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Grand Lake Yacht Club
One of the World's Highest at an Elevation of 8.369 ft
By
Joe Kelley
Grand County, Colorado
enjoys its share of unique features. Surrounded by dramatic, snow-covered
peaks, the high mountain valley remains isolated by modern standards.
It often attracts adventurous spirits who prefer its splendid isolation
to Wal-Mart and fast food. Others, who never make the leap of faith to
live here, enjoy it as a familiar playground, returning regularly to enjoy
its vast mountain ranges and unlimited outdoor opportunities.
Within this county
of extreme temperatures, extreme altitudes and extreme geographic variation,
lives a population as unique as the landscape itself. They range from
the highly educated who accept less financial opportunities for a backyard
full of outdoor adventure,
to well-to-do retirees who can now actually afford to be ski bums, and
the remaining ranch families with generations of heritage in Grand County.
And those broad categories don't begin to cover the real diversity of
the people in this physically large yet demographically small place. After
living here long enough, though, Grand Countians become accustomed to
the surprising talents and interests that pervade the community, and have
for generations.
Of course, surprises still pop up! Like when a casual conversation about
motorcycles with the local optometrist during a routine exam reveals that
he builds some of the fastest vintage race bikes in the nation. Or when
you find out that one of the first year-round residents of Grand Lake
back in the 1870s produced a little boy named Alexander Phimister
Proctor, who became America's greatest wildlife sculptor in the early
20th century and credited his success to early experiences in the rough
and raw environment of his boyhood home in Grand County. And while these
may seem like the ingredients that make up many a small town in America,
it has to come as a surprise to learn that Grand Lake, Colorado
nestled next the Continental Divide at over 8,300 feet elevation
has a 102- year-old yacht club!
When this adventure
began, back in 1902, there was only a stage road into the southeast corner
of Grand County over Berthoud Pass. Grand Lake is situated next to the
entrance of Rocky Mountain National Park, at the far northeast corner
of the county, with the rugged backbone of the continent directly to the
north and east. At the turn of the twentieth century, it was a summer
vacation spot with few full-time residents. Summer visitors and full-time
residents alike recognized the grandeur of the their surroundings, and
Grand Lake very early became a summer home to many of Denver's elite,
and the summer business they brought helped support the local economy.
It was a few enthusiastic
Denverites with a keen interest in Grand Lake and sailing who organized
the Grand Lake Yacht Club over 100 years ago. The founders included Richard
Crawford Campbell, who married Senator Thomas Patterson's daughter and
became the business manager of his father's newspaper, the Rocky Mountain
News; William Henry Bryant, a Denver lawyer who was active in both sailing
and Colorado politics; J. Fermor Spencer, a close friend of Mr. Bryant
and long-time treasurer of the club; and William Bayard Craig, who enjoyed
a broad education and had been the Chancellor of Duke University before
he became interested in acquiring land in Colorado. By the
end of 1902, according to Denver papers, the first bona fide yacht
club between the Mississippi river and the Pacific ocean was in
operation.
An atmosphere of excitement
and pageantry swept over Grand Lake during the early Regatta weeks, when
the Yacht Club held its annual races. In Denver, The Friday Evening Times
proclaimed during August of 1904, Yachting season is here,
and went on to describe the enthusiastic cottagers gathered on shore
around Grand Lake to cheer for the yachts. In 1907, Regatta week included
yacht racing as well as foot races, donkey races and bronco busting. When
the yacht races ended, the boat captain who won the most races had earned
the Colorado Cup.
The Grand Lake Yacht Club's small sailing fleet during Regatta week
three days of racing during mid-August sometimes included only
a handful of boats during its first decade or so. Still, according to
one observer, the organization has more spirit to the square foot
than I ever saw exhibited before. Races on the first day of Regatta
week, 1905, illustrate the enthusiasm well. In the hotly contested first
race of Regatta week, Robert Campbell's Highball, built in Racine, Wisconsin,
tossed her two-man crew into the icy waters of Grand Lake when she capsized
while running in second place. Shortly after, the third place yacht, Duchess,
went over too, leaving the Chicago-built Dorothy II captained by Commodore
Bryant the first and only boat to cross the home buoy.
