best we had made—and without a hitch, the little boat clocking off a steady 4 1/2 knots. We could easily have made the canal that night, but might have lost the little fellow in the dark, so the best plan was to lay by and wait for daylight. What difference age and experience make to your ideas of distance!  


I recollect when a kid, and we first went cruising, we used to think twenty miles a good day's work, and thirty something extraordinary. In a cruise from New Rochelle to Thimble Islands, some fifty miles, we took from two to three days to make the voyage, and perhaps six, getting back against the wind. Today the air would be blue if obliged to dawdle along like that.  The coasters in Colonial days sailing as packets between the Eastern ports and New York, only made about thirty miles a day, taking from six to eight days to make the passage to Boston.  One fellow, whose log I read, was six weeks from Boston to New Haven.  They went into harbor every night, and never worked a head wind, except with a fair tide.  Read Richardson's, the novelist, account of his voyage to Lisbon, and see what went for speedy voyaging a generation or three ago.

When morning broke, we were within two hundred yards of the Old Cock, the outermost rock of this dangerous reef.  I never see that jagged line of stones without recalling the loss of Mystery, the New Haven sloop yacht that capsized off there, drowning all her crew.  She was taken aback by a sudden shift of wind in the night and upset, being an inside-ballast, centerboard craft.  One of the men was seen by a schooner's crew next morning standing on the rock just inside the Old Cock, but the vessel's captain left him to perish, giving the excuse that it was too rough to launch the yawl boat.  This was supposed from description to be Bartlett, a man whom I knew.

The distance from Hen and Chickens to Wings Neck is about twenty-one miles, and leaving early, we made this by 9:50, and then headed in for the canal, Sea Pup following close behind. The fine weather still continued; light wind, smooth sea. 

While waiting off Cleveland Ledge Gas Buoy for the little fellow to catch up, a large power skiff came to us and asked if we wanted help.  We told the man why we were waiting and thanked him for his courtesy in coming to make the inquiry . I am sorry not to know the name of this man, but hope the mention of this of the act will be an incentive to others to do likewise.   This Summer a power boat broken down was passed by abandoned for the mainland.  It is to be regretted that not one of which offered to give him a tow, or even to make an inquiry as to whether he wanted help.
I had to look up gas buoys.  Interesting!
At Wings Neck begins the buoyed channel leading to the entrance of the Cape Cod Canal. This canal joins Buzzards Bay to Cape Cod Bay, passing across the narrow neck of sandy land lying between the sea and the Monument River.  The original name of Buzzards Bay was Monumental Bay.  Why it was so called, and why and when it was changed to Buzzards, I don't know.   



On its shores at Cuttyhunk was the first settlement of the English in the New England States. Gosnold landed there and built a fort and village in 1609, but it was soon abandoned for the mainland.  It is to be regretted that the original names of these places were not retained, instead of new or corrupted titles.

 At the entrance to the canal, just below the railroad bridge, Collector Ghen met us with the guard boat, and piloted the Mayzi to the pier, where we tied up and waited for Sea Pup to arrive.  While she was coming along I telephoned Walter Moreton in Boston, and asked him to come down with his speed boat, Flying Clam, and meet us off the East end of the canal. This would allow us to leave the nurse boat at Buzzards Bay, saving the canalage and gasoline. 

The distance from Boston to the canal entrance is about fifty miles, and Flying Clam could make this in four hours.  The canal charge for Sea Pup was five dollars, this being the minimum charge. The toll for yachts is based on their length over all, and very reasonable, it being about equal to the cost of the gasoline saved by using the longer route. The length of the canal is 8 miles, and the guaranteed depth 18 feet.  The management are anxious to have boats use the waterway, and every attention is paid to vessels passing through it. The navigation on both sides is free from dangers and very simple.

Owing to the difference in the rise of the tides at the two ends, the current runs through very strongly, and as it was setting to the West, we were obliged to wait with the little boat until after two o'clock before getting underway for Boston.  Moreton had promised to be waiting for us at the other end, so we loaded on all our goods and chattels and started off, the three of us, leaving Sackett and Noble to spend Sunday at Onset.

