Press Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: ED WIGHTMAN
607-868-3025
FINGER LAKES BOATING MUSEUM AUCTION
FEATURES ‘project’ boats from museum’s collection
HAMMONDSPORT, NY
(Thursday, Sept. 5, 2013) – Looking for a classic wooden boat project? Well, look no
farther.
After collecting wooden
boats built in the Finger Lakes for more than a decade, the
Finger Lakes Boating
Museum has decided to sell some boats from its collection of
more than 100 vessels.
The Auction will take
place Saturday, Sept. 21, starting at 10 a.m. at the Museum
storage site, 8231
Pleasant Valley Road, Hammondsport.
Ed Wightman, Museum
President and Chair of its Collections Committee, said that the
boats in the auction are
“project boats,” meaning they are not in excellent restored
condition. “We are
offering them because they are either duplicates or boats that we
have not been able to
identify their origin,” explained Wightman.
The Museum, which
collects only boats made in the Finger Lakes, often receives boats from donors that are in
need of restoration. Museum members have restored a number of boats in the
Collection.
The collection of boats
is now stored in a former Mercury Aircraft warehouse on
Pleasant Valley Road in
Hammondsport. The auction will take place in the parking lot
adjacent to the
warehouse. The following boats will be auctioned:
· Sailboats –Ten
boats, including three K-Boats by Wright, a Comet and a Lightning by Skaneateles,
a Ro-Mo-Sail, a Phantom and Sailing Dinghy by Penn Yan, a Laser and a Bauer cat
rigged sloop.
· Rowboats - Two
boats, a Rowboat and a Troutboat, builders unknown;
· Canoes – Three
canoes, including an HW by Old Town, an Owasco by Penn Yan and
another built by Bauter;
· Row-Outboard –
Five boats, two Trailboats, two Car Toppers and a Sr. Car Top,
all built by Penn Yan
Boats; and
· Outboard
Runabout – Two boats, an Angler and one that may be made by Thompson.
Photographs of the boats to
be auctioned will be on the Museum’s website at www.flbm.org. The website
contains information about the Museum’s collection and its mission of
education, restoration and preservation.
The Boating Museum has
assembled a collection of more than 100 wooden boats
built in the Finger
Lakes over the past 100 years, as well as numerous related artifacts and extensive
reference material.
The boating museum is a
501c3 not-for-profit corporation and was chartered by the New York State
Department of Education in 1997 to “research, document, preserve and share the boating history of the
Finger Lakes
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