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C&C Yachts was a builder of high-performance fiberglass monohull sailboats with production facilities in Canada, Germany, and the United States. C&C designed and constructed a full range of production line cruiser-racer boats, as well as custom one-off and short production run racing and cruising boats. C&C boats ranged in size from as small as to as large as . C&C also produced a line of bluewater cruising boats in the to range under its Landfall brand. In addition, C&C designed sailboats for production by a number of other manufacturers such as
CS Yachts CS Yachts was a Canadian boat manufacturer founded in 1963 by Paul Tennyson, under the name Canadian Sailcraft. The company specialized in the design and manufacture of fibreglass sailboats. The location of the firm was in Brampton, Ontario, n ...
, Mirage Yachts, Northern Yachts,
Ontario Yachts Ontario Yachts is a Canadian boat builder at one time based in Oakville, Ontario, then Hamilton, Ontario and more recently in Burlington, Ontario. The company specializes in the manufacture and repair of fiberglass sailboats. The company was f ...
, Paceship Yachts, and
Tanzer Industries Tanzer Industries Limited was a Canadian boat manufacturer based in Dorion, Quebec. The company specialized in the design and manufacture of fibreglass sailboats. History The company was founded by Johann Tanzer in 1966 and went bankrupt in May ...
. C&C was founded in 1969 as a public company in Canada, which resulted from a joint venture among several companies and design teams. At the peak of its market success, the company supplied 50% of the Canadian market and 20% of the US market. The company name, C&C Yachts, came from the names of two of the founding designers, George Cuthbertson and
George Cassian George Cassian was a yacht designer and founding partner of Cuthbertson & Cassian yacht designers, one of four companies that in 1969 formed C&C Yachts, a Canadian yacht builder that dominated North American sailing in the 1970s and early 1980s ...
.


History


Origin

Two Canadian sailors; George Cuthbertson, a mechanical engineer, and George Cassian, an aircraft designer, then unemployed following the demise of the Avro Arrow jet project, formed the Cuthbertson and Cassian design group in 1961. This partnership evolved out of Cuthbertson's previous yacht brokerage and design firm. ''Inishfree'', the racing yacht built 1958, was Cuthbertson's first design of consequence. Cuthbertson initially held 75% interest in the company and later increased Cassian's share to a third. They started by designing a small number of steel and wooden boats, with Cuthbertson doing the preliminary lines and calculations and Cassian the interior plans and details. After successful design of the Hinterhoeller Invader 36, in 1965 Canadian
Perry Connolly Perry Connolly (June 24, 1927, Vancouver - September 29, 2017, Victoria, British Columbia) was a Canadian hotel constructor and yachtsman. Connolly was one of the instigators for George Cuthbertson to form C&C Yachts, whose ''Red Jacket'' won the ...
(who had previously purchased an Invader 36) commissioned Cuthbertson and Cassian to design a custom 40-foot (12m) racing sloop. At a discussion between periods at a Toronto Maple Leafs game in Maple Leaf Gardens Connolly requested "the meanest, hungriest 40-footer afloat".G+M: "Designer George Cuthbertson crafted sleek, speedy sailboats"
20 Oct 2017
The boat, named ''Red Jacket'', was built by Bruckmann Manufacturing of balsa wood sandwiched between two layers of fibreglass. The resulting structure was strong, stiff and significantly lighter than the wood or solid fiberglass yachts then sailing. ''Red Jacket'' is considered to be the first sailboat engineered with a cored hull (the practice is common in yacht-building and aerospace, even in the manufacture of wind-turbine blades today). She was launched in May 1966 and won 11 of 13 starts that summer. That winter, ''Red Jacket'' headed south and won a number of races on the famed Southern Ocean Racing Conference (SORC), competing against more than 85 of the best racers of the day. Connolly went back the next year, and ''Red Jacket'' was, in 1968, the first Canadian boat to win the SORC. The sailing community at large paid attention and demand for the C&C designs in production skyrocketed. C&C joined forces with their builders and suppliers: Belleville Marine yacht builder Ian Morch, George Hinterhoeller of Hinterhoeller Yachts and custom builder Erik Bruckmann. Together they formed a holding company, C&C Yachts Limited, officially formed on September 26, 1969., which was traded on the Toronto Stock Exchange with the help of an
IPO An initial public offering (IPO) or stock launch is a public offering in which shares of a company are sold to institutional investors and usually also to retail (individual) investors. An IPO is typically underwritten by one or more investment ...
by Walwyn, Stodgell & Co., an issue of 350,000 common shares at $4.50, providing the fledgling company with working capital of $1.5 million. The company started the mass production of fiberglass sailboats, a relatively new industry at that time. The sale of stock enabled C&C to build inventory in the off-season, which would then be delivered to dealers in the spring and early summer. It allowed efficiencies which were otherwise impossible. Owing to his degrees in engineering from the University of Toronto, and business administration from the University of Southern California, Ian Morch was made president. George Cuthbertson directed the design effort,
Erich Bruckmann Erich Bruckmann was a boat builder and founder of Bruckmann Manufacturing, one of four companies that in 1969 formed C&C Yachts, a Canadian yacht builder that dominated North American sailing in the 1970s and early 1980s. Erich Bruckmann built ...
the custom work, and George Hinterhoeller managed production. The plant at
Niagara-on-the-Lake Niagara-on-the-Lake is a town in Ontario, Canada. It is located on the Niagara Peninsula at the point where the Niagara River meets Lake Ontario, across the river from New York, United States. Niagara-on-the-Lake is in the Niagara Region of On ...
was "a completely integrated operation" aside from lead keel casting. The plant contained a rigging shop, a metal shop, a wood shop, a fiberglass shop, a upholstery shop, and an assembly area. In the operation conceived by Hinterhoeller, the yachts were built in pits, as opposed to the state-of-the-art which required a boatbuilder to use a ladder to mount the erected hull and keel. In 1969 the customs tariff to import yachts from the US into Canada was 17.5% and C&C achieved sales of $3.9 million its first year.


