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After the end of hostilities in 1945, the fishing industry was quick to establish some semblance of recovery and a surge of new builds and restoration of Admiralty motor fishing vessels soon followed. In Fraserburgh, on Scotlands east coast, several established yards satiated this desire amongst the fishing-boat owners for new craft. Thus it wasnt surprising that a new yard sprung up at the end of the 1940s when three local apprentices from one of the yards decided to set up their own boatbuilding yard on the breakwater, in what was a very exposed position. And so the yard of Thomas Summers & Co. was born, a yard that became synonymous with fine seaworthy fishing boats suited to various methods of fishing. In the space of just thirteen years they produced eighty-eight fishing vessels and their output was more prolific than most of the other Scottish boatyards. Many of these boats survive to this day, some still working as fishing vessels, and others converted to pleasure, a testament to their superb design and solid construction. Here, Mike Smylie recounts the story of Thomas Summers & Co. through historic records and personal memories of both fishermen and family members, with many striking photographs of the boats they built.
Acknowledgements 7(2)
Introduction 9(2)
1 A Little Bit of History
11(6)
2 Tommy Summers & Co.
17(14)
3 Building Wooden Boats
31(12)
4 Some Boats and their Soggy Endings
43(7)
5 After the Yard
50(4)
6 A Few Twenty-First-Century Survivors
54(12)
7 List of Big Boats Built between 1949 and 1962
66(47)
8 List of Forty-Footers Built between 1949 and 1962
113(16)
9 List ofYawls Built between 1949 and 1962
129(32)
Appendices
A PLN name changes for Summers Vessels
161(3)
B Tender for 40ft Fishing Boat
164(2)
C Sea Fishing Boats (Scotland) Act 1886 Discharge of Mortgage for Janet, FR166
166(1)
D Model Form of Building Contract (Inshore Vessels)
167(4)
E Plans of a Yawl by Malcolm Burge (MB Drafting)
171(2)
F Advert for Thomas Summers & Co.
173(1)
G Drawing of a Fraserburgh Ripper Line
174(1)
Bibliography 175
MIKE SMYLIE is a maritime historian who specialises in the fishing industry and has written numerous books and articles on the subject, including Thomas Summers & Co.<./i> and Voices from the Shoreline for The History Press. He is also a founder member of the 40+ Fishing Boat association, which was founded to promote and preserve British fishing traditions and vessels, and edits their thrice-yearly newsletter Fishing Boats.