marblehead pond yacht for sale

More from Maritime Models

Contact Jack

[email protected]

The club has a new website where all current and future information

will be posted.

Please follow the link below to our new site:

www.themmyc.org

NEWS 2024 Season Racing Schedule Coming Soon American Marblehead Class Website   1930 Model Yachting booklet          

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Birthplace of the "Marblehead Class" and home to the new " American Marblehead Class" . If it's a Marblehead we sail them!

We also have a large fleet of CR 914 s sailing as well as Dragon boats ... and International, AMYA Ms .

Anyone interested in learning about, watching, or participating in the sailing of these yachts check out our 2019 schedule under the "Racing Information" tab to see our schedule.

In the schedule you'll see three designations for Marbleheads.

AM American Marblehead Class (encompasses all years)

M is for more modern designs @1990 designs and up.

VM is for Vintage Marbleheads , designs up to @1972. It has two divisions, Traditional and High Flye r.

AM stands for the new American Marblehead which encourages any Marblehead from any era to sail together and be scored according to it's division. Marbleheads from all eras, whether home built or professionally built all share two basic traits. They measure 50 inches long and are allowed 800 square inches of sail.

If you've got a boat 50 inches long bring it to the pond and let our group see what you have.

Come on down and join us!

March / April Issue No. 297  Preview Now

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50/800 Marblehead Pond Yacht

After taking Thom McLaughlin’s class on building pond yachts at the WoodenBoat School in 2009, John Stoudt spent the rest of that year into the early winter of 2010 working on this model. It is a 50/800 Marblehead Vintage class design that John built with very thin planks, tacked to wood frames. John also planked the deck. All of the fittings are solid brass.

Design Specifications

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ARCTIC TERN KAYAK

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THOMPSON BROS. FISH BOAT

McKenzie River Drift Boat

16 ft. McKenzie River Drift Boat

Arie Van Dyk and wife Jean try out the new canoe

An 80th birthday present for himself

From the community.

'66 Century Resorter 17

'66 Century Resorter 17

Mahogany inboard. New varnish & bottom paint. Newish 383 (500-hp). 50 mph. New upholstery.

1959 Thompson Runabout

1959 THOMPSON 17’ RUNABOUT – PRICED TO SELL!

Pre 1905 Warren Cole Adirondack Guideboat

Pre 1905 Warren Cole Adirondack Guideboat LOA 16′, 42″ beam

Restored in ME by Jonathan Minott (seen in WB "Launchings" July/Aug 2009).

Vintage Crosby Catboat

Vintage Crosby Catboat - I Belong in a Museum

Partial restoration. Has rare Edson oscillating (worm) steering system.

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Musto 2023 BR1 MPU 1

The M or Marblehead Class, sometimes called the "50/800", is a remote-controlled high performance development class. It's original concept in the 1930's was to produce the largest model that would conveniently fit in the standard American car of the time. The class has been highly developed over the years to produce a high performance model that can be sailed in a wide range of conditions, assuming the owner has the appropriate rigs. Boats are available from several suppliers who can provide them from basic kit form to fully assembled.

© Alan Morgan

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Show photos from latest 2024 2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995

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Marblehead Class

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The SAILSetc range of products for the Marblehead class has been constantly refined since 1978 and provides for everything from a completed boat down to the smallest component part.

The Marbleheads built by SAILSetc have had a long run of success at world championship level:

3rd 1986 NO SECRET, 2nd 1988 HUSH HUSH, 5th 1990 ENIGMA, 1st 1992 PARADOX, 1st 1994 PARADOX, 1st 1996 PARADOX, 1st 1998 RAD, 2nd 2000 ROK, 2nd 2002 PRIME NUMBER, 2nd 2006 ROK, 2nd 2012 PRIME NUMBER, 2nd 2014 QUARK, 3rd 2016 QUARK, 6th 2018 QUARK.

Characteristic of SAILSetc designed boats is their ability to perform for sailors of all skill ranges and in a wide range of conditions. Not only can they give excellent results for some of the best sailors (there were three QUARKs in the top 6 places at the 2014 world championship) but they can also give better results for sailors lower down the finishing results. This is partly due to their reliability imparted by the build quality and partly due to the handling qualities imparted by their fundamental and detail design.

