Being native to michigan and into boats for most of my 54 years, these "Chris Craft" vessels played a huge inspiration in life itself. I honor every single one of these vessels I come across to this day.
Im 70 and grew up on boats in western Michigan. Chris Craft was real nice quality and appearance. Groundbreakers too. I loved our decorated up boat parades on the lake on the 4th of July. The Chris Crafts always looked the best, hands down.
I grew up at lake Tahoe. We had a fiberglass boat but our cousins and other friends had a Chris-Craft. I spent many hours in that boat. In the eighties and nineties got really popular for people to get classic Chris-Craft and centurys. My cousins start importing Wooden boats from Italy. One summer I worked sanding and refinishing shop of a boat works. Yes the memories. Thank you for your piece.
The Lake Geneva (Wisconsin) classic wooden boat show was a superb way to see the various Chris Crafts, Garwoods, Hacker Crafts, etc., in one place-as well as meeting the owners. This drew entrants and visitors from a wide geographic range, and was always much anticipated by everyone. During Covid, the show was "temporarily" suspended. It has not returned, sadly. The folks who ran the show were up in years to begin with, and the hiatus became an unintended undoing. I own a 17' 1940 Chris Craft racing boat (3 carburetors on a 155HP MBL engine) and a 1957 20' Continental. Both are pristine and have "no soak" hulls. These boats ply the waters of Lake Geneva, and will do so as long as I can still turn the wheel.
In my late teens my family would vacation in southern Ontario and take trips on the Trent canal system.I always loved to see the Chris Crafts very stylish,classy and even when docked seemed like the boat could not wait to get out to open water!
Thanks for the memories. I owned 2 CC's in the 80's. The first was a 27' Constellation. We had that til my 2 kids were born and then moved up to a 36' Connie. Both were wonderful boats. I recently built a 30" scale replica of the 36. Now I can look at it every day.😂
Im from Guernsey, Channel Islands and adored Chris Crafts back in the 1960s. There were only a few, two of them were fibreglass. But still fast and beautiful.
When I was a kid (back about 1960) our family couldn't afford a boat - but when we went fishing, I would go down by the docks and browse. Seeing a Chris Craft was always a treat - to me they looked like floating jewels. Fiberglas boats were nice, but just didn't compare. And owners really took care of them - never saw one that wasn't polished up & clean - you could always see right down into the grain of the mahogany - like you you could fall right in. I can still smell the wood & varnish.
@dennisrediske6338....Me too...!! It was back in the late 1950's, I think, when I was about 7 or 8. I think the CC that my Grandfather had looked similar to the one shown here at 1:18.
In the early 50s a friend owned a Chris Craft Cavalier rigged for skiing. He would try to throw me off my skies using full power and that would cause my hands to lock up. I had to intentionally fall and let that rip the rope from my hands at the end of the run. That boat was the fastest on that river every summer.
Memory Mountain is always an edutaining experience 😁 While I'm not into boats, I am familiar with many of the well known names in the industry. It was very interesting to learn that Chris-Craft was started my my home state.
In Los Angeles "Chris Craft" years ago owed and operated a local T.V. station KCOP ch.13 and during their scheduled sign off each night it would end with the announcer saying "KCOP channel 13 a CHRIS CRAFT STATION".
At least one of these photo's was taken at Priest Lake Idaho. I have been going there for 55+ years. They have an annual wooden boat gathering there. Elkins Resort is a great place to see lots of amazing classics. 8:01
Just a possible correction that the video says in 1925 they sold $3 BILLION dollars worth of boats. I'm not sure Ford was selling that much, so perhaps it's MILLIONS? I have not researched it but that sounds high.
A friend of the family had a 16-18 foot Mahogany plank Wanted me to restore it Turned it down because I didn't have enough experience to take on such a task
I watched this hoping vaguely to see the boat I lost my boat-driving cherry on (in the Panama Canal, no less), and am still amazed it was actually there. Anybody know anything about the long boat (it was 65') in background from 5:07 to 5:11?
