YRUGL Consitution
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Detailed History Factoids
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Cross Cup Historical Records
At one point in the Richardson Trophy history, miniature trophies of the permanent trophy were made.
The sand casting stands about 8" tall and 8" long.
Made of sterling silver, with a thickness over 1/4", the weight of the silver is close to about 3 pounds.
The one pictured, is Harry Nye's that he won in 1967.
The lettering says, "Yacht Racing Union Challenge Cup" identical to the permanent trophy.
There are four logo's, including DRYA (Lake St. Clair), LYRA (Lake Ontario), LMYA (Lake Michigan Sail Racing Federation's predecessor) and RCYA (unclear what this represents).
This leaves off three of the lakes that participate.
It is unclear why the other lake's aren't mentioned.
There were no markings to indicate when or where this trophy was made.
INDEX:
1996 Abridged History
Detailed History
Richardson Trophy Engraving Procedure
Keeper Trophy Order 4/29/94
Delegates 7/12/95
Trophy Value
ABRIDGED HISTORY
Yacht Racing Union of the Great Lakes
for the winners of the
RICHARDSON GREAT LAKES CHAMPIONSHIP RACES
This sterling silver trophy by Tiffany was donated by Commodore S. O.
Richardson, Jr., of the Toledo Yacht Club, Toledo, OH, to encourage
match sail yacht racing between substantial yachts representing each of
the Great Lakes. The first of these races was held
in Chicago, in 1912, between Universal Rule P Class yachts.
After the interruption of World War I, the trophy was transferred to
the YRUGL, with racing continuing in R Class yachts until 1966. Since
then, the races have been held in several different types of yachts,
including 6 Metre, Cal 40, Redline 41, PJ-43, C&C 35, Islander 36,
Tartan 10, C&C 33, C&C 34, Santana 35, & Laser 28. In 1994,
because of the difficulty in getting enough borrowed large yachts
together, tradition was broken by holding the races in Dragons. The
Tartan 10 Class was used for 1996. The Duluth Yacht Club, of the Lake
Superior Yachting Association, was the 1996 host.
The races are generally rotated among the six members of the Yacht
Racing Union of the Great Lakes in the following order:
Lake Yacht Racing Association
Lake Superior Yachting Association
Lake Huron Yachting Association
Lake Michigan Sail Racing Federation
Detroit Regional Yachting Association
Inter-Lake Yachting Association
--Robb Holt, 1992-1996 President, Yacht Racing Union of the Great Lakes
DETAILED HISTORY
ORIGIN
Attending the first races for Canada's Cup, held at Toledo in 1896, were
a goodly number of interested sailor-men from each of three of the Great
Lakes. The idea was broached of forming a Union or Association to
promote yacht racing and to formulate racing and measurement rules to
govern the sport on the Great Lakes.
Commodore Aemilius Jarvis of the Royal Canadian Yacht Club eagerly
seized upon the idea, enlisting the services of J. E. Burroughs of the
Royal Canadian Yacht Club and E. H. Ambrose of the Royal Hamilton Yacht
Club to represent the Lake Yacht Racing Association at a meeting to be
held at Buffalo on November 7, 1896. Present at that meeting were also
representatives from the Inter-Lake Yachting Association and the Lake
Michigan Yachting Association. It was decided to form a body to be known
as "The Yacht Racing Union of the Great Lakes." At this
meeting an exhaustive set of racing rules prepared by Mr. Ambrose was
presented and tentatively adopted. It was decided to extend invitations
to join the Union to the L.Y.R.A., I-L.Y.A. and L.M.Y.A., to which they
later agreed.
A further meeting was held at Buffalo on January 16, 1897 when
representatives from each of the three Lakes Associations were present,
and the rules devised by Mr. Ambrose were revised and finally adopted.
OBJECTS
The objects of the Union as determined upon are: "To encourage and
promote yacht racing on the Great Lakes, and to unify rules but it is
not intended that the Union shall act in any other than an advisory
capacity."
ACTIVITIES
The Union has served a useful purpose through the years in fostering
yacht racing on the Great Lakes, and in unifying the racing and
measurement rules governing all three lakes.
The usefulness of the Union was further enhanced by the promotion of
inter-lake racing which was made possible by Commodore S. O. Richardson,
Jr. of the Toledo Yacht Club presenting a cup for international racing.
The first of such races took place in 1912 at Chicago when the class
"P" yacht "Patricia" representing the L.Y.R.A. was
successful against the Yacht "Michicago" representing the
L.M.Y.A.
It was the expectation that such races would be held every other year
but World War 1 intervened and there were no races until 1922, when the
Deed of Gift was amended to allow for racing in class "R", the
cup to be known as the "Yacht Racing Union Cup."
