March 29, 2011

Well crap - RIP Harold 'Dynamite' Payson

Although I am not involved with them these days, I am very much into boats and have owned several sailboats including one of these for five years:
blanchard_senior.jpg
Harold 'Dynamite' Payson was well known in the wooden boat community for his writing -- he authored several books on boats and boatbuilding as well as sets of plans and many articles in WoodenBoat magazine. From the Bangor (Maine) Daily News:
Boatbuilder, teacher Harold ‘Dynamite’ Payson dies
Harold H. “Dynamite” Payson, a mentor to a generation of backyard boat builders, has died.

Payson died Wednesday at Maine Medical Center in Portland after suffering an aneurysm at his home in South Thomaston earlier that day. He was 82.

Payson is best known in the world of wooden boats as a builder, writer and teacher. In collaboration with the late Gloucester, Mass., designer Phil Bolger, he developed a line of small boats that could be easily built by novice builders using everyday tools and easily obtainable materials.

Payson called them “instant boats” and wrote a series of books explaining his methods for building. He broke down the barriers to boat ownership for a lot of people who might have been intimidated by traditional boat building methods, according to Carl Cramer, publisher of WoodenBoat magazine.

“There are a lot of dreamers who will see a boat and say, ‘I wish I could build that,’” Cramer said. “But building a boat can be a daunting prospect. Dynamite took the ‘daunt’ out of the process.”

His boats are scattered along coastlines all around the world, Cramer said.

Payson was born in Rockland in 1928 and got the moniker “Dynamite” at an early age from his older sister’s boyfriend who said he was pesky and kept “popping up like a stick of dynamite,” according to a 2009 interview.

He served in the U.S. Navy during World War II, but returned to the Maine coast where he lived the rest of his life. He fished and later built boats at a shop he and his father built in 1952. That also was where he did all of his writing, he once told a reporter.

“When I write, I come out here to the shop, because everything I’m associated with is here,” he said.

While building boats, he began a long relationship with WoodenBoat magazine, where he frequently wrote commentaries and articles on various aspects of wooden boat building. Over the years, WoodenBoat published several of his books, covering topics that included building a dory, a dory model and sharpening tools.

In those books, and others, he had the ability to explain the designs and his methods in layman’s terms so that the “average Joe” could understand them, according to Rich Hilsinger, the director at WoodenBoat School, where Payson taught each summer. The books laid out a straightforward method that encouraged novices to “just do it,” which was often the way he inscribed the books that he signed for fans.

His beautiful boats, his “real Mainer” demeanor and his wealth of stories endeared him to the students at the school, young and old alike.
An American classic -- he will be missed. Posted by DaveH at March 29, 2011 1:32 PM
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