imageAMERICA'S CUP
1851-1937

   "If we can fly today in the San Francisco Bay, this is because there have been "adventurers" like Walter Greene and Mike Birch.
   To understand the future, we must know and respect the past."

Loïck PEYRON (Voiles et Voiliers July 2014)

Sycamore, Capt. Edward Isaac (1855-1930) USA

Category: SKIPPERS & CREWS

EdSycamoreVTHE ILLUSTRATED LONDON NEWS, OCT 3, 1901 (races not finished)

Captain Sycamore and Captain Barr are emphatically men of the day and men of the week, though they may have no mention as yet in “Men of the Times.” Their names have gradually displaced, on the popular tongue, the names of Shamrock II and of Columbia, and we have had a duel in New York waters ...

...less perhaps between shipbuilders or designers than between skippers. “Captain Sycamore was ahead here” or “Captain Barr led there” was the common vocabulary of the most minutely reported yacht race ever yet sailed. Captain Sycamore has the credit of being not only an excellent captain, but also a Scotsman, and one who had municipal activities ashore before he took to the sea. The fact that Captain Barr is himself the bearer of a name well-known north of the Tweed seems to indicate that the parties to the race have decided that it is well to set a Scot to sail a Scot. The position has this pretty solution, that, whether Captain Sycamore or Captain Bar had to lose, it was Scotland that must win.

Lieutenant Edward Isaac Sycamore, RNVR

By Commander David Frost Royal Navy.

Captain Sycamore, my great grandfather, was born on 24 August 1855 in Chelmsford, the main town in Essex County.
Syc, as he was usually known, had no formal qualifications of any sort and, as he started work as a fisherman at the age of 12, he wouldn’t have had much education. His mother died when he was six and his father abandoned the family, so Syc was brought up by his maternal grandparents. Aged seven he was paid 3d per day to work on his grandfather’s farm.

He started in yachting with the Marquis of Ailsa in 1875 and was launched on a career that was to make him one of the world’s best known racing yacht skippers between 1890 and 1929. His career included two America’s Cups and lengthy spells in charge of Sir Thomas Lipton’s 23 metre Shamrock.

Syc1
He also skippered the 19 metre Mariquita for A K Stothert. She was rebuilt a few years ago and I had the pleasure of a sail in her in the Solent.

Among the owners for whom he worked in the 1890s was Rear Admiral the Hon. Victor Montague, he of the eponymous whaler, which will be familiar to many older Naval members. Syc was poached by Lord Dunraven as skipper for the America’s Cup challenge of 1895. He evidently parted from Montague on good terms as the latter presented him with a silver watch. Also in my possession is an engraved stop watch he was given by Admiral Lord Charles Beresford, then CinC Channel Fleet. I have recently inherited all Syc’s papers from 1880-1930. There’s even correspondence about prize money which I didn’t realise was still payable during the First World War.

Syc’s early wartime experiences were unfortunate. In 1914 he had command of the German-owned 15 metre Isabel Alexander. Along with the Kaiser’s yacht Meteor they were being towed by a torpedo boat to England for Cowes week when war broke out. Towed back to Germany he and his crew were interned for a short while before being repatriated via Denmark. Such generosity of spirit may have been due to him being well known to the Kaiser, whose yacht he regularly beat.

Sacred Cowes reports his appearance before the Admiralty Interview Board thus: “What,” asked their Lordships, “do you know about navigation?” “I guarantee to take any vessel you like to give me from Dover to Rosyth in thick weather quicker than any of you gentlemen sitting round the table,” Sycamore told them, with such conviction that they gave him a commission.
Syc2

The survival of ML logs is patchy and there are none for ML350 or his later command ML5 for the period he was in them. That for ML350 for the three months prior to his joining reveals the ship was on mundane patrols in the Irish Sea. She later operated from the seaplane base at Newlyn, and ML5 spent most of her time at Dundee.

Syc became a Captain RFA on 1 April 1918 and was not demobbed until 13 September 1919, by which time he was well past his 64th birthday. He resumed his yachting career and was still skipper of Shamrock on his 74th birthday in 1929. He died on 9 April 1930. My great grandmother survived him by 32 years and lived long enough to receive a telegram from the Queen.

USEFUL LINKS

Four candidates for one place

The four candidates for the honor of defending the cup met for the first time on the New York Yacht Club cruise. Little definite was learned here of their relative speed, owing to a succession of light, baffling winds, with fog, while on the first day of the cruise. 

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A painting of the Puritan, which hangs in the dining room on the Eastern Yacht ClubTHE YANKEE OUTFOOTS THE GENESTA AND BEATS HER AT EVERY POINT

Copyright © The New York Times : Published: September 15, 1885
Capt. Jake Schmidt's sloop yacht Alice, resplendent with bunting, was anchored off 0wl’s Head as the stakeboat, and the Luckenbach, having sounded the call to the line at 10:10 o'clock, was dropped anchor about 300 yards due west of her.

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AMERICA'S CUP STAYS HERE
RESOLUTE WINS BY A MILE

TIME LIMIT ALMOST GONE AS DEFENDER CROSSES LINE

WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1920 - When Resolute and Shamrock IV started making ready in Sandy Hook Bay for the fifth and ...

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VIGILANTX3D

X3D is an open standard for 3D content delivery. It is not a programming API, nor just a file format for geometry interchange.

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ColoniaV2In 1893,the New York yachtsmen went to Herreshoff with orders for two cup-defence vessels, and he produced Vigilant, centre-board, and Colonia, a keel boat.
Colonia was owned by a syndicate composed of Archibald Rogers, Frederick W. Vanderbilt, William K. Vanderbilt, F. Augustus Schermerhorn, J. Pierpont Morgan, and John E. Brooks.

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NicholsonCEVIn the 1890s, with the arrival of Ben Nicholsons three sons to the firm Camper and Nicholson, a final name change was made to Camper and Nicholsons. Middle son, Charles Ernest Nicholson, emerged as the consummate yacht designer, able to combine elegance with speed and seamanship.
Nicholson’s first design of note was the Redwing class, designed for the Bembridge Sailing Club as a single-hander, to replace the expensive half racers...

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OMalleyKJVJulia O’Malley-Keyes resides in Falmouth, Massachusetts, where she lives and paints in her studio. Her affinity for the ocean is reflected in her luminous coastal landscapes, seascapes, and paintings of classic yachts including the “Big J’s”, Endeavour, Endeavour II, Shamrock V, Velsheda, and Ranger.

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HoltEV Edward Holt was born in Bradford, Yorkshire, UK in 1949. Totally self trained, he began painting as a hobby later in life. His work has attracted much attention and to date he has enjoyed five major exhibitions and many commissions. His paintings form part of many collections of marine art around the world.

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