Cowes Week

Cowes Week
A Cowes Week race in 2003
Regatta off Cowes in 1875
Cowes Parade in Cowes Week 2007

Cowes Week is one of the longest-running regular regattas in the world. With 40 daily races, up to 1,000 boats, and 8,500 competitors ranging from Olympic and world class professionals to weekend sailors, it is the largest sailing regatta of its kind in the world. Having started in 1826, the event is held on the Solent (the area of water between southern England and the Isle of Wight made tricky by strong double tides), and is run by Cowes Week Limited in the small town of Cowes on the Isle of Wight.

Contents

Description

Cowes Week is held at the beginning of August, set after Glorious Goodwood in the social calendar, which in most years means, from the first Saturday after the last Tuesday in July, until the following Saturday. It is occasionally moved to another week if the state of the tides in the normal week is unfavourable or, as in 2012, to avoid a clash with the Olympic Games. The regatta is famous for its fireworks on the final Friday.

A typical Cowes Week now has over thirty-five starts a day for classes of cruiser-racers, one designs and keelboats; over a thousand boats and 8500 competitors take part. During this time the Solent, which is a busy commercial waterway, is filled with boats of all classes and is particularly colourful due to the spinnakers (the large rounded sail hoisted at the front of a yacht when running downwind). The different classes of boats are split into either White Group (dayboats) and Black Group (larger boats with cabins).

As well as the sailing activities, the week includes a large number of onshore events including live music and cocktail parties. Marquees are erected in the marinas serving food and drink, and the crowds overflow from busy public houses and restaurants around the narrow high street - the town becomes a hive of activity into the early hours of each morning. Around 100,000 visitors are attracted to Cowes by the festival atmosphere of the event each year in addition to all the competitors.

The title sponsor of the regatta is currently Aberdeen Asset Management which means that until at least the 2013 event, its official title is Aberdeen Asset Management Cowes Week.

History

The festival originates from the Prince Regent's interest in yachting which continued after he became George IV in 1820. The first race started at 09:30 on Thursday the 10th August 1826 with the prize of a "Gold Cup of the value of £100" and was held under the flag of the Royal Yacht Club, which later became the Royal Yacht Squadron. Another race was held the next day for prize money only (£30 for first place, £20 for second).

Until World War I, big cutters and raters were raced by gentlemen amateurs employing skippers and crew. In the twenties and thirties there were cruiser handicap classes and local one-designs (although the six to eight and twelve metre classes attracted the most racing interest). Following World War II, when there was a revival of big yacht racing, ocean racing classes started to predominate, especially after the first Admiral's Cup event was held in 1957 and the growth in popularity of the two ocean-going races that start and finish the regatta The Channel and the Fastnet. The Fastnet, which rounds the Fastnet rock far out in the Atlantic and can be dangerous, is held in odd-numbered years only.

In the decades following World War II, yachting moved away from its image as a rich man's sport to one which is enjoyed by many today in modest self-skippered 30 to 40 foot yachts. The attraction of Cowes Week has also given life to many water-based activities and sailing schools promoting the sport of sailing to all age groups and walks of life. Although certain functions in the week are still the preserve of the elite or members-only clubs, Cowes Week encompasses a wide range of events and attractions open to the public, marketed to a very diverse range of interests.

Traditionally at the end of the Cowes Week event, a fireworks display is held. This has occurred for more than 150 years. In recent years contributions to the funding of the display have been requested by the community who enjoy and benefit from it and a significant contribution has been made by Cowes Week Limited. If everyone who enjoys the display contributes just £1 towards it, the fireworks would easily have sufficient funding.


Major trophies

The Queen's Cup was presented to the Royal Southampton Yacht Club by Queen Victoria in 1897, her Diamond Jubilee year.

Eleven boats entered the first Queen's Cup race on 9 August 1897. It was won by Latana, a 165-ton yawl owned by Mr W M Johnstone, by far the biggest boat in the race. The Cup was subsequently raced for on the opening day of Cowes Week but, shortly after the turn of the century, it was mysteriously lost. Re-discovered in 1937 in a second-hand shop in Cardiff by a club member, Captain "Jonah" Jones, the Cup was bought back for the princely sum of £35.