Expansion

C&C's reputation was based on its racing successes. The year of the merger brought a challenge for the Canada's Cup, a match-race between Canada and the US. C&C's custom shop, Bruckmann Manufacturing of Oakville, Ontario, built the three Canadian defenders, one of which, ''Manitou'', beat the Sparkman and Stephens-designed ''Niagara''. In 1971 hull #1 of the "Limited Edition" series, ''Arieto'', won first in Class B of the SORC, and the Montego Bay Race. Also in 1971, ''Endurance'', a 43-footer as well, won the Chicago-Mackinac Race. In 1972, ''Condor'', the prototype
Redline 41 The Redline 41 is a series of sailboat designs, first built in 1967 and that remained in production in 2017. The first two designs were by Cuthbertson & Cassian and the more recent one by Mark Mills. The three different boats that have carrie ...
won SORC overall and the 43 foot ''Arieto'' won the Nassau and Governor's cups. During the formative years of C&C Yachts the company sold their early racing hull molds to build capital for development of a comprehensive line of C&C branded racer/cruisers. For example, the venerable Redline 41 design was sold to Lindsay Plastics for production and became the
Newport 41 The Newport 41 is a family of American sailboats that was designed by C&C Design as International Offshore Rule (IOR) racer- cruisers and first built in about 1972.Sherwood, Richard M.: ''A Field Guide to Sailboats of North America, Second Ed ...
which was later produced by Capital Yachts. The demands of managing a large multi-national company, with the attendant problems of finance and being answerable to a board of directors, in 1973 led Cuthbertson to take on the position of president, and hand over his design responsibilities to Robert Ball. High oil prices and a strong Canadian dollar provided the environment for rapid growth for C&C and the entire sailing industry. In 1974, Cuthbertson was elected to membership in the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts. C&C experienced double-digit growth throughout the decade of the 1970s. Plant expansion into the Port of Rhode Island and 56,000 square foot facility in
Middletown, Rhode Island Middletown is a town in Newport County, Rhode Island, United States. The population was 17,075 at the 2020 census. It lies to the south of Portsmouth and to the north of Newport on Aquidneck Island, hence the name "Middletown". History Vari ...
, and the development of a dealer network, proved instrumental factors in a strong business model, but in
Kiel, Germany Kiel () is the capital and most populous city in the northern Germany, German state of Schleswig-Holstein, with a population of 246,243 (2021). Kiel lies approximately north of Hamburg. Due to its geographic location in the southeast of the J ...
the firm ran into foreign exchange problems when the Deutschmark doubled 1977-1979. Hank Evans joined the company in 1977 to establish a network of inland dealers and once that job was done he stepped into the role of sales manager for the entire line. Dealers found it easy to sell a product with a strong reputation for reliability and high performance. But the death of George Cassian in 1979 cast its pall over affairs. C&C became the breeding ground for the next generation of boat designers, employing young designers such as Henry Adriaanse, Rob Mazza, Rob Ball, Mark Ellis, and Steve Killing. Designer Mark Ellis left the company in 1976 to draw the Niagara and Nonsuch sailboats for George Hinterhoeller, who had sold his shares in C&C that same year. Robert W. Ball was the chief in-house designer until 1991. Every Canadian Canada's Cup contender between 1969 and 1978 was a C&C product. The Canada's Cup winner in 1978 was a C&C design, the Two Ton class ''Evergreen'', owned by Don Green with
