Despite decades of stiff competition, a few builders in Bath, Maine, the
City of Ships, persisted in building wooden schooners, modifying and
enlarging them to meet the changing times. Gardiner G. Deering
(1833-1921) was one of these diehards. Genial and unaffected but driven
to succeed, he started at the bottom of the trade and worked himself to
the top, building ninety-nine vessels over his long life, dozens of
which he personally managed. As this spirited, absorbing study reveals,
Deering prospered in the face of ferocious competition and economic
gyrations. Through thick and thin, he seemed to enjoy himself immensely.
When Gardiner Deering died in 1921, he was widely acknowledged as the
last of his breed, the Patriarch of Maine Shipbuilding.