- Chebacco. com | Chebacco Sailboats – Designed by Phil Bolger
Chebaccos are a family of camp cruiser sailboats designed by Phil Bolger (1927-2009), one of the world’s most prolific and innovative boat designers Chebacco boats are commonly, but not exclusively, home built
- Stories from Chebacco (Essex) - Historic Ipswich
Chebacco residents were still residents of the town of Ipswich The word “Chebacco” was a Native American name for the lake that lies between Essex and Wenham Chebacco had a thriving shipyard, and a movement for complete separation gained strength in 1818
- The Chebacco Boats - Small Boats
There were three original Chebacco boats, all designed by Phil Bolger for Brad Story Story was a friend of Bolger’s and a boatbuilder, now retired, of considerable talent in Essex, Massachusetts All three boats feel very much alike on the water
- chebacco, n. meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English Dictionary
chebacco, n meanings, etymology, pronunciation and more in the Oxford English Dictionary
- Bolger Chebacco 20 sailboat for sale - Sailing Texas
Go to 2000 Bolger Chebacco 20 designed by the late Phil Bolger It is also called a Cat-yawl because of the small mizzen mast When I first started sailing it on the Chesapeake Bay, peaople constantly complimented the boat since it has a wonderful "old fashioned" look to it
- Lewis H. Story — Essex Shipbuilding Museum
Chebacco Boats were built by the hundreds not only in Essex, but in other coastal towns as well Typically, they measured between 22 and 30 tons and averaged from 24 to 48 feet in length, had two masts and no bowsprit They were usually a flush-deck vessel with several cockpits, or "standing rooms" in which the fishermen stood to fish
- History and Variants | Chebacco. com
The Chebacco boats are the brainchild of Phil Bolger, the prolific naval architect of Gloucester, Massachusetts The are derived from an earlier design of his, called ‘Harbinger’ – a 15 foot open catboat with a cold-molded hull
- Essex shipbuilders built Chebacco Boats that were used primarily for . . .
The “Chebacco” was a style of sailing vessel that preceded the schooner It was primarily used for coastal transport and the inshore fisheries, although a few fished the distant offshore banks
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