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Special Report: Rolex Fastnet Race

Hints of the Modern Invade Royal Yacht Squadron

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By Christopher Clarey

  • Aug. 14, 2015

COWES, England — At the Royal Yacht Squadron, they still wear black tie and toast the queen every Saturday night. They still fire the cannons from their battlements to start the Rolex Fastnet Race and scores of other races throughout the year.

But as it celebrates its 200th anniversary in 2015, the Squadron — as it is known in Britain and in much of the sailing world — is not quite the same club of old.

It remains seriously exclusive and thickly populated by royals: from Prince Philip, the now 94-year-old husband of Queen Elizabeth II, to Juan Carlos, the former king of Spain, to the Aga Khan.

Yet the Squadron elected its first three female full members this year, even if their names have yet to be released publicly. The club also has adopted a palpably more open approach to those who dwell outside Cowes Castle, the Squadron’s clubhouse on the Isle of Wight that was first used for defensive purposes when built by Henry VIII in 1539.

“I think we’re more relaxed about it all,” the club’s commodore, Christopher Sharples, said in a recent interview in the castle. “There used to be the feeling that you mustn’t put your head above the parapet or you’re certain to be shot. And I think they’ve got quite good parapets here.”

They do indeed, as well as a memorable, concentration-sharpening sign affixed to them: “Warning. Starting cannon may fire at any time.”

“I think there was a notion for quite a few years that the Squadron was a bunch of sort of pompous old guys together, very much the blue-blood, old-school type of thing,” said Mike Broughton, a British navigator and former British naval officer. “To be honest, I think over the last 10 years in particular, they’ve worked hard to modernize and also to modernize in terms of professional racing. They’ve modernized their racing management, which has been great to see actually, and they’ve worked hard to keep up with the times.”

That does not mean, however, that the time has come for an outsider with a profound love of the sea (and fancy dinners) to ring up the Squadron and ask to be emailed a membership application.

“The first thing to say about that is you get invited; you don’t apply,” Sharples said.

The club’s regular membership is now capped at 535, and there is a four-year waiting list. “There are also about 70 naval members who come in from a slightly different category,” Sharples said. “They come in through a side door and don’t have to queue up, and that’s because of our longstanding relationship with the Royal Navy.”

The club remains the only one whose member yachts are allowed to fly the white ensign of the Royal Navy.

The recent decision to add female members is part of a wave of similar moves by long-established British clubs: the Royal & Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews in Scotland elected its first female members in 2015 after 260 years of existence.

“I’m a firm believer that if a club wants to be a single-sex club only, it can be, but not if it’s connected to sport,” Sharples said. “I think if you have a social club in London, I liken it to bull elephants hanging around a watering hole. Well, nobody seems to mind about that do they? But if on the other hand you are connected to a sport where you have facilities that sportsmen use, it seems to me much better that you give equal opportunity to ladies to use and access those facilities.”

When the club was founded by 42 gentlemen in 1815 in a gathering at the Thatched House Tavern in London, prospective members were required to own a vessel of at least 10 tons.

Today, boat ownership — at any tonnage — is not a requirement. “You have to be somebody who is actively involved in sailing,” Sharples said. “If you have access to a boat or regularly sail on somebody’s boat, that’s fine.”

To become a candidate, one needs a proposer, a seconder and three other initial letters of support, plus eight additional letters: all of these from club members. Only then does one join the list with a chance to eventually face an election, which involves the full membership.

Avoid too many blackballs and you will join a club with a uniquely rich maritime history whose members and their boats played a role in both World Wars. The membership roll has included the Arctic polar explorers Robert Scott and Ernest Shackleton, a Russian czar, British kings, the round-the-world solo-sailing pioneers Francis Chichester and Robin Knox-Johnston, as well as Ben Ainslie, Britain’s biggest sailing star of the moment, who the club hopes can finally bring the America’s Cup back to the Squadron.

It left here in 1851 when the yacht America — owned by a syndicate of New York Yacht Club members — defeated a fleet of yachts representing the Squadron in a race around the Isle of Wight.

The Cup, a silver ewer, had been purchased for the competition by a Squadron member, Henry William Paget, First Marquess of Anglesey, who had had his right leg amputated after being wounded by one of the last cannon shots of the Battle of Waterloo in 1815.

Cowes Castle was Paget’s summer home, and it became the Squadron clubhouse after his death in 1854.

The cup purchased by Paget was eventually renamed the America’s Cup. Though the Australians at last managed to wrest it away from the New York Yacht Club in 1983 and yacht clubs from New Zealand and Switzerland have since won it, the British have yet to reclaim possession.