The boats previously supplied by SAILSetc are now available from BOATSetc, a new entity located in Germany. The moulding quality is superb leaving the builder with only the task of adding the foils, structural component parts and fittings before going on to add rc and rigs. 

BOATSetc - [email protected] - www.boatsetc.eu

BOATSetc and SAILSetc can supply carbon pre-preg hulls for the Marblehead QUARK and the component parts and general arrangement plans required to complete them. We welcome enquiries and orders from individuals and other builders, in the UK and elsewhere, who want to purchase hull mouldings or kits for these boats. Please go to the class category sections of this website to find more information.

Please see the Licensed Builders page for contact details for the many other builders who are producing our designs.

SAILSetc will continue to offer rc installation, rigging, optimisation and measurement for QUARK.

SAILSetc foiuls, ballast, spars, fittings and sails provide an optimised and compatible range of products with which to equip any Marblehead, whether from SAILSetc or from another source.

The complete range of products in any category and for any class can be found in the Products by Category section.

Voilier Classe M

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Lizard Spin Shoe

The M or Marblehead Class, sometimes called the "50/800", is a remote-controlled high performance development class. It's original concept in the 1930's was to produce the largest model that would conveniently fit in the standard American car of the time. The class has been highly developed over the years to produce a high performance model that can be sailed in a wide range of conditions, assuming the owner has the appropriate rigs. Boats are available from several suppliers who can provide them from basic kit form to fully assembled.

© Alan Morgan

  • Latest videos, from 2018

Show photos from latest 2024 2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995

© CSC

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History of the Marblehead Class

marblehead pond yacht for sale

Young skippers on the rocks besides Redd’s Pond, Marblehead, late 1890s.

marblehead pond yacht for sale

A flotilla of 450s on Redd’s Pond in the late 1920s.

The Marblehead club was always a bit of a maverick in model yachting circles because it was large enough (70 members in 1930) to support classes of its own. Throughout the 1920s a very popular local class was the one originally suggested by the full-scale designer L. Francis Herreshoff : 450 in 2 of sail area and no other restrictions.

The plans shown here are for a design by C.W. Sweet. LWL 30.5 in, LOA 39 in, Displacement a mere 4.5 lb.

The 450 class, like other classes with no hull restrictions, lead to long, handsome “greyhound” shapes with extreme overhangs.

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One of the first M Class boats, by Roy Clough.

In 1930 Roy Clough, then commodore of the club, proposed a new class of larger boats. The first published reference we have is from Model Yachting for Oct–Nov 1930:

The 450 class has been so popular, with so many boats racing in it at Marblehead, that a larger sail area class has been started there. These boats must be 50 inches on deck. At first it was proposed to carry 700 sq. in. of sail, but after trying one out with 795 the question as to whether the sail shall be increased to 900 or 1000 sq. in. is to be brought up at a meeting of the club.

The result, of course, was that the sail area was settled at 800 in 2 , and the single most popular class in the history of model yachting was launched. Called variously the “Marblehead,” “50/800,” or “M” class, it had at one time over 1000 registered boats. The class became a national class in the US in 1932 and an international class in 1937. There were many reasons for its popularity: the size of the boat made for a good sailing model in all kinds of weather and was still (by design, it was rumored) small enough to fit in the back seat of a car. The simplicity of the rules contrasted with the other classes of the day, which required extensive measurement to determine whether a boat was legal.

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Roy Clough in his living room with a slightly later boat. Note the sail number.

