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Thursday, November 21, 2024

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Buyboat F.D. Crockett turns 100 this year — restoring vessel was huge task

The Deltaville-based buyboat F.D. Crockett (Photo by Tom Chillemi)

The log hull buyboat F.D. Crockett (1924) is a century old this year and still going strong!

The Deltaville Maritime Museum (DMM) is conducting a 100th birthday party on June 15 and 16 at the museum to celebrate the life of the boat and to establish an endowment to further the maritime life of one of the most unique style of deck boats on Chesapeake Bay.

F.D. Crockett and Old Point (1909), owned by the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum (CBMM) in St. Michaels, Md., are the last two large log hull deck boats alive that were built specifically for motor power.

The F.D. Crockett was built near the end of the log boat era and it is believed to be one of the largest ever built specifically for internal combustion engine. The launching of the F.D. Crockett on Chisman Creek in York County in 1924 was the grand finale of the log canoe era in America!

During the transition from wind and sail power to motor-powered boats, there was a narrow window (1900s into 1920s) when traditional log canoe builders, particularly in the Poquoson and Dare areas in York County, were able to compete against builders across the bay who built large deck boats powered by motors and built out of planks. F.D. Crockett and Old Point are amazing examples of the few boats built in that short window in bay maritime boatbuilding history.

In the last years of its commercial life, the F.D. Crockett was worked in Virginia’s commercial crab dredge fishery. The low-sided log boat made it an ideal platform for hauling dredges up over the sides and onto the deck. Virginia’s winter crab dredge fishery was banned for conservation reasons by the Virginia Marine Resources Commission in 2008, closing out one of the last fisheries that supported large wooden deck boats on the bay.

Even before then, the F.D. Crockett had fallen into disrepair. With the encouragement of the late “Kaptain Krunch” Steve Smith, the museum accepted the donation of the boat in 2005 from Ron Turner with a horde of soothsayers across the bay questioning the museum’s ability and means to support the restoration of such a boat.

The reconstruction came about because the community embraced the project with donated funds, thousands of hours of donated boatbuilding talent and free railway time by local boatyards. Longtime boatbuilder and home contractor John England spearheaded the project as the project manager.

The restored hull of the F.D. Crockett was dedicated in 2011 to “the boatbuilders and watermen of Chesapeake Bay and the families who kept the history alive.” Thousands of volunteer labor hours brought her to National Landmark status in 2012.

The vessel is now a maritime ambassador for the museum and travels annually to different ports as an example of that watermark era in bay boatbuilding history.

Those wishing to join the generous donors of the “F.D. Crockett’s 100th year Preservation Endowment” can write to the Deltaville Maritime Museum (DMM), P.O. Box 466, Deltaville, VA 23043, phone DMM at 804-776-7200; or visit the DMM website at www.deltavillemuseum.com.

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Larry Chowning
Larry Chowninghttps://www.ssentinel.com
Larry is a reporter for the Southside Sentinel and author of several books centered around the people and places of the Chesapeake Bay.