Races were held alternately on each of the three lakes until 1940
when World War II made racing unfeasible. There was no further racing
until 1951 when "crew racing" was substituted for "boat
racing". Such races have continued each year on each lake
alternately.
The Union has sponsored through the years races for the Barthel
Trophy presented by Commodores O. F. Barthel, Detroit, George Orr
Chicago, and T. K. Wade, Toronto, for competition in the Eight Metre
Class with the expectation that it would be sailed for alternately on
the three lakes, during the off years of the Y.R.U. Cup. However, this
was prevented by the financial situation which prevailed in the
thirties. Finally "Boat Racing" was substituted and excellent
racing resulted for a number of years, Eight Metre Class being used on
Lakes Ontario and Erie and the "Q" Class on Lake Michigan.
There was no racing from 1954 to 1959 when races were revived in the
Dragon Class.
In 1955 the O'Keefe Company presented a trophy to the Union to be
known as the "O'Keefe's Dragon Trophy" to be emblematic of the
Championship of the Great Lakes in International Dragon Yachts. Races
were held yearly at different points on Lake Ontario from 1955 to 1961, the winner each
year being sent at the Company's expense to compete for the Gold Cup.
These races were very popular, as many as 30 to 40 boats taking part.
APPRECIATION
Too much credit cannot be given to Aemilius Jarvis and his confreres for
their energy and and foresight in launching the union on such smooth
waters that have stood the test of time. These gentlemen represented the
Lake Yacht Racing Association which has ever since been a staunch
supporter of the Union.
There are two other men who should receive credit for the rounding of
the Y.R.U. One is George W. Gardner of Cleveland, who was also founder
of the Cleveland Yacht Club in 1878 and the I.L.Y.A. in 1885. The other
is Ernest Radder of the Cleveland Yacht Club who followed through to
create the North American Yacht Racing Union (now the United States
Sailing Association) at New York's Fifth Avenue Hotel in 1897.
Over the years, Y.R.U. has had three members who each served two
years as President and following those terms, also served as
Secretary-Treasurer and Historian—Thomas K. Wade, 1910 to 1965; E. G.
Sorsoleil, 1965 to 1974; and Don Fairchild, 1968 to 1983. This
continuity in office helped support the many excellent men, such as Carl
Hilton, Frank Shumway, Lynn Stedman, David W. Howell, Thomas Fisher and
Harry Kostoff, who gave of their talent and time and all of whom deserve
much credit for the survival of the Y.R.U.
In 1950, YRU purchased three beautiful trophies - one for each of
their three member associations (I-LYA, LYRA and LMYA) in order to
encourage competition among sail yachts in those areas. The YRU became a
four member association in 1967 with the addition of the DRYA. The DRYA
had functioned as a subordinate affiliate of the I-LYA and through that
organization contributed a great deal to YRU, but in 1945, DRYA became
equal and independent. In 1967, Lynn Stedman, Jr., who was Vice
President of the North American Yacht Racing Union, called a meeting in
Detroit of Frank Shumway, Rochester, New York, Mark H. Baxter, Chicago,
Carl Hilton, Chicago, Jere Sullivan, Cleveland, all representing YRU,
plus William Nagel and Milton Cross III, both of Detroit, representing
the DRYA, to establish the DRYA as a full and equal member of the YRU.
Then two more associations were added - LSYA in 1970 and LHYA IN 1976.
The Milton O. Cross, Jr., Memorial Trophy was assigned to YRU by the
Cross family in 1970. The delegates felt that a Lakes Offshore Racing
Championship of the Great Lakes would make an excellent series for this
trophy and that there should be a Trans Erie and a Trans Superior race.
They were established in 1970.
There was not enough interest shown by the boat owners in the
Offshore Racing Championship of the Great Lakes so from 1974 to 1982,
the Cross Trophy was competed for by three yachts from each of the
associations of YRU sailing in the Port-Huron-Mackinac Race plus a
course race every other year sailed off of the Sarnia Yacht Club. The
cost of insurance for the trophy has put this series on hold for the
present.
The delegates were unable to locate the Constitution for the YRU so,
in 1975, a new one was written by Don Fairchild and approved by the
delegates at the annual meeting that year.
It was decided by the delegates in 1976 that a safe place to keep the
records of the YRU was the Great Lakes Historical Society in Vermilion,
Ohio. The minutes of the meetings for the periods from 1896 to 1924 and
from 1939 to the present time, plus many other miscellaneous papers and
programs, are stored there.