Hans Fogh Hans Marius Fogh (8 March 1938 – 14 March 2014) was one of the most successful competitive sailors in history, with dozens of national and international championships and in many different classes, including two Olympic medals. Olympic caree ...
at the helm. The design was a radical, dinghy-like, 41-foot boat, designed with the aim of winning the trophy. The catastrophic failure of the mast during a "stiff breeze" on Lake Ontario while on a shakedown cruise may have been indicative of design issues, as the C&C design team had exploited loopholes in the regatta rules. As one example, the galley was required to have sink but, in order to save weight, it had no drain, which the rule makers had not thought to specify. The deck hatches opened inward, which could be a safety hazard if they gave way during a capsize or
broach The BROACH warhead is a Tandem-charge, multi-stage warhead developed by Team BROACH; BAE Systems Global Combat Systems Munitions, Thales Missile Electronics and QinetiQ. BROACH stands for ''Bomb Royal Ordnance Augmented CHarge''. Development of ...
, and the ''Evergreen'' crew faced protests over this defect in both the SORC and in the Canada's Cup. Upon reflection over the
1979 Fastnet race The 1979 Fastnet Race was the 28th Royal Ocean Racing Club's Fastnet Race, a yachting race held generally every two years since 1925 on a 605-mile course from Cowes direct to the Fastnet Rock and then to Plymouth via south of the Isles of Scil ...
in which he participated, Skipper Green later said that ''Evergreen'' "never should have gone to England" for the
Admiral's Cup The Admiral's Cup was an international yachting regatta. For many years it was known as the unofficial world championship of offshore racing. The Admiral's Cup regatta was started in 1957 and was normally a biennial event (occurring in odd-numbe ...
, which is the destination of most Canada's Cup winners.thespec.com: "Reliving the ill-fated Fastnet"
, 12 May 2007
Canadian Yachting ''Canadian Yachting'' is a bi-monthly (six issues a year) magazine, and boating news website which documents the Canadian yachting scene - from dinghies to keelboats, cruising to racing, youth sailing and around the world events.kerwil.com: "Ab ...
magazine stated fifteen years later that "few yachts have created more controversy than" ''Evergreen'', and that "its extreme design and controversial features ruffled feathers around the world." After the competition that year, the rule books were rewritten to preclude safety problems like those raised by the design of ''Evergreen'', and as a result, C&C never received another commission for a Canada's Cup yacht. By the early 1980s, C&C found itself at the forefront of the sailing industry, from both sailing performance and business success:
C&C had built more that seven thousand boats since its foundling in 1969. At it highest in 1984, sales were estimated at about $44 million and profits at about $2 million, placing it in the top three North American sailboat builders, along with
Hunter Marine Hunter Marine is an American boat builder, now known as Marlow-Hunter, LLC, owned by David E. Marlow. The company also produces the Mainship powerboat brand. Marlow also owns and manufactures the Marlow Yachts brand consisting of long rang ...
and Catalina Yachts.