In 1936, Roy Clough wrote how the Class was inspired:

I would now like to tell you how this class came into existence. The idea of building a boat of this size came to me suddenly one Sunday morning when my club was racing the old 450 square inch sail area class. Looking out on the pond, I was all at once conscious that although the class was limited to 450 square inches of sail we had a real ‘mongrel’ class of boats. Boats of all sizes, from 30 to 45 inches long; regular keels, fin keels, overhanging rudders, and boats anywhere from five to ten inches wide all belonged in the same class! I went home that Sunday morning and drew my dream boat in profile and sail plan on an old barn door. Different members of the club came to see it and were very favorable, so after drawing it up on paper and then building the boat, the interest began to increase, and soon there were twelve boats being built from that plan, each with a few individual changes. From that time on, our membership began to increase, and we had to hire larger quarters. New clubs seemed to spring up overnight, and things started to boom for the Marblehead class. Later the design was officially adopted by the Model Yacht Racing Association of America, and the greatest model yacht building boom ever seen in this country was under way. Clubs and trophies began to appear as if by magic, and at the present time the most sought-after trophy is the ‘Marblehead Perpetual Challenge Cup’ which was won this year by the Jersey City Model Yacht Club. The Heisler Cup, which was given by Mr. Charles Heisler of Rensselaer, N.Y., is another beautiful prize. This cup is held by the Red Bank Model Yacht Club. Another trophy, a sterling silver bowl, which was won last year by Mr. Frank Goodwin of the Marblehead Yacht Club, is the Chester I. Campbell Cup, which was given by the estate of the late Chester I. Campbell. The winner of this cup holds it for one year and also receives a replica to keep. There are also large regattas held each year by other clubs at which there will be from 50 to 60 models. One of these events is the National Championship Races of the Marblehead 50/800 class, which will be held this year in Warinanco, New Jersey. Little did anyone who saw the first profile drawing on the old barn door think that it was to be the forerunner of the largest model yacht class in the world today. And now, to make the joy of 50/800 fans complete, I have this week received notice from the Model Sailing Club, a department of the German Sailing Club, that the Marblehead 50/800 class has been accepted in Germany because they ‘…believe that this class will render very nice and useful boats with a simple formula which are not difficult to build and which besides the reason of their small size are handy …’ An accompanying notice gave word that they are to hold an International Race at Hamburg at the end of the Olympic Games. One of the two yacht classes selected for the race is the Marblehead 50/800, and this country will be invited to send two boats to the competition. Eight other countries have also been invited to participate. From the small beginning on the old barn door has come the most popular class of yachts the world has ever known; after blanketing our country, it has spread to foreign lands, and is still growing.

In 1932, the Marblehead club issued a challenge for M class boats, and Cypher was the successful defender. She is typical of “first generation” M boats in that she has a fair amount of overhang at bow and stern and thus retains a “yacht-like” appearance. This was all to change rapidly under the pressure of competition.

Cheerio I .

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John Black and Cheerio I on the dock at Hamburg in 1936.

John Black’s Cheerio I won the first international M class race held in Berlin in conjunction with 1936 Olympics. The design is interesting in that it attempts to maximize waterline length and still maintain a shape reminiscent of her bigger sisters.

Cheerio later became famous with the publication of Black’s 1939 textbook Yachting with Models , and many copies of her were made. By that time, however, the design was no longer competitive; the snub nosed, vane-steered, high-rigged boats had come on the scene.

A. R. Lassel’s Sun-Kiss dominated the races of the 1940s. She was an example of what could be called the “third generation” of M boats. All pretense of “yacht-like” lines is gone, and the waterline length is carried as far as the rules will allow.

Here is her designer’s description, which accompanied the publication of her plans in Model Yachting Monthly for September of 1945:

The “Sun-Kiss” design shown in the MYM supplement stems from “Faithful” and “Gurgles”, The 1937 and the 1941 National M-Class champions, and from “Roschana”, runner-up in 1937. Ted Thorsen re-drew the lines of these yachts to conform to those of warships having a speed that produces the constant 1 in the speed-length formula. Hence, an M-Class yacht should make 2.04 naut. miles per hour when a 500′ warship makes 22.5.
She is not giving away any potentialities due to water-line length, has powerful sections and a flat chine line. Her lateral plane is more than adequate, so that, if wetted area be considered more important than dynamic balance, the width of the skeg may be reduced. On the “Sunmaid”, the last year’s National Champion, the skeg is a mere strut. The keels of Paul Collet’s “Sunmaid” and How’d Curry’s “Sunapee” weigh 13 lbs. and J. McKinney’s “Vagabond” and Dr. Peal’s models from this design weigh 13.5.
The design of the keel is the result of an observed phenomenon in towing 50-inch models of different keel designs at about twice the normal speed. When the junction of the keel with the hull was rather thick, and the yacht towed with a decided heel, the resistance as compared with that of the upright position, shot up eight-fold. The only visual difference was a short but steep secondary wave in the way of the keel. The obligation, then, became the elimination of this secondary wave; the seal-flipper keel as shown on “Sun-Kiss” represents an effort in that direction. The scope of the sliding rig is sufficient within the range of 0 to 18 mile winds.

