MacKenzie Bass
Boats were lofted and
built in several
locations in
Massachusetts,
including Marion,
Padanaram, Fall
River, Taunton and
Hyannis, but none had
the history of The
Jones River Landing
in Kingston.
Ernest MacKenzie
built his famous lap
strake fishing boats
at The Landing from
July of 1951 until he
moved his operation
to Fall River in
1956. During this
time many boats were
built for the fishing
guides at Cuttyhunk.
These guides made
Mac’s boats famous,
catching boat loads
of stripers for their
clients. In the early
years Mac attached
the moniker
"Cuttyhunk" to his
boats and they soon
became known as
"Mackenzie Cuttyhunk
Bass Boats."
During the Landing
years, Mac built
boats of several
sizes. The smallest
was 19 feet and the
largest was 28 feet.
Other boats built at
that time included
20, 23 and A
24
Footer. Depending on
the owner’s wishes or
the intended purpose
of the boat, building
materials varied from
Atlantic White Cedar,
Honduras Mahogany and
marine plywood to
Douglas Fir framing
stock and native
White Oak. All boats
were assembled with
silicone bronze
screws and copper
rivets in the laps.
Many boats of this
time had their frames
assembled with bronze
bolts, while others
were assembled with
galvanized iron
bolts. Perhaps the
most distinctive
characteristic of a
MacKenzie was the
"reverse lap strake"
which became the
trademark of Mac’s
design. This design
was said to make his
boats "grip the water
and track better"
than any other boat
built at the time. To
this day, there are
few who would argue
that this is not
true.
The over all
design for these
boats was for fishing
the rip tides around
the Elizabeth
Islands, so many were
built with no cabin
or windshield. This
design, with only a
spray shield ahead of
the cockpit, created
a wonderful platform
for casting or
jigging for trophy
fish. Other Macs were
built with a
windshield and
usually had a canvas
Navy top to keep the
spray and wind off of
the crew and clients.
Very few boats were
built with cabins
around this time. One
"Kingston Boat" that
does sport a cabin is
a 28’ Mac built in
1955 as
Scram
for a family in
Duxbury. As the story
goes, Mac felt that
adding a cabin to his
boats would affect
the handling and
seaworthiness and he
refused to build them
that way.
Scram
was one of these
boats. Because the
owner wanted a cabin,
Mac delivered
Scram as a hull
only and she was
finished in the
owner’s barn. A
favorite at antique
and classic boat
shows, this boat is
still plying the
waters of Plymouth
and Duxbury Bays as
Let’s Go.
Another unique 28
footer was built in
the early ‘50s. This
boat was built for
Carl Haffenreffer,
operator of the
famous Herreshoff
yard in Bristol, RI.
This boat was very
unique, with a
stepped sheer, raised
foredeck and custom
hardware and
fittings. Because he
owned such a famous
boat building
company, Haffenreffer
refused to
acknowledge that he
had gone "outside"
for the boat he
wanted.
Unfortunately,
Skidoo was lost
off her mooring in
hurricane Carol in
1954.
Several other
Kingston built
Mackenzie’s, in
addition to Let’s
Go, survive
today. Grouper,
a 20’ 6" plywood
planked Mac resides
in Sesuit Harbor;
White Cloud, a
24’ mahogany on oak
Mac is moored in
Clinton, CT;
Connie J, a
classic 23’ Mac, is
kept in Westport, MA;
Hey Jude,
another 24’ Mac,
resides in Fort
Weatherall, RI. Other
boats built at The
Landing surface from
time to time, though
they are rare.
Described as
"curmudgeonly and
headstrong," Ernie
MacKenzie was in
several business
partnerships during
his boat building
years. While at The
Landing he was
partnered with Dr.
Herbert Lotz of
Plymouth, then Thomas
E. Stott of Kingston.
Mac left The Landing
for Fall River in the
Spring of 1956 for
another partnership,
this time with an
outstanding gentleman
named Al Grey who has
been a treasure trove
of information on
these boats.
No matter where
they were built,
Ernie MacKenzie's
Cuttyhunk Bass Boats
inspired and spawned
a whole genre of salt
water fishing boats
of a style that is
still being built a
half century later.
By Chris R. Ward