505 Albert Lea Street
by Lee Wangstad
My good friend Ross Pfund sent me a copy of
Popular Boating magazine the other day. It was the January 1961
issue, and there in the letters column was one titled "Old Boat
Specs" and read as follows:
"My hobby, for the last four or five years, has been that of
collecting old inboard speedboat catalogs, glossy photos and
brochures. Last week I received in the mail 18 old 1932 Chris-Craft
runabout postcards that are in perfect condition. These are now my
oldest pieces of literature in my collection. I was wondering if you
possibly had any old photos, catalogs, brochures or other literature
on the following old inboard speedboats: Mullins steel inboards
(information for any year); Dodge wooden inboards (information for
any year); Chris-Craft, early history and any literature up to 1937
and from 1937 to 1949, also 1951, 1952; DeWitte, information for any
year; and Doane, information for any year. These are just a few
companies on which I would like to receive either a small written
history or the literature for the years stated. I know this is a big
order, but I think you can help me."
The letter was signed, Bob Speltz, 505 Albert Lea Street, Albert
Lea, Minnesota. Now, maybe to some, the address doesn't mean a whole
lot, but the name hails a significant message to all of us classic
boat aficionados out here in Minnesota ---. and the rest of the
world as well.
The really amazing thing to me is that, here it is 1961, and Bob has
to be all of 18 years old. Already, he has been researching the old
classics for four or five years and collecting the literature and
histories and writing them down. It makes me think of what I am
doing and where I'm at in 1961. Wow, ten years old and barely in
Little League. Where is the rest of the hobby at this early date?
Bob would have a long wait for the rest of us to catch up.
When I see the address 505 Albert Lea Street, it immediately brings
to mind the house with its white clapboard siding, freshly painted,
always neat and tidy. It's on the hill overlooking Fountain Lake in
a quiet, tree lined neighborhood, that seems to be coming right out
of the 30's. And there’s the porch that enter into the comfortable
living room. Bob's mom, Angie, is answering the door to always
greeting you with a smile and a manner which immediately sets you at
ease. You know that you are with friends. This is the house where
Bob Speltz grew up. It is the house where he stayed and wrote the
volumes that have taught us all about those wooden runabouts that he
was so anxious to research.
When I was young, I would travel down to the Minneapolis Boat Show
with my family, and collect the literature from each display, and
lug the bags of catalogs around all night. Then, I'd bring them
home, sort them out with my favorites working their way towards the
top of the pile, while the bottom of the pile slowly finds its way
out of the house headed for the next paper drive at school.
Bob Speltz did a very similar thing, only there was no top or bottom
to his pile. He loved them all equally. He would hang onto this
literature the rest of his life. That’s how he was. These things
were important to him, and just as he had saved and collected the
literature from the shows he had attended, he started to travel back
in time and collect the older things.
It would only be natural for him to write on this subject. He had a
fifteen-year head start on everyone else. There was little else on
the subject when he first produced the REAL RUNABOUTS. If Bob had
been like most people, he would have been content with a successful
book and the accolades that followed. But he was driven by something
deeper. The more he looked, the more he found. The whole thing was
beginning to open up to him. The first book was the tip of the
iceberg. Each succeeding volume would bring forth more information
--- not just on the boats in Volume I --- but on companies that most
had never heard of. The hobby grasped his books with true
dedication, following his lead in the discovery of an industry that
time had swept aside.
He wrote this collection of works from his office in his home at 505
Albert Lea Street. Overlooking Fountain Lake, where memories from
his boyhood would spring up while gazing out the window, he would
chronicle the history of an industry focused on recreation --- in
and around the water.
My favorite picture of Bob shows him on the back of a pontoon boat
that's rigged up with a hoist to pluck lifts out of the lake each
fall and return them again in the spring. He had told me of how he
had custom-rigged this thing to make it possible to work on Fountain
Lake. It was what he wanted to do --- be on the lake. I found this
picture while sorting a batch of literature that he had given me. On
the sideboards are the words "Bob's Boat House". On the
front is the familiar phone number 373-2145. Each time that I read
the number on the picture, I am reminded of the great conversations
about boats that we've shared.
I can't think of 505 Albert Lea Street without the image of Angie at
the back door with a jar of candy, offering a handful to my daughter
Emily for the long ride home. And the smile on Emily's face, just
knowing that this was someone who truly cared. As I think of that
1961 letter to Popular Boating, I can only think that he wrote that
letter because he cared. There was information that he wanted to
know, information that he would share with others. Not just today or
tomorrow, but forever.
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