As Chris-Craft evolved, the flat stern is what we recognize today, but early on when he first started the early punts/sciffs did have a square bow. I know the photo shown at that time showed them building a flat stern, but I couldn’t find a photo of the boats he built in 1874. Sorry for any confusion. Thanks for watching!
Please try to have your photos have some relation to your narration!--By the way, I cannot believe that Chris Craft EVER sold $3 BILLION worth in any year, let alone the 1920's
Being native to michigan and into boats for most of my 54 years, these "Chris Craft" vessels played a huge inspiration in life itself. I honor every single one of these vessels I come across to this day.
Unmatched quality in it's time. Beautiful boats.
Im 70 and grew up on boats in western Michigan. Chris Craft was real nice quality and appearance. Groundbreakers too. I loved our decorated up boat parades on the lake on the 4th of July. The Chris Crafts always looked the best, hands down.
In 1955, my dad bought a 21’ Chris Craft Capri. Most beautiful boat ever. I’d give anything to have that boat again. Smooth as silk on the water.
Magnificent boats I remember as a kid, seeing them incredibly beautiful, mixed with power, America style
Nothing better than a Chris craft!
I grew up at lake Tahoe. We had a fiberglass boat but our cousins and other friends had a Chris-Craft. I spent many hours in that boat. In the eighties and nineties got really popular for people to get classic Chris-Craft and centurys. My cousins start importing Wooden boats from Italy. One summer I worked sanding and refinishing shop of a boat works. Yes the memories. Thank you for your piece.
The Lake Geneva (Wisconsin) classic wooden boat show was a superb way to see the various Chris Crafts, Garwoods, Hacker Crafts, etc., in one place-as well as meeting the owners. This drew entrants and visitors from a wide geographic range, and was always much anticipated by everyone. During Covid, the show was "temporarily" suspended. It has not returned, sadly. The folks who ran the show were up in years to begin with, and the hiatus became an unintended undoing. I own a 17' 1940 Chris Craft racing boat (3 carburetors on a 155HP MBL engine) and a 1957 20' Continental. Both are pristine and have "no soak" hulls. These boats ply the waters of Lake Geneva, and will do so as long as I can still turn the wheel.
In my late teens my family would vacation in southern Ontario and take trips on the Trent canal system.I always loved to see the Chris Crafts very stylish,classy and even when docked seemed like the boat could not wait to get out to open water!
Thanks for the memories. I owned 2 CC's in the 80's. The first was a 27' Constellation. We had that til my 2 kids were born and then moved up to a 36' Connie. Both were wonderful boats. I recently built a 30" scale replica of the 36. Now I can look at it every day.😂
TFS. I loved seeing
mahogany Chris Craft boats on Lake Geneva, Wisconsin over the years.
Terrific memories for me in the 50-60’s on Cape Cod. If you had an inboard CC you had arrived! 😎
In 1982 I bought a cross craft scorpion.
I still have it.❤
Im from Guernsey, Channel Islands and adored Chris Crafts back in the 1960s. There were only a few, two of them were fibreglass. But still fast and beautiful.
Awesome video, great American story.
Best years of my life were spent with 45 foot ChrisCraft Tournament Sport Fisherman. Sold it 11 years ago and still miss it
When I was a kid (back about 1960) our family couldn't afford a boat - but when we went fishing, I would go down by the docks and browse. Seeing a Chris Craft was always a treat - to me they looked like floating jewels. Fiberglas boats were nice, but just didn't compare. And owners really took care of them - never saw one that wasn't polished up & clean - you could always see right down into the grain of the mahogany - like you you could fall right in. I can still smell the wood & varnish.
My first time Water Ski-ing was behind a Chris Craft
@dennisrediske6338....Me too...!! It was back in the late 1950's, I think, when I was about 7 or 8. I think the CC that my Grandfather had looked similar to the one shown here at 1:18.