It has just occurred to me that in spinning this yarn I forgot to mention days and dates, unlike the hero who, in chronicling his campaign, wrote:

"Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday are week-days three:Monday, the army met;Tuesday, off we set;Wednesday, beaten were we."
So to get you right in the reckoning, it was Wednesday, September 8th, when we sailed, and Saturday when we arrived at the canal entrance.  It was scheduled to be in Boston Saturday, about 1 p.m., but owing to the fog, we lost some thirty hours, and as all who have voyaged know lost hours are untraveled miles and hard things to make up.










It was just 2:47 by the Buzzards Bay clock when we pulled out, and bucking a strong tide, headed East through the canal.  The sides of the canal for some distance from the bridge are lined with dolphins for the waiting craft to moor to, and these dolphins are connected by a flying bridge similar to the dolphins in the Kiel Canal.  To escape the current, we ran in behind the dolphins, and as close as possible to the bank.  About halfway through the tide slacked and Sea Pup made better time, getting to and passing out at the other end at 4:30, being 1 hour and 43 minutes making the eight miles.  Here another collector took up our pass, and we were free to proceed to sea.







The toll charged for the passage was $5, a very reasonable charge, but the toll on the large vessels is too heavy and prevents these using the canal.  This is especially true of sailing craft as the wind, being furnished by nature, costs nothing, and a good Southwester makes it only a matter of ten hours' running from Cuttyhunk to Highland Tight, so that the saving of time is nil.  If I was running the canal, my plan would be to station a tug at Minots Tight and another at Hen and Chickens to pick up and tow the schooners through free of charge. Keep this up for a couple of years, and they would become accustomed to employing the short cut and continue to use it.  The ultimate fate of the canal is to come into the Government ownership, and to be made free of toll.  Then all hands will use it.

Our promised escort was not at the canal mouth, so we decided to go ahead and make as far North as possible before overhauling her.  It was decidedly cramped, three in the boat, and we did not relish several hours packed in with all the other goods and chattels. The sea, luckily, was like a looking-glass, and no sign of wind.  Loaded as she was, the boat driven by the cheerful motor reeled off 4 1/2 knots.  We saw two other boats, but neither proved to be the Flying Clam. 




When Gurnet Light showed up at sunset, I decided to run into Plymouth and put up for the night, so headed in across the shoal, never doubting, even at low water, there would be draught enough to float a dinghy.

Friend, have you ever been in the harbor of Plymouth, Mass.? If so, it is unnecessary for me to enlarge on the subject.  The first thing we nearly landed on was Browns Island; backing off this we ran into the channel, and then into another bank.  Two boats ahead of us went aground, each supposing the other knew the way.  One man we hailed answered that they had an 18-foot channel.

"What, 18 feet wide?" was our rejoinder.

Take my advice, go into Plymouth in daylight if you don't know the way, or go in at high water.  We ended up at the clubhouses, being very kindly received, and courteously treated by several members who were on hand.   We heard Flying Clam was in port and that her owner and Mr. Meyer, of the Evinrude Company, had come in her, and were awaiting us at the Rock House.  They had left Boston late, and made into Plymouth for the night, hoping to find us there.  In coming, they had bumped several times, and picked up a lot of weed on the wheel.  A lobster supper and a real sleep followed.


At daylight we were underway again, passing Gurnet Light at 6:15, and heading away North, headed into a brisk breeze.  

It was cold, and after passing Green River, I was glad to get into the Clam where there was room to move my legs.  


Fisher took the Sea Pup, and the other four voyaged in the speed boat.  It was surprising to see the way in which the dinghy drove up against the sea and wind; it did not seem to check her speed a particle, and at 9:50 she passed Scituate, while we went in back of the breakwater and put on some more clothes to keep warm.




Old Scituate Light
Scituate is a fine harbor for small craft, and very easy to enter, except when a heavy Easterly is blowing.  The entrance is behind a breakwater, which is marked by a ruined light tower. 


