Gulf Yachting Association
The Gulf Yachting Association (GYA) formed in 1901,[1] is a non-profit organization consisting of 39 member and affiliate yacht club's from Houston, TX to Sarasota, FL along the Gulf of Mexico in the United States. Organized specifically to further the sport of yacht racing,[2] marine safety and seamanship, the GYA is the oldest organization of yacht clubs in the United States.
Short name | GYA |
---|---|
Founded | 1901 |
Location | United States |
Website | www |
Regattas
Capdevielle Racing
The Commodore Auguste B. Capdevielle Memorial Trophy was commissioned in 1941 and honors Auguste B. Capdevielle who served as Commodore of the GYA for six terms.[9]
Competition for the trophy has developed and fostered inter-club rivalries, excellent seamanship and camaraderie throughout the GYA's membership. The GYA has only had three Capdevielle one-design boats in over 118 years of racing, the Fish-class sloop,[10] the Flying Scot (dinghy) and the Viper 640[11]
History
Originally formed as the Southern Gulf Coast Yachting Association[12] in New Orleans in 1901 by the leadership of Southern, Mobile, Pascagoula, Biloxi, Bay Waveland, Bay St. Louis and Pass Christian Yacht Clubs, the founding organizations of the reorganized Gulf Yachting Association in 1918 were Bay Waveland, Biloxi, Mobile, Pass Christian and the Southern Yacht Clubs[13]
Notable member clubs
- Biloxi Yacht Club - Biloxi, MS
- Buccaneer Yacht Club - Mobile, AL
- Houston Yacht Club - Shoreacres, TX
- Lakewood Yacht Club - Seabrook, TX
- Long Beach Yacht Club, Mississippi - Long Beach, Mississippi
- Mobile Yacht Club - Mobile, AL
- New Orleans Yacht Club - New Orleans, LA
- Southern Yacht Club - New Orleans, LA
- St. Petersburg Yacht Club - St. Petersburg, FL
References
- "Gulf Yachting Association is Now Going Proposition". The New Orleans Times-Picayune Oct. 18, 1920.
- "Gulf Skipper Gets 15 1/4 Points in Mallory Cup Series (Sept. 9, 1954)". The New York Times.
- O'Reilly, D.B. (March 1922). Marshall Foch Awards Trophy. The Rudder.
- The Fish Class Regatta. Motorboating Magazine. 1951. p. 76.
- "How Women Sailors Broke The Glass Ceiling". BoatU.S. Magazine.
- "Bay Waveland Yacht Club wins 99th Sir Thomas Lipton Challenge Cup Regatta". WLOX TV.
- Murray, Tim (August 1992). NOYC Wins Challenge Cup Three Years in a Row. Mid-Gulf Sailing Magazine. p. 43.
- Allstate Sugar Bowl Race of Champions.
- Scheib, Flora K. (1986). History of the Southern Yacht Club. Pelican Publishing. p. 230. ISBN 9781455605866.
- "History of the Fish Class". FishClass.org.
- Gilbert, Troy (November 2015). Viper 640 Wins GYA Capdevielle. Sailing World Magazine. p. 26.
- "New Yachting Association Formed". New Orleans Item April 29, 1901.
- Counce, Oliver J. (2000). The Sesquicentennial of the Southern Yacht Club of New Orleans, 1849-1999: 150 Years of Yachting in the Gulf South. Southern Yacht Club. p. 269. OCLC 46836336.
Further reading
- Hennessey, Louis J. (March 1949), "100 Years of Yachting: Southern Yacht Club", H.N. Cournay Printing New Orleans
- Scheib, Flora K. (1986). History of the Southern Yacht Club. Pelican Publishing. ISBN 9781455605866.
- Counce, Oliver J. (2000). The Sesquicentennial of the Southern Yacht Club of New Orleans, 1849-1999: 150 Years of Yachting in the Gulf South. Southern Yacht Club. OCLC 46836336.
- Akkerman, Dora F. (2008). From Buffalo Bayou to Galveston Bay: The History of the Houston Yacht Club. Houston Yacht Club.
- Martha Mabey (2009), "Resolved to Sail: The First 75 Years of the Gulfport Yacht Club", The Donning Company Publishers, OCLC 324731258