I joined last night so I could get the images posted on the Morphew question. I needed an image to illustrate a point I was making and I didn't have a copy, at the time, of the only picture still remaining of the Morphew my dad raced in the Freeport to Galveston Marathon circa 1955, winning in its class.
This picture was developed September 1954, as printed on the back.
Now, the main purpose of the photo was my Little League uniform, but the boat is in the background. Since it was over 50 years ago, I have to stretch what little memory I still have, but I believe this boat had a new deck installed and varnished. The front cock pit seat was so hard, it had foam and vinyl covering it (it helped a bunch!). The hull was covered in fiberglass cloth and fiberglassed and it ran a 40 hp Mercury. At 14', it was pretty fast for the time period, even with the extra weight of the fiberglass!
Part of the inspiration for the project probably came from the hydroplanes that raced about every weekend in the "old river" in Freeport, (the river channel had been diverted at some previous time prior to 1952) behind the Tarpon Inn area. The 20 hp Mercury was pretty much king at the time, but between races there were a lot of Yellow Jackets running the river with 40 hp Mercurys.
We were up close to Livingston at Dam "B" doing some fishing in the Morphew and hit a stump or something that shear the prop key. With a stub of a paddle, the front cover of the Mercury and a syrup bucket lid, we paddled all the way back in. It's a good thing it was as light as it was!
Well, that's my contribution, to help repay for the use of a good image of a Morphew!
This picture was developed September 1954, as printed on the back.
Now, the main purpose of the photo was my Little League uniform, but the boat is in the background. Since it was over 50 years ago, I have to stretch what little memory I still have, but I believe this boat had a new deck installed and varnished. The front cock pit seat was so hard, it had foam and vinyl covering it (it helped a bunch!). The hull was covered in fiberglass cloth and fiberglassed and it ran a 40 hp Mercury. At 14', it was pretty fast for the time period, even with the extra weight of the fiberglass!
Part of the inspiration for the project probably came from the hydroplanes that raced about every weekend in the "old river" in Freeport, (the river channel had been diverted at some previous time prior to 1952) behind the Tarpon Inn area. The 20 hp Mercury was pretty much king at the time, but between races there were a lot of Yellow Jackets running the river with 40 hp Mercurys.
We were up close to Livingston at Dam "B" doing some fishing in the Morphew and hit a stump or something that shear the prop key. With a stub of a paddle, the front cover of the Mercury and a syrup bucket lid, we paddled all the way back in. It's a good thing it was as light as it was!
Well, that's my contribution, to help repay for the use of a good image of a Morphew!
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