Welcome
To Hatteras Motor Yachts!
UNDER CONSTRUCTION - PRELIMINARY SITE

The Hatteras legend
began on the barrier islands of the North Carolina
shore where the frigid waters of the Labrador
Current encounter the tropical Gulf Stream. The
outcome is Diamond Shoals – home to some of the most
turbulent and untamed waters in the Atlantic and
some of the best sportfishing in the world.
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Historical
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Hatteras Motoryachts |
Hatteras Sportfish |
Here in 1959 at
Cape Hatteras, where nor'easters can blow almost as
fiercely as hurricanes, Willis Slane envisioned
building a boat that could conquer the waters of
Diamond Shoals and surmount the Hatteras weather. It
would not be an ordinary boat – no traditional
wooden fishing boat could do this. This new boat
would have to be rugged and robust to take the
pounding of Hatteras waters. But most importantly,
it would have to be a great sportfishing boat – big
enough to handle a group of avid fishermen and
comfortable enough for family back at the dock.
Breaking with
all tradition, Slane chose a new material –
fiberglass – to build this noteworthy yacht that
launched an industry.
Hatteras
produced its first sportfishing yacht on March
22, 1960, in the town of High Point, North Carolina.
Christened the Knit Wits, she was a 41-foot
twin cabin sportfisherman with a 14-foot beam and a
pair of 275-hp Lincoln V-8s. The response was
enthusiastic and the Hatteras legend was born. In a
testament to the ruggedness that has become
synonymous with Hatteras Yachts, the Knit Wits
is still in service today after a fishing career
that includes service in the Gulf of Mexico and
Pi?as Bay, Panama.
Within two
years, Hatteras premiered the 41 Double Cabin, the
first fiberglass motor yacht and the precursor of
its cruising yacht line. Additional sportfishing
models quickly followed.
The market soon
demanded bigger boats, and so the Hatteras
sportfishing fleet expanded – first to 50-foot boats
and now up to 90-foot convertibles. Hatteras also
began designing and producing a line of cruising
yachts that now ranges from 63 to 100 feet in
length.
In 1967
Hatteras added a second manufacturing facility in
the coastal town of New Bern, North Carolina. Thirty
years later, the original facility was closed and
all manufacturing was consolidated at the 95-acre
waterfront site in New Bern, where operations remain
today.
However, some
things at Hatteras have not changed. Hatteras yachts
continue to set the standard for ruggedness and high
performance in all waters. Hatteras builds all its
boats with a solid fiberglass hull bottom, and only
Hatteras warrants its hull for five years – a
testament to the ruggedness of its boats.
This commitment
to superior craftsmanship began with the Knit
Wits and continues today. Whether the choice is
a sportfishing convertible or a motor yacht, both
deliver the "renowned Hatteras ride" in comfort and
style.
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