Professional BoatBuilder - April-May 2018

(Ann) #1
14 PROFESSIONAL BOATBUILDER

ROVINGS

thickness. One day, while working on the dinghies in Bris-
tol, Dr. Press Veltman of the W.R. Grace Co. walked into the
shop, chatted up Pearson, and o ered the resources of his
company in several signi cant areas. Pearson told him of
problems with gelcoat cracking, even with premium mate-
rials from Glidden, Schenectady Paint & Varnish, and Nau-
gatuck. “He taught me how to blend titanium dioxide into
an inert polyester,” Pearson said. “We started making our
own gelcoat that was better in gloss and crack resistance
than anything on the market.” And when Pearson told
Veltman about his plans for the Triton, saying he was

If one had to choose the most in u-
ential person in modern composite
boatbuilding, you wouldn’t lose any
points naming Everett Pearson, who
died on Christmas Eve 2017 at age 84.
Pearson’s six decades in the boat-
ing business began while he was a
senior at Brown University majoring
in economics and was captain of the
football team. He and cousin Clint
Pearson made a plug for an 8' (2.4m)
 berglass dinghy and to produce it
rented space in an old textile plant on
the Bristol, Rhode Island, waterfront.
 e Cub Dinghy was followed by the
Plebe daysailer in 1957,  ve run-
abouts and the Pacer ski in 1958,
and in ’59, most notably, the Carl Alberg–designed 28' 6 "
(8.7m) Triton auxiliary sailboat, o en credited with launch-
ing the  berglass boat into respectability. No longer were
critics saying, “If God wanted  berglass boats, He would
have made  berglass trees.”  e idea for such a boat origi-
nated with Tom Potter, a marketer associated with another
boatbuilder in Rhode Island that was already trying to
promote the Block Island 40 (12.2m), and not very success-
fully. Potter approached Cape Cod Shipbuilding and Spark-
man & Stephens, who each told him the Triton was a bad
idea. When he asked the Pearson cousins, Everett later
related, “Being young and not knowing any better, we
said, ‘Sure.’ ” Over the next nine years they built 712
of them. Numerous other models in sail followed,
plus a few in power that didn’t sell as well.
I had the privilege of talking boats with Pearson
on a number of occasions over the ensuing years.
One of my strongest memories is recounted in my
book Heart of Glass, in which Pearson debunked the
popular notion that early  berglass builders relied
on wood boat scantlings to determine laminate

Everett Pearson: A Major Force in FRP


Pearson Yachts was founded in 1956 by (left to right) Fred Heald and cousins
Everett Pearson and Clinton Pearson.

Above—Pearson Yachts’  rst boats were
small dinghies and runabouts, such as the
12' (3.7m) Pacer, shown here on top of
Everett Pearson’s 1950s-era Plymouth.
Left—The wooden plug for the 28'6"
(8.7m) Pearson Triton auxiliary sailboat
was lofted from the shop  oor in the com-
pany’s  rst facility, an old textile plant on
the Bristol, Rhode Island, waterfront.

COURTESY

HEART OF GLASS

, BY DAN SPURR (ALL)

Rovings172-ADFinal.indd 14 2/22/18 5:11 PM

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