StanCraft Boat Company

StanCraft Boat Company
Private
Industry Boat manufacturing
Founded 1933
Founder W.H. "Billy" Young
Stanley Young
Headquarters Hayden, Idaho
Key people
Robb Bloem
(Owner, president)
Amy Bloem
(Owner)
Number of employees
65 (2015)[1]
Website stancraftboats.com

StanCraft Boat Company is an American boat design and manufacturing company based in Hayden, Idaho.

History

StanCraft was founded in 1933 by W.H. "Billy" Young and his son Stanley Young, when they handcrafted their first mahogany wood speedster in Lakeside, Montana, on the shore of Flathead Lake.[2][3] Over the next 35 years, they constructed over 800 wooden boats,[2] with Stanley Young as head designer and builder.[4]

In 1937, when StanCraft built its first factory near Somers, Montana, it was the only boat-building factory in Montana.[4] Stanley and his brother Donald Young operated the factory until the beginning of World War II, and resumed operations after the war. During the war, Stanley operated a plant on the West Coast, building boats for the US Coast Guard. In 1948, StanCraft's sales offices and headquarters were moved from Somers to nearby Polson, Montana.[5] On March 9, 1966, a fire burned down the StanCraft manufacturing plant in Somers, destroying 11 boats that were in storage.[6]

Stanley Young and his wife Delores had three children, including Syd Young,[7] who took over the business in 1970.[3] As fiberglass boats grew in popularity, the company began building fiberglass boats in addition to wooden boats.[2][8] Syd Young moved the company to Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, in 1981.[2][8] The company's main business at the time was restoring wooden boats, building only a few new boats per year.[3] The 1981 film On Golden Pond, which features vintage wooden boats, was credited in part with sparking renewed interest in the vessels.[3] In 1997, Syd Young cut back on operations and sold much of the company's assets to Hagadone Marine Group. Robb and Amy Bloem (Billy Young's great-granddaughter) took over what remained of StanCraft in 2003, rebuilding the custom manufacturing operations while expanding the company's storage and restoration services and adding three brands of fiberglass boats to its offerings.[3]

In March 2016, the company moved into its newly-constructed headquarters in Hayden, Idaho, for offices, manufacturing, operations and storage,[9] with plans to double its production of wooden boats.[10]

Products

The company builds approximately 10 wooden mahogany boats under 20 feet long, and another 12 large custom designs annually.[2] StanCraft boats range in length from 14 to 46 feet.[1] Each boat is handmade and takes about nine months to complete.[11] From its founding through 2015, the company has produced over 1,000 wooden boats.[2]

In 2006, John Elway purchased The Missile, a 36-foot missile-shaped wooden speedboat capable of cruising at 85 mph.[3][12] Wayne Gretzky purchased the Discovery II, a 30-foot Deluxe Sport Low Boy originally built for the Discovery Land Company, with a body made of African mahogany and featuring custom silicon-bronze cast and chrome-plated hardware.[2] The Low Boy series introduced the use of a starboard-side door for easy entry and a deadrise that lifts and launches the boat smoothly onto plane as it accelerates.[2]

The company also operates StanCraft Marine Center pro shops and showrooms in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho; Mesa, Arizona; and Portland, Oregon. The shops sell MasterCraft, Formula and Chris-Craft performance boats; Manitou Pontoons; ski and wakeboard equipment; and boating accessories.[3]

Partnerships

Starting in 2014, StanCraft has collaborated with MasterCraft on a limited line of wooden wakeboard boats, with StanCraft constructing the wooden bodies for the boats. MasterCraft provides materials like interior seating, towers and helms. StanCraft built a limited production of the X30 MasterCraft Edition, debuting it at the 2014 Miami International Boat Show.[13][14]

StanCraft also has an agreement with pontoon boat maker Bennington, where StanCraft lends design and construction work on around 35 boats per year.[3]

Milestones

Year Event
1933 StanCraft founded by W.H. "Billy" Young and Stanley Young in Lakeside, Montana.
1937 StanCraft builds its first boat-building factory.
1970 Syd Young, a second-generation owner, purchases the company.
1981 Syd Young moves StanCraft headquarters to Coeur d'Aline, Idaho.
1997 Syd Young retires, selling all business but StanCraft brand to Hagadone Marine Group.
2003 Robb and Amy Bloem take over the company as third-generation owners.
2016 StanCraft moves its headquarters to Hayden, Idaho.

References

  1. 1 2 "StanCraft to move to Hayden," Coeur d'Alene Press, August 23, 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Neil Rabinowitz, "Stancraft Wood Boats: Classic and Curvacious," Yachtworld.com, April 22, 2015.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Mike McLean, "StanCraft boat manufacturer rides wave of growth," Spokane Journal of Business, May 8, 2014.
  4. 1 2 "Only Boat Factory in State on Shore of Flathead Lake," Independent Record, February 14, 1938.
  5. "Stan-Craft Boat Co. To Build New Plant At Polson," Daily Inter Lake, September 11, 1947.
  6. "Blaze Destroys Stan-Craft Plant," Daily Inter Lake, March 10, 1966.
  7. "Stancraft Boats," Inland Empire Chapter Antique & Classic Boat Society, 2015.
  8. 1 2 Lynnette Hintze, "Boating has always meant good times on Whitefish Lake," Daily Inter Lake, June 22, 2013.
  9. Treva Lind, "The Dirt: Commercial real estate deals unfold in Spokane Valley," The Spokesman-Review, March 19, 2016.
  10. Benton Alexander Smith, "Stancraft Boat Company finds success in its third generation," Idaho Business Review, April 26, 2016.
  11. "Made in the Northwest – StanCraft Boat Company," KXLY-TV, July 9, 2015.
  12. Jeff Williams, "StanCraft Mahogany Boats," Cigar Aficionado, May/June 2012.
  13. Brandon Judd, "MasterCraft Boat Company and StanCraft Boat Company Announce Product Partnership," Wakeboarding, February 21, 2014.
  14. "MasterCraft teams with wooden-boat builder on limited production run," Trade Only Today, February 24, 2014.
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