Banks dory

Banks dory

The Banks dory, also known as the Grand Banks dory, is a small, open, narrow-flat bottomed, slab-sided boat with a very narrow transom. It was first used for fishing off the Grand Banks of Newfoundland after the 1850's."Chapelle, page 85]

The boats were inexpensive to build. They could be stacked or nested inside each other and stored on the decks of larger fishing vessels which functioned as mother ships.

Banks dories have long overhangs at the bow and stern to help them lift over waves. There were one-man and two-man versions. The larger ones (12ft along the bottom or more) could be fitted with sails and a tiller. The dories became more stable in rough weather when they were loaded with about half a ton of catch.

Production

The Banks dory type is very simple and quick to produce making them well suited to mass production. The Lowell Boat shop of Amesbury Massachusetts is credited with being the first to build these boats in any numbers and excelled at their mass production. It is claimed that at one time Lowell's boat shop produced over 100 Bank dories in a single 24 hour period. By 1880, Bank dories were being built principally in the Massachusetts towns of Gloucester, Beverly, Essex, Newburyport, and Salisbury (Amesbury). Other major areas of production included Seabrook New Hampshire, Portland Maine and Bremen Maine. Salisbury alone had 7 shops producing between 200 and 650 boats a year. The firm of Higgins and Giford advertised in 1886 that it had built over 3,000 dories in the preceding 13 years. [Chapelle, page 86]

Mother ships

Banks dories were carried aboard mother ships, usually fishing schooners, and used for handlining cod on the Grand Banks. Prior to the introduction of Banks dories, fish were caught with handlines from the mother ship alone. Weather permitting, the dories were launched early each day with one or two crew and bait from previous catches. During the day they would return several times to the mother ship and unload their catch.

The barquentine, "Gazela Primeiro", while not a schooner, was one of the last of the dory mother ships. She had a long association with dories and the Grand Banks cod industry and made her final voyage as late as 1969.externalimage
align=right
width=260px

http://www.lowellsboatshop.com/slidesshow_banks.htm Contemporary Banks dories.]

http://heissufficient.files.wordpress.com/2007/09/fogwarning.jpg"The Fog Warning"] by Winslow Homer
Banks dories have been capable of surviving long voyages, some unintentional, when the fishermen became separated from their mother ships. One of the more famous adventures was by Howard Blackburn, who survived 5 days in the North Atlantic in January.

A Banks dory is seen in Winslow Homer's painting "The Fog Warning".

ee also

* Dory
* Glouster dory
* Swampscott dory
* Cape Ann dory.

Notes

References

* Chapelle, Howard L. (1951) "American Small Sailing Craft" WW Norton Company, New York, ISBN 0-393-03143-8
* Gardner, John (1987) "The Dory Book." Mystic Seaport Museum, Mystic Connecticut. ISBN 0-913372-44-7
* Philadelphia Ship Preservation Guild: [http://www.gazela.org/ships/gazela/gazelahistory.htm#banker "Gazela Primeiro" (1883)] . Retrieved 23 June 08.


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