Resources for Wood Canoe Enthusiasts
The Wooden Canoe Heritage Association is a non-profit membership association devoted to preserving, studying, building, restoring, and using wood-canvas, cedar strip and birchbark canoes, and to disseminating information about canoeing heritage in North America.
WoodenBoat magazine and Messing About in Boats occasionally have articles about wood canoes, and are all-around good reading.
The Essential Wood Canoe Enthusiasts Library
History
- Boats and Boating in the Adirondacks by Hallie Bond. Contains excellent history of wood canoes, especially with regard to their influence on recreation in the Adirondacks. Also has a photographic catalog of every canoe and boat in the collection of the Adirondack Museum.
- Canoeing the Adirondacks with Nessmuck: The Adirondack Letters of George Washingotn Sears edited by Dan Brenan. Join Nessmuck as he galavants around the Adirondacks in several of Rushton's tiny cedar canoes.
- A Real Runabouts Review of Canoes: Cedar Planked and Canvas Covered by Bob Speltz. Capsule histories, with descriptions, photographs, and catalog pages, for sixteen wood canvas canoe manufacturers. A good place to start when identifying an old canoe, but suffers from a lack of notable manufacturers, including Morris, Rushton, Gerrish, Racine and Carleton.
- Rushton and His Times in American Canoeing by Atwood Manley. The definitive guide to J.Henry Rushton's life, business and canoes, and a good general history of canoeing.
- Sailing Craft by Edwin J. Schoettle. Has a chapter with a partial history of decked sailing canoes in North America by Maurice Wilts.
- The Wood & Canvas Canoe by Jerry Stelmock and Rollin Thurlow. The essential reference for anyone interested in wood canoes. Mainly a building guide for new canoes, also covers restoration, history, and capsule summeries of selected manufacturers.
Catalog Reprints available through the Wooden Canoe Heritage Association.
- Carleton Canoes and Boats. Reprint of 1916 catalog.
- Chestnut Canoes. Reprint of the 1950 catalog.
- Kennebec Boat and Canoe Co. Originally printed ca.1914.
- Morris Canoes. Reprint of catalog ca. 1908.
- Old Town Canoes. 1910 catalog reprint for the oldest producer of wood canvas canoes.
- Peterborough Canoes. Reprints 1929 catalog and other selected material.
- The Rice Lake Canoe. Reprint of catalog from ca. 1916-1918.
- Rushton Indian Girl Canoes. Reprint of 1910 catalog describing Rushton wood canvas canoes, including the Indian Girl and American Beauty.
- Rushton's Rowboats and Canoes: the 1903 Catalog in Perspective by William Crowley. A reproduction of the 1903 catalog from the heyday of Rushton's canoe manufacturing. Also includes additional information.
- Sailing Canoes Reprint of 1935 pamphlet published by the American Canoe Association. Covers both open and decked sailing canoes.
Wood Canoe Building and Repair
- Building Lapstrake Canoes by Walt Simmons. Building guide for cedar lapstrake canoes.
- Building the Maine Guide Canoe by Jerry Stelmock. An earlier effort, makes a nice supplement to The Wood & Canvas Canoe.
- Canoe and Boatbuilding for Amateurs by W.P. Stephens. Most recently published in 1903, this book is an essential reference for anyone interested in decked sailing canoes, by one who built them.
- More Building Classic Small Craft by John Gardner has a chapter entitled "Four Canoes" which describes building a Peterborough four-plank canoe, a Rushton smoothskin lapstrake Arkansaw Traveler, and two decked sailing canoes.
- Repairs by Walt Simmons. Discusses a wide variety of repairs to various boats and consturction types. Makes reference to an Old Town Otca that Walt restored.
- Ultralight Boatbuilding by Tom Hill. Describes building canoes and small boats with glued plywood lapstrake construction.
- The Wood & Canvas Canoe by Jerry Stelmock and Rollin Thurlow.
Guide for building the wood canvas canoe, and also discusses restoration. Contains plans for several of Rollin's canoes.
Bark Canoes
- The Bark Canoes and Skin Boats of North America by Edwin Tappey Adney and Howard Chappelle.
- Birchbark Canoe by David Gidmark.
- Builder of Birch Bark Canoes by William Rossman. Story of Bill Hafeman.
- Building a Birchbark Canoe: The Algonquin Wabanaki Tciman by David Gidmark
- The Building of a Chippewa Indian Birch-bark Canoe Milwaukee Public Museum.
Wood Strip/Fiberglass Composite Boats
- Building a Strip Canoe by Gil Gilpatrick. Includes eight designs.
- Canoecraft by Ted Moores and Marilyn Mohr. Arguably the single best book on the modern stripper canoe, along with several nice canoe designs.
- The Stripper's Guide to Canoe Building by David Hazen
Return to Five Lakes Wooden Boat Center home page.
Last modified by DJM 12/22/96