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A
Minnesota Institution
by Andreas Jordahl Rhude,
Second
in a series of articles on Larson, Larson Watercraft, and Crestliner
boats.
Minnesota
has been and is home to numerous boat builders and one that has made
a reputable name for itself is Larson. Larson Boats has managed to
survive the quirks of the tumultuous boating industry and has
thrived in recent years. Wood, fiberglass and even aluminum;
buyouts, mergers; bankruptcies; failed endeavors into making
snowmobiles and ping-pong tables; wars; peacetime; boom and bust;
fire; Larson has been through it all.
It
all goes back to around 1905 when Paul G. Larson built his first
boat at his parent’s home near Little Falls, Minnesota. He was
only eleven years of age at the time and he used his boat on the
waters in the area. Scrap lumber and nails salvaged from the fire of
a nearby farm home were utilized to build the boat. By the age of
19, in 1913, he sold his first boat. It was a 14-foot long
double-ended duck boat that weighed 80 pounds. Paul used steam bent
white oak for the frames and clear Minnesota white pine for the hull
planking. The cockpit was 9 feet in length and 28 inches wide and
could accommodate two men.
He built the duck boats in his spare
time during the winter months using nothing but hand tools – no
power tools. He sawed the planks and drilled the holes by hand. Paul
worked at various jobs in the summertime when it was available.
About 1915 Larson earned enough profits from fur trapping to
purchase his first power woodworking equipment. “This really put
me in the boat building business for it had jointer, rip saw and
band saw.” he wrote in a remembrance of his business genesis (Paul
Larson letter).
With
his new multi-purpose tool he started making 14 and 16-foot boats
for lake cottages. They were built for use with the outboard motors
such as Evinrude, Koban, and Caille; the heavy one cylinder outboard
engines. His first major market were cottage owners on Lake
Alexander, about 22 miles northwest of Little Falls.
He constructed his first shop, a
small 18 x 24 foot [432 square feet] building, in 1915. Compare that
to Thompson Brothers Boat Mfg. Company of Peshtigo, Wisconsin which
had a three story 60 x 120 foot building encompassing 31,600 square
feet of floor space as early as 1913 (Peshtigo Times, 27 June 1912).
World War I raged in Europe and the United States became entrenched
in the conflict in the summer of 1917. Larson was struggling through
its earliest years during this period.
In March of 1922, Larson and fellow
Little Falls resident, Sherman Levis joined a group of
sports-persons on a 150 miles dog sled trek through northern
Minnesota. Amongst the team were State Game and Fish Commissioner
Jay Gould and a few wardens. He struck up a friendship with the
wardens and this resulted in Paul selling a few boats to them for
use in their assignments. Paul designed a special lightweight vessel
he called the “Game Warden Special” for them. Constructed of
cedar strip planking over white oak ribs, she was covered with
canvas below the waterline. Many years later he commented that it
was some of the best advertising he could ever have dreamed up.

Larson made a coup in 1922 when he
became the first dealer in the state of Minnesota for Johnson
outboard motors. He packaged boat and motor making one stop shopping
for consumers. This marriage enabled Larson to grab a strong market
share for the boating world in central Minnesota. In those early
days Larson made wooden strip-built fishing and rowboats. By 1925 a
larger factory was built, 24 x 40 feet, along the banks of the
Mississippi River. Their cedar strip boats were typical of the era.
They were similar to those made by other builders such as Shell Lake
Boats; Thompson; Alexandria Boat Works; and Penn Yan.
In the twenties Paul began racing his boats. He made the race
circuit in Minnesota and Wisconsin making a name for himself and his
boats. He was seriously injured in a crash during a race at Red
Wing, Minnesota on 24 August 1929. His boat was named the “Spirit
of 770” and was sponsored by the local Elks Lodge No. 770. Aviator
Charles Lindbergh’s “Spirit of St. Louis” inspired the first
portion of Paul’s boat name! Lindbergh was a long time Little
Falls resident. This Lindbergh connection continued to be a part of
Paul’s boating career for years to come.
More deluxe models that came with
decks, windshields, running lights, and upholstered seats were
added. Larson Boat Works did make a few inboard utility models in
the 1930s and ‘40s. The hulls were made of strips of mahogany
similar to those used in the manufacture of
fishing boats. This was lieu of wide planks as was commonly used by
Chris-Craft and others. A fully restored one sits in John
Monahan’s Boat Works museum in Little Falls.
The stock market crash of October
1929 effected Larson. Paul had to obtain a $1,000.00 loan to
survive. That was a large amount at the time, especially considering
the depressed economy. Things looked brighter by the end of the
thirties as manufacturing space was doubled.
The 3,000th Larson boat was built in
January, 1939 when the firm had twenty woodworkers on the payroll.
Over the company’s first 26 years, this averaged to 115 boats
annually. Contrast this to Thompson Brothers Boat that was building
over 2,000 boats each year during the same period (Marinette Eagle
Star, 22 July 1937).
