Organizing our attic over spring break, I was reminded about
two model sailboats passed along to my father, Ralph Cameron Mitchell, from his
father, Cyril William Mitchell. Originally from Nova Scotia, C.W. Mitchell had
worked as a deckhand on boats in Halifax harbor and had an affinity for
sailboats, the sea and all things maritime.
One is an elaborate sailing ship (top) reminiscent of the Bluenose (above),
a celebrated Canadian racing schooner built in 1921. The name
“bluenose” originated from a moniker for natives of Nova Scotia. For 17 years, the ship was a champion racing vessel that neither American nor Canadian challenger could catch in a race.
The
other is a simple single-mast boat (bottom) that I remember sailing with my father down in the model
yacht lagoon fed by Crystal Springs Creek at Westmoreland Park (below), close to my
grandmother’s house near Reed College. My Dad taught science classes at the quirky private school during the
summer.
C.W., a certified public accountant by trade and controller
at the Meier & Frank Company in Portland, had built a number of ships, and I was suddenly motivated to restore the two models. Inquiring at
Eugene Toy and Hobby, I found a local hobbyist, Larry Standifer, who said he
was more than willing to refurbish the boats.
Standifer,
a Bend native and former trainer for University of Oregon athletics and physical therapist, is a craftsman of boats and much more in his own
right, and he gave me a tour of his handiwork at his home in South Eugene. A
couple weeks later, here I am with two family mementos, both of which are now (ahem)
in “ship shape.”
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