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1970 Dyer Dhow

Estimated price for orientation: 1 199 $

Category: Sailboats Under 20 feet
Class:











Description
Condition: Used Year: 1970
Hull Material: Fiberglass Make: Dyer Dhow
For Sale By: Private Seller Type: Dinghy



Located in Warren, Rhode Island,  has been building boats named after the company’s founder, Bill Dyer, since 1930. After creating the 10-foot Dyer Dink, an earlier line of Dyer dinghies, the 9-foot Dyer Dhow was built in the early 1940s and manufactured out of plywood.During WWII, Anchorage was contracted to supply lifeboats to be carried aboard small minesweepers and PT boats. Dyer Dhows were the boats to answer this call to service. Used on the Pacific front, Dhows were used as rescue units when ships were attacked. Stacks of Dyer Dhows were dropped into the water over shipwrecks to allow survivors safety until they could be rescued. Anna Jones, granddaughter of creator Bill Dyer, describes their early uses during war time:“The government (War Department) came to my grandfather, Bill Dyer, during WWII and asked him to build a boat that would fit in nine-feet of space and hold nine men. The original 9′ers were plywood and were used on PT boats during WWII. I have pictures of them being loaded on the big transport planes. I also have a picture showing nine of our men standing in one out here on the [Warren] river and it was still floating. About a year or so ago, I had a call from a customer who told me that when he was stationed in the South Pacific during the war they used to take a boat and rig a sail on it and sail around. That’s where he learned to sail.”In 1949, the first fiberglass sailing dinghy based on the version of the Dhow used during the war was built. While not the first boat ever built of fiberglass, the Dhow is the oldest continuously-built fiberglass boat in production today. The nine-foot Dhow was followed by the 7′ 11″ Midget and the 12 ½’ Daysailer. Dyer also makes the Glamour Girl, a launch or utility vessel, which can also be found at Mystic Seaport and as part of the Joseph Conrad Overnight Sailing Camp and Community Sailing programs.

A versatile boat, the Dyer Dhow’s “hard chine” design offers stability for teaching sailing to all ages. Dyers Dhows can hold up to four people or approximately 650 lbs. Dhows are not just sailboats; many people use them as rowboats or powerboats as well.