During World War II the company built
26-foot long training rowboats for the Navy along with a few inboard
boats used for shore patrol. They even made wooden beer cases; beer
being considered an essential war staple!
One of the most unique of all Larson
models ever made was the Falls Flyer. Designed and later patented by
Paul Larson, the first Flyer came off the production line in 1939
(patent number 126,588 dated 15 April 1941). It first appeared in
the 1938 Larson catalog. The early models had cedar strip planking
over white oak framing. The exterior was covered in canvas, similar
to a wood-canvas canoe. The red, cream white, and black paint job
was also a departure from conventional boat design. In 1954 they
made their first fiberglass Falls Flyer. In the early 1960s the
model was dropped from the Larson line after major redesign occurred
circa 1958.
Soon after the cessation of
hostilities of the Second World War, Larson was involved in the
formation of “Aluminum Boat Company,” which made aluminum
fishing boats. The name became Larson Watercraft, Inc. in 1948 when
Loiel S. Ryan, Sr. and Jr. took over management of the operation.
One of their models was called the Crestliner, the name the company
adopted as its identity on 16 September 1957.
Paul’s brother K.L. “Lem”
Larson joined the firm and was a long time vice president. In 1948
some of the employees with at least ten years tenure included: Iver
Nelson; Elmer Byllemos; John McGuire; Jack Oestreich; Leonard Ring;
Arnold Nagel; Leonard Smith; Conrad Sunstrom; Howard Barden; and
Lyle Tuller. At that time nearly 100 workers were employed by Larson
Boat Works and Larson Watercraft (the aluminum boat builder). They
made about 1,700 wooden boats each year and close to 800 aluminum
ones.
Disaster struck on the thirteenth of
December 1949 when fire demolished the entire Larson facility. It
was a total loss with forms; inventory; equipment; and records being
destroyed. Sadly, one dedicated Larson employee was lost in the
fire; night watchman Jake Ringwelski. He went back into the burning
building several times in an attempt to save materials. The factory
was ultimately rebuilt on the same spot. The fire did not affect the
Larson Watercraft plant, adjacent to the main Larson Boat Works
facility.
The destruction of records lends to
the mystery of the early era of Larson Boat Works. Very little is
known of early models, employees, and production statistics.
In 1953 the company offered a
fiberglass coating on the bottom of several of their strip built
models as an option. They called it “armorglass.” By the
following year they made their first molded fiberglass hull, a Falls
Flyer. Larson quickly made the metamorphosis from wooden to
fiberglass reinforced plastic construction. The new Laker Line of
‘glass boats soon came to dominate their output.
1956 was a pivotal year at Larson
with the introduction of the “All American” fiberglass model.
Larson used that particular model name into the 1990s. Their
earliest fiberglass boats had plastic hulls but wooden decks and
covering boards over the gunwales. By 1957 when the company was
incorporated, ninety percent of their production was in fiberglass.
Sales were increasing in the decade and additional financing was
needed to help build more production space. A local industrial
development corporation was established to sell shares to raise
capital for Larson. They built a new plant on the west side of the
Mississippi River in 1958-59.
Larson was one of the first
fiberglass boat builders to use the Rand chopper gun fiberglass
spray method of building up hull thickness. There were 300 workers
at the Little Falls plant by 1959. Larson Boats were being built at
Ontario, California; Nashville, Georgia; Casper, Wyoming; and
Cornwall, Ontario, Canada under various licensing agreements with
other builders. A nation-wide dealer network was well established by
that time.
Paul G. Larson was born in Chicago on
10 January 1894 and he died at the age of 89 in Little Falls on 20
January 1983. His Swedish born parents brought the family to
Minnesota while Paul was just shy of five years. Growing up near the
forests, streams and lakes, and the Mighty Mississippi it was no
wonder that he grew to love the outdoors. He became an avid
sportsperson and making boats fit in well with his genre.
Larson Boat Works started out as a
humble, one man operation and became a major force in the boating
industry in the United States and Canada. It made a successful
transition from wood to fiberglass, a much more smooth switch than
other builders. Minnesota is lucky to have two privately funded
maritime museums dedicated to Larson Boats: The
Mikkelson Collection at Willmar and The Boat Works at Little
Falls.
Continued in the next issue.
Sources:
-
Paul G. Larson letter, undated
(from files of Shirley Hanson, daughter of Paul Larson)
-
The Real Runabouts by Bob Speltz
-
Peshtigo (WI) Times w Marinette
(WI) Eagle Star
-
Little Falls (MN) Daily
Transcript w John Monahan, Little Falls, MN
-
Paul Mikkelson, Willmar, MN w
Larson Boats history, undated, unpublished timeline
-
American Dreamboats: An
illustrated History of Larson Boats – The Company, The Boats,
and Their Times by Laura Sommers

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