Ainslie, an honorary Squadron member and four-time Olympic gold medalist, helped Larry Ellison’s Oracle Team USA retain the trophy in 2013 by playing a major role in the epic comeback in San Francisco against Emirates Team New Zealand. But he is now head of his own team, Ben Ainslie Racing, which will represent the competitive arm of the Royal Yacht Squadron in the 2017 America’s Cup competition in Bermuda.

That will come in the final year of Sharples’s four-year term, which has already included the bicentennial celebration.

“I suppose my ultimate aim, if you like, is to help Ben bring the Cup back to this club before I step down,” Sharples said.

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MEMBER LOGIN

royal yacht squadron iowa

AMERICA'S CUP

On March 17th 2021, the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron, on behalf of the Defender Emirates Team New Zealand, accepted the Notice of Challenge for the 37th America’s Cup (AC37) from Royal Yacht Squadron Ltd and INEOS BRITANNIA (formerly INEOS TEAM UK) and were announced as the Challenger of Record for the 37th America’s Cup.  This will be the first British Challenger of Record to compete in the America’s Cup  since Tony Boyden’s Sovereign challenge in 1964.

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Gallery: the rooms, art and antiques of the Royal Yacht Squadron

  • Elaine Bunting
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This photo gallery shows what it's like behind the gates of the exclusive Royal Yacht Squadron, its dining and member's rooms, artefacts, paintings, even its wine cellar, with photos by Paul Wyeth

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The RYS is also very active in racing circles, has a youth programme and is the challenging yacht club for Ben Ainslie Racing’s British America’s Cup challenge. So although it may be steeped in history, the club keenly looks forward as well.

You can read more about the club, its traditions and history here.

But its closed gates continue to intigue those on the outside. Here, we take you inside, with scores of photos by Cowes-based marine photographer Paul Wyeth, of what is is really like in ‘the Castle’.

Royal Yacht Squadron

See more photos inside the RYS, and its collection of memorabilia, on the next pages…

  • 1. Introduction

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Flag Officers of the Royal Yacht Squadron

royal yacht squadron iowa

The Hon Sir James Holman

[email protected]

royal yacht squadron iowa

Vice Commodore

P l f french esq.

[email protected]

royal yacht squadron iowa

Rear Commodore Finance

Jeremy bennett esq.

[email protected]

royal yacht squadron iowa

Rear Commodore Yachting

B b huber esq.

[email protected]

Royal Yacht Squadron

The Castle, Cowes, Isle of Wight, P031 7QT

Tel: +44 (0) 1983 292 191

Photography

IMAGES

  1. Inside the Royal Yacht Squadron: a rare view

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  2. Inside the Royal Yacht Squadron: a rare view

    royal yacht squadron iowa

  3. Inside the Royal Yacht Squadron: a rare view

    royal yacht squadron iowa

  4. No more Mr Nice Guy!

    royal yacht squadron iowa

  5. Inside the Royal Yacht Squadron: a rare view

    royal yacht squadron iowa

  6. 18 facts about the Royal Yacht Squadron's colourful history

    royal yacht squadron iowa

COMMENTS

  1. Inside the Royal Yacht Squadron: a rare view

    Originally named The Yacht Club, it was founded on 1 June 1815 by a group of 42 gentleman yachting enthusiasts. Five years later, member King George IV conferred the Royal in the club's title ...

  2. Inside the Royal Yacht Squadron: a rare view

    Inside the Royal Yacht Squadron - we get a rare view of this most exclusive club. Belinda Bird; May 18, 2015. 0 shares. 0 shares.

  3. Royal Yacht Squadron

    The Royal Yacht Squadron (RYS) is a British yacht club.Its clubhouse is Cowes Castle on the Isle of Wight in the United Kingdom. Member yachts are given the suffix RYS to their names, and are permitted (with the appropriate warrant) to wear the White Ensign of the Royal Navy [1] rather than the merchant Red Ensign worn by the majority of other UK registered vessels.

  4. rys

    Royal Yacht Squadron. The Castle, Cowes, Isle of Wight, P031 7QT. Tel: +44 (0) 1983 292 191. Photography. Paul Wyeth ...

  5. rys

    The Club's association with the Royal Navy began early and Nelson's Captain at Trafalgar, Admiral Sir Thomas Hardy, was among early Honorary Naval members. 1825-1848. In 1826, the Club took to organising yacht racing as a principal feature of the annual regatta at Cowes. In 1828, the rule requiring a yacht on the port tack to give way to ...

  6. Inside the Royal Yacht Squadron: a rare view

    The Royal Yacht Squadron will be 200 years old on 1 June this year and in celebration the club has invited members of 25 clubs around the world for a week of racing from 25-31 July, ...

  7. List of Royal Yacht Squadron members

    The following is a list of the more notable members of the Royal Yacht Squadron with their years of birth. Henry Dutton (1910) [1] References. Debrett's People of Today, 2011 This page was last edited on 19 August 2024, at 05:11 (UTC). Text is ...