The coast below Scituate as far as the canal entrance is free of all dangers if you give it a berth of a mile, but above this point there are many outlying rocks, and it is dangerous to approach at night or in bad weather.  
Scituate Harbor


But in fine weather and daylight, small craft can make passage among these rocks, as they can readily be detected by the break of the sea, or color of the water.  

Another danger at night to power craft is the lobster pots, the place being pestered with them.




Minot's Ledge Light











We made Cohasset at 10:50, going inside the rocks,  so saving two or three miles, which would have been tolled if taking the course outside Minot's Ledge.  

The wind now went more Easterly, and the sea smoothed out.  It was warming up, much to our cheer.  At 12:o6, Sea Pup passed Point Allerton, which is the South gatepost of Boston Harbor, and made up to the finish at the Boston Y. C. At 11:29, she finished at the club float, having made the run from port to port in 52 hours and 47 minutes.

All through the run the Evinrude motor never stopped, except when it was stopped by the engineer, and never balked or missed fire, to my knowledge. Any further comment on the excellence of the little machine is needless.

In regard to the boat: Several designs have been put forth for the purpose of providing a small boat that will carry the weight of one of these outboard motors without squatting. Such of these that I have seen have been either failures or abortions, where the desired buoyancy has been obtained by making a craft that is out of proportion aft, and for this reason, useless for any other purpose. What we endeavored to produce in Sea Pup is a boat that is all-around useful, one that can be rowed, sailed or driven by motor. In plain words, what every experienced yachtsman wants his dinghy to be.

The average dinghy is a misfit affair. The reason for this is that they are designed and built by shop sailors, men who, no doubt, are good boat-builders, but having little or no outside experience. A yachtsman was unfortunately drowned this Summer out of one of these boats, and in a like craft I very nearly capsized in a moderate seaway. The most glaring defect of these boats is too much ends and not enough middle, the ends being pared and drawn out to make what is considered a good looking craft.

Sea Pup is not in any way original or novel. She is the result of centuries of experience; nothing more or less than a ship's yawl, modified to carry the outboard motor. You have in her the accumulated experience of your ancestors, and that is a compound worth more—a thousand times more—than all the modern shop knowledge lumped together.


It has been the practice of The Rudder when it sent forth a design, to test it out, and that is the reason why this voyage to Boston was undertaken. To this is largely due the success of Rudder boats. They are not office ideas worked up on a sheet of paper, but the result of years of experience, observation and study. We can now recommend this design to you with confidence that it will be found to be seaworthy, speedy and all-around useful.

In closing, I want to again compliment Mr. Fisher and Mr. Mikkelsen for their fine work, and to thank Captain Sackett for his able assistance in aiding in making the test a success. 


To Mr. Meyer and Mr. Moreton, for helping us out, our thanks are also due, and, above all, the weather deserves to be remembered, for never did men enjoy four finer days for voyaging in a 12-foot boat.


Total distance 232.9 sea miles

Total time 52 hrs. 47 min.

Gasoline used 14 gallons

Lubricating oil used 7 pints

Total fuel cost $2.10

Total oil cost .56

Time taken per sea mile 13 min. 6 sec.

Average speed 4.58 knots (5.27 m.p.h.)

Quantity of gasoline per mile 0.48 pint

Cost of gasoline per mile 9/10ths of one cent

Quantity of lubricating oil per mile O.03 pint

Cost of lubricating oil per mile 1/5 of one cent

Price of gasoline 15 cents per gallon

Price of oil 65 cents per gallon

Quantity of fuel per hour 2 pints (approx.)

The End


Just following up on "one of the boys", the Evinrude man Hans Mikkelsen. Nine years later in 1924 this article was in Motor Boating.



Sunday, October 27, 2019

1920 - Caille Clipper Article: “Pity the Guy in the Boat"

This article was in the The Motor Boat in 1920.

