Club
History from 1872 to Present
Santa Barbara
Yacht Club
1872
- 1920
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| The original SBYC Clubhouse.
A 35 foot x 20 foot building at the foot of Stearns' Wharf. Originally
the home of the John Stearns during the building of the wharf |
Just seven years following the conclusion
of the Civil War, organized yachting came to Santa Barbara. According to
the Bible of all things maritime, Lloyd's Register Of American Yachts,
the Santa Barbara Yacht Club was formed in 1872, although not formally
incorporated until May 5, 1887. This was a time before the first Southern
Pacific train reached the city and State Street was a graded dirt thoroughfare
with boardwalks and lighted by gas imported from San Francisco. In the
world of yachting this was the beginning of the "golden age" with the first
race for the America's Cup in 1870.
The proximity of the town to the ocean
gave rise to an emerging consciousness of the joys of water sports and
sailing, just as it was doing on San Francisco Bay. The sport of sailing
rapidly spread to every seaport in the country, from the sophisticated
East Coast to the shores of the Pacific and the picturesque town of Santa
Barbara. In 1872, stimulated by an influx of Eastern visitors, the businessmen
awakened to the area's potential. A Chamber of Commerce was formed under
the name of the Immigration Bureau and the first item on the agenda was
the formation of a tourist hotel - The Arlington.
A mule car line was established between
the water front and the site of the proposed hotel. The long isolation
of the community was broken with the completion of a substantial wharf
named for its builder, John B. Stearns. Ships could now unload their passengers
without rowing them ashore.
The original clubhouse, as far as the records
show, was a 35 x 20 foot building at the foot of Stearns Wharf on the West
side. During the building of the wharf this had been the home of John Stearns.
The southeast corner of the building was occupied by a galley with a wood
stove. The southwest corner was a ÒheadÓ with a pipe leading
to the beach below. A battered piano stood in the Northeast corner. The
membership totaled 50.
1921
- 1950
 |
| The original SBYC Clubhouse's
final days. It was destroyed by a storm in February of 1924. |
In the summer of 1921 a survey was organized
by the Yacht Club to determine if and where it would be possible to have
a yacht harbor. The firm of Hill & Co. of San Francisco was hired to
make the survey, for which they were paid $3,500 by the club. The Bird
Refuge was recommended. An alternative location, opposite Castle Rock where
it is today, was rejected because of possible shoaling.
About Christmas, 1924 in a southeast gale,
the clubhouse was washed out to sea. In early 1925 Messrs. Fleischman,
Storke, Murphy and Spaulding said they would have a clubhouse built on
Stearns Wharf and leased to the Club. This Club House opened in 1926, at
the location of the present Harbor Restaurant. From 1921 to 1929 a regatta
was held every year. In 1925, the year of the Santa Barbara earthquake,
the Southern California Yachting Association (SCYA) Regatta was scheduled.
SCYA offered to call it off because of the earthquake damage. The club
said it was willing to put it on if the visitors didn't mind a few inconveniences.
The regatta that year was the biggest and best. The banquet, ball and distribution
of prizes was held at La Cumbre Country Club.
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|
Artist's Rendering
of the Yacht Club building on the Wharf.
|
In 1926 Major Fleischman offered financial
help for the construction of a suitable harbor. In spite of previous advice
the city recommended the harbor be built in its present location. A bond
issue was approved in 1926 for $250,000 for a 1,000 foot breakwater and
work started in January 1927. When work was eventually completed the length
was 2,435 feet at a cost of $775,000.
|
|
Presently The Old Yacht Club
Inn, this two-story house was an interim clubhouse after the original
was destroyed. It was located on Cabrillo Boulevard just east of Stearns
Wharf but was later moved to it's present location at 431 Corona Del Mar.
|
A few of the yachts owned by the Club members
and moored within the new harbor were Haida 128 ft., Invader
135 ft., Faith 106 ft., Malibu 100 ft., Patolita 82
ft., Radio 110 ft., Westward 68 ft., Hafje 58 ft.,
Navigator
78 ft., Zingara 65 ft., Caprice 65 ft.,
Wymitch and
Bayadere,
each about 50 ft. In addition, there were four 8-meters, seven star boats
and 12 large power yachts of various sizes.
