America’s Cup
America’s Cup
Sources
Origins. One of the oldest and most prestigious prizes awarded in international yacht racing, the America’s Cup was originally an 100-guinea silver trophy offered by the Royal Yacht Squadron to the winner of a race around the Isle of Wight on 22 August 1851. John Cox Stevens, a wealthy New Jersey real estate broker and founder of the New York Yacht Club, won the race by defeating seventeen British yachts. He named the cup after his yacht America and put the trophy on display at his Annandale, New Jersey, estate. After his death in 1857, the cup became the trust of the New York Yacht Club “as a permanent challenge cup, open to competition by any organized yacht club of any foreign country.”
Social Atmosphere. In the late nineteenth century yacht racing in the United States, as in England, was a pastime of the wealthy, and it attracted many spectators. The first challenge for the cup since 1857 occurred in 1870 and stimulated enormous interest in New York. On the day of the race, businesses closed down and the harbor swarmed with countless spectator craft festooned with ribbons and pendants. The race itself was the focus of intense rivalry on the part of the participants. The seemingly glamorous world of yachtsmen attracted international public attention and led to speculation in sporting journals as to the merits of particular captains and hull designs. Ship owners spent fortunes on sleek vessels and highly trained crews. Until 1920 the course for the America’s Cup generally started in Upper New York Harbor, ranged out into the Atlantic Ocean for thirty miles, and ended off Staten Island. (An inside course, which was sailed within the confines of New York Harbor, was last used in 1887.)
Ashbury. There was no competition for the cup in the 1860s because the Civil War brought a temporary halt to pleasure boating and racing off the eastern seaboard. In 1870 James Ashbury, a wealthy British railroad entrepreneur, became the first contender for the cup. On 8 August the race featured seventeen New York Yacht Club schooners against Cambria, the British vessel. Cambria finished 42 minutes behind Magic, the winning vessel. Ashbury complained about the course and number of ships, maintaining it gave the New York Yacht Club an unfair advantage in defending its possession of the cup. In response to that complaint,
the New York Yacht Club announced that future challenges would be one-on-one matches rather than mass affairs. In the first one-on-one challenge in 1871, Ashbury entered the Livonia, but it lost two of the three races to the Columbia of the New York Yacht Club.
Challenges. The Canadians and British were consistent challengers to the cup in the late nineteenth century. In August 1876 the Canadian yacht Countess of Dufferin lost to the American Madeleine. Five years later Canada again made a bid for the cup. The Bay of Quinte Yacht Club of Belleville, Ontario, entered Atalanta, a boat designed and owned by Alexander Cuthbert. Mischief, designed by A. Cray Smith, defeated Atalanta. Cuthbert, who wanted to challenge for the cup again with Atalanta in 1882, was thwarted by a rule change that said the same boat could not challenge for two years. In 1885 the New York Yacht Club accepted the challenge of England’s Royal Yacht Squadron on behalf of Sir Richard Sutton. In perhaps the best series of races in the history of the challenge, the English cutter Genesta lost to the American sloop Puritan, owned by a syndicate headed by J. Malcolm Forbes, the son of railroad and shipping magnate John Murray Forbes. The New York Yacht Club retained possession of the America’s Cup with victories by Mayflower over the British Galatea in 1886 and by Volunteer over Thistle in 1887.
Dunraven and Lipton. After Volunteer’s victory, the New York Yacht Club instituted a new rule stipulating that the challenger had to reveal the design of its boat before the race. In 1889 the Royal Yacht Squadron, on the behalf of the earl of Dunraven, issued a challenge for the cup. The challenge was withdrawn, however, when Dunraven refused to indicate the design of his boat, only its dimensions; however, in 1893 Dunraven yielded to the demands of the New York Yacht Club and entered his boat, Valkyrie II. The American boat Vigilant, the first of several America’s Cup champions designed by master boatbuilder Nat Herreshoff, defeated Valkyrie II. In 1895 Dunraven’s Valkyrie III lost to Defender, another boat designed by Herreshoff and owned by J. P. Morgan. Dunraven’s charge that the interference of spectator boats caused his boat to lose led to such acrimony that the New York Yacht Club did not expect to receive another British challenge for the cup until the next century. However, in 1899 the Yacht Club received a challenge from Sir Thomas Lipton, the Scottish-bred Irish tea merchant. His yacht, Shamrock I, lost to the American vessel, Columbia. Lipton’s 1899 challenge was the first of five that the New York Yacht Club would accept from him during the next thirty-one years. Despite his determination, Lipton failed each time to wrest the cup away from the Americans.
Ian Dear, The America’s Cup: An Informal History (New York: Dodd, Mead, 1980);
John Rousmaniere, America’s Cup Book, 1851-1983 (New York: Norton, 1983);
A. B. C. Whipple, The Racing Yachts (Alexandria, Va.: Time-Life Books, 1980).
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
The St. Edith Cycle in The Salisbury Breviary (c.1460)
Magazine article from: Fifteenth Century Studies; 1/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...breviary is a good example of what John Lowden has recently termed a...glorification of its patron, John of Lancaster, Duke of Bedford (1389-1435). Our close examination...commissioned from a Paris workshop by John of Lancaster, Duke of Bedford...
|
|
Clock is ticking to save 15th century Hours of the Passion illuminated manuscript.
