
1950 U-27 Slo-mo-shun IV
In the years before the
Mariners and other local big league sports teams, Seattle had the Slo-mo-shun IV
hydroplane - “Slo-mo” for short. This speedy vessel’s designers, builders and
racers, Anchor Jensen, Ted Jones, Stan Sayers and Lou Fageol became household
names when they set the world water speed record on Lake Washington and won the
covetede Gold Cup in Detroit in 1950.

As the centerpiece of Seafair –
Seattle’s annual civic celebration begun in 1950 – the “hydro” races on Lake
Washington were the high point of every summer for more than 30 years. The races
continue to draw huge crowds every August.

Slo-mo’s radical “flying” three-point
hull design and unmatched speed refined boat racing, and inspired the design of
every hydro that followed. After a devastating wreck in Detroit in 1956, Slo-mo
was cosmetically restored for display at Seattle’s Museum of History and
Industry (MOHAI) beginning in 1959. In 1990, she left MOHAI for a complete
structural and mechanical restoration, by the Hydroplane & Raceboat Museum, and
was ultimately put through her paces on Lake Washington one last time. Slo-mo
returned to MOHAI in 2001.
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