classic
5 vessels
Bertram 31
Before the Bertram 31, going offshore in a small boat meant getting beaten to pieces. Ray Hunt's deep-V hull design changed that. The constant 24-degree deadrise cut through waves instead of pounding over them. Dick Bertram proved the concept by running a prototype in the 1960 Miami-Nassau race in rough seas — while flat-bottom boats were turning back, the Bertram kept running. The sportfishing world noticed. Within a decade, every serious sportfishing boat was a deep-V, and the Bertram 31 was the benchmark. It's the hull design that made offshore fishing accessible to anyone who could handle a boat.
Boston Whaler 13
Dick Fisher founded Boston Whaler on a single idea: a boat that couldn't sink. The foam-core construction — fiberglass skins bonded to a solid polyurethane foam core — meant the hull would float even if cut in half. Fisher proved it by sawing a Whaler in half with a chainsaw at boat shows. Both halves floated. Both halves ran. The 13-foot Whaler became the most trusted small boat in America. Coast Guard stations used them. Fishing guides used them. Families used them. The trust was earned: you could not sink this boat.
Chris-Craft Cobra
The Chris-Craft Cobra is car culture floating. Designed in the mid-1950s when American cars had fins, chrome, and V8 engines, the Cobra brought that energy to the water. Mahogany hull, automotive-style dashboard, a V8 engine that rumbled like a Corvette. It was the boat you drove to the lake club and parked next to your Bel Air. The Cobra wasn't about fishing or working — it was about speed, style, and the pure American postwar confidence that everything should be bigger, faster, and made of mahogany. Today, restored Cobras are among the most valuable classic boats in the world.
Cigarette 35 Top Gun
Don Aronow built the fastest boats in the world from his shop on 188th Street in North Miami — a stretch of road known as Thunderboat Row. He founded Cigarette Racing Team in 1969, and his boats became the definition of high-performance marine craft. They also became the vehicle of choice for drug smugglers running loads from the Bahamas to South Florida. Miami Vice put the Cigarette boat in living rooms across America. Aronow himself was murdered in 1987, shot in his car on Thunderboat Row. The killer was a former business associate with drug ties. The story of the Cigarette boat is inseparable from the story of 1980s Miami — speed, cocaine, violence, and style.
SS Minnow
A three-hour tour. That's all it was supposed to be. The SS Minnow sailed out of Honolulu harbor with seven passengers and crew, hit rough weather, and wrecked on an uncharted island somewhere in the Pacific. For three seasons and decades of reruns, those seven castaways built a functioning society out of bamboo and coconut shells but could never fix the boat. Gilligan's Island premiered in 1964 and ran for three seasons. It was never critically acclaimed. It didn't need to be. The premise is burned into American culture so deeply that people who've never seen an episode know the setup. "A three-hour tour" is shorthand for any simple plan that goes catastrophically wrong. The show was named after FCC chairman Newton Minow, who in 1961 called television a "vast wasteland." Creator Sherwood Schwartz named the doomed boat after him as a joke. The FCC chairman's legacy is a shipwrecked charter boat. Television has a sense of humor. The real boats used were Wheeler 38 Playmates, sturdy sportfishing yachts from a New York builder that made some of the best recreational fishing boats of the postwar era. The Minnow deserved better than an uncharted island.