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Don White wrote:
The Americas Cup grew to be considered a 'sissy race' by 1919. As a matter of fact, when the race was called because of a 'twenty-three mile an hour gale', real fishermen/racers started competing for the Fisherman's trophy. see http://www.histori.ca/minutes/minute.do?ID=10213 That's funny, considered a sissy race by those who couldn't win it? The fact is that advances in technology made sloops faster than schooners by the middle 1890s. But the schooner rig remained the dominant rig for working vessels. We forget that sailboats were the 18-wheel trucks of the pre WW1 economy. Literally hundreds of them crowded every waterfront of every sizeable town in the U.S. and Canada. No wonder that the schooner races were a matter of big interest... and no wonder that schooners came to be looked down on as "blue collar" type boats by the super wealthy who could afford to play in the America's Cup. There were a number of fast American schooners, mostly from New England.... mostly from Gloucester Mass in fact... a few of which may have been as fast... but none of them managed to put together a racing crew capable of beating the Bluenose. Her captain (Angus Mc-something IIRC) was a master racing skipper, an unusual skill among blue-collar cargo & fishing sailormen. Fresh Breezes- Doug King |