Sun-Kiss was a West Coast boat and was raced on artificial ponds that were deep and generally right on the shore where the wind blew straight, hard, and often. Back in Marblehead itself, the boats raced on historic Redd’s Pond: a natural venue of great beauty, the occasional submerged rock, and notoriously fickle winds. J. Selmer-Larson’s Broom V , a contemporary of Sun-Kiss , shows how this difference in environment affected the design. Note the shallower draft and hull shape tailored to lighter airs than those of California and Washington state.

Arrow III .

Ains Ballantyne was a New Zealander who took his love of sailing to his adopted country and designed and skippered many successful boats on Redd’s Pond. He was a pioneer in vane gear design as well. This boat represents a synthesis of the West Coast “seal flipper” school and the shallower draft boats of Selmer-Larson. The rig, though conservative in height, reflected a deeper understanding of the optimum ratio of jib to mainsail.

Ted Houk of Seattle was one of the most innovative designers in the class; his Humptulips strongly influenced the design of Sun-Kiss . In 1949 he came up with Rip Tide , which may be the pinnacle of design of the free-sailing era of M boats. The deeper draft takes advantage of the West Coast ponds and permits the carrying of full sails in anything less than gale winds. Note the elegant hull shape, with its hollow (concave) entry transitioning to a flat, semi-planing floor in the aft sections. The construction was equally impressive for a wooden boat: 18.5 pounds displacement, 13.5 of it in the lead keel.

Warrior I .

Because there was no general-circulation journal covering model yachting in the 1950s and 1960s, we have an almost complete lack of plans from that period. (This unfortunately poor-quality scan is from a copy of builder’s plans.) By 1971 we do know that there were two organizations competing for the right to sanction international model yachting races in the United States: the Model Yacht Racing Association of America, which focused on free-sailing boats, and the then-upstart American Model Yacht Racing Association, which promoted radio control. In 1971 each of them held championships, and Stan Goodwin of Marblehead won both with this boat. As a single design which triumphed both in free-sail and radio control, Warrior I marks a fitting transition from the Vintage to the Modern Era.

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Status of Class: Adopted Administrative Body: IMCA

The Marblehead class (M) is probably the most exciting to sail with its minimal rule structure and modern construction techniques a modern M will usually be made of carbon fibre and kevlar with full carbon rigs. The rules do allow for most boats from the mid 90’s onward to be modernised and still hold their own in current fleets.

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This is quite often referred to as the Formula One of Radio Sailing.

  • Marblehead Class GBR Fixtures here
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  • Please visit our  Knowledgebase  or  Q&A  for more help
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IMAGES

  1. A MARBLEHEAD POND YACHT

    marblehead pond yacht for sale

  2. A GOOD MARBLEHEAD POND YACHT HALLOWEEN , K1366

    marblehead pond yacht for sale

  3. Lot 56 Restive MK 1395 marblehead Pond Yacht

    marblehead pond yacht for sale

  4. A Marblehead pond yacht

    marblehead pond yacht for sale

  5. 930 32 inch Marblehead pond yacht with AJ Fisher fittings and Braine

    marblehead pond yacht for sale

  6. Marblehead 450 Class Pond Yacht

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VIDEO

  1. Aquador 35 ST

  2. Vintage Marblehead Pond Yacht

  3. Afternoon sail on a Vintage Marblehead Pond Yacht

  4. Marblehead yacht; "The Lady Isabelle"

  5. 2024 Kansas Late Winter Pond Fishing

  6. Vintage 36 Pond Yacht “Starlet”

COMMENTS

  1. A MARBLEHEAD POND YACHT

    A MARBLEHEAD POND YACHT. with planked hull, calibrated booms, original sails with ?maker's label for 'Wicksteed', vane steering gear and vane, finished in varnish with black-painted keel -- 90 x 50in. (228.5 x 127cm.) Stand. Special notice. No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium, which ...

