Compadre Cabin Cruiser and Tally Ho Cutter
Compadre is a 43-foot bridge-deck cruiser built in 1929 to a design by Stevens Brothers in Stockton, California. Her hull is Port Orford cedar on white oak frames, and her house is solid teak. She was originally powered by twin 6-cylinder Lathrop Mystic gasoline engines and was recently re-powered with twin 80hp Yanmar diesels. Her interior layout and cabinetry are nearly all original. She was built for Mr. Leland Adams of San Francisco, a vice-president of Leslie Salt Co. She spent many years cruising the sheltered waters of San Francisco Bay and the San Juaquin River delta. She relocated to the Pacific Northwest in 2007. Compadre is her original name.
Tally Ho is a gaff-rigged cutter yacht designed by Albert Strange. The 48 ft yacht was built in 1910 at Shoreham-by-Sea, West Sussex in England. While still based in Southampton until the 1960s, Tally Ho made multiple transatlantic crossings. Later she worked as a fishing boat out of Brookings, Oregon, until 1987. By 2017 she had nearly rotted away. She was sold it to an English boatbuilder to be completely refit. Seven years later, in June 2024, , Tally Ho sailed into Port Townsend Bay.
This photo was taken at Port Townsend's 2024 Wooden Boat Festival woodenboat.org/
Compadre Cabin Cruiser and Tally Ho Cutter
Compadre is a 43-foot bridge-deck cruiser built in 1929 to a design by Stevens Brothers in Stockton, California. Her hull is Port Orford cedar on white oak frames, and her house is solid teak. She was originally powered by twin 6-cylinder Lathrop Mystic gasoline engines and was recently re-powered with twin 80hp Yanmar diesels. Her interior layout and cabinetry are nearly all original. She was built for Mr. Leland Adams of San Francisco, a vice-president of Leslie Salt Co. She spent many years cruising the sheltered waters of San Francisco Bay and the San Juaquin River delta. She relocated to the Pacific Northwest in 2007. Compadre is her original name.
Tally Ho is a gaff-rigged cutter yacht designed by Albert Strange. The 48 ft yacht was built in 1910 at Shoreham-by-Sea, West Sussex in England. While still based in Southampton until the 1960s, Tally Ho made multiple transatlantic crossings. Later she worked as a fishing boat out of Brookings, Oregon, until 1987. By 2017 she had nearly rotted away. She was sold it to an English boatbuilder to be completely refit. Seven years later, in June 2024, , Tally Ho sailed into Port Townsend Bay.
This photo was taken at Port Townsend's 2024 Wooden Boat Festival woodenboat.org/