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Item | Title | Type | Subject | Creator | Publisher | Date | Place | Address | Description | |
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10644 | The Henry R. Hinckley Company - Store |
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| The store was torn down and moved to the other side of the street since this photograph was taken. The car is a 1935 Dodge coup. | Description: The store was torn down and moved to the other side of the street since this photograph was taken. The car is a 1935 Dodge coup. | ||||
14319 | Albert Bartlett's Sail Loft |
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3495 | Henry R. Hinckley Company Manset Boat Yard Hinckely Company Hinckley Yachts |
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| The Hinckley Company started in 1928 as the Manset Boatyard in Southwest Harbor, Maine. Henry R. Hinckley’s focus was on servicing the local lobster boats as well as the yachts of summer residents on Mt. Desert Island. Today Hinckley builds boats at its production facilities in Trenton, Maine, but the original Manset yard is at the heart of the Hinckley legend. Today it ranks as a world class service facility. | Description: The Hinckley Company started in 1928 as the Manset Boatyard in Southwest Harbor, Maine. Henry R. Hinckley’s focus was on servicing the local lobster boats as well as the yachts of summer residents on Mt. Desert Island. Today Hinckley builds boats at its production facilities in Trenton, Maine, but the original Manset yard is at the heart of the Hinckley legend. Today it ranks as a world class service facility. | |||
13562 | Jarvis Newman Boat Yard |
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13665 | Hinckley Military Boats |
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| “1941 - With World War II on the horizon, [Henry Rose Hinckley II (1907-1980)] goes to Washington D.C. to secure contracts for military boats. His first order is for twenty 38-foot Coast Guard picket boats. By the end of the war, 93 of these boats are built for the Coast Guard, using production line techniques developed for the Islander. The yard also builds 24-foot Navy personnel boats, motor mine and tow yawls (using a hull design that would briefly reappear 30 years later in fiberglass yacht club launches), shallow-draft towboats and sailing yawls as part of the war effort… By the end of the war, Hinckley will have built nearly 40% of the 1,358 boats built in Maine for the war.” - “The Hinckley Company History” | Description: “1941 - With World War II on the horizon, [Henry Rose Hinckley II (1907-1980)] goes to Washington D.C. to secure contracts for military boats. His first order is for twenty 38-foot Coast Guard picket boats. By the end of the war, 93 of these boats are built for the Coast Guard, using production line techniques developed for the Islander. The yard also builds 24-foot Navy personnel boats, motor mine and tow yawls (using a hull design that would briefly reappear 30 years later in fiberglass yacht club launches), shallow-draft towboats and sailing yawls as part of the war effort… By the end of the war, Hinckley will have built nearly 40% of the 1,358 boats built in Maine for the war.” - “The Hinckley Company History” [show more] | |||
9466 | Aerial View of The Henry R. Hinckley Company, Manset, and Southwest Harbor |
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10657 | The Henry R. Hinckley Company - Early Office |
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10627 | The Henry R. Hinckley Company - Making Paddles |
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10629 | The Henry R. Hinckley Company - The Hinckley Yard |
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10653 | The Henry R. Hinckley Company |
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9822 | Boat Show Display |
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