Sale of company

Cuthbertson presided over the works until 1981. The success of the 1980 financial year, including sales of $39.7m, delivering a profit of $1.24 per share, brought the unwanted attention of a C&C customer, Jim Plaxton of Great Lakes Airlines fame, who was interested in buying the company. The directors together owned 65 percent of the existing 404,000 shares, which were then trading at around $3.50. The original IPO share price was $4.50 and that was the offer Plaxton made for 51% of the company. The board refused. Meanwhile, Plaxton had formed, with the Deluce family, Delplax holdings to manage what became Air Ontario, and Delplax offered $5.25 a share, this time for all of the shares. The board again demurred, and the offer was raised to $6.00. This was accepted, and so the company was acquired by people unfamiliar with the industry. The company was de-listed from the stock market, as all of its shares were now in private hands. In 1982 Cuthbertson left the company he had founded 20 years earlier. The unfriendly buyout caused 80% of the heyday staff to leave in the Cuthbertson exodus, by 1983. Plaxton instructed the designers "to undertake a flat-out offshore racer according to the IOR rule." He wanted novel construction materials and novel construction processes to replace the balsa-wood core structures that had been the staple of the firm until the management changeover.canadianyachting.ca: "C&C Custom 44 - Exotic or blackwall"
December 1984.
The 41' boat that resulted from these instructions, ''Silver Shadow III'', measures a 12'11" beam, while the 41' ''Evergreen'', produced a scant four years earlier, measures 14.25'. The owner and operator of ''Silver Shadow III'', Plaxton, "decided not to participate" in the 1983 Admiral's Cup, and his yacht's place was taken by another C&C boat, ''Magistri'', which was also designed in 1982. This Cup team of three boats managed a fifth-place finish, an all-time high for Canada. In 1985, under Ball's supervision, C&C's design office had grown to eleven staff, and the firm experienced its racing nadir, with the poor performance at SORC of the company-backed custom 44 ''Silver Shadow IV'', also a 12'11" beam but on a lengthened 43'7" long yacht. Estimates of the total cost of the project approach $1 million. By November 1985, the plant in Middletown was closed, the last of the international manufacturing locations. C&C was left with one single manufacturing operation in
Niagara-on-the-Lake Niagara-on-the-Lake is a town in Ontario, Canada. It is located on the Niagara Peninsula at the point where the Niagara River meets Lake Ontario, across the river from New York, United States. Niagara-on-the-Lake is in the Niagara Region of On ...
when the custom shop in Oakville was closed and the company entered receivership. By 1986, a partnership including Mutual Trust purchased C&C from the receivers. After a financial audit in 1988, an executive of the trust assumed control of the operation. In the late 1980s rising costs and a shrinking market caused the closure of many boat manufacturers, including Quebec-based
Tanzer Industries Tanzer Industries Limited was a Canadian boat manufacturer based in Dorion, Quebec. The company specialized in the design and manufacture of fibreglass sailboats. History The company was founded by Johann Tanzer in 1966 and went bankrupt in May ...
and Mirage Yachts. The day after the end of the 1990
Toronto International Boat Show The Toronto International Boat Show is an annual boat show held in January at the Enercare Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It was established in 1959, and is the largest indoor show held in North America. In 2019, it featured 550 vendors exhib ...
, C&C had announced that it needed a cash infusion. The company was again placed in receivership in September, with no prospective buyers and the creditors seeking payment of debts.


C&C Yachts International

In 1992, there was a temporary reprieve. All assets of C&C Yachts were purchased by the Hong Kong based shipping magnates, Anthony Koo and Frank Chow, who then operated the new organization as ''C&C Yachts International''. By 1994, the Niagara-on-the-Lake factory was operating at capacity, building the new C&C 51, the Tripp designed IMS 45, as well as the SR range of sport boats, designed by Glenn Henderson, which were originally built in Florida.


Niagara-on-the-Lake factory fire - April 1994

On 21 April 1994 a fire broke out in the factory, completely destroying the production line, most of the tooling, records and plans. The 1:30 a.m. blaze tore through C&C's production sheds and block-long warehouse that housed the production equipment and fibreglass materials. The fire destroyed 40 molds and the boats currently under construction, including three C&C 51s. The company's insurance only covered a small portion of the loss and in 1996 the land, boat tooling and trademarks were all sold.


