
Author: Dave Harris
We are sad to report that Mark Ellis, co-founder of Harris & Ellis Yachts, has died at the age of 80 in Essex, Connecticut.
Mark was, above all, my friend. He was also my colleague, my business partner, my mentor. He was the guy who regularly dragged me out for lunch to his favourite local Indian buffet when we shared an office, which we did for more than 30 years.
I met Mark In 1973 with the launch of the C&C 48 Discovery, in Bronte Harbour. I had landed a gig as a full-time paid hand on the boat, thanks to owner Bob Grant and his son, Michael, whom I had met at university.
That year, Michael and I took Discovery to Florida. Mark sailed the SORC with Bob and his crew, then again when we sailed north to Newport for the Newport-Bermuda race. We finished third in class.
Later, Mark invited me to work with him on the Aurora Yachts program, which basically meant running around with my toolbox as chief yacht commissioner and hands-on boat yard guy. The first of his Aurora 40s was built by Henri Adriaanse in 1976, pioneering the advent of modern cruising yachts.
The same year, Mark and John Burn (both formerly of C&C Yachts) launched Burn & Ellis Yachts. Mark was the designer, and John and I handled sales out of our office in Oakville. It was a privilege to be on the front line as Mark rolled out the iconic Nonsuch and Niagara designs, along with innovative powerboats and motorsailers like Limestone, Legacy, Northeast, and Bruckmann. We worked with master builders George Hinterhoeller and Erich Bruckmann, yachting legends in their own right. When John left the firm in 1980, Mark and I regrouped as Harris & Ellis Yachts for a long and successful partnership.
Mark, an American, returned to the US in 2011 and focussed on his design practise in Essex, Connecticut. His passing earlier this month brought back a flood of memories. The last time I saw him was at the 2022 Canadian Sailing Hall of Fame inductions in Kingston, Ontario, where Mark made the induction speech for Gordon Fisher, the inspiration behind Nonsuch.
I will miss his friendship, his sardonic wit, and, yes, even the famous self-confidence that accompanied his brilliance. Fair winds, my friend.
The following remembrance is from Rob Mazza, courtesy of Canadianboating.ca
We are sad to report the recent passing of yacht designer Mark Ellis in Essex, Connecticut on May 11 having suffered a heart attack after a fall and some complications that left him wheelchair bound for 2.5 months, according to his wife, Barbara.
Mark had moved to Essex many years ago after a long and successful design career in Oakville, Ontario, where he built his company Mark Ellis Design and established his design reputation.
Mark Ellis will always be remembered as the designer of the Nonsuch line of Hinterhoeller-built cruising catboats, but his design portfolio included the Niagara line of cruising sloops also for Hinterhoeller, custom one-offs built by Bruckmann, as well as the Limestone line of deep-vee powerboats built by Hinterhoeller and Medeiros, and custom and semi-custom power cruisers built by Bruckmann, Holby Marine, and Freedom Yachts.
Mark also partnered with Dave Harris in the establishment of the Harris & Ellis yacht brokerage firm.
Brought up in Watertown in Upstate New York, Mark spent his summers mucking around in boats at the family cottage in the Thousand Islands, and from an early age knew he wanted to be a yacht designer. Mark started his design career with noted designer Phil Rhodes in Rhodes’ New York City design office in the 1960s, worked for John Deknatel at Ray Hunt Associates, and then Ted Hood, all the while taking a business degree from Boston University.
First C&C, then Nonsuch
After graduation Mark joined the design office of Cuthbertson & Cassian in Port Credit in 1968. He then transitioned to custom yacht sales with Erich Bruckmann at the C&C Custom Division. Mark would part company with C&C at George Cuthbertson’s urgings in 1974 to establish his own design firm to design and market the Aurora 40 built by Henri Adriaanse at Niagara Nautic, and then the Niagara 35 for George Hinterhoeller. However, it was after being approached by Gordon Fisher, whom Mark had got to know well while with C&C, that the Nonsuch concept was developed to “simplify sailing”, by creating a boat that did not need the large crews demanded by IOR racing at the time.

The Nonsuch 30 attracted an influential early following leading to a very successful debut at the 1978 Annapolis Boat Show. The concept of a very traditional shear and house on a more performance-oriented underbody combined with an innovative freestanding rig and wishbone boom appealed to a lot of sailors at the time and still does today. The Nonsuch 26 soon followed and then the 22 and the Nonsuch 36, the latter originally built by Goman Yachts before also being built by Hinterhoeller. The 33 was the last Nonsuch to be developed, followed by the cat-ketch Nereus 40 for Wiggers Custom Yachts.
Limestone

When Fredrik S. Eaton approached Mark to design what would become the Limestone 24’ power launch to access his island in Georgian Bay, Mark easily made the transition to power designs based on his time with Ray Hunt Associates. Mark then designed other models on that basis for builders such as Bruckmann, Medeiros, and Ontario Yachts with most models eventually falling under the Limestone umbrella when built by Medeiros after the demise of Hinterhoeller Yachts. Mark would go on to design several large custom power cruisers built by Bruckmann Yachts in Oakville, and Freedom Yachts under the Legacy brand name in the US.

Like the Nonsuch designs which incorporated traditional catboat aesthetic on a more performance oriented underwater hull form, Mark’s power cruisers also utilized traditional design aesthetics on performance-oriented planing hulls incorporating a deep vee configuration transitioning aft into wide chine flats for improved lift.
When approached by his good friend and Nonsuch dealer Jim Eastland in Connecticut to design a series of motor sailors, the North East line evolved initially built by Cabo Rico and then Bruckmann.

Mark not only had a fine design sense, but he also benefited from excellent business acumen. He was one of the few designers who could negotiate royalty agreements with builders, often based on finding financial backing from customers in advance to absorb the cost of tooling. In that respect, Mark benefited from the support of “patrons” of the art of yacht design who enjoyed seeing their ideas take shape and come to fruition. They too, were often good businessmen. On top of that Mark often negotiated the right to sell the boats through Harris & Ellis and owned the copyright on the product names! Even the builder’s ads for the boat had to stipulate that this was a Mark Ellis design. Mark, more than most, knew the importance of a good contract.
Concluding thoughts

I worked with Mark at C&C Design until his departure in 1974, and again for seven years after I, too left C&C in 1985. Even during those early days at C&C, Mark was more formal and conservative than the rest of us in the office, as seen in the 1973 photo of the C&C Design Office. Mark is the only one in the photo wearing a tie and not slouching with hands in his pockets. Slightly older than Rob Ball, Steve Killing and me, he was certainly more worldly and “mature”, having, unlike us, actually worked in other design offices and yards than C&C. He was also much more interested in the business aspects of yacht design, which is not surprising for a business graduate. That business interest served him very well.
After moving back to the US he served on the Model Committee of the New York Yacht Club and was active with the Cruising Club of America (CCA).
Mark didn’t have as large a design portfolio as some designers of the same period, but few designers had his range of innovative products in both sail and power. His passing marks another loss of a notable yacht designer from the golden age of yacht design. At the 2022 Canadian Sailing Hall of Fame inductions, it was Mark who, without hesitation, agreed to make the induction speech for his mentor, the late Gordon Fisher. Mark, tragically, will not be able to witness his own induction when it will inevitably takes place in the near future.

Mark is survived by his wife Barbara and two grown children from his previous marriage.
Rob Mazza worked with Mark Ellis at Mark Ellis Design for 7 years after parting company with C&C Design in 1985 and starting with Hunter Marine in 2002. He witnessed the transition from Sail to Power in the Mark Ellis design office.