  2. Marblehead Model Yacht Club

    For Sale. Links . NEWS. 2024 Season Racing Schedule. Coming Soon American Marblehead Class Website ... If you've got a boat 50 inches long bring it to the pond and let our group see what you have. Come on down and join us! ©2024 Marblehead Model Yacht Club ...

  3. Vintage Marblehead

    Vintage Marblehead. In 1930 Roy Clough, then commodore of the Marblehead Model Yacht Club, proposed a new class of larger model sailboats. The first published reference we have is from Model Yachting for Oct-Nov 1930. These boats must be "50 inches on deck" (50 in LOA). The sail area was settled at 800 in 2, and the single most popular ...

  4. 50/800 Marblehead Pond Yacht

    After taking Thom McLaughlin's class on building pond yachts at the WoodenBoat School in 2009, John Stoudt spent the rest of that year into the early winter of 2010 working on this model. It is a 50/800 Marblehead Vintage class design that John built with very thin planks, tacked to wood frames. John also planked the deck. All of the fittings are solid brass.

  5. For Sale: M Class Hull (boat to remain in the family)

    For Sale: M Class Hull (boat to remain in the family) January 30, 2022. Libby Parker is selling this 1940s Marblehead. The boat does not have a rig. It needs work but is certainly restorable and could even be rigged for remote control. A fun project. According to Libby (re: 1940s), "This would have been the time my dad and his uncle would ...

  6. For Sale: Vintage Marblehead Cheerio III (50-800) (SOLD)

    April 5, 2022. Jane Peterson is selling her beautiful and competitive Cheerio III (50-800). This is a vintage Marblehead, Jane built it 2009. The Cheerio III was designed in 1939 by John Black who won at the 1936 Berlin Olympics with an earlier version of this great boat. The Atlantic cedar planked hull and aircraft plywood deck are beautifully ...

  7. "RUSTICATOR" VINTAGE MARBLEHEAD

    This vintage style Marblehead sailboat was build by Bruce Richter. It was awarded the 2013 and 2014 Craftsmanship Award by the US Vintage Model Yacht Group. Bruce began the project in the "Build Your Own Plank Constructed Pond Yacht" at The Wooden Boat School in Brooklin, Maine which he now teaches. He completed the boat over a span of two years.

  8. "PEONY" VINTAGE MARBLEHEAD

    The plans for this "Peony" design sloop were influenced by free-sailing model sailboats from the late 30's and 40's and were developed by Thom McLaughlin of Sublime Boatworks. This and other vintage sailboats race in the AMYA Vintage Marblehead (VM) 50/800 ( 50" overall length/800" sq. in. of sail area) class.

  9. Marblehead

    Pond Yachts. 8in Waterbugs; 12in Dragonfly; 16in Kingfisher; B 30; V36; Class Racers

  10. Marblehead class

    Contested in free-sailing Marblehead model yachts operated by vane Posted on 9 Oct 2023 Marblehead Nationals at Keighley Racing on the edge of Ilkley Moor, 256 feet above sea level Posted on 21 Sep 2023 MYA Marblehead Ranking 3 & 4 at Datchet Water A true test of a boat's reliability, and a skipper's stamina

  11. 1939 Kittywake design Marblehead

    Classic Pond Yachts. This is a Mr. A W (Bert) Littlejohn designed Kittwake Marblehead, first registered 5 August 1939, (just in time for WWII) at the MYSA in Kensington Gardens, registered name 'Semels' sail number 94. Her original owner was a Mr. R H Hawkes and her builder a Mr. F E Matthews. This is how I first saw 'Semels' at Beale Park, the ...

