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The Harkins Website
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Andrea
Harkins
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Date:
22 April 1956 Source:
The Flint Journal Subject:
Aluminum Boat Pioneers in St Charles Author:
Harold Bastien (Journal Outdoor Writer)
There
are no conveyor assembly lines in the plant of Harwill Inc., at St Charles,
where Aero-Craft aluminum boats are made-at a rate of 200 a week. All
the parts, and the completed boats themselves, are so light they are moved by
hand, by women as well as men. It
is this lack of excessive weight that has bought about the tremendous boom in
aluminum boats in the ten years since Harwill built the first production craft
made of the light but tough metal. This
year may be the biggest for the boating industry, and Harwill, which employs
100 residents of the little Saginaw County town, expects to capture it’s
share of the market. Its large
stockpile of winter made boats and canoes is dwindling rapidly as huge loads
leave the plant each day. There
are many reasons for the popularity of aluminum boats, with lightness at the
top of the list. Durability is a
big factor. The only wood is on
the transom, with plates of marine plywood riveted inside and out to
accommodate an outboard motor, or motors. All
seams are caulked and fastened with airplane rivets, closely spaced.
There are no floorboards to add to the weight, passengers walking right
on the bottom, which is covered with non-skid paint. All
this makes for easy maintenance, and permits the company to guarantee it’s
products against puncture for 20 years, tops among all companies making this
type of boat. When
spring comes, all one has to do is put his aluminum boat in the water.
There’s no scraping, caulking and painting.
Under each seat is Styrofoam to provide buoyancy. Harwill,
Inc. had it’s beginning in the brains of three men- L.B. Harkins, Leon
Harkins, and Doug Wiltse. All had
a background in aircraft sheet metal design and fabrication. They
chose to incorporate because it was necessary to sell stock to raise enough
capital to begin operations. The
names of the three men were combined to form the corporate name, Harwill, and
the new company came into being March 4, 1946. A
form letter was sent to about 50 villages in Michigan, asking about what
concessions could be granted to induce Harwill to locate it’s plant to the
best advantage. The letter stated
the company needed a building and that it planned to employ about 10 persons
within a year. The
best offer was made by St Charles, which had an abandoned water plant which
could be converted into a factory. During
the conversion period, Harwill’s founders designed Areo Craft model A, and a
pilot model was ready for testing early in June 1946. After a few minor changes the model was put into production
early in July, and the first aluminum boats began to roll off a production
line, the beginning of a brand new industry. By
the fall of 1946 the demand for the new boat far exceeded Harwill’s
capacity. Many of the
manufacturing operations were being performed outdoors, and winter was
approaching. A new issue of stock
was offered and the additional plant space and equipment permitted an increase
in production from 20 to 50 boats a week. Only
a year later, Harwill reached a new milestone when it began production of it’s
18 ½ foot Model JCC, America’s first outboard cruiser to come off an
assembly line. Harwill
has expanded continuously during its first decade. New models have been added each year and now there are 29
listed in the company’s catalog, ranging from easily handled nine-foot
runabouts with a weight of 65 pounds, to the big cabin cruiser, which weighs
585 pounds. In between are two
canoe models weighing 67 and 69 pounds, and boats of various lengths and
styles and weights. Although
pleasure boats are the company’s principal product, it has been used for
production of motor freight truck trailers, aquaplanes, toboggans and military
production of aluminum power and assault boats, parachute packing tables, mess
tables, folding tables and ship cabinets. L.B.
Harkins is the General Manger. His
brother, Leon, is Production Manager and Treasurer, and Doug Wiltse is the
Secretary. A.S. Brennen, Saginaw
insurance executive is the President, serving in an advisory capacity, and is
active in the company’s financial relations.
L.B. Harkins had experience in aircraft conduction with United Aircraft
and Briggs Aircraft in Detroit and Dow Chemical Company in Midland Michigan.
He is the author of “Magnesium Fabrication”, published by Pitman
Publishing in 1947. Wiltse was
his co-worker in Bay City Michigan before Harwill was organized.
Leon Harkins was manager of the Williams Form Engineering Company in
Grand Rapids.
Note…Reprinted exactly as written, with the exception of grammar corrections.
Harwill Incorporated was sold to
Browning Marine in the late sixties and that was subsequently sold to Thompson
Boats. At this time, the facility in St Charles is not producing any
boats.
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