(1920–1995)
Richard Hartley designed New Zealand’s first trailerable racer–cruiser, the famous Hartley 16 – ideal for the do-it-yourself family sailor.
Beginnings
Richard Hartley was born in Auckland but lived in Britain’s Scilly Isles for eight years as a boy. Back in New Zealand, he took on a boatbuilding apprenticeship. During that time he studied the basics of yacht design under Jack Brooke at the Auckland Technical Institute night school.
He worked at Shipbuilders Ltd and later at the Devonport naval base during World War II, then moved to Whangarei where he had his own boatbuilding yard for seven years. He returned to Takapuna in 1959.
Hartley 16 – do-it-yourself dream
In this pre-fibreglass era, sailors built boats themselves or paid someone else to do so. Hartley aimed at the do-it-yourself market. He saw a need for a small centreboard racer–cruiser that families could build cheaply and tow behind the family car.
The result was the plywood Hartley 16 (1963), New Zealand’s first ‘trailer sailer’. This 16-footer (4.88m) became one of New Zealand’s most popular trailer yachts, with more than 6,000 being built over the next 40 years.