A PROMISING NEW TRADE PUBLICATION

If  The Caille Clipper, which is the name of the new house organ published by the Caille Perfection Motor Co. of Detroit for circulation among its own family of workers, can keep up to the spirit and the quality of its first number, it is going to be one of the most interesting publications of its kind in existence.

The very first article is entitled “Pity the Guy in the Boat." It is worth reprinting for the reason that it reflects the spirit which ought to be present in every marine motor factory and which we believe sincerely is present in all of those which have established reputations on a par with that of the Caille.

When you read this remember that it is directed not at the buyer, but at the men who build Caille motors and sell them. It was written without the idea that it would ever become generally published:


PITY THE GUY IN THE BOAT

There are two reasons for making Caille motors right.


The first is obvious. It’s to get a good reputation for our products.

The second is because it’s mighty necessary for the man in the boat to have a reliable motor.

It doesn’t hurt us any if a gasket blows out, or a bearing 'burns out, or a connecting rod breaks.

But it means a lot to the man who is using the engine. Sometimes it means just the difference between life and death.

Some of you have used motor boats. How in hell do you feel when a squall’s coming up and your engine quits?

Then there’s the fellow with just a limited time for his motor boating. He gets his new engine, sticks it in his hull and then the first time out - Phewey! Something’s shot, and he’s hung up for a few days or a couple of weeks waiting for a new part.

Or it’s some chap with a week or two vacation.  He gets up. to the lake, 20 miles from nowhere. Puts his engine on the boat, and a couple of put-puts are all he gets out of it.  Before Shook’s personally conducted service department can get him fixed up, his vacation’s over and he's a sore and disappointed man.

Those are the fellows who suffer when we let an engine slip out that isn’t exactly right, and you’ll admit it’s pretty tough on those fellows who’ve spent their hard-earned money on one of our engines.

The people who buy Caille engines aren’t wealthy people. We make small and low-priced engines only. The wealthy fellows buy engines like Scripps or Sterling or Van Blerck. The Caille users are mostly shop and office men, fellows like us.  Some users are men who fish or crab for a living. 
(Be still, now, be still—I don’t mean that kind of crabbing.)  Some are trappers and some are ferry men.  So you see it means a lot to them to have their engines Just Right, and it means a lot if they are saved hollering for replacement of defective parts.

Don’t hesitate about throwing out a bad casting, or a bum piece of machining, or sending back a cripple.  Think of the guy in the boat.

Wednesday, October 2, 2019

1917 - My Ninety-Dollar Miracle





If you ever wondered why I transcribe articles?  This is what appears online for this one!  Fuzzy, small, eye-wearying text.  


Enjoy!






OMEWHERE in the make-up of every healthy son of Adam, Nature has installed a sort of wireless receiving system over which she periodically sends out her call. 

It comes to some of us through the open window of a tall office building, deep in the canyons of a roaring city.  To others it steals through puzzled thoughts of finance and business with an insistent buzz that brightens the eye and cheers the tired brain.  
To still others it tinkles on the receiving instrument, clearly and plaintively above the din of factory and busy whirr of wheels. But the summons is there just the same and we answer it in different ways, according to our temperament, our circumstances, and alas! sometimes, according to the state of our pocketbook.

In the winter of 1915 my summons came to me in one clear call.  I was born and bred within a hundred yards of old mother Ocean and had paddled in her briny waters before my infant legs could more than toddle.   The roar of beating waves was music to my ears, and although I had long since divorced myself from such associations and had become a city toiler, Dame Nature had never ceased from time to time to summon me back to the joys of all outdoors. 


As I have said, it was mid-winter. The city streets were deep with snow, the chill winds of March were bitingly keen, but I began to think of fishing rods, guns and boats; I could smell the salt tang of the ocean, and longed for a fair wind and a whitecapped sea and the swish of foaming waves. But my purse was slim and it looked as though my answer to the summons would be a limited fifty cent excursion ticket on some warm Sunday to the beach and back home by night.

