
Boatnight | Feature: Smokin'
the South End |
The Wieland Remodel
The Wieland remodel
This article, put together by Sid Hollister is a compilation
of a story John Kortum wrote for the Dolphin Log in the
Fall 1997 and of Jon Bielinski's talk to the Maritime Museum
Small Craft Association on September 14, 1998.
John Wieland, gold miner, baker and beer baron, was one
of the founding members of the Dolphin Club.
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| John Wieland |
As an immigrant from Germany in 1849, Wieland at first
settled in Philadelphia, but in 1851, he set out for California.
He mined enough gold along the South Fork of the Yuba River
to move to San Francisco and go into the baking business.
Wieland subsequently bought into the Philadelphia Brewery,
a thriving San Francisco concern, finally becoming its sole
owner and building it into the most successful and largest
business of its kind on the Pacific Coast. He had few years
to enjoy his success, for in 1885 his home caught fire and
Wieland and several members of his family died in the blaze.
John Wieland was only 55 years old. Later that year, the
surviving family members commissioned Al Rogers, a young
boatbuilder in Alameda, to build a magnificent six-oared
barge in their father's memory. In June 1887, they gave
the "John Wieland" to the Dolphin Club, where,
ever since, it has been the flagship of the Club fleet.
The "John Wieland" has come to us with little
recorded history about her voyages during the more than
one hundred years she rode the Bay's waters.
Old timers do remember, however, that one time she almost
sank off Alcatraz with a cargo of horse manure, that she
transported Club members to Candlestick for the ball games,
that she regularly served as a team bus for softball competitions
on Angel Island, and that she frequently contributed to
the public safety by keeping club members off the state
highways on return trips from Sam's in Tiburon and other
bayside watering holes.
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| The
early phases of the project |
By the late 1980s, constant use and the occasional accident
had taken their toll, to say nothing of the indignities
of patchwork repairs, neglected maintenance, general rot
and the steady corrosion of metal fastenings. Old and weary
and leaking, the Wieland was too tired to stay in active
service. The question was, what was the Club to do with
her? Many possibilities were tossed about, ranging from
"burn it" to "replicate it."
Jon Bielinski, the Club's principal boatbuilder, suggested
restoring the vessel to new construction standards, duplicating
its hull form as it was built a hundred years ago as well
as its construction details and original hardware.
With some trepidation, given the scope and estimated cost
of the project, the Club's Board of Governors gave the go-ahead
to do the work. The fact that seven smaller boats in the
Club's fleet had been rebuilt under Bielinski's guidance
encouraged them to make this decision. After a last row
around Alameda, the place of her construction in 1887, the
"Wieland" was decommissioned in December 1991,
and placed in the Dolphin Club boatshop. A journal was started
that would trace every step in the restoration process.
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| The
ribs are placed |
John Muir, a professional boatbuilder himself, took the
first step by shooting dozens of photographs to document
the Wieland's condition and construction details. Old photographs
of the barge were collected for what they could reveal about
its original hardware and details of construction, and photos
of other boats built by the Wieland's original builder,
Al Rogers, were examined for construction similarities.
Then, with help from Tuesday "boat night" volunteers, boatbuilder
Bielinski took off the Wieland's measurements and laid out
a full-size drawing of the barge. With this information,
he constructed molds to define the Wieland's reconstructed
shape.
Once the barge's interior was dismantled and parts set
aside that could be reinstalled or used as models to guide
duplication of construction details, the molds were placed
into the vessel as a final check upon her shape. Her bottom
and keel structure were then cut out and Bielinski and his
volunteer crew laid in a new backbone, which consisted of
the keel and associated parts. The planking was then replaced
or repaired, the construction molds removed and the interior
planking varnished.
The next step was the framing, and a new definition of
"rib night." In one steaming and bending frenzy on a night
in June, 1996, 45 volunteers sent frames flying out of the
steam box at the rate of one every two minutes. In just
three hours they fastened 60 frames into the Wieland. Teams
of volunteers then secured the planking with over a thousand
copper nails and, with guidance from the design of traditional
sliding-seat eight-oared shells, engineered the layout of
the rowing positions.
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| The
newly remodeled boat under way to Sacramento |
Nine coats of varnish protect the inside of the planking,
six coats shield the frames and interior fittings, and six
coats seal the outside hull. The most significant design
change from the Wieland as decommissioned is the replacement
of the heavy log keel, installed in the 1970s as a patchwork
repair, with a "T" structure of oak, a change that cut approximately
300 pounds from the barge's weight. The new keel helps the
boat resist bending in her length but allows her to twist,
softening the stress of the waves.
To complete this ambitious project, more than 176 volunteers
contributed 4,767 hours. The Wieland was rechristened
with a fine party on the Club's pier July 23, 1997, and
slid into the Bay's waters for its first row. All the
rowers were "old timers", every one a Club member
for more than 25 years. Crewed by a helmsman and six rowers
on the oars, the Wieland cruises at six knots. With two
crews trading rowing watches, she has already criss-crossed
the Bay a number of times and has even made the journey
to Sacramento.
The "John Wieland", a vessel unique to the Dolphin
Club, will, we hope, be rowed for another one hundred years,
keeping alive the vital boating tradition of the Club and
the memory of the man who helped establish it over 125 years
ago.
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