Chicago Yacht Club

The Chicago Yacht Club is located in Chicago. The yacht club is best known for organizing the Chicago Yacht Club Race to Mackinac each July. It also hosts dozens of other races and regattas throughout the boating season. It has two club houses, one at Monroe Harbor and one at Belmont Harbor.

Chicago Yacht Club
Short nameCYC
Founded1875
LocationChicago  United States
CommodoreLouis Sandoval [1]
FocusTo encourage, promote, and develop knowledge, participation, and enjoyment of all aspects of yachting.[2]
Websitewww.chicagoyachtclub.org

History

The Chicago Yacht Club was founded in 1875 to encourage and promote the sport of yachting. In 1898, the first Race to Mackinac was held. In 1900, the club obtained its first clubhouse, the Argo clubhouse located at the Illinois Central Pier #3.

Chicago Yacht Club's original Chicago to Mackinac Trophy dates to 1906. The trophy has been awarded annually since 1921. Although the Chicago to Mackinac races were skipped in 1917–1920 due to World War I, they were sailed every year of World War II. In 1920, the Lincoln Park Yacht Club, which had helped start the Canada's Cup, combined with the Chicago Club.

In 1955, construction began of the current Monroe Harbor Station, one of two clubhouses maintained by the club. The other clubhouse (41.9406°N 87.6352°W / 41.9406; -87.6352 (Chicago Yacht Club, Belmont Harbor Station)) is located in Belmont Harbor and is host to the club's One Design sailing fleet.[3]

Among those who have sailed for the club is Robert Halperin, Richard Stearns and William Parks who won an Olympic bronze medal in 1960. Halperin also won a Pan American Games gold medal in 1963 in yachting, and was also a football player at Notre Dame, Wisconsin, and in the NFL, one of Chicago's most-decorated World War II heroes, and Chairman of Commercial Light Co.[4]

As part of the club's centennial celebrations in 1975, Richard and Wendy Van Mell edited The First hundred years : a history of the Chicago Yacht Club, 1875–1975[5]

The Club competed for the America's Cup in the 1987 Louis Vuitton Cup, represented by the Heart of America boat, skippered by Buddy Melges. The club's entry finished 8th of 13 boats in the competition to determine the cup competitor.[6] The presentation of a challenge from a Lake Michigan yacht club, required adjudication of whether the lake was an "arm of the sea", as required by the Deed of Gift of the America's Cup and the decision allowed Great Lakes boats to compete.[6]

Activities

Chicago Yacht Club hosts a series of on the water events throughout the boating season.

In June, the club hosts the SAILING WORLD Magazine's National Offshore One Design (NOOD) Regatta which draws several hundred competitors from around North America.

Each July, the club hosts the Chicago Yacht Club Race to Mackinac, one of the longest running fresh-water sailing races in the world. The race starts from just off the Chicago Harbor Lighthouse, continues up the length of Lake Michigan and finishes on Mackinac Island off the round island lighthouse.

Another signature event is the annual VERVE Cup regatta held each August. The "Verve" hosts both an inshore event and an offshore event and attracts the top sailors in the country.

Chicago Yacht Club is a leader in teaching children and adults to sail, teaching sailing lessons for over 84 years.

Commodore

  • Louis Sandoval (2019- )
  • Leif Sigmond (2017–2018)
  • Gregory Miarecki (2015–2016)
  • Gerald Bober (2013–2014)
  • Joseph Haas (2011–2012)
  • Sheldon Clark[7]

References

  1. "Club Leadership". Chicago Yacht Club. Archived from the original on 23 July 2017. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
  2. "Mission Statement". Chicago Yacht Club. Archived from the original on 1 December 2016. Retrieved 30 November 2016.
  3. "Home – Chicago Yacht Club". chicagoyachtclub.org.
  4. Heise, Kenan (May 9, 1985). "Robert Halperin, 77, War Hero, Executive". Chicago Tribune.
  5. Richard and Wendy Van Mell The First hundred years : a history of the Chicago Yacht Club, 1875–1975 (Chicago: The Club, 1975)
  6. "Classic America's Cup: the Heart of America". Cruising World.
  7. "Sheldon A. Clark Shot After Family Quarrel in Billiard-Room of Paulsboro House". The New York Times. November 21, 1933. Retrieved 2010-12-07. Sheldon A. Clark, 35 years old, son of Commodore Sheldon Clark of Chicago, wealthy sportsman and vice president of the Sinclair Refining Company, was shot and killed in the basement of his home here late this afternoon, following one of a series of arguments with his wife. ...

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