The Jackett era

In 1996 the C&C brand and its intellectual materials were acquired by Fairport Yachts, builders of Tartan Yachts, and moved to Fairport, Ohio, where the company started the production of a new line of C&C yachts. These new boats, designed by Tartan's in-house designer Tim Jackett, were intended to preserve the design characteristics and performance of the C&C brand. Starting in 1997, C&C Yachts introduced four new models, the
C&C 99 The C&C 99 is an American sailboat, that was designed by Tim Jackett and entered production in 2002. Production The boat was built by C&C Yachts in the United States, but it is now out of production. Design The C&C 99 is a small recreatio ...
,
110 110 may refer to: *110 (number), natural number *AD 110, a year *110 BC, a year *110 film, a cartridge-based film format used in still photography *110 (MBTA bus), Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority bus route *110 (song), 2019 song by Capi ...
,
115 115 may refer to: *115 (number), the number *AD 115, a year in the 2nd century AD *115 BC, a year in the 2nd century BC *115 (Hampshire Fortress) Corps Engineer Regiment, Royal Engineers, a unit in the UK Territorial Army *115 (Leicestershire) Field ...
, and
121 121 may refer to: * 121 (number), a natural number *AD 121, a year in the 2nd century AD * 121 BC, a year in the 2nd century BC * 121 (Eagle) Sqn * 121 (MBTA bus) * 121 (New Jersey bus) *Road 121, see list of highways numbered 121 *Russian cruiser ...
, producing over 150 boats under the new leadership. In 2002, C&C built its entire line with post-cured, foam-cored epoxy hulls with uni-directional "E"-glass and carbon local reinforcements. Beginning in 2004, C&C started equipping all models with carbon-fiber masts as standard equipment.


US Watercraft era and closure

In September 2013, US Watercraft announced that it had bought the rights to the C&C brand from Tartan and would take over manufacturing of all new C&C models starting in the fall of 2013. US Watercraft entered receivership in July 2017 to sell its assets, but by the summer of 2018 no buyer had been found, the C&C website had been blanked and production of the last two models, the
Redline 41 The Redline 41 is a series of sailboat designs, first built in 1967 and that remained in production in 2017. The first two designs were by Cuthbertson & Cassian and the more recent one by Mark Mills. The three different boats that have carrie ...
and C&C 30 One Design ended.


Cuthbertson archive

The
Marine Museum of the Great Lakes The Marine Museum of the Great Lakes is a museum dedicated to marine history in the Great Lakes. It is located at 55 Ontario St. in Kingston, Ontario, which is also a designated National Historic Sites of Canada, National Historic Site of Canada ...
in Kingston, Ontario has in its archives the early original C&C design and construction drawings, a retirement donation by Cuthbertson of his papers. In 2008 Jackett, whose company bought the C&C name in 1996, donated the rest of the Cuthbertson papers and more, dating from 1972 through to the late 1980s. Cuthbertson died at the age of 88 on 3 October 2017; he had served on the board of directors of the MMGL for many years, and had been inducted into the Canadian Sailing Hall of Fame in 2014.sailingscuttlebutt.com: "Eight Bells: George Cuthbertson"
5 Oct 2017


C&C models

Models include:


C&C designed sailboats (for other manufacturers)

