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HISTORY OF SQUANTUM YACHT CLUB

Special Thanks to Hank Wessmann for the all the research that he put in to authoring this document.

First clubhouse on pilings (1906)

In the latter years of the nineteenth century, the enthusiasm for sailing among an increasing number of residents in the Greater Boston area had led to the establishment of several yacht clubs in Dorchester and Hingham Bays.In the late 1800’s the western shore of Quincy Bay was significantly different from today. The shore line consisted of large and small creeks which cut into what was mostly a marshland waterfront which flooded with the tide, much like the marshes that surround present day Squantum. There was no dredged channel although there was a small natural one in this area of marsh and mudflat and it was in this small natural channel where boats in Quincy Bay would be moored. In July of 1890 a small group of those who so moored their boats met and decided to form a yacht club named “North Quincy Yacht Club” for the residents of Wollaston, Atlantic, and Squantum. Initially the “North Quincy Yacht Club” consisted of twenty members but by August of 1890 the name was changed to the “Merrymount Yacht Club” to broaden the connotation of the range of the club. In 1891, with continued expansion of the membership of the club, the officers of the club began the search for shoreline property to be acquired for the erection of a clubhouse and boat landing facilities. In 1892 the club again changed its name, this time to the “Squantum Yacht Club of Atlantic” and simultaneously adopted the present design for the club burgee. In 1893, a waterfront building was leased by the club for the season but in April of 1893 the club purchased a 5,800 square foot lot with 116 feet of shoreline on Channing Street in Quincy. Also, in March of 1983 the “of Atlantic” part of the name was dropped and the club filed a charter with the Commonwealth. In 1894 the Squantum Yacht Club purchased the clubhouse of the then defunct Massasoit Canoe Club of South Boston, loaded it on to a large scow and towed it over to the Quincy shore line where it was then re-erected on the new club land. A 250’ long runway was also constructed and a large landing float was moored at its outer end. The float enabled landings on not much less than half tide for the membership which by 1895 had expanded to 96 and included 23 sailboats. From 1896 through 1903 the Squantum Yacht Club went through some tough times. The “Great Portland Storm” heavily damaged the club’s facilities. It is believed that a membership rift led to a splintering off of the membership who then formed “Wollaston Yacht Club”. Then in 1903 the club was forced to abandon its facility since it was in the path of the Commonwealth’s new Quincy Shore Drive. In taking the Squantum Yacht Club’s site, the Commonwealth gave the club permission to erect a new clubhouse on a piled wharf. Work was promptly started and in April of 1904 the attractive new facility was formally opened. In 1904 the Commonwealth dredged a channel and basin to the club and at long last the club finally became water accessible at all tides.

Postcard (1924)

In 1930, the 40th anniversary year of the club, a fire swept through the club and a total disaster was narrowly averted by the actions of one of the first firemen to reach the fire who was also a member of the club. The club membership responded accordingly by not only restoring the club but also improving it. During the 30’s Squantum Yacht Club’s sailing prowess was further established in metropolitan Boston by capturing the Lipton Cup Trophy in 1931, which was a trophy presented to the Massachusetts Bay Yacht Club Association by Sir Thomas Lipton, founder of Lipton Tea, to commemorate the 350th anniversary of Boston’s founding. Squantum Yacht Club presently is the “keeper” of this trophy and holds the highly regarded Lipton Cup regatta for sailing every summer. Squantum Yacht Club’s Junior Crew continued to bring regional acclaim to Quincy Bay by winning the Finley Trophy, a trophy emblematic of the junior championship of the South Shore Junior Racing Association, five times in this period. In 1938 Squantum Yacht Club played a leading role in helping to form the Quincy Bay Race Week Association whose week long regatta continues to the present. With the Second World War, the Squantum Yacht Club’s activities were again curtailed for the war effort and with many of its younger members in the service. As the war ended, membership was again on the rise and the “Hustler” class sailboat became the second class sailboat developed at Squantum.

