|
|
| A
brief history of the SHYC by Lewis Jackson - Updated
2008
|
Situated
near the head of one of the world’s finest harbours,
the seaside town of Shelburne, Nova Scotia has had a
lengthy and prestigious association with yachting. From
her storied shops and yards were launched the Roseway
Yacht, an eight-tonne Schooner, which in 1786
made a 28-day passage across the Atlantic to London, Alba,
a prodigious trophy winner during the early years of the
Royal Nova Scotia Yacht Squadron. Mistress,
second place finisher in the Newport to Plymouth race as
well as the Royal Yacht Club Regatta at Cowes, Waterwitch,
triumphant in the Miami to Nassau race, Malay,
two time winner of the Newport to Bermuda Race,
Little Haligonian, three time victor of the St,
Petersburg to Havana race and Svapp which
carried internationally renowned yachtsman W.A.
Robertson on his 32,000 mile round the world voyage.
In addition to her acclaim as a distinguished building
centre, Shelburne also came to be the home of the Shelburne
Yacht Club. Although an informal club consisting of
locally built yachts was active as early as 1877 and
invitational regattas were held as early as 1898; the
original Shelburne Yacht Club was not formed
until 1903.
In that year the club was incorporated through an Act of
the Legislative Assembly of Nova Scotia and the
following year a building committee engaged a local
contractor to construct a two story club house set on
pilings near the waters edge on the northwest corner of
Dock and George Streets.
From the outset the SYC established a general
program of activities and continued the annual regattas
initiated in 1898. The 1905 Regatta was one of the more
noteworthy, with fishing sloops from across Shelburne
County racing locally and then going on to win top
honours in Halifax against Tancook Schooners from
elsewhere in the province. The club also hosted an
International Race in 1907 where locally constructed
Swampscott Racing Dories competed against entrants form
the Massachusetts Racing Dory Association for the Lovitt-Wagner
Cup. Success of the American craft at these races
prompted return matches in the United Stated the
following year.
For the next four decades the SYC served as the
premier social organization in the town of Shelburne.
Its dances, socials and races were well attended by many
of the community’s leading citizens.
In the mid 1930’s several club members embarked upon a
program of Snipe Racing and more than a dozen such craft
were built by local parties. They were rewarded for the
their efforts in 1947 when Shelburne Yacht Club’s ‘Rascal’
won the Dominion Snipe Boat Championship, an achievement
which sent her crew forward to represent Canada in the
International Races held at Geneva, Switzerland the same
year.
The original club was disbanded after the clubhouse on
Dock Street fell victim to the effects of Hurricane Edna
in 1954.
It was revived again in 1983 when eighteen local yacht
owners formed the Shelburne Harbour Yacht Club
and hosted the Nova Scotia Schooner Association races as
part of Shelburne’s Bicentennial activities. At first
functioning out of rental rooms, in 1992 the SHYC purchased
a property to serve as a clubhouse location at Sandy
Point on the Eastern Shore of Shelburne Harbour. After
operating this site for more than a decade, in 2003 the
SHYC moved to a new location on Shelburne's Historic
Waterfront, within the Muir-Cox Shipyard Museum
Complex. Housed in a building formerly used by Harley
S. Cox and Sons to construct large vessels under
cover, the club features wrap-around balconies
overlooking Shelburne's majestic harbour and shares
space with the Osprey Arts Centre and Theatre, Shelburne
Harbour Marina Association, and Shelburne Sailing School
Association.

|
|
|
|