Most on this site were not lucky enough to see the first commercially built raceboats appear. It was the beginning of Outboard Performance Craft, but we didn’t know it at the time. Stock Outboard Racing classes had been around for decades prior to the 1950’s. Boats were hydros and runabouts. There were several builders and many do it yourselfers.
In 1953 the largest Outboard was 25 hp. All of the commercial family boats were wooden. Peterborough canoe company manufactured most of the boats and OMC in Peterborough had the lions share of the Outboard market in Canada.
There was a small company out east in Mahone Bay that made cold moulded Plywood hulls and sold blank hulls with no transom to the Canadian boat builders. Those companies completed the boat and added their own company sticker.
The builder of these moulded plywood hulls in Nova Scotia was Industrial shipping company Ltd.
They started a offshoot company called Paceships. Paceships built small boats mostly 11 to 13 feet in length, open style or with a center deck.
Here is an example:
http://antiqueboatamerica.com/Boat/12_F ... dian_28463Many lakes in Ontario had regattas they included boat races. The Stock Outboard racers ran in those races. The rules were different and different types of boats raced in the same race. Classes were normally based on horsepower not boat design. The name given to the races was Wild Cat. Racers around Ontario would travel lake to lake and race.
Speedliner built utility hulls which were runabouts. They and the other runabout Stock Outboard Boats were the dominant boats in Wild Cat. Then out of the blue 2 Paceships boats appeared, an 11 footer with a 10 hp and a 12 footer with a 25 hp. They were more than competitive! Their main problem was props. No manufacturers made props suitable for these overpowered, very light boats.
Michigan propeller started making some and prop repair shops learned how to rework the props. The boats got faster and they handled the rough water conditions much better than the Stock Outboard hulls.
The moulded plywood boats were replaced by the fiberglass V hulls in the mid 1960’s and OPC was born.