'The sea was in my blood': Model ship exhibit features a farm boy's passion
It took decades for Thiren Smallman to find an outlet for his childhood obsession
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Health problems kept 69-year-old Thiren Smallman out of the navy, but he has found a different outlet for his passion for the sea.
Smallman grew up on a farm in western P.E.I., and since he was young felt an affinity for the water.
"I always wanted to be a sailor," he said.
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"I was brought up on a farm but I always loved the water. The sea was in my blood. I don't know what it is about it."
When he was 14 he came down with rheumatic fever. It left him with a heart murmur, and that ruled out military service. Instead of the navy, Smallman found himself driving trucks for a living, with a bit of carpentry on the side.
Then in the winter of 2002, with time on his hands, he thought he'd take a shot at building a scale model of the Nova Scotia schooner Bluenose.
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"I'm not much good at sitting around the house watching television. I like working out in the shop," he said.
He has since built 33 scale model ships, a number of which, like the Bluenose, have been celebrated in song and story: Edmund Fitzgerald, Reuben James, Marco Polo, Titanic.
He ended up selling the first Titanic he built, and has made six more since. He has also made seven Bluenoses.
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His Marco Polo includes a piece of the wreck from the original 1851 ship.
"That was a piece of the brass pin that was in the keel. A diver found the pin, cut that much off, used it for a key chain and I ended up with it," he said.
It usually takes a month or two of evenings to build one of the scale replicas. The time can vary by the difficulty of the design, and whether someone comes in with a broken rocking chair or some other more urgent woodworking project.
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Smallman's ships are currently on display at the Lefurgey Cultural Centre in Summerside. The exhibit continues through August.
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With files from Island Morning