Last modified: 2022-08-19 by rick wyatt
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image located by Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 19 July 2022
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In the 18th century, sailing up from New York in the direction of Albany,
there were two points sticking out from the east bank into the Hudson River.
First came a point of low-lying lands, general described as the Low Point. The
next point further north was where the Wappinger Creek flowed into the Hudson
River. This was a more rocky point, so, this was called the High Point.
Approximately 1800, both points got town place names. Low Point was named after
a city of long ago: Carthage. High Point was named after a more recent city: New
Hamburgh. Carthage has some problems with the chosen name and they tried
Carthage Landing for a while, and eventually became Chelsea. New Hamburgh
nowadays is called New Hamburg, but otherwise they stuck with their choice. So
far, I have not found any reference to who first came up with the idea of naming
the points after well-known cities.
In 1869, the local well-to-do formed
the New Hamburg Ice Yacht Club. Ice Yacht Clubs Along the Hudson River – 1860-
1900 (https://docs.google.com/document/d/1KmNBNt_sChpJFaj6ywqOhzJieikGnMdCPK-in2MFu8o/edit)
provides us with a club signal. (Which is also from Manning's Yacht List 1896.)
The NHIYC regulated the regattas for the Ice Yacht Championship Pennant of
America. Several challenges were between Archibald Rogers' Jack Frost and John
Roosevelt's Icicle. In 1881, Captain Relyea built the Robert Scott, which was a
new concept for that time. Where older ice yachts mimicked the Dutch style,
Relyea's yacht did away with the heavy bits. It had barely enough space to hold
its crew, and the even the parts holding the yacht together had been replaced by
steel cables. Relyea's Robert Scott, for Poughkeepsie beat the Icicle for New
Hamburg. Though the Robert Scott had less sail surface, she was so much lighter
that she made more speed than the Icicle. Post-1881 ice yachts were generally
built after the style of the Robert Scott.
The last time “Challenge
Pennant of America” was sailed, in 1922, Jacob Millard brought her home with
“Scout.” But basically, in the new century, speed was not found in wind, but in
naphtha.
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 19 July 2022
image located by Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 19 July 2022
When the [ice yacht] craze was over, the club had
become the New Hamburg Yacht Club, without mentioning hard water. Thus, they had
a new burgee, that no longer included the I. The club provides an excellent
image, that I am glad to borrow.
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 19 July 2022
image by Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 19 July 2022
In 2019, the club celebrated its 150 years. At https://nhyc1869.com, they depict a burgee to celebrate that event, but nothing says whether this was actually used as the burgee that year.
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 19 July 2022