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Vessels Built by the Deltaga Boat Works Ltd.
compiled by John M. MacFarlane 2015
Deltaga Boat Works Ltd. advertisement (Photo Western Fishermen Magazine.)
The Deltaga Boat Works Ltd. was located in Sunbury, Delta BC on the Fraser River. It was originally established by Kumetaro Tsumura from Prince Rupert BC. Kumetaro was born in Japan, and came to Prince Rupert in a sailing ship in 1899 from the Wakayama area of Japan. He was already a skilled boat builder on his arrival. Kumetaro worked for a time as the Master of the fish boat J.L. Card before opening his own boat yard.
During the Second World War the whole family was interned, passing through the assembly at Hastings Park in Vancouver, moved on to road camps in the Slocan Valley and finally on to Ontario. This was a painful period which the family endured stoically. In Ontario Kumetaro worked at the Richardson Boat Works in Meaford Ontario before moving together to Toronto. His son Kei relates that his father, anxious to keep building boats, constructed one in the basement that required the foundation to be breached so that it could be extracted. Once the Federal Government allowed Japanese Canadians to return to the coast (around 1949) the Tsumura family joined family members, veterans of Second World War service in the Canadian Army, who were already located there.
Together they purchased 7 acres in Sunbury, Delta, on the Fraser River and constructed a full shipyard there. In Delta, Kumetaro worked with his four sons (Andy (Isao); Johnny (Teiji), Sub (Suburuo) and Daniel (Kei) and his two daughters (who worked in the office) Mary (Sachi) and Grace (Takeo). Johnny trained as a naval architect in the USA. He was highly skilled and designed all the vessels built by Deltaga Boat Works Ltd.
The first boat built was the Phantom Thrush which was a planing hull gill netter in an adaptation of a sport boat. This created quite a stir on the coast as all previous gill netters had been displacement hulls. The early boats were wood planked. They experimented with fibreglass over wood in what Kei Tsumura recalls as the first attempt on the coast to build a glass fibre hull fish boat. Soon most vessels they produced were glass fiber hulls.
The early customers included a lot of Japanese fishermen wishing to resume careers fishing on the coast. Kei Tsumura acknowledged that at first there was a harsh bad feeling toward the Japanese who had returned to the coast. But he says: "You are tested by the quality of the work you do" and soon they saw that the prejudice was diminished and orders started pouring in from a wide part of the marine sector. The company was very productive and he says that one year they produced 50 vessels. Most were fishing vessels: gill netters, trollers and drum seiners. They also produced a number of small racing boats and a class of specially designed fish boats for use on Great Slave Lake.
Kei Tsumura spent a year running his own gill netter and another season working in the crew of a troller. He had other ambitions though and returned to Toronto to write for the Star Weekly magazine writing feature articles, some of which drew upon his experiences as a fisherman on the Fraser river. He then was appointed as editor of the New Canadian, the national Japanese Canadian newspaper in Toronto.
Deltaga Boat Works Ltd.
146 matches. 3 pages. Max 50 records per page.Page # 2
Name | Registration | Vessel Type | Year Built |
---|---|---|---|
Helena Dawn | 348745 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1974 |
Hells Bells | 347059 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1973 |
Hyson II | 369560 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1974 |
Hywass | (nk) | Fishboat, general | (nk) |
Ivory Isle | 322392 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1964 |
Jaclyn VI | 383463 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1977 |
Joanie (I) | 319173 (Canada) | Fishboat, troller | 1956 |
Joanie (II) | (nk) | Fishboat, general | (nk) |
Jomakara | 370330 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1975 |
June Morris | 348745 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1974 |
Karletta | 189450 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1957 |
Kim-Kel | 371844 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1976 |
Kor-Wes | 369600 (Canada) | Fishboat, gillnetter | 1975 |
L.D. Scott | 372355 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1978 |
Lady Arran | 370243 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1975 |
Lagoon Bay (I) | 319336 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1962 |
Laurel Lou | 346975 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1973 |
Leena V | 369633 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1975 |
Lenny Doll II | 393587 (Canada) | Fishboat, misc. combination | 1979 |
Libra (I) | 344618 (Canada) | Fishboat, gillnetter | 1970 |
Lilybob | 370330 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1975 |
Lilybob-B | 372679 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1977 |
Lone Star (III) | C06998BC (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1996c |
Loner | 323633 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1967 |
Lynn-Marie No. 1 | 346684 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1972 |
Lynne Marie IV | 371802 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1976 |
Majestic Belle II | 369666 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1975 |
Marci Lynn | 348796 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1974 |
Mardival | 369588 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1975 |
Mark VII | 347861 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1973 |
Marlene N. | 348811 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1974 |
Misa Rei | C04538BC (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 2010c |
Miss Asrai | 348531 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1974 |
Miss Dari-Anne | 348531 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1974 |
Miss Jane II | C01471BC (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 2013c |
Miss Keiko | 372603 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1977 |
Miss Lamalchi | 369079 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1973 |
Miss Lella II | 822667 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1986 |
Miss Lyna | 348531 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1974 |
Miss Moria | (Canada) | Fishboat, general (combination) | 1978c |
Miss Nikko 77 | C20439BC (Canada) | Fishboat, troller | 1977c |
Miss Toni | 383509 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1974 |
Misty Lady (II) | 395912 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1980 |
Misty Raider | 323488 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1965 |
Moncton No. 1 | 346684 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1972 |
Montaro | 314909 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1962 |
Montcalm II | 369120 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1974 |
Montego Bay II | 370330 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1975 |
Moonlight Harvester | 392224 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1979 |
Nasparti | 383967 (Canada) | Fishboat, general | 1978 |
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Author’s Note: This is a partial list (work in progress). I am indebted to Kei Tsumura (4th son of Kumetaro Tsumura) who generously shared his memories and knowledge to make the history narrative more accurate and complete.
Vessel Images: Can you help us fill gaps in the vessel images in the database? If you have pictures of missing vessels that you have taken and would be willing to contribute to the database to make it more complete all our users would be very grateful. Please send them to admin(at)nauticapedia.ca
Note to Reader: Vessel names containing Roman numerals in parentheses (e.g. Floater (II)) indicates more than one vessel in the database with the same name. The numerals in parentheses are NOT part of the vessel name but are used to distinguish one vessel from another in the database.
To quote from this article please cite:
MacFarlane, John M. (2013) Vessels Built by the Deltaga Boat Works Ltd. Nauticapedia.ca 2013. http://nauticapedia.ca/Articles/Vessel_Builders_Deltaga.php?Page=2
Site News: November 20, 2024
The vessel database has been updated and is now holding 94,591 vessel histories (with 16,203 images and 13,900 records of ship wrecks and marine disasters).
Vessel records are currently being reviewed and updated with more than 40,000 processed so far this year.
The mariner and naval biography database has also been updated and now contains 58,599 entries (with 3996 images).
Thanks to contributor Mike Rydqvist McCammon for the hundreds of photos he has contributed to illustrate British Columbia’s floating heritage.
My very special thanks to our volunteer IT adviser, John Eyre, who (since 2021) has modernized, simplified and improved the update process for the databases into semi–automated processes. His participation has been vital to keeping the Nauticapedia available to our netizens.
Also my special thanks to my volunteer content accuracy checker, John Spivey of Irvine CA USA, who continues (almost every day for the last couple of years) to proof read thousands of Nauticapedia vessel histories and provided input to improve more than 14,000 entries. His attention to detail has been a huge unexpected bonus in improving and updating the vessel detail content.