In 1976, an Offshore One-Design Committee composed of former
presidents of the YRU, David W. Howell, Thomas K. Fisher, Harry Kostoff,
Frank Shumway, Gordon Fisher and Fred Soames, developed the North
American 40. This one-design boat has proved to be very successful and
over forty have been sold. The Barthel Trophy has been awarded for the
past several years to the winner of their (NA-40) National Championship
series sailed out of Charlevoix, Michigan.
ENGRAVING INSTRUCTIONS
INSTRUCTIONS FOR ENGRAVING RICHARDSON
KEEPER TROPHY:
(WHEN TURNED SIDEWAYS, THE YRUGL BURGEE IS REPRESENTED.)
VERTICAL PLATE
HORIZONTAL PLATE
TO REMOVE VERTICAL PLATE, POP BURGEES OFF SIDES.
UNSCREW BACK FROM FRONT AND BOTTOM, THEN SEPARATE FROM FRONT.
VERTICAL PLATE NUTS WILL THEN BE ACCESSIBLE FOR REMOVAL.
HORIZONTAL PLATE NUTS ARE ACCESSIBLE FROM BOTTOM.
KEEPER TROPHY ORDER
29 April 1994
Mr. Richard Devine
288 Mount Vernon Avenue
Rochester, NY 14620
Dear Richard,
Enclosed is our check for $200.00, making our total down payment
$300.00 for an order of three additional Richardson Cup Keeper Trophies
like that which you designed and crafted for us last year.
Our 1994 competition is scheduled to be held at the Edgewater Yacht
Club, in Cleveland, Ohio, starting 21 August. I would appreciate
completion of these three trophies in time for me to get them to EYC by
that time.
I’ve enjoyed working with you on this project, and certainly hope
that our need will continue.
Best of wishes to you and your family; I hope that your mother is
getting along fine.
Regards,
Robb Holt
YACHT RACING UNION OF THE GREAT LAKES
ROSTER OF OFFICERS & DELEGATES—12 July 1995
Rolf Krotseng
1241 Bonnie View Avenue YCFX 216-281-0265
Lakewood, OH 44107-2330
Edgewater YC, Cleveland, OH, Inter-Lake Yachting Association
Past President H. Robb Holt H/O 716-342-2177
447 Colebrook Drive HFX 716-342-2177, or
Rochester, NY 14617-1923 YCFX 716-342-8116
Rochester YC, Lake Yacht Racing Association E robb_holt@mlsonline.com
Treasurer Glenn T. McCarthy H 708-833-8173
413 Huntington Lane O 312-263-3215 x 69
Elmhurst, IL 60126 OFX 312-847-4222
? YC, Lake Michigan Sail Racing Federation
Vice President Lake Michigan Sail Racing Federation
Vice President Lake Superior Yachting Association H
807-767-2742
Commodore Richard Clarke O 807-343-8686
108 Robinson Drive HFX 807-767-1972
Thunder Bay, Ontario, P7A 6G5 OFX 807-343-8116
Thunder Bay YC E rclarke@sky.lakeheadu.ca
Vice President Lake Huron Yachting Association
(None assigned) ‘96 Commodore Spike Boston H 519-344-5236
10 Maude Street O
Point Edward, Ontario N7V 1P4 OFX
Sarnia YC
Vice President Detroit Regional Yachting Association
Mike Thompson H ?
2188 Seminole O 313-924-9444
Detroit, MI 48214 OFX 313-924-9470
Bayview YC CELL 313-690-2752
Vice President Inter-Lake Yachting Association
Vice President Lake Yacht Racing Association
Colin Andrews H 416-410-0518
42 Esther Lorrie Drive HF 416-747-8744
Etobicoke, Ontario M9W 4T8 O 416-599-9979
National YC OF 416-599-4959
E plasma@istar.ca
Awards Chairman Bill Mosher H 810-385-7222
Mosher’s Jewelers O 810-987-2768
336 Huron Avenue OFX 810-987-5946
Port Huron, MI 48060
Port Huron YC, Lake Huron Yachting Association
1997 Richardson Cup Host (LHYA)
Andy Connoly H 810-984-5648
514 Sanborn Street
Port Huron, MI 48060
TROPHY VALUE
Note from Rolf Krotseng 12/1/99:
Abbott said he had had it appraised for $40,000.
When I had it updated, I talked at length with GINO, the top jewelry
man in Cleveland. In essence:
No way is it worth $40,000. The abuse of indiscriminant engraving,
especially machine engraving renders it worthless except for the
sentimentality to those who abused it.
It is not reproducible in the USA for any reasonable amount.
It is reproducible in Italy for about $15,000. (1994)
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