Innovators in Boating - Offshore Legend Allan “Brownie” Brown, Part 1

Allan 'Brownie' Brown and his book "Tales From Thunderboat Row" / Photo- Dina Rella & LuxuryCenterConsoles.com
Very few high-performance boaters likely recognize the name but, Allan Brown, affectionately known as “Brownie,” has likely had more impact on the brands in this tightly knit segment than any other person.
Brown’s first foray into the boatbuilding business had nothing to do with high-performance. He was involved with the building of the first two PT boats at Miami Shipbuilding, then later assisted Willis Slade in the late 1950’s in the tooling up for the first Hatteras,
Knit Wits.
Challenger Boats in South Florida is generally credited with being among the first to utilize fiberglass in its hull construction. As a young man, Brownie started learning the boatbuilding business at Challenger. Following several years working his way up, plus a couple of years serving in the U.S. Navy, he became General Manager at Challenger.
Legendary
Don Aronow created Formula Boats in 1959 and built his boats in the relatively unknown and deserted NE 188th Street in North Miami. One of Aronow’s first and most successful boats was the
Formula 233, designed by fellow offshore racer Jim Wynne, who is generally credited as the inventor of the sterndrive.
The 233 featured a slightly modified version of the relatively new
deep-V hull design of
C. Raymond Hunt while retaining what has become the trademark of offshore high-performance boats -- a deadrise of 24-degrees for a smoother ride coupled with high horsepower to break it loose and give it speed.
In 1964, Don Aronow sold Formula Boats to Alliance Machine, then owners of Thunderbird Boats, thus creating Formula Thunderbird. Aronow almost immediately formed Donzi Marine. Utilizing the basics of a small offshore design that Jim Wynne had created, the first Donzi 16, later to be known fondly as the Sweet 16, was born.
This is where the story turns. Allan “Brownie” Brown was lured away from Challenger to become Aronow’s Sales Manager at Donzi. With Brown working the boat shows, the Donzi 16 became an instant success.
Jim Wynne drove one to a second-place finish in the November, 1964 Miami-Key West race.
A Donzi 28 was quickly conceived and launched. In the second running of the Sam Griffith Memorial Race in early February, 1965, a grueling 145-mile round trip from the Miami Government Cut and around Cat Cay in the Bahamas and back to Miami, five Donzi 28’s placed in the top ten finishers including 1st, 3rd, and 4th place.
The winning Donzi 28,
Broad Jumper, powered with twin 550 HP diesels with V-Drives, was owned by new Donzi customer and relatively new offshore performance boater, industrialist Bill Wishnick. Brown did most of the driving while simultaneously teaching forty-year-old Wishnick the driving and throttling dynamics of offshore boat racing. Brown’s teaching must have been good as Wishnick would go on to win the US National Championship in 1970 and was crowned World Offshore Powerboat Racing Champion in 1971.
With Allan Brown commanding both the sales and racing helms of Donzi, the Donzi 28
Blue Devil powered with twin 530 HP Holman Moody engines with V-Drives won the 1966 Hennessy Long Island Marathon, a rough water circumnavigation of Long Island, New York. Another 28 Donzi,
Donzi Baby powered with twin 561 HP Holman Moody with V-Drives set a new record in winning the 1967 Miami-Nassau Race.
After a couple of years, Aronow sold Donzi to Teleflex while Brown stayed on as General Manager. Brown, however, was not particularly happy under the new ownership and in 1968, with financial help from Bill Wishnick, left Donzi and founded Nova Marine, a little ways down and across the street from Donzi on NE 188th Street in North Miami. NE 188th Street was starting to acquire a reputation for high-performance boats and soon carried the title "
Thunderboat Row."
Noted designer Dick Cole, who had helped Brown with the design of the Donzi 22, once again collaborated to put together some of the best from Formula and Donzi to create the Nova 24. It was just shy of 25' LOA on an 8'2" beam along with perhaps the deepest vee hull of any boat at that time. The deadrise was just shy of 25-degrees!
The Nova 24 was primarily intended for family use as well as for racing and for family safety in rough water, almost all interior surfaces were upholstered and cushioned. Safety grab handles and rails were placed throughout the cockpit and a cushioned sunpad adorned the motorbox cover. A cuddy cabin featured stretch-out cushions on each side. Teak trim was utilized freely throughout. Standard power was from a pair of 235 HP Holman Moody engines with V-Drives.
The Nova 24 was an almost instant commercial success. In race trim, it captured several 1st and 2nd place class wins in major offshore races including 1st place in the 1969 Miami-Nassau Offshore Race. Once the Nova 24 was settled, “Brownie,” possibly recalling the success of the Donzi Sweet 16, put together the Nova 19 with higher freeboard than the Donzi 16 and with a safety wraparound windshield top coaming.

Donzi Sweet 16 / Photo- Beyond Performance Powerboats
The Nova 19 was also intended to be family friendly and was outfitted accordingly to be comfortable and safe. With its 8-foot beam, standard power was offered as a single inboard V-drive. Allan Brown was apparently not a fan of sterndrive power. The Nova 19 also had a significant deep-vee like its big sister Nova 24. But, times were tough in the boat business and, in the early 1970s Brown sold the rights to the Nova 24 to Wellcraft Marine. It soon became one of Wellcraft's biggest selling models and its first true performance boat. It was renamed the Wellcraft Nova.