C2—Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, November 22,1980 Daily fanner leaves strange legacy BY JANE BRESEE Staff Correspondent A large model of a sailing ship is a strange legacy for a dairy fanner to leave the world. This is the story as far as it can be pieced together. Karl Markert, the creator of the ship model, was bom in 1905 in Wemsberg, West Germany He worked as a blacksmith in Germany and came to the United States in 1928 where he was employed by a bus company on Long Island. As the story goes - he saw a picture of a German sailung ship on a postcard, probably one sent to him from Ger many, and for some reason the picture inspired him to make a small replica of the ship. Perhaps he had always dreamed of being a sailor and was captivated by the grace and beauty of sailing ships; perhaps he was just making a fancy cabinet for a radio which in those days was quite a novelty; or maybe he was homesick and needed something to take up his time. Karl made detailed blueprints and afterward built the model in his spare tune m the basement of a friend’s house. It took him three years to complete it. The model ship is not a small work of art. It is con structed from strips of brass layered and shaped to form the hull. There are three tall masts, holding 17 copper rectangular sails and 4 triangular lateen sails, also copper. The model measures 4 by 6 feet from stem to stem. The sealing ship is perfect in every detail right down to the one inch door on the deck house which opens and closes on tiny hinges. Miniature life boats, each supplies with diminutive oars, are hunt at intervals along the deck. The rigging is strung exactly as a real ship would be, but wires are used instead of rope, and fastened with little pulleys to the railings and deck. It is a maze of defaiheven to the “rope” ladders leading to the top of each mast As an added whimsey, Mr Markert installed a radio (which no longer works) under the deck, and lights mside the hull to shine through the real portholes He named her the El-Ba Rose