Last modified: 2012-11-24 by rick wyatt
Keywords: skaneateles model yacht club | united states yacht club | new york |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
image
by Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 27 Februry 2012
See also:
I came across the Skaneateles, describing
The Tempest,
saying:
'The Tempest was built by Capt. John Furman in 1852. Soon after the
Skaneateles Model Yacht Club was formed, with Edward Potter as Commodore.
Besides the Club Flag each boat had its own flag, & a code of signals being
adopted there were frequent reviews. W.H. Jewett was Vice Commodore. The
club flag was a white star & a red cross on a blue ground.', which is a quote
from The Rev. William Martin Beauchamp - Souvenirs of Some Early Days in
Skaneateles, N.Y., 1882. A note is added: 'The Skaneateles Model Yacht Club
aspired to be “a model of excellence;” its boats were not models, but the real
thing.'
I've drawn this burgee of the Skaneateles Model Yacht Club,
following that description and one of the accompanying images, that pictures the
burgee. As the description already shows, it looks a lot like that of the
New York Yacht Club. The star is clearly larger, and
currently the NYYC uses a quite dark shade of blue, but at a distance, you might
not be able to tell these apart. Then again, the NYYC burgee would fly from
large multi-mast yachts, while the Tempest mentioned in the text is illustrated
as an open sailing boat. If that's accurate, there probably wouldn't have been
any confusion about the burgees.
The picture of the Tempest shows another
flag flying from the yacht, beside the ensign and the burgee. If Furman kept the
Tempest, it would have to be his signal. Unfortunately, the rather free style of
drawing shows us little more than two horizontal stripes ending in a fly box.
Another page from the same blog,
http://kihm6.wordpress.com/2009/09/20/water-music, tells us the club's first
regatta was on the 4th of July 1854, and that it hosted regattas for the next
four years. By that time, apparently the sailing had become less amateur- and
model-like, and because of this, the club ended its existence in 1867.
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 27 February 2012