A great jumpable wake
Skied behind many of these beauties
In the early 50s a friend owned a Chris Craft Cavalier rigged for skiing. He would try to throw me off my skies using full power and that would cause my hands to lock up. I had to intentionally fall and let that rip the rope from my hands at the end of the run. That boat was the fastest on that river every summer.
Memory Mountain is always an edutaining experience 😁 While I'm not into boats, I am familiar with many of the well known names in the industry. It was very interesting to learn that Chris-Craft was started my my home state.
Very freaking awesome!
In Los Angeles "Chris Craft" years ago owed and operated a local T.V. station KCOP ch.13 and during their scheduled sign off each night it would end with the announcer saying "KCOP channel 13 a CHRIS CRAFT STATION".
Wowmi remember that
At least one of these photo's was taken at Priest Lake Idaho. I have been going there for 55+ years. They have an annual wooden boat gathering there. Elkins Resort is a great place to see lots of amazing classics. 8:01
There's a gentleman in rancho Cordova that does make boats like these he's a brilliant designer and builder.
I've always thought C Cs were the best looking boats on the water. They look fast just sitting at the dock. Beautiful workmanship.
Grew up with Chris Craft boats. Owned and sold an XK-19 and an XK-22.
Confused. At 0:24 you state that the skiffs had a "square bow". Methinks you meant "square stern", but then again I've been known to be wrong before.
I had relatives who worked at the plant here in Cadillac Mi.
sweet
👍👍
My Dad Sold Chris Craft boats at Hayward Marine Center in Cos Cob, Connecticut.
They also made outboard engines for a short time. Had a 5.5 hp.made in 1952.
My father in-law built boats for them in Algonac. Then GM came in and hired a bunch of wood model makers.
3 Billion Dollars? Really, in 1930? I don’t the GNP was that much in 1930.
Million. Not billion. 😬 👍 Thanks for the update!
3 billion in sales! Are you sure?
They should bring back some all wooden boats.
Riva of Italy makes and sierra boat imports
Just a possible correction that the video says in 1925 they sold $3 BILLION dollars worth of boats. I'm not sure Ford was selling that much, so perhaps it's MILLIONS? I have not researched it but that sounds high.
A friend of the family had a 16-18 foot Mahogany plank Wanted me to restore it Turned it down because I didn't have enough experience to take on such a task
Funny to imagine those first fast for the time tiny cc boats would get passed by the uss new jersey BB which once did 35mph in trials. 😀
I watched this hoping vaguely to see the boat I lost my boat-driving cherry on (in the Panama Canal, no less), and am still amazed it was actually there. Anybody know anything about the long boat (it was 65') in background from 5:07 to 5:11?
Not the Bow that is square - its the Stern
As Chris-Craft evolved, the flat stern is what we recognize today, but early on when he first started the early punts/sciffs did have a square bow. I know the photo shown at that time showed them building a flat stern, but I couldn’t find a photo of the boats he built in 1874. Sorry for any confusion. Thanks for watching!
Bring back wooden boats !!!
Was that million or billion dollars?
Should be million!
Even that seems too high for 1930s.
I was a graphics sales and catalog subcontractor to Chris-Craft in the late 1960. I can tell you that sales were in the millions (NOT BILLIONS)
that you, Zach?
They became heavy users of plywood after the fifties
3 million.
Please try to have your photos have some relation to your narration!--By the way, I cannot believe that Chris Craft EVER sold $3 BILLION worth in any year, let alone the 1920's
That's how much booze they carried back in the day. 🍸🍹
Try transporting a +3000 lb boat onto the roof of today's cars....says enough about modern cars and boats!
Another where images do not match narrative
How many billions in 20s on a thousand boat sales? unlikely
Always loved Chris-Craft...
As a Chris Craft owner I can attest to their quality