Nature didn't want that, and I was willing to do more. First, I thought sad thoughts of a cabin cruiser with fishing tackle and sleeping quarters, and a shellback’s galley and the smell of tar and rope and paint and warm engine grease, and the things that go with it all. I of course needs must compromise with old Dame Nature. and thought of a canoe with a pal to help paddle. 
And then, oh joy! I saw an “Alluring Ad.”

Like the old Greek alchemist who was commanded by his emperor to figure out whether a crown of gold was pure or alloy, I came near to shouting "Eureka."   There would be no canoe to buy, no pals to be lured into sharing the joys and sorrows of a vacation on the water; no paddle for rusty muscles to pull, no wind or weather conditions to vex my soul and disappoint my purposes, and I felt that the world was mine.  Immediately I got busy collecting information and addresses and the next mail took my application to a half dozen makers of portable motors for catalogues, prices and descriptive literature. They all responded with more or less alacrity and that is where my troubles began.

The “Broncho Buster" people said their portable motor was the best in the world, because they did not make anything else; they had been making portable motors ever since Davy Jones was a small boy; that they knew everything that could be known about a portable motor and that all the fates awaited me if I did not buy their make.  It was an awful temptation.  I thought of sending them one of Uncle Sam's pale blue money orders on the spot, but there was a bunch of catalogues and circular-letters and printed matter and gaily colored folders and other tempting pictures of motors before me.

So I turned thoughtfully to the story of the “Jolly Pirate" people, who had forty million dollars of capital, seventeen city blocks of factories, thirteen hundred service stations, and political influence enough to regulate the price of gasoline with a free supply of Rockefeller’s celebrated lubricating oil given as a premium with each purchase.  I wondered whether it would be best for me to string along with the “Jolly Pirate" crowd, but just then I caught sight of a folder issued by the “Wild Rover” factory, which showed me a boat spinning through the water at a speed that would have put to shame the builders of “Miss Minneapolis" and the prices reminded me of a department store mill-end bargain sale.


“ASK THE MAN WHO OWNS ONE"

After going through all the catalogues and. all the attractive offers made under various guises and the various viewpoints of those who had something to sell, I decided that before taking my plunge it would be best for me to study what I wanted, rather than what I was asked to buy, and I came to three conclusions: First, I wanted a motor that I could take with me by train or trolley and that would not necessitate the hiring of a sea-going hack to tote it. Something that I could adapt to any old craft that would carry me in safety over the bosom of the waters I loved so well.  Secondly, I wanted a dependable motor; one that would take me and my hired craft where I wanted to go and bring me back with reasonable certainty. And thirdly, as assurance that it would last me several seasons, I wanted a motor with a reputation back of it.

My search for these three qualifications is an other story. Sufficient to record, a few preliminary investigations forced on me by a limited purse and a still more limited vacation, and a tender regard for “safety first," led me to discard most of the high-fallutin’ promises of some of the manufacturers. 
Eventually I appealed to an “old salt," relegated to the amateur ranks of nature-lovers, who told me more facts about portable motors than I ever dreamed existed. He traced their short history from the first model that had ever been exhibited in our country, through all the stages of development, down to the latest double-action, electrical kick-backer that had Thomas A. Edison faded off the map. The substance of his advice was exactly what I had conceded to be my requirements.

The old shellback cautioned me that price should be my last consideration, because my requirements were positive and clear, and that all prices were based on quality and not figured out in the competitive imaginations of those who had something to sell.  I compared notes with those who had paid for their experience in various ways, and the consensus of opinion left no room for doubt that many believable opportunities to get more than one pays for are either doomed to disappointment or are at least beset with retributive drawbacks.  In the final result I bought my motor, answered my summons from the wild, and the keen enjoyment I received or that came to me as a refreshing draught to the thirsty traveler, would form still another story.

Not to go outside of the space limits at my disposal—I learned more about portable motors in the summer of 1916 than would fill a sizable volume. 
For one thing. I learned that the conclusions I had formed on a first judgment were both wise and correct—that a portable motor to be a source of joy and satisfaction, must be light enough to be carried from one place to another, that it must be dependable both in operation and in mechanical construction and that it must be built and sold by people with a reputation to uphold. 