Building Sabots upstairs (1954)

After fire (1930)

The “Hustler” quickly became a popular Quincy Bay boat and by 1952, 39 “Hustlers” sailed from Squantum Yacht Club. In 1952, the Yacht Racing Union of Massachusetts established the Benson Trophy for the Senior Men’s Championship, and it was won by one of Squantum’s better “Indian” and “Hustler” skippers, Jim Bonney. The popularity of Squantum’s sailing fleet extended to other non-Quincy Bay developed sailboats including the “Thistle”. In 1961, of the 33 interclub “Thistles”, 11 sailed from Squantum.

Ice damage to the clubhouse (1960)

In 1961 disaster again struck the Squantum Yacht Club’s piled facility. Quincy Bay had frozen over and a storm with strong easterly winds created sufficient ice pressure to snap off the pilings under the front of the clubhouse and its verandas causing them to collapse into the bay. But the members of the club rose to the occasion; cutting back approximately one third of the building to the ridge line, driving new piles, and reconstructing the building.

Clubhouse after repairs due to ice damage (1963)

Squantum Yacht Club strongly rebounded from the devastating disaster and this was particularly evident in its sailing. Squantum soon had the highest participation in the Mass Bay Yacht Racing Association Regatta. 1965 marked the Diamond Jubilee of the club and it hosted the National Championship regattas for “Tiger Cats”, “Thistles”, and “Day Sailors. Additionally, regattas included the indigenous “Indian” and “Hustler” class sailboats, as well as the newer boats including “210’s”, “420’s”, “Turnabouts”, and “Flying Scots”. In 1966 the Squantum skipper Jim Bonney, who had won the first Senior Men’s Championship of the Yacht Racing Union of Massachusetts in 1952, went to compete in the “Little America’s Cup” and in 1967 was awarded the “Unesco” award in Paris, France. Another Squantum “Indian” sailor, Lee Van Germet, crewed with Ted Hood in the America Cup trials and in 1975 he won the Newport to England Trans- Atlantic Race. 

​On Washington Birthday in 1976, Squantum Yacht Club suffered probably its biggest disaster when the clubhouse burned to the pile line. The fire boats were forced to retreat as the blaze burned as the tide receded due to the lack of dredging. The building was a total loss. The will of the membership to rebuild was unbroken even when it was determined that the pilings, which were hoped to be reused, were found to be unsuitable. But, plans were drawn up, new pilings were driven, the North Bennett Street Industrial School of Boston framed the shell of the new building for a training project for its students, members did the plumbing, electrical, sheet rocking, finish work and painting, while Wollaston Yacht club opened its doors as the temporary home to its brother members, and, on May 5, 1978 the building was dedicated at its annual opening night ceremony.The celebration of the reestablishment of the clubhouse was short-lived when in the winter of 1979 Quincy Bay froze over all the way out to Long Island. During one night again the winds blew hard from the East and the pilings again under the front deck were crushed. The ill timed disaster was particularly devastating to the club in that it had no funds as a result of the 76 fire but a member assessment was immediately approved, a piling contractor employed, and the members pitched in and did the carpentry. The work was completed in time for the opening night ceremony in May of 79.During the 1980’s the club continued to rebound. New floats were constructed, the junior sailing program which had been displaced by the rebuilding effort from the fire was reinstituted and strengthened, and the 2 day Lipton Cup regatta was organized and instituted. In 1988 Squantum Yacht Club was named “1988 Yacht Club of the Year” by the Yacht Racing Union of Massachusetts Bay. Also in 1988 Squantum Yacht Club gained national notoriety by having been awarded the “Yacht Club of the Year in One Design Racing” by the United States Yacht Racing Union.

