I was not sure that the attached info has not been seen before but the attached is a letter from George O'Day to then past president of the DS Asso. Hans Gottschalk regarding the birth of the Day Sailer. Signed 1/27/70. I find this letter fascinating as it shows a certain amount of tension between O'Day and Fox concerning credit for the design. In fact George upbraids the Day Sailer Assoc to Hans by stating" I have always resented the fact that your class association has directly attributed the Day Sailer to Uffa, when in reality this was not the case." George submits that the "The combined talents of Uffa Fox, myself, and Palmer Scott were the ones that were directly responsible for the boat." Scott " was the man who took the lines of Uffa and my final ideas and put them all into a production boat." George refers to Marscot Plastics as our plant. The early models of the boats from the first in June 1957 to 1960 had some problems including serious "oilcanning which was resolved by George and a man named Bob Eschback.
I have an early boat and wonder what modifications were made to stiffen the hull. I've never sailed a newer model so am not sure what the difference may be.
Anyways this letter gives a detailed description (from George's point of view) regarding the morphosis of the boat. This letter is from the archived quarterlies of the DS Assoc, members only. The archives are from 1967 to 2008. This letter I found in the Spring 1970 issue. There is a lot of great information in these older issues, well worth the $35 membership fee by themselves. (Hello Mary)
Cliff-
I am sorry but the preview says the PDF is not allowed--I have reduced it to 523 KB Is that the problem? --I believe DS owners would enjoy seeing the 27 points listed by George O'Day on his own stationary along with his working with Uffa Fox
