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History
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A Brief History of the Georgia Tech Sailing Club
In 1961, a group of Tech students got together to form the Georgia
Tech Sailing
Club. They had the common goals of wanting to continue their hobby
of sailing
while at scholl and to interest others in the sport. Many of the
early members
were avid racers and competed locally on a regular basis. About
the same time that
GTSC formed, the Lake Lanier Sailing Club was formed. LLSC was
dedicated to
promote one design racing in the Atlanta area, and helped the
Tech club immensely
in the first few years.
The sailing club's first years were busy and productive ones.
The club was
instrumental in forming SEISA, the Southeastern Intercollegiate
Sailing Association
[SEISA was the forerunner of the current SAISA], and was very
active in local
collegiate racing. Tech hosted her first regatta at Lake Lanier
with the help of
LLSC. The race was held in borrowed Thistles, and the racing team
took a third
place. The club realized that they needed their own fleet of boats
in order to
regularly host regattas, as well as for practices and just plain
sailing. When
Notre Dame put their fleet of Flying Dutchman Juniors up for sale,
the club jumped
at the opportunity. The club had no cash reserves, so they borrowed
the $3000 that
was needed.
GTSC enjoyed a period of propserity, racing against local schools
and occassionally
travelling to others. The club started the tradition of the Bahamas
cruise in the
summer of 1963. Needless to say, this tradition has continued
into the present.
Membership reached a high of 60. Unfortunately, membership began
to drop off and
the financial reserves were drained by the monthly payments on
the loan. Dues had
to be raised from $5 per quarter to $10. Membership dropped alarmingly
and hit a
low of 8. There was no money available for improvements on the
boats, and they
fell into disrepair. The club was even forced to drop out of SEISA
for lack of
funds.
In the spring of 1966, things began to look better. Several of
the members took it
into their own hands (and Pockets) to repair the Flying Juniors
and recruit new
members. The club petitioned to rejoin SEISA and began once again
to compete
intercollegiately. During this time, the club became part of the
Tech YMCA, an
organization which has supported the club ever since.
By 1973, the Flying Juniors had gotten very old and were constantly
in need of
repair. The club looked into many new boats, and decided on a
fleet of Banshees.
They used these boats for regattas until 1976. As far as boat
acquisitions go,
1976 was an auspicious year for the club. Not only did a generous
alumnus donate a
fleet of six Ghost 13's, but the club was given The Goose. The
Goose, a 15 ft.
Feathercraft launch, served as committee boat and runabout for
the club regattas
until it was laid to rest in the winter of 1985. In 1980, the
club purchased its
current fleet of Coronado 15's. Various boats have been acquired
since then, and the
club holdings now include a Hobie 16, 2 Force 5's, a Laser, and
an ex-Marine Patrol
powerboat.
Through it's existence, the club has had trouble with finding
places to meet and
store equipment and boats. The club eventually reached an agreement
with LLSC
allowing boats to be kept in an area near the boat ramps. After
joining with the
YMCA, most of the equipment was stored in the old YMCS building.
The Y was not,
however, an ideal location, and over a break most of the club's
equipment (sails,
life jackets, etc.) was stolen. This left the club sorely needing
a safe storage
place. The club also lacked a place to repair boats. Many boats
suffered even
more damage due to weather while a place was being found to fix
them. Meetings
were at this time being held in the Student Center, and everyone
agreed it would be
better to meet as well as work in the same place. After much searching
and working
with the administration, the sailing club was allowed to occupy
the downstairs of
the Drama Tech building (formerly the Church of God). Burdell's
Basement, as it
used to be known, has proven an ideal location. There is plenty
of room inside for
storage, working on boats, and meetings. Outside is the impound
lot where the club
is permitted to keep boats while they are at Tech for repairs.
The building is,
unfortunately, condemned.
In recent years, the club has become especially active, acquiring
newer and better
boats and getting rid of older ones. Right now the club is looking
into purchasing
a fleet of sailboards. Membership is high and expected to get
higher. The club is
looking to rent a house near Tech for meetings, parties, and overnight
housing for
regattas. The club is continuing the tradition of Bahamas cruises
and island
parties. The racing team has done extremely well, winning SAISA
for the first time
ever this year. The club is prospering and is working hard to
keep things going
well.
A Brief Update on the History of the Georgia Tech Sailing Club
July 18th, 2000 - Justin Preyer (Commodore '98 - '99)
Well, some information in the Brief History of the Georgia Tech
Sailing Club
is outdated. First and foremost, Burdell's Basement was condemned
and
finally demolished in spring of 1992. This obviously necessitated
the
move of all the club's equipment and meetings. A house on Tenth
St. on
campus was provided for all the watersports at Tech to store equipment.
This became known as the Watersports Clubhouse since it was home
for the
scuba club, the crew team, the waterski club, as well as the sailing
club. This proved to be a wonderful place to hold meetings as
well as
store whatever equipment the club had. It even has a large parking
lot
little known to people on campus where the waterski club and sailing
club
store boats and trailers. However, like the YMCA, it has not proven
impervious to breakins. Luckily, those who try to rob this house
are of
a more stupid nature and seem to never take anything of value.
Regretably, this house is also condemned (notice a trend here
in what
Tech provides) and awaiting the purchase of other houses so that
Tech can
convert the block into another large research building.
