Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Foreword by Tom Cunliffe
- Acknowledgements
- Conversion of Imperial to Metric Measures
- Introduction
- 1 Stirrings and Beginnings
- 2 Restoration Yachting and Its Purposes
- 3 The Development of Yachting in the Eighteenth Century Part One: The Seaside Towns
- 4 The Development of Yachting in the Eighteenth Century Part Two: Yachting in Boom Time London
- 5 The Landed Gentry Take Up Yachting
- 6 The Slow Expansion of Yachting in Britain, 1815–1870
- 7 The Development of Yachting in Ireland and the Colonies
- 8 The Enthusiastic Adoption of Yachting by the Mercantile and Professional Classes after 1870 Part One: The New Men
- 9 The Enthusiastic Adoption of Yachting by the Mercantile and Professional Classes after 1870 Part Two: A Philosophy of Yachting for the New Men
- 10 The Golden Age of Yachting, 1880–1900 Part One: The Rich
- 11 The Golden Age of Yachting, 1880–1900 Part Two: Small Boats and Women Sailors
- 12 Between the Wars
- 13 1945–1965: Home-Built Dinghies and Going Offshore
- 14 Yachting's Third ‘Golden Period’: Of Heroes and Heroines; Of Families and Marinas, 1965–1990
- 15 The Summer before the Dark: Yachting in Post-Modern Times, 1990–2007
- 16 After the Crash
- Epilogue: Fair Winds
- Bibliography
- Index
5 - The Landed Gentry Take Up Yachting
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 August 2018
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Foreword by Tom Cunliffe
- Acknowledgements
- Conversion of Imperial to Metric Measures
- Introduction
- 1 Stirrings and Beginnings
- 2 Restoration Yachting and Its Purposes
- 3 The Development of Yachting in the Eighteenth Century Part One: The Seaside Towns
- 4 The Development of Yachting in the Eighteenth Century Part Two: Yachting in Boom Time London
- 5 The Landed Gentry Take Up Yachting
- 6 The Slow Expansion of Yachting in Britain, 1815–1870
- 7 The Development of Yachting in Ireland and the Colonies
- 8 The Enthusiastic Adoption of Yachting by the Mercantile and Professional Classes after 1870 Part One: The New Men
- 9 The Enthusiastic Adoption of Yachting by the Mercantile and Professional Classes after 1870 Part Two: A Philosophy of Yachting for the New Men
- 10 The Golden Age of Yachting, 1880–1900 Part One: The Rich
- 11 The Golden Age of Yachting, 1880–1900 Part Two: Small Boats and Women Sailors
- 12 Between the Wars
- 13 1945–1965: Home-Built Dinghies and Going Offshore
- 14 Yachting's Third ‘Golden Period’: Of Heroes and Heroines; Of Families and Marinas, 1965–1990
- 15 The Summer before the Dark: Yachting in Post-Modern Times, 1990–2007
- 16 After the Crash
- Epilogue: Fair Winds
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Mr Herbert Weld, who was elected to the Squadron in 1924, owned the Big Class cutter Lulworth which he raced very successfully. Or to be more accurate, his crew raced very successfully … The papers were always delivered to Lulworth about half an hour before the race was due to start. Weld would then go below with a copy of The Times tucked under his arm and would not reappear until the race was well under way. ‘Hullo!’ he would say, casually looking round him. ‘We've started’.
Cowes Becomes Yachting's Capital – the Squadron's Early Years
We left an informal grouping of yacht-owning aristocrats at the end of the last chapter who had agreed to meet twice a year, once in London and once in Cowes. Two questions merit answering. Firstly, why meet at Cowes, and, secondly, how did this informal group become the most prestigious yacht club in the United Kingdom, if not the world? In the final section, I will examine the America's Cup, first raced for in 1851, and its subsequent history.
I described in Chapter 3 how, during the second half of the eighteenth century, inland spa towns had gradually lost favour to seaside resorts, as doctors began lauding the merits of seawater, seawater bathing and sea air. Besides, inland resorts were becoming ‘invaded’ by members of the ‘lower classes’, seeking to join in the promenades, the dances and the meetings. Royalty and the Aristocracy moved their socialising away from the inland spas to coastal spas.
Already, before the turn of the century, grand properties were being built along the Solent Coast around Cowes and along the Medina River. The swelling of its summer population was reported on by the Hampshire Courier and the Hampshire Telegraph, ‘two papers which may be regarded as the archives for the first period of English yachting, of the fine company which gave an increasing prosperity to Cowes before the nineteenth century had run into its teens’.
Travel to the Island was improved by the introduction of the paddle steamer, Prince Cobourgh, on the Southampton–Cowes run from 1820.
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- Information
- A New History of Yachting , pp. 69 - 96Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2017