Roger Moody

Women, Sports, and the North Woods Camps
As the allure of the Great Outdoors grew in prominence in the late 1800s, Maine’s sport camps and guides sprang up to cater to the new notion of vacationing.

The Inheritance Class Cutter
Based on an early ship model, the Inheritance Class cutter was a classy daysailer

The Hinckley Company’s War Boat Production
While the Hinckley name today is synonymous with luxurious pleasure boats, back in the 1940s, the Maine boatbuilder produced a series of working boats for the war effort.

Boatbuilding on a Smaller Scale
Robert Rice has become the custodian of his family’s boatbuilding history. He also builds boat models.

Camden’s Anchor Works
Camden once was the site of the country’s largest anchor manufacturing company.

Every Boat Has a Story
The stories behind two classic boats that once called Moosehead Lake home.

Rice Brothers’
Of the 15 lightships surviving in the United States, three were built in Maine by the Rice Brothers Corporation in East Boothbay.

A Broadway Producer and the Boothbay 33
The story behind the Boothbay 33 and its Broadway theater connections.

Where Broken Canoes Find New Life
Bruce Larson of Georges River Canoe specializes in building and restoring classic canoes.

Whistler
Back in the 1930s and 1940s, yacht designers began experimenting with aluminum. The first American all-aluminum yacht was built in Boothbay.