I found the plans for the 'Scientific
American Supplement (1876) "$3.00 at Craig
O'Donnel's Cheap Pages. See also here
and continued here.
I made a "quick-n-dirty" model. Here are some pictures...scale
1" = 1'. The scow would be 10' X 3' X 12" draft.
I enjoyed this poem:
I would really like to build one but as I am a rented "condo"
dweller, "She who must be appeased" has to become "She
who must be convinced..." (Smiling). I have been researching
online and am amazed at how many cultures all over the world have
utilized the "scow" hullshape.
Here in the USA, in the 19th and early 20th century's scow schooners
were used in the Great Lakes, Galveston Bay, and San Francisco
Bay & Sacramento River Delta. On the east coast, Carolinas
and Florida behind the barrier islands they used the "Sharpie"
which had a flat bottom but pointy bows.
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SV ALMA - SAN FRANCISCO BAY SCOW |
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Galveston Bay Scow |
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New Zealand Scow |
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Carolina Sharpie Schooner |
I read that the New Zealand Scow was 1st built by families of
boat builders that built the Great Lakes "Stonehooker"
scows, used to transport of stone for building on Lake Ontario.
The New Zealand Scow had flared bows but flat bottoms. The Stonehookers
were like the San Francisco Bay Scows with flat bows like the
"San Francisco Pelican" of today.
The Dutch in their Zuider Zee used flat bottomed boats with Lee
Boards.
Smaller boats with flat transoms and bows and bottoms but lengthy
16 - 20 feet were used on the rivers in Europe, and for drifter
fishing on the rivers of the Ozarks...the Ozark River Johnboat.
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Drawings of Ozark Johnboat |
Here is a the THE
OZARK JOHNBOAT webpage that relates to the above drawing.
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Drifting down a lazy river... |
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Louisiana Bateau |
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Harlan & Anna Hubbard's Shantyboat and punt
river-row boat on the Ohio River Late 1940s (Those days are
gone) |
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Sampan from Eurasia... |
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Punt on the Kentucky River in Appalachia... |
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(Foreground) Loire River (France) Sailing Punt |
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England - River Severn Punt |
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Marsh boat from Scandinavia.... |
Form follows function... all over the World. Amazing..
It totally fascinated me how the same hull-type shows up all
over the world... I personally want to build one of these..
Here is the drawing again and here is a picture of one (below).
Click here
for the build page.
Here is a link to a *.pdf article about the johnboats:
https://maa.missouri.edu/mfap/articles/johnboat.pdf
(History, form & function)
Larry
***** |