  12. Stan Witty designed 'Wasp' Marblehead

    Classic Pond Yachts. [email protected]. A Stan Witty Wasp design Marblehead. 19 March 2021 ... this one is GRP and a duck type Marblehead, these were boats where the idea was to design a much longer boat than the 50 inch Maximum for a Marblehead class yacht and then just cut off the ends to 50 inches, H B Tucker designed the Jemima ...

  13. RCSails

    RCSails. The M or Marblehead Class, sometimes called the "50/800", is a medium size high performance development class. It's original concept in the 1930's was to produce the largest model that would conveniently fit in the standard American car of the time. The class is a development class with the main restrictions being a hull length of 50 ...

  14. Boats for sale in Marblehead

    There are presently 242 boats for sale in Marblehead listed on Boat Trader. This includes 143 new watercraft and 99 used boats, available from both individual owners selling their own boats and well-qualified dealers who can often offer vessel warranties and boat financing information. The most popular boat types for sale in Marblehead at ...

  15. Marblehead Fittings

    PEKABE 397 Flat Head Screws 12mm Pack of 10 Model Sailboat R/C Remote Controlled. $3.00. See All. Offering miscellaneous Pekabe Model Yacht Fittings, the finest RC model boat fittings for over forty years. Also selling a variety of assorted fittings such as; clothing, home goods, fabric, books, model boats, and other unique items I may come across.

  16. Antique Model Pond Boats/Yachts for sale

    Get the best deals on Antique Model Pond Boats/Yachts when you shop the largest online selection at eBay.com. Free shipping on many items | Browse your favorite brands ... Antique model pond yacht (Marblehead) $1,130.00. or Best Offer. $45.75 shipping. Antique Vintage Metal Pond Boat Yacht; Boucher Pond Model ??; 1930's to 1940's. $1,870.00. or ...

  17. Marblehead Class

    The SAILSetc range of products for the Marblehead class has been constantly refined since 1978 and provides for everything from a completed boat down to the smallest component part. The Marbleheads built by SAILSetc have had a long run of success at world championship level: 3rd 1986 NO SECRET, 2nd 1988 HUSH HUSH, 5th 1990 ENIGMA, 1st 1992 ...

  18. Marblehead class

    Marblehead. The M or Marblehead Class, sometimes called the "50/800", is a remote-controlled high performance development class. It's original concept in the 1930's was to produce the largest model that would conveniently fit in the standard American car of the time. The class has been highly developed over the years to produce a high ...

  19. For Sale

    6 Metre. Place your Ads here for 6 Metre class boats and accessories. Please use the " Mark topic as SOLD " link once your item has sold. 4. posts. 6 metre John Lewis design Tern for sale. By Catsails, March 10.

  20. 12in Dragonfly

    Length 31cm, Beam 9cm, Height 47cm. Price: £75 + £8 P & P. Please visit or shop to see our Dragonflys in stock. If there are no Dragonflys in stock please e mail us at [email protected] to place an order. Delivery normally takes 7-10days after confirmation of order. Overseas customers please contact us for shipping price.

  21. History of the Marblehead Class

    History of the Marblehead Class. Young skippers on the rocks besides Redd's Pond, Marblehead, late 1890s. A flotilla of 450s on Redd's Pond in the late 1920s. The Marblehead club was always a bit of a maverick in model yachting circles because it was large enough (70 members in 1930) to support classes of its own.

  22. Marblehead Class (M)

    Marblehead Class (M) The Marblehead class (M) is probably the most exciting to sail with its minimal rule structure and modern construction techniques a modern M will usually be made of carbon fibre and kevlar with full carbon rigs. The rules do allow for most boats from the mid 90's onward to be modernised and still hold their own in current ...

  23. Redd's Pond Boatworks: Traditional Wooden Boat Builders, Marblehead, MA

    The last boat Albert Strange had built for himself was the biggest at 28' 7", designed to include a separate women's cabin. Much of his cruising was done in 18' to 21' boats, pretty spartan camp cruising, but most of his cruising designs are between 21' and 30' including Venture at 29' 6" the design on which SEA HARMONY was based. The last ...