Difference between revisions of "Emerald"

From Classic Boat Library
Jump to: navigation, search
(added boats in use link)
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 +
Logo and Additional History Needed. Please contact us to edit or contribute to this page.
 +
 +
 +
Emerald Boats
 +
 
Emerald Fiberglass, Inc.
 
Emerald Fiberglass, Inc.
  
Line 11: Line 16:
  
  
you know every boat in this marina. So I started my career there, and within a year and half, I was the top salesman and I was flying along. But back then in the 50's, we didn't have the Chris-Craft franchise, and there was the magic name. It had 62 percent of the entire market. An
+
[http://www.fiberglassics.com/index.php?searchword=Emerald&ordering=newest&searchphrase=all&limit=20&Itemid=88&option=com_search Emerald Boats in Use]
 +
 
 +
 
 +
[[Main Page|Back to the Main Page]]
  
So I went to a Chicago trade show in '64 looking for a small line of fiberglass boats. Back then, there were a lot of start-ups that would go out of business and stick you with bad boats, so you had to be careful. Sea Ray founder Connie Ray and I actually started our businesses at about the same time. Connie had Jerry Michilak, fresh from high school in Detroit, designing every Sea Ray until he recently retired- he's now in the Michigan Boating Industries Association's Hall of Fame. That's how I got fired up and started selling Sea Rays. I really got hooked on them. I remember in about 1970, I was with Connie on his big 58-foot aluminum fishing boat in the Bahamas and I told him we had to build bigger boats — we were at 30 feet at the time. He said, "I don't know." We spent a late night drinking too many martinis and I woke up at about 6 the next morning and heard a bunch of engines. It was one of the first Bertram shootouts and the fleet was coming in. So I woke up Connie to show him and said, "There, that's what we need — to get up into that size boat. Why should we hand your success and my success off to these
+
[[Category:Oregon]]
 +
[[Category:Fiberglass]]

Latest revision as of 20:54, 28 October 2012

Logo and Additional History Needed. Please contact us to edit or contribute to this page.


Emerald Boats

Emerald Fiberglass, Inc.

1831 W. 12th Ave.

Eugene, Oregon


Also found listed as the Emerald Fiberglass Manufacturing Company. According to a July 27, 1970 article in the Eugene Register-Guard, the Emerald Fiberglass building burned and eight or nine boat molds were destroyed. The "story-and-a-half corrugated metal shed" was destroyed. Owner of the company was listed as Fred Lindsey.

A Feb. 8, 2001 obituary, also from the Eugene Register-Guard, listed Harold Gilmour and Velma Gilmour, residents of Eugene from 1935 to 1971, owner-operators of Emerald Fiberglass Boats.


Emerald Boats in Use


Back to the Main Page