In the course of my experience I ran across motors that were too big and too heavy to be portable, motors that must have been sired by the original prize balky mule, motors that were built to sell and were dear at any price—and a few motors that would stand the acid test of inspection and service. 

All honor to those who make them. Fortunately, there is no monopoly in the field of portable, dependable, reputable motors. But the uninitiated amateur longshoreman cannot pick them out in the dark, nor should he swallow the alluring offers of every Tom, Dick and Harry without investigating.  If some reader of these little personal experiences should contemplate buying a portable motor, let him first decide just what he wants and then search the motor boating annals.  

An honest product, honestly advertised and squarely presented on its merits, beats all the flim-flam arguments of an expert copywriter. A reputation for square dealing beats a multimillionaire corporation four ways from the jack, and a motor that is flexible, dependable and adaptable is a thing of beauty and a joy forever. 

Yes, I know you want me to tell you which is the motor to buy. I cannot do it  because the editor will censor anything I would like to say.  Furthermore there are several—and this is only a landsman's yarn, not an advertising “puff.” 

When you have settled in your mind just what your time off for boating is going to be, stretch of water to be covered and the manner in which you are going to cover it, the three qualifications I have referred to may be amplified or contracted according to your own particular circumstances.    You may purchase a very dependable portable motor suitable for a little fishing smack that will answer your purposes, in waters that are not crowded, in close proximity to a boat livery and an electrical supply shop, for any sum you wish to pay from $50 to $60.    It will be a motor with battery ignition system and will undoubtedly fill your needs.  

But if‘ you contemplate using your motor in crowded fishing grounds or at a pleasure resort, where boats are plentiful and navigation not as free as all-get-out, you need a motor that is more flexible than the type I have just referred to.  There are motors on the market equipped with reversible propeller, controlled by simple mechanism, that makes your boat as responsive as a motor car.   There are other motors with water-proof magneto ignition, doing away entirely with the vexing question of new batteries, short-circuiting wires and troublesome spark coils.   These motors are higher in price and are well worth the money.  You may pay from $80 to $90 for this type and be richly rewarded for your larger investment.  Finally, there are motors equipped with starting devices which obviate the need of cranking, with the possibility of bruised knuckles and other inconveniences.  This type may cost you all of $90, and represents in my opinion the best investment. Take my tip and investigate. Compare notes with those who have gone through the mill, and when you find a make of motor that has stood the test in the hands of actual users, and that is really backed by its makers, you won't go very far astray.

Possession of a portable motor gives a spirit of independence that knows no reasonable limit. Whether your recreation ground is in Maine or California or Texas or Florida, the joy of motor boating is at your disposal and when your summons comes in by wireless, with the first breath of spring, you have very little to figure on beyond the first investment in the motor itself. With the proper selection of the right motor to suit your own particular needs, you’re fixed.

Now let me sum it up: 
  • First, boating with the donkey work cut out is joy unconfined, and in addition it takes you somewhere, and from dust and burly-burly.
  • Secondly, a regular motor boat costs a lot of money, requires considerable care, and is expensive of upkeep.  You have quite a sum tied up in a craft which you must leave to the tender mercies of all and sundry when you are away at work. After every storm you must show up and maybe bail out a barrel or so of water and put in half a day getting the engine sweet tempered again.
  • But with your own portable motor you can use any old boat, anywhere. That is to say, any boat just so it is built right. I know you can clamp onto just about any kind at all, but you soon acquire an aversion to any kind except that with a broad, flat-bottomed, square-ended stern.
    If you own your boat, it pays to have one of the special design made for the purpose; a good, stout craft that you can leave behind you secure in the knowledge that its side will not be stove in when next you come around.

Get it right and the portable-motor equipped rowboat will deliver more downright satisfaction for every dollar you invest and hour you spend in it, than any other craft that floats—if you have a portable motor income and the good sense to realize it. 

It’s a regular afternoon miracle, is the rowboat “p.m."  
Mine is, anyhow—a $90 miracle!