The Queen's Cup has traditionally been awarded by the R.S.Y.C. to the IRC Class 0 winner racing on the first Saturday of the event.


In 1950, Sir Peter Scott suggested to King George VI that larger yachts should compete for a new trophy as it was felt that the America's Cup could not be restarted after the war. It was time for another competition of international significance to be introduced. King George was in favour and presented a trophy to the Royal Yachting Association, naming it the The Britannia Cup. It certainly acted as a stimulus to big boat racing after the war. This competition also gave points towards the Admiral's Cup.

The Britannia Cup was first won in 1951 by Taisser IV and Group Captain R J S Barton.

The Britannia Cup is awarded to the winner of the class nominated by the Royal Yacht Squadron on the Tuesday of the event, this is usually IRC Class 0 or IRC Class 1.


The New York Yacht Club Challenge Cup was presented by the New York Yacht Club in 1951 on the 100th Anniversary of America's victory which led to the commencement of the America's Cup. It was presented to the Royal Yacht Squadron for races during Cowes Week Class 1. In 1957, with the advent of the Admiral's Cup, points won in this race counted towards the Admiral's Cup. In some ways the Admiral's Cup was an extension of the N.Y.Y.C. Cup in that Miles Wyatt and four friends presented this overall trophy to encourage overseas yachts to race at Cowes. Latifa, owned by Michael Mason, first won the Cup in 1951.

The New York Yacht Club Challenge Cup is awarded to the winner of the class nominated by the Royal Yacht Squadron on the Wednesday of the event, this is usually IRC Class 0 or IRC Class 1.


The Young Skipper's Trophy is awarded to the Skipper, aged under 25 on the Sunday immediately after the event, who achieves the best results over the course of the entire Week. The competition is open to young skippers across all classes. The Trophy was first presented by Skandia at the 1995 event and recognises the success of the yachtsmen and women of the future.


The overall winner of Aberdeen Asset Management Cowes Week is awarded with a special Scottish quaich Overall Winner Trophy, presented by Aberdeen Asset Management in their first year of sponsorship in 2011.

The Overall Winner Trophy is awarded to the winner of either Black Group or White Group, determined by the overall winner on points.

References

External links


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Cowes Week —   [ kaʊz wiːk], Segeln: alljährliche Regattaveranstaltung vor Cowes mit Dreieckswettfahrten der Jollen und Kielboote sowie Hochseerennen (u. a. Admiral s Cup) …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Cowes Week — Eine Wettfahrt der Cowes Week (2003). Die Cowes Week ist eine Segelregatta, deren Wettfahrten seit 1826 jährlich im August auf dem Solent und rund um die Isle of Wight im Süden Englands ausgetragen werden. Gegenwärtig nehmen rund 1.000 Yachten… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Cowes Week — ➡ Cowes * * * …   Universalium

  • Cowes — an English holiday town and sailing centre on the Isle of Wight in the English Channel. Every year there is a ↑regatta (=series of boat races) there, known as Cowes Week …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • Cowes — This article is about the town on the Isle of Wight. For the town on Phillip Island, Australia, see Cowes, Victoria. Coordinates: 50°45′34″N 1°18′01″W / 50.7595°N 1.3002°W …   Wikipedia

  • Cowes — 50.762777777778 1.3008333333333 …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Cowes — /kowz/, n. a seaport on the Isle of Wight, in S England: resort. 18,895. * * * ▪ England, United Kingdom       town at the northern extremity of the Isle of Wight (Wight, Isle of), historic county of Hampshire, England, 11 miles (18 km) south of… …   Universalium

  • West Cowes — DEC …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Beken of Cowes — Als Beken of Cowes bezeichnet sich eine Familie von Fotografen aus der britischen Stadt Cowes, deren Mitglieder seit 1888 Yachten fotografieren und einen neuen Stil der Yachtfotografie prägten. Anfang der 1970er gründeten die Familienmitglieder… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • HMY Britannia (1893) — Takelung: 1 Mast Rennkutter Segelklasse Big Class …   Deutsch Wikipedia

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