Dick Gibbs formed Gibbs Boat Company in 1950 when he was 21 years old. Dick built
wooden and later fiberglass boats in his plant in LaSalle, MI. The Gibbs Boat Company had
produced some 6,000 sailboats by 1972 when he sold the business to MFG in Union City, PA.
The principal boats built during this time period were Y-Flyers, the Rhodes Bantam, the Shark,
Phoenix, Dingo catamarans and the Thai MK 4 catamaran designed by Rod Macalpine – Downie.
Rod Macalpine – Downie was a brilliant King’s Scholar at Eaton College who had no formal
training in yacht design. Rod had seen the Shearwater catamaran, which was the latest rage in
the UK, and felt that he could do a better job. The Thai MK 1 class B catamaran was the first
boat Rod designed. Rod handily won the UK One of a Kind Regatta with ‘straight bullets’ in
1961. Shortly after, Rod Licensed Dick to build the Thai MK 4 for the U.S. market. Dick had
built about 100 Thai MK 4’s by the time they first met in person.
In 1962 Dick and Rod finally met at the First International Catamaran Challenge at Sea Cliff,
Long Island, NY, where Rod raced his Hellcat class C design to yet another victory. It was
during this time that they agreed to corroborate on the Shark Catamaran Project. They were to
campaign the Shark prototype throughout the United States. This barnstorming adventure
would begin in Montreal in 1962, travel as far west as El Paso, TX, back to the America’s Cup
at Newport in September, down to win the President’s Cup in D.C. and on to Yachting’s One of
a Kind Regatta in Miami in February of 1963. While in New Orleans during this adventure they
formed a boat design partnership, which began with a handshake and continued until Rod’s
death in 1986. During that time Rod and Dick designed some 80 sailboats with a combined
production in excess of 150,000 units for builders in the U.S., UK, Germany, Italy and Japan.
Their business relationship was a simple one, begun with a handshake and based on a steadfast
trust in and respect for each other’s talents. Both men were competent designers. Rod’s strength
was in hull form and Dick’s in production engineering. While both participated fully in all
deliberations of design, they agreed early on that in areas of disagreement Rod had the final
word in hull form and Dick in production engineering. Dick fully appreciated that it was Rod’s
genius in hull form design that made the Buccaneer (Mutineer) the fine boat that she is.
Chrysler had purchased in 1964 or 5 the Lone Star Boat Co. in Plano, TX and in addition to the
Lone Star 13’ and 16’ they had added a Gus Linell design; the ‘Barracuda’, a 13’ dagger board,
cat rigged scow. There had been a major surge of sailboat production during that decade and
demand for Chrysler’s sailboats was dwindling. In (1968) the Marketing Director of Chrysler
Marine, who had recently moved over from MFG, employed Rod Macalpine-Downie and Dick
Gibbs to submit designs for sailboats that would help bolster Chrysler Marine’s position in the
sailboat market.
Prior to associating with Chrysler; Downie-Gibbs had designed the 16’6” ‘Upstart’ for Bud
Sanxter of Starcraft in Goshen, IN and the 15’5” ‘Sidewinder’ for Art Hansen of MFG in Union
City, PA. along with several other designs for the UK and German market. In 1968 the 15
prototype of the Man-o-War, originally designed for Starcraft, had recently been completed.
When Bangor Punta bought Starcraft he decided to get out of the sailboat business and backed
out of Starcrafts’ contract to build the boat. The Man-o-War was then made available to
Chrysler to become the first design by Downie-Gibbs to be produced by Chrysler. The next in
line was the Buccaneer 18’ followed by the Mutineer 15’, the Musketeer, a 16’ catamaran, the
Pirateer 13’ and the Dagger 14’6”, an updated version of the Man-o-War.
PRODUCTION
Design of the Buccaneer 18’ began in (1968). Because the Buccaneer was to be a production
boat; read a wider range of built weights was to be expected, the design displacement was
established at 785 lb. The boat weight was to be 500 lb. with a crew allowance of 285 lb. She
was designed with long waterlines and with adequate beam and a modest aspect ratio sail plan
to reduce the heeling moment. The waterlines were retrimmed to produce as nearly a
symmetrical heeled waterline as possible, minimizing weather helm due to heeling. She has a
long easy entry to reduce bow wave and easily greases onto a plane. The Buccaneer is a boat
that suffers little if sailed with three persons, e.g., 165 lb. over the design displacement. A
renowned builder of patternmaker prototypes constructed the original cold-molded wooden
Buccaneer 18 prototype in England. This overweight, 3/8’ thick, glass covered tooling plug,
was first sailed/raced on Lake Michigan near Chicago. The event was Yachting Magazine’s One
of a Kind Regatta which took place in late summer of (1968). The Buccaneer 18 placed second
to the Thistle in a fleet of twenty plus boats.
It took Chrysler most of 1969 to set up their marketing, distribution, sales and tooling to
manufacture the Buccaneer 18. In August of 1969 Chrysler held a press preview to introduce
the Buccaneer 18 at Honey Harbor, Ontario, Canada. The Buccaneer 18 debuted for the boat
dealers at the Playboy Club, Lake Geneva, WI in September 1969.
During 1969 when Chrysler was gearing up to manufacture the Buccaneer 18 there were only a
handful of production builders of dinghy sailboats; Alcort - Sunfish, George O’Day – O’Day
day sailor and the 505, and the Ray Green Co. - Nipper and Rebel to name a few. Chrysler had
the unique ability to produce an unlimited number of boats. They were able to warehouse
unsold inventory in 5 regional facilities and had a national marketing and distribution
organization. Their dealer organization built three sailing simulators to train salesmen and
dealers to sail and sell sailboats. It was this well founded infrastructure and commitment that
allowed Chrysler to convert sailboat manufacture from, ‘order one-build one’ to ‘what color
would you like.....Is delivery on next Tuesday OK?
’
It is uncertain how many Buccaneers made it into the hands of individual owners in 1969. In
the sailboat industry the model year begins in September; thus any boats manufactured in late
1969 would have been considered 1970 models. By 1970 production was in full swing. During
Chrysler’s ten-year tenure in the sailboat business they built about (4,000 Buccaneers), (8,000
Mutineers) and total of 22,000 plus dinghies. To compare, it took forty years of Flying Scot
production to reach 4,000 units.