Also, the fleet of Coronado 15's mentioned in the Brief History
were sold
to the Lanier Sailing Academy in the late 1980's. In 1990, with
help in
funding from the Student Government Association and the sale of
the old
Coronado 15's, GTSC purchased a new fleet of Coronado 15's. As
of 2000,
these boats are doing great and have proved to be the ideal college
sailing club workhorses. They are the boats that we provide instruction
on and are used for most of the general cruising in small boats.
Also,
their is a very active southeastern fleet of Coronado C15's that
GTSC
members have raced with for many years.
Throughout the 1990's, GTSC concentrated efforts on creating fleets
of
boats maintained by the club. Through the late 1980's and 1990's,
the
club acquired various used Hobie 16's and a Hobie 18. The club
also
purchased 4 new lasers to go with Buzz, the affectionately named
beat-to-hell Laser that the club has owned for at least 15-20
years of
hard life. Also, in the late 1980's, the club was able to purchase
a
fleet of four Mistral windsurfers. The club has maintained these
four
fleets as the primary small boats of the club throughout the 1990's.
The
club has also owned various keelboats stored at Aqualand through
the
years. The main two keelboats as of 2000 are a C&C 25 donated
in the
mid-80's and a J/24 purchased used in 1997. Other keelboats have
been
owned by the club over the years and sold. These include a Soling,
a
Santana 20, an American, a San Juan 24, and a Spirit 23.
It seems that Mother Nature is not always a fan of our sailing
club. In
1994, Hurricane Opal turned a Hobie 16 the club owned, that permanently
resided in Ft. Walton, into a few pieces. Also, in the spring
of 1999,
a tornado in downtown Atlanta dropped a tree along the parking
lot of the
Watersports Clubhouse. This impressive sized tree shattered a
Hobie 16
in the parking lot, as well as two Mistral windsurfers on a trailer.
Luckily, later that spring, Student Government allocated money
for the
purchase of a new Hobie 16 and 4 new Mistral windsurfers. These
purchases revitalized these two fleets and more than made up for
Mother
Nature.
Between the C&C 25, the J/24, the Coronado 15 fleet, the Hobie
16 fleet,
the Laser fleet, and the fleet of Mistral windsurfers, the club
has
current fleets in better shape and more numerous than ever before.
The club is thriving in numbers with membership peaking around
75 people
per semester (Tech converted to semesters in the fall of 1999).
Dues
were raised in the 1999-2000 year to $40 per semester from $30
per
quarter of the year before. The club is in good financial situation
with
all the fleets in good repair and well-maintained and great membership
numbers. GTSC is currently the largest student club at Georgia
Tech.
In the 1998-1999 school year, GTSC helped both Emory University
and the
University (sic) of Georgia start sailing programs. Emory currently
sails out of the Atlanta Yacht Club on Lake Allatoona and UGA
sails out
of Lake Lanier Sailing Club as well as GTSC. Our agreement with
LLSC has
been modified to include no special provisions for GTSC beyond
our normal
student memberships (held at 10 for decades) and dry slip space
(10 dry
slips for an equally long time). Ultimately, there has been rocky
times
between LLSC and GTSC over the years. The tradition of island
parties
had to be discontinued in the mid-80's due to a large fall-out
with the
Department of Natural Resources and LLSC over the "illegal" island
parties.
Other traditions have been maintained as much as possible. The
Bahamas
cruise tradition was dormant for the early 1990's, but was reborn
in the
late 1990's. Also, the club has continued to tow boats down to
the
Leeside Inn in Ft. Walton Beach, FL for three Florida Trips a
year. The
club tows all the Hobie 16's, windsurfers, and Buzz down to Ft.
Walton
for wonderful party trips. These trips have grown into large parties
of
30 or so people. A Florida Trip tradition is a shrimp boil on
the beach
for the Saturday night dinner. Also, since Florida trips do not
happen
in the winter, the club organizes a Ski Trip each year to Snowshoe,
West
Virginia. This tradition has been going on for a decade and has
grown
into a huge trip (typically drawing around 30 people). Also, the
club
hosts club regattas throughout the year known as the Frigid Digit
in
winter, the Spring Fling in the spring, and the Summer Bummer
in the
summer. These are always competitive and fun regattas.
In terms of racing, GTSC petitioned the intercollegiate governing
body in
the 1980's to be included in SAISA instead of SEISA due to proximity
of
schools in which we race against. SEISA became mostly the southern
school
in Texas, Louisiana, and neighboring states, while SAISA consisted
of
Florida, Georgia, Tennessee, South Carolina, and North Carolina.
Georgia
Tech has typically competed in SAISA South versus the Florida
schools.
The intercollegiate racing has not attained the levels reached
in the mid
80's, but has raced competitively throughout the years. Also,
the club
has actively raced the keelboats, lasers, newest Hobie 16, and
Coronado
15's over the years with many great results. The club hosted the
Coronado 15's North American Championships with LLSC help in the
fall of
1998 and had members place 3rd and 5th in the competition.
Overall, things are looking great for the club. The membership
is truly
at its all-time high. The maintained fleets are in great shape.
The
racing is good and competitive. And of course, the parties are
great.
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