Over the years the firm designed yachts for a number of other Canadian boat builders, including
CS Yachts CS Yachts was a Canadian boat manufacturer founded in 1963 by Paul Tennyson, under the name Canadian Sailcraft. The company specialized in the design and manufacture of fibreglass sailboats. The location of the firm was in Brampton, Ontario, n ...
, Mirage Yachts, Northern Yachts,
Ontario Yachts Ontario Yachts is a Canadian boat builder at one time based in Oakville, Ontario, then Hamilton, Ontario and more recently in Burlington, Ontario. The company specializes in the manufacture and repair of fiberglass sailboats. The company was f ...
, Paceship Yachts, and
Tanzer Industries Tanzer Industries Limited was a Canadian boat manufacturer based in Dorion, Quebec. The company specialized in the design and manufacture of fibreglass sailboats. History The company was founded by Johann Tanzer in 1966 and went bankrupt in May ...
,. C&C also designed boats for manufacturers in the US, such as Newport series for Lindsey Plastics (later Capital Yachts) of
Harbor City Harbor City is a highly diverse neighborhood in the Harbor region of Los Angeles, California, with a population upward of 36,000 people. Originally part of the Rancho San Pedro Spanish land grant, the Harbor City was brought into Los Angeles as ...
, California, Harpoon for Boston Whaler, and Lancers for Lancer Yacht Corporation, in Irvine, California. In England, Anstey Yachts built the Trapper 27, 28, and 35 (which was a C&C 35). C&C designed several yachts for OY Baltic in Finland and the Benello 37 for Cantiere Benello in
Livorno Livorno () is a port city on the Ligurian Sea on the western coast of Tuscany, Italy. It is the capital of the Province of Livorno, having a population of 158,493 residents in December 2017. It is traditionally known in English as Leghorn (pronou ...
, Italy. A full list appears below.


Notable C&C racing sailboats

* 40' ''Red Jacket'' (1966) - first balsa cored fiberglass hull (light), won 11 of its 13 race series in 1967, SORC Champion 1968, still winning races. * 41' ''Condor'' (1967) - SORC Champion 1972; first of Redline 41 production Racer/Cruiser, also built as Newport 41 * 40' ''Manitou'' (1969) - defended 1969 Canada's Cup over S&S Designed NIAGARA, won 4-0 * 35' ''Cygnus'' (1970) - Owned by Roy Hawkinson, has won more
Port Huron to Mackinac Race The Bayview Mackinac Boat Race is run by the Bayview Yacht Club of Detroit, Michigan. It is one of the longest fresh-water races in the world with over two hundred boats entering the race each year. There have been at least six changes to the ...
s than any other boat in history, both Overall (4 times) and in the C&C 35-1 Class (8 times). * 53' ''Bonaventure V'' (1970) - Mac races combined trophy 1970, SORC Champ Class A 1971, many, many years of many wins thereafter. * 61' ''Sorcery'' (1970) - extensively raced, SORC Champion, rolled by a rogue wave in the North Pacific and survived * 39' ''Windquest'' (1972) - Won many races including the Port Huron to Mackinaw and the SORC. * 61' ''Robon'' (1972) - first to finish of 180 starters in a heavy upwind Bermuda Race 1972 * 41' ''Evergreen'' (1977) - custom IOR Two-Tonner built 1978 for Don Green of
Royal Hamilton Yacht Club The Royal Hamilton Yacht Club (RHYC) is located in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, at the west end of Lake Ontario, and has been in existence since 1888. When the yacht club first opened, it was located on the Burlington Canal (near the light station), ...
, won Canada's Cup back from U.S. in 1978 after an absence of six years * 39' ''Magistri'' (1982) - Selected to the Canadian Admiral's Cup team, she won the Channel Race overall – the first-ever overall win by a Canadian yacht in an Admiral's Cup event. Her final series placing was sixth in fleet, also a best-ever for Canadian sailors. * 40' ''Fastrack'' (1988) - Many wins in her first season of racing in 1988, including Block Island Race Week, and Whidbey Island Race Week


See also

*
List of sailboat designers and manufacturers This is a list of notable sailboat designers and manufacturers, which are described by an article in English Wikipedia. Sailboat design and manufacturing is done by a number of companies and groups. Notable designers Sailboat designer articles i ...


References


Bibliography

* * *


External links


C&C Yachts Reunion and Conference
featuring interviews with members of the C&C Design Group, C&C Production, Sales and Marketing, and a group of yachting industry professionals discussing the legacy of C&C Yachts. Videos from event held in April 2012. *
"Don Green - Evergreen"
Interview with Don Green, May 14, 2012 at the C&C Yachts Conference and Reunion,
Royal Hamilton Yacht Club The Royal Hamilton Yacht Club (RHYC) is located in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, at the west end of Lake Ontario, and has been in existence since 1888. When the yacht club first opened, it was located on the Burlington Canal (near the light station), ...
, Hamilton Ontario
C&C 27 Association - The History of C&C Yachts
{{DEFAULTSORT:CandC Yachts C&C Yachts