M2 Presswire; 4/18/2007; 700+ words
; ...of hours of the highest quality from the Bedford Workshop in Paris, the most important centre...period. The anonymous artist known as the Bedford Master is named after John of Lancaster, Duke of Bedford, brother of King Henry V and regent of...
|
|
Kathleen "Kitty" (Moore) Mcanany
Newspaper article from: Intelligencer Journal Lancaster, PA; 5/9/2008; 430 words
; ...McAnany, 72, of Lancaster, died May 7, 2008...death by her husband, John L.D. McAnany...wife of Richard Bedford of Lancaster, John L.D. McAnany...Funeral Home, 415 North Duke Street, Lancaster with Rev. Barry Spece...
|
|
HOW THE ENGLISH TRIED AND FAILED TO SEIZE FRANCE
Newspaper article from: Evening Standard - London; 11/5/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...in protracted civil war between Lancaster and York, few people know that...hold France was Henry's brother John, Duke of Bedford. Maintaining Henry's legacy...French required skill and resolve. Bedford was equal to the task but when...
|
|
HOW THE ENGLISH TRIED AND FAILED TO SEIZE FRANCE [Edition 2]
Newspaper article from: Evening Standard - London; 11/5/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...in protracted civil war between Lancaster and York, few people know that...hold France was Henry's brother John, Duke of Bedford. Maintaining Henry's legacy...French required skill and resolve. Bedford was equal to the task but when...
|
|
Into bed with Shirley Bassey; Author and former Chronicle reporter Peter Kinsley has rubbed shoulders with stars of film, music, royalty and politics including Winston Churchill, Princess Grace and Shirley Bassey. He tells LIZ LAMB about his amazing life.(Features)
Newspaper article from: Evening Chronicle (Newcastle, England); 7/6/2007; 700+ words
; ...dined with the Duke of Bedford, met Christine Keeler...policeman, and brother John and sister Mary lived...and my brother John was 13, I woke up...artists Augustus John, Lucien Freud and...Richard Harris, Burt Lancaster and Robert Mitchum...
|
|
Birthdays
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 5/24/1997; 548 words
; ...Stanley Baxter, comedian, 69; The Duke of Bedford, writer and exponent of the stately...James Levine, conductor, 54; Col John Mayo, former Director-General...former Roman Catholic Bishop of Lancaster, 87; Miss Margaret Forster, novelist...
|
|
John B. Heroux
Newspaper article from: Intelligencer Journal Lancaster, PA; 4/9/2009; 700+ words
; ...retiring in 1979. John worked as an accountant...City, and moved to Lancaster in 1956 to become...all survive him: John, widower of Elizabeth Selitto, Bedford, NH, Jeanne, wife...Suwanee, GA. John was a member of St...Church, 929 North Duke Street, Lancaster...
|
|
Golden threads and blood-stained snow
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 7/15/1995; ; 700+ words
; ...diehards assembled at Lancaster. The gentry who...the index under "Bedford, Jasper Tudor, Duke of, see Pembroke...chaplain, the saintly John Fisher, with her...Earl of Oxford, John Morton and Jane...understatement, John Paston wrote home...
|
|
Vandy knocks off Miss. St.
Newspaper article from: The Record (Bergen County, NJ); 3/13/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...Joseph's. No. 5 DUKE 84, VIRGINIA 74...high 26 points for Duke, which will play...75 (at Dallas) - John Lucas III hit a short...JERSEY CITY 74 (at Lancaster, Pa.) - Andrew...Bergen Catholic star John Bedford added 16 to lead...
|
|
duke of Bedford John of Lancaster
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
duke of Bedford John of Lancaster see Bedford, John of Lancaster, duke of .
|
|
John of Lancaster Bedford, duke of
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
John of Lancaster Bedford, duke of 1389-1435, English nobleman...9-month-old nephew, Henry VI, Bedford was designated as regent of France...brother Humphrey, duke of Gloucester . Bedford devoted himself to the affairs of France...
|
|
John of Lancaster, duke of Bedford
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
John of Lancaster, duke of Bedford see Bedford, John of Lancaster, duke of .
|
|
Bedford, John of Lancaster, duke of
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to British History
Bedford, John of Lancaster, duke of (1389–1435). The third son of King Henry IV, John was created duke of Bedford by his brother Henry V in 1414...regent of France. In alliance with John, duke of Brittany, and Philip...
|
|
Humphrey Gloucester, duke of
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Humphrey Gloucester, duke of 1391-1447, English...Gloucester's older brother, John of Lancaster, duke of Bedford , protector of the realm. Since Bedford was occupied in France...Henry Beaufort , forced Bedford to return from France...
|