 |
| DIABLO - Designed
and built by N.G. Herreshoff, Rhode Island, in 1915. Shown here at the
finish of the 1924 Anacapa Island Race. It won the 1923 Honolulu Race as
HASWELL |
 |
| Major Max Fleischman's
128-foot diesel cruiser HAIDA. One of the first boats to have a
mooring after the breakwater was built. |
 |
| Earl Hayward's brand new
Star 450, TWINKLE, taken in1927 next to the SBYC Clubhouse |
 |
| PATOLITA - owned
by Charles Deere Wiman and John J. Mitchell. A Class M Sloop, she was the
winner of the Mussolini Trophy, the Class M and N Championships and the
San Pedro-Santa Barbara Race in the Pacific Coast Championship Regatta
at Santa Barbara in 1931. |
 |
| ENDYMION was designed
in 1930 by Nicholas Potter. In the background is AMORILLA designed
in 1916 by John Alden. |
 |
| NAVIGATOR, 80 foot
Gloucester schooner, designed by Burgess, Swasey and Paine and built by
A.D. Story at Essex, Connecticut. Owned by Clayton de Mott, Jr |
 |
| POINSETTIA, which
once belonged to the German Crown Prince. |
 |
| Start of the 1924 Cruiser
Race showing MISS MIXIT, CORSAIR andFELICIA waiting
for the signal. |
The 1930's were a rocky period for the club.
Prior to 1929, membership in the club was held to not more than 100 members.
Following the stock market crash and the onset of the depression, membership
was thrown open to anyone with the result that the membership jumped up
to between 600 and 700 members, few of whom were yachtsmen. Generally poor
conduct on the part of a few members, however, threatened to collapse the
Club. In 1932, the yachtsmen who had dropped out because of this were induced
to come back and the Club was reorganized. Those not interested in yachting
were for the most part dropped from the membership. 1937, however, saw
a repeat of the 1932 problem by non-yachtsmen members and the Stearns Wharf
Clubhouse was lost for non-payment of rent. Alcohol and the depression
had taken a toll on the Santa Barbara Yacht Club.
 |
| The "one room shack" directly
across the Wharf from the old clubhouse. |
In March 1938 the Club was again reorganized
and renamed the "Channel Corinthian Yacht Club". Major Fleischman, Tom
Crawford and A. C. Postel were instrumental in reorganizing the Club and
merging with the remnants of the Santa Barbara Yacht Club. The corporate
charter, due to expire after 50 years, had been renewed to retain the name
"Santa Barbara Yacht Club." The name "Santa Barbara Yacht Club" was readopted
June 20, 1940. The clubhouse was a one room shack on the east side of Stearns
Wharf, opposite the old Yacht Club building.
In 1940 the Club was in sound financial
condition and the members started to agitate for property of their own.
The city was in need of a civic auditorium, so plans were drawn for a building
to be erected immediately west of the breakwater. The Southern wing was
to be the Yacht Club, the center the auditorium and the northern wing for
the Naval Reserve. The city council appropriated $20,000. The W.P.A. was
to put up the balance. With construction well under way war arrived. The
W.P.A. shut down and the city was stuck with a building less than a third
completed. The building was given to the Navy, and the harbor was closed
during the war, but a "shadow" club was held together.
1946
- Present
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| Water Color painted of
the old expanded club on the present site. |
Activities started again in 1946, the first
regatta in 1947 was held at the Naval Reserve Armory. Club meetings were
held in various member's houses. During February 1949 a suite was leased
in the California Hotel. In January 1950 negotiations were opened with
the City for a portion of beach for a clubhouse location. In July 1950
there was a "Bill of Sale" from the Union Oil Company for an old office
building to be used for a clubhouse. The clubhouse was completed and in
use by December 1951. It was in this building that the spirit shown by
our Yacht Club today was generated. That building was removed in 1966 and
replaced by the current facility.
Present
Clubhouse at the same location as the 1950 Clubhouse.
The
Santa
Barbara Yacht Club is proud of the contributions that we make to
our city, such as:
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Playing
host to visiting yachtsmen from all over the world and providing a facility
for their comfort.
-
Founding
and sponsoring the Santa Barbara Youth Foundation
and offering sailing instructions to young sailors from the Santa Barbara
area.
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Providing
a facility for the Santa Barbara Sailing Club
race program.
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Hosting
the starting point and finishing point for the Santa
Barbara to King Harbor, Encinal
to Santa Barbara and Santa
Cruz to Santa Barbara races. These events
are estimated to bring 300 yachts and up to 5,000 people to Santa Barbara.
-
Providing
direct support for the Harbor Festival
and visitation of US Naval
Vessels.