(Heathrow Airport, Queen Mary Reservoir, a.k.a. London, England)- The
Royal Thames Yacht Club, in the heart of London’s West End, is bracing
itself to welcome an influx of sailors from across the world, all eager
to begin the competition to win the Cumberland Cup, the only
international yachting event to be held in the capital of the United
Kingdom. The Cumberland Cup is once again supported by the Royal Thames
YC’s corporate partner, Audemars Piguet (an exotic Swiss watch company).
Although only launched in 2008, the Cumberland Cup, now raced in J/80s,
has rapidly come to be regarded as the most important two-boat team
racing event in the World and, with the cream of the World’s yacht clubs
eager to compete, the Club has been forced to select the challengers on
a ‘first come, first served’ basis.
The eight confirmed teams for the 2012 event present a worthy sample of
the World’s best team racers: Eastern Yacht Club (Marblehead, MA), New
York YC (New York, NY & Newport, RI), Seawahnaka Corinthian YC (Long
Island, NY), Southern YC (New Orleans, LA near the French Quarter),
Royal Northern & Clyde YC (Scotland), Royal Perth YC (Perth, Western
Australia), Island Royals (a combined team from Royal London YC, Royal
Corinthian YC and Royal Yacht Squadron) and the Royal Thames YC
(somewhere near great shopping in downtown London on the Brompton Road
and a stone's throw from Hyde Park-- e.g. Knightsbridge!). The Event is a
four-day celebration of sailing, both ashore and afloat.
There is a full social program including a Reception at St James’s
Palace in the presence of the RTYC Commodore, HRH The Duke of York, and a
Regatta Dinner at the Royal Thames YC’s Clubhouse at 60 Knightsbridge
(Harrod's, by the way, is just around the corner).
Racing, which starts on Friday 11th May, with Thursday 10th scheduled as
a practice day, runs virtually non-stop with each two-boat team
competing against every other team. With such high quality sailing the
Cumberland Cup is very exciting and yet relatively easy for spectators
to understand – the winner in each case is the team that avoids having
the last boat across the line.
All the sailing will be taking place at the home of the RTYC J/80s, the
fabulous Queen Mary Reservoir. The fantastic shore-side premises ensure
visitors are able to have a great view of all the on the water action.
Please note the bookies present will place bets on every mark-rounding.
And, if RTYC isn't leading, the House of Lords will undoubtedly be in
revolt!
The artifact for which the Royal Thames Cumberland Cup international
yacht club contest is raced has an iconic significance not just within
the Club itself, but in the wider context of the sport we now call
"yacht racing". The name "Cumberland" is central to the whole history
and, indeed, very existence of what today is called the Royal Thames
Yacht Club. In 1775 Henry, Duke of Cumberland, who was both the brother
of the King (George III) and himself a keen sailor gathered together the
gentlemen yachtsmen who had been sailing and occasionally racing on the
River Thames since half-way through the Previous Century and bade them
to organise a race for which HE would Give a Cup. This was the very
first Cumberland Cup, sailed for on July 13th 1775, and in honor of the
occasion the gathering of yachts was called the "Cumberland Fleet".
For humble "Colonialists" in America, please note this was a good YEAR
before George W The First took his rowboat across Delaware River to
declare victory over the "taxation without representation" zealots.
At the time of that regatta, there was no organization in the country –
nor indeed so far as we know in the World – engaged in the organization
of regular yacht racing. There had been earlier races and indeed earlier
gatherings of yachtsmen – the Water Club of Cork and its "maneuvers"
being the best known - but by 1775 they had come and gone. After that
July 1775 Regatta, the yachtsmen who had formed the Cumberland Fleet met
in a coffee room in London and formed what they called "The Cumberland
Sailing Society". That society still exists, known today by its more
modern name of Royal Thames Yacht Club and each year in June at their
Annual Regatta (in Cowes, IOW, of course), they hold the Cumberland
Sailing Society dinner.
Each year after 1775 The Duke gave another cup – always until 1786 known
as the "Cumberland Cup"– to be raced for by the Cumberland Fleet. After
1786 the Cups had varying names but the Cumberland Sailing Society
continued, changing its name very briefly in 1823 to the Coronation
Society before becoming, just a few months later, the Thames Yacht Club.
The 1781 Cup was originally made by London's famous silversmiths
Garrard's. MUCH later, the Garrard silversmiths were the makers of the
rather LATER America's Cup- an old piece of silver known as the 100
Guinea Cup). Silver-gilt, and topped by a figure of a sailor holding a
scroll bearing the names of the winning yachts of all the previous
cups--- the Cumberland Cup has just a "bit of history"- you can read
more about it here (cool stuff if you like sailing & yachting
history)!
For more Royal Thames YC Cumberland Cup sailing information