  8. Hints of the Modern Invade Royal Yacht Squadron

    By Christopher Clarey. Aug. 14, 2015. COWES, England — At the Royal Yacht Squadron, they still wear black tie and toast the queen every Saturday night. They still fire the cannons from their ...

  9. History

    In 1885 the New York Yacht Club would face their first challenge to win back the Cup from the Royal Yacht Squadron, it was the fifth challenge they faced to date and came from Sir Richard Sutton's Genesta. He lost 2-0. The RYS would not give up, however, and challenged the NYYC both in 1893 and 1895 again, this time through the Earl of Dunraven.

  10. PDF The Royal Yacht Squadron A short history

    tionship with the French wine merchants.The fast-evolving design of racing yachts led to improvements in ships for the Navy, and in 1835 the Club was named 'The Royal Yacht Squadron' by command of King William IV in 'gracious approval of an. stitution of such national utility'. In 1841 steam-powered yac.

  11. Royal Nova Scotia Yacht Squadron

    (902) 477-5653. 2372 Purcell's Cove Road, Halifax, NS, Canada, B3P 1C7

  12. RYS (@royalyachtsquadron) • Instagram photos and videos

    3,095 Followers, 188 Following, 123 Posts - RYS (@royalyachtsquadron) on Instagram: "Founded in 1815, the Royal Yacht Squadron is one of the most prestigious and exclusive yacht clubs in the world. #rys #cowes" Log into Instagram. Log in to see photos and videos from friends and discover other accounts you'll love. ...

  13. Royal Nova Scotia Yacht Squadron

    The Royal Nova Scotia Yacht Squadron is thrilled to announce that we'll be hosting the 2024 WASZP North American Championship from August 20-25. Don't miss out - register now for early bird pricing until July 20th! Early registration ensures correct sizing for the free rooster rash guard & hat provided. Find out about billeting and hotel ...

  14. Royal Yacht Squadron Racing

    On March 17th 2021, the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron, on behalf of the Defender Emirates Team New Zealand, accepted the Notice of Challenge for the 37th America's Cup (AC37) from Royal Yacht Squadron Ltd and INEOS BRITANNIA (formerly INEOS TEAM UK) and were announced as the Challenger of Record for the 37th America's Cup. This will be the first British Challenger of Record to compete ...

  15. Kiwis accept Royal Yacht Squadron's America's Cup challenge

    Published 9:25 PM PDT, March 18, 2021. Britain's Royal Yacht Squadron Racing has been confirmed as the Challenger of Record for the 37th America's Cup, meaning it will help determine the rules and location for the next edition of sailing's marquee regatta. The Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron made the announcement on Friday in Auckland.

  16. Photo gallery: inside the Royal Yacht Squadron

    This photo gallery shows what it's like behind the gates of the exclusive Royal Yacht Squadron, its dining and member's rooms, artefacts, paintings, even its wine cellar, with photos by Paul Wyeth

  17. rys

    Royal Yacht Squadron. The Castle, Cowes, Isle of Wight, P031 7QT. Tel: +44 (0) 1983 292 191

  18. Making waves: Inside the Royal Yacht Squadron at Cowes

    The Royal Yacht Squadron, founded at the Thatched House Tavern in London as The Yacht Club on June 1 1815, had 42 original members whose idea was to meet in London and at Cowes, on the Isle of ...

  19. RYS IOW Foundation

    Royal Yacht Squadron Maritime Careers Fair . Oceans of opportunity on land and sea. Duke of Edinburgh visit The RYS Foundation's mission is to promote opportunities in the marine industry for young people living on the Isle of Wight. Marine Engineer.

  20. rys

    Royal Yacht Squadron. The Castle, Cowes, Isle of Wight, P031 7QT. Tel: +44 (0) 1983 292 191

  21. About

    The Royal Yacht Squadron Isle of Wight Foundation is a registered charity founded in the Royal Yacht Squadron bi-centenary year 2015. WHAT IS THE MISSION OF THE RYS FOUNDATION? The RYS Foundation's mission is to work to raise aspiration of young people aged 15-29 living on the Isle of Wight, opening their minds to opportunities outside the ...

  22. rys

    The Castle has survived because the building has adjusted gracefully to new uses. The award-winning Pavilion on the Squadron lawn, designed by Sir Thomas Croft to resemble an orangery, was built in 2000. With the benefit of over 20 years of experience, it was re-modelled by a major alteration in 2022/23. Since then, the Haven was constructed in ...

  23. rys

    Royal Yacht Squadron. The Castle, Cowes, Isle of Wight, P031 7QT. Tel: +44 (0) 1983 292 191