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Meet the Minnesota Neighbors Who Own Some of the Country’s Finest Vintage Boats

  
Via:  Buzz of the Orient  •  7 months ago  •  4 comments

By:   By MICHAEL VERDON

Meet the Minnesota Neighbors Who Own Some of the Country’s Finest Vintage Boats
 

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S E E D E D   C O N T E N T


Meet the Minnesota Neighbors Who Own Some of the Country’s Finest Vintage Boats

Minnesota residents Lee Anderson and John Allen have been sourcing and restoring classics for over two decades.


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Jim Wangard

Not all vintage-boat owners have inherited their vessels. Two Minnesota neighbors are among those who seek out old beauties instead—and who have amassed staggering collections of classics.

When Lee Anderson bought his first antique boat, a 1938  Chris-Craft  Resorter, in 1985, he named it after his wife, Katharine. “When I was a boy, my dad had a wooden boat on the lake in northern Minnesota where we spent the summers,” says Anderson, 82. “I always wanted one. After  Katharine,  I kind of got the bug.”

Forty-five boats later, Anderson still owns the 19-footer—which he describes as “not terribly valuable” but one he’ll never sell—as well as the definitive collection of vintage North American boats, with many valued in the millions. Anderson is now focusing on pre–World War II one-off race boats, such as the 1924  Baby Bootlegger,  which won the  American Power Boat Association  Gold Cup in 1924 and 1925, and storied models from then rock-star builders, including Gar Wood and Hacker, and even rarer Canadian mahogany brands. To make the cut, a boat must have a history so intriguing that it makes other collectors jealous. “Scarcity is what’s important to me,” he says.

Anderson houses 10 vessels in a special wing of his home on Gull Lake, Minn., that doubles as a showroom, with tracks that lead down to the shore so he can launch them during the summer. He keeps 12 others in the water under canopies. “I don’t like the boats to not be used,” he says. “I try to keep them all going every summer.” Anderson is regularly seen piloting two or three different woodies per day around the lake.

John_Allen_Yacht2.jpg?w=1000

John N. Allen drives his 1926 Hacker Craft 22-foot Black Jack. ( Jim Wangard)

On the same chain of lakes lives John N. Allen (the men’s Naples, Fla., homes are close by each other, too), who also owns one of the country’s largest and rarest collections of classic wooden boats. “I’d see Lee running those boats before anyone else was interested, and it kindled my interest,” says Allen, 67. His first acquisition: a 1929 Gar Wood triple-cockpit in 2001. “That was 29 boats ago.”

Allen’s collection includes the two oldest  Chris-Craft s in existence—both dating to 1922—and a 1926 Gar Wood 33-foot Baby Gar called  Bolo Babe,  powered by a V-12 Liberty engine. He’s now restoring  Teaser,  an almost 40-foot-long fast commuter that in 1925 beat the 20th Century Limited train in a race along the Hudson from New York City to Albany. Allen declines to pick his favorite, though it might be easy to guess. “ Princess Paige  is a 1926 Earl C. Barnes named after my only daughter,” he says. “It’s the closest thing I’ve ever seen to a jewel box on the water.”

Allen considers himself a steward of the rare treasures. “So many valuable boats have been destroyed over the years,” he says. “I take a lot of pleasure in restoring them and moving them into the future.”


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Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
1  seeder  Buzz of the Orient    7 months ago

I am really jealous of those 2 guys.  Interesting that they're on Gull Lake, Minnesota.  My lakefront chalet was on Gull Lake, Ontario but I only saw one antique wooden boat on that lake, a Sheppard, and it was owned by our veterinarian who was on an island in our lake.  

Although it says Anderson has rarer mahogany Canadian brands it could have mentioned Greavette, or Minett or Ditchburn, boats that I've shown in earlier articles on this group.  

All power to those two guys who are entitled to kudos for preserving some wonderful woodie boat history.

 
 
 
Krishna
Professor Expert
1.1  Krishna  replied to  Buzz of the Orient @1    7 months ago

Many older models of boats have some really beautiful wood-- as do some of the interiors of a few older design cars. (I'm not too familiar with the makes and models, but I've seen pictures of some)

I like the "natural" look-- plus fine craftsmanship-- not a big fan of plastics or fiberglass.. 

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
1.1.1  seeder  Buzz of the Orient  replied to  Krishna @1.1    7 months ago

As much as I loved the vintage "woodie" boats, there is no way I was able to afford their annual maintenance, let alone purchase one, so I'm happy that my bowrider WAS fiberglass because it was maintenance-free. 

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
1.2  seeder  Buzz of the Orient  replied to  Buzz of the Orient @1    7 months ago

The Gull Lake that I was on is located in what's known as the Haliburton Highlands, but west of that area is the Muskoka Lakes District, which is where the millionaires from Canada and America locate their palatial "cottages", and they are the ones who ply their gorgeous vintage "woodie" boats on those lakes and hold rallies with them.  Muskoka lake is where Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell have their summer "cottage" (shown below)...

R-C.1c5cd911496cb304f2787879a50a0f43?rik=7llcfc%2fQbppcHw&riu=http%3a%2f%2fwww.cottageblog.ca%2fwp-content%2fuploads%2fGoldieandKurt_1600.jpg&ehk=Qi10fQzOFbsKWrC4q%2bjTtt73PRZLRL%2bf7hiwPsEhs9I%3d&risl=&pid=ImgRaw&r=0  

 
 

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