Today, Dorothy O'Donnell
O'Ryan, Commodore Bryant's granddaughter, maintains her family's summer
home in Grand Lake. In 2002, she published Sailing Above the Clouds: An
Early History of the Grand Lake Yacht Club, which chronicles the club's
first 50 years. Her Colorado roots go back to Colorado territory's last,
and the state of Colorado's first Governor, John Long Routt, who was appointed
by President Grant in 1875, the year before Colorado became a state. Knowing
the early history as she does, and the difficulties inherit with Mountain
transportation, O'Ryan marvels at the logistics of bringing
sailboats built in Racine, Wisconsin or Chicago, Illinois over the Continental
Divide into Grand County, Colorado by rail and stage road.
Home-built crafts,
both crude and highly crafted, competed as well. Many of the first home-built
boats were modified rowboats, with homemade sails and masts.
Observing the annual Regatta week in August of 1904, though, Arthur Johnson
called attention to the Jessica, a 16-foot boat belonging to the
vice-commodore and built at Grand Lake that sported a sail
that would have done credit to a venturesome Lipton on the high seas.
If a sailboat in Grand
Lake during 1904 done credit to a venturesome Lipton, Sir
Thomas Lipton himself returned the favor tenfold in 1912. It so happened
in 1912 that Lipton was traveling by train across the United States and
would pass through Denver on his journey. Probably, Sir Thomas had met
the well-traveled and enthusiastic yachtsman, William H. Bryant (Grand
Lake Yacht Club Commodore) at the New York Yacht Club. Continued correspondence
between the two resulted in the Grand Lake Yacht Club inviting Sir Thomas
to the Denver Club for dinner in December of 1912, sponsored, of course,
by the Grand Lake Yacht Club. Before he left that evening, flattered by
the warm welcome he received, Lipton had proffered a silver cup to the
Grand Lake Yacht Club.
Lipton became a yachting
icon during the early 20th century. His sportsmanship was nearly unparalleled
in the sport and he spent most of 30 years and millions of dollars trying
to win the America's Cup. Thoroughly devoted to yachting as a sport and
highly capable in the art of advertising, Lipton spread his Lipton Cups
around the globe to promote the sport and himself. His gift
to the Grand Lake Yacht Club energized the young organization.
Today, the boathouse
of the Grand Lake Yacht Club still reminds visitors and members of the
organization's heritage. Built in 1912 by Grand County pioneer Preston
Smith on land donated by fellow pioneer Jake Pettingell, the lakefront
log structure sits in the midst of magnificent mountain scenery, with
the dramatic peaks of the Continental Divide to the west and north and
the Never Summer mountain range to the west.
On a clear summer day, bright white sails glisten on the lake. As the
club matured, it began to offer more races to more members and guests
throughout the summer season. The original Regatta week still exists as
the most important, and festive, event. Races were added, though, in 1912
with the Adams Cup; in 1914, the Lipton Cup was incorporated; in 1923,
the inventor of the Sunshine Lamp (which Coleman Lanterns later bought
out) presented the Hoffstot Cup; and in 1925, Dorothy Bryant O'Donnell
offered the Bryant Cup in honor of the late first Commodore, W. H. Bryant.
Well over 20 cups or trophies now highlight the Grand Lake Yacht Club's
season.
The Grand Lake Yacht
Club is no longer such a novelty. Getting sailboats over the mountains
to Grand Lake is easier, Colorado's land-locked sailors and yachtsmen
flock to the lake during summer, and Rocky Mountain National Park next
door to Grand Lake draws thousands of new visitors each year. After more
than 100 years, the Grand Lake Yacht Club blends perfectly into the rustic
town of Grand Lake.
In fact, from its early beginnings with four members and then eight members
to its status today as part of Grand Lake's rich heritage, the Grand Lake
Yacht Club has gone from novelty to tradition. Throughout its evolution,
though, the Club has remained as unique as the dramatic physical environment
that surrounds it and the people who envisioned and created it.
From the 2006 Alpenglow
Online Magazine - return to GLYC History page
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