In the period from the 1990’s to the present Squantum Yacht Club has continued its long and proud traditions. The Lipton Cup Regatta is the premier sailing event of Quincy Bay. New “Opti” sailboats have been purchased and are utilized for the Junior sailing program which is open to all junior members of the public at large. Facility improvements keep the appearance of Wollaston Beach as a desirable place to attend. An annual fishing tournament, open to all, is sponsored by the club. The second floor function hall is opened for rental to all and opened for free to the schools of Quincy for several functions, while the “Friends of Wollaston Beach” use the facility for their meetings. The Office of Homeland Security maintains a wind/weather station at Squantum and the Quincy Police as well as the Coast Guard use the facility and its floats as a shore access point for emergencies since there are no others. Squantum Yacht Club has evolved as a grass roots organization for the interested citizens of metropolitan Boston for well over 100 yearsAlthough its history speaks for itself, Squantum Yacht Club’s purpose is best summarized by its founding preamble to its Constitution: “Since it is our desire to perpetuate an organization to foster and promote yachting in Quincy Bay and surrounding waters, to provide a common meeting place for yachtsmen and their friends, where good fellowship may prevail and harmony reign supreme and to encourage the youth of our organization to emulate the above principles, this organization is therefore founded, with the trust that it will be a benefit to the community.”


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Past Commodores - Click to Expand
Past Commodores - Click to Expand

2023..... Bob Thomas

2022..... Bob Thomas

2021..... Paul Astrella

2020..... Paul Astrella

2019..... Peter Forbes

2018..... Kate Orchard

2017..... Christopher Harrington

2016..... Jack Swanson

2015..... Maureen Powers

2014..... Paul Lewis

2013..... Bruce Anderson

2012..... Steve Reid

2011..... Ryan Blair

2010..... Frank Hart

2009..... Christopher Harrington

2008..... Mike Kelley

2007..... Bob Moreau

2006..... Joe Wallace

2005..... Ken MacLeod

2004..... Jack Swanson

2003..... Richard O. Sheehan

2002..... Richard L. Casey Jr.

2001..... Michael J. Foley 

2000..... John Stewart 

1999..... Gregg Sweetser 

1998..... Susan McNamara 

1997..... Jack P. Phillips 

1996..... Richard Gallagher 

1995..... James Hines 

1994..... Paul Hines 

1993..... Kevin Madden 

1992..... David Lewis 

1991..... Ed Olson 

1990..... Donald McGilvray 

1989..... Thomas Glennon 

1988..... Joseph Tessier 

1987..... Thomas McAleney 

1986..... Joseph Clasby 

1985..... Joseph (Al) Ross 

1984..... Henry Lamb 

1983..... Donald Riley 

1982..... Donald Riley 

1981..... Frank Newton 

1980..... Richard Hendry 

1979..... George Gullage 

1978..... George Hines 

1977..... James Gerry 

1976..... John "Jack" White 

1975..... Gerard Neal 

1974..... Joseph Bergamo 

1973..... Larry Gottlieb 

1972..... Patrick Conroy 

1971..... Alfred Woodman 

1970..... Arthur Morrissey 

1969..... Herbert (Al) Shaughnessy 

1968..... Gordon Davis 

1967..... William Wilkens 

1966..... Robert Newton 

1965..... Raymond E. Regan 

1964..... Edward E. Simpson 

1963..... Hubert L. Goodwin 

1962..... Charles C. Nolan 

1961..... William T. Moran 

1960..... William Forbes 

1959..... Donald W. McGilvray 

1958..... Donald W. McGilvray 

1957..... Larry Williams 

1956..... Edward J. Gallagher, Jr. 

1955..... Edward Spiers 

1954..... Edward L. Murphy 

1953..... Edward L. Murphy 

1952..... Stanley A. Rawson 

1951..... Stanley A. Rawson 

1950..... Stanley A. Rawson 

1949..... Stanley A. Rawson 

1948..... John J. Jennings 

1947..... John J. Jennings 

1946..... William D. Wells

1945..... William J. Sands 

1944..... William J. Sands 

1943..... William J. Sands 

1942..... William J. Sands 

1941..... William J. Sands 

1940..... Howard Cosman 

1939..... George H. Hey 

1938..... George H. Hey 

1937..... Thomas F. Sheehan 

1936..... Thomas F. Sheehan 

1935..... Robert E. Bradley 

1934..... Manuel M. Prada 

1933..... Harry C. Wells 

1932..... Harry C. Wells 

1931..... Edward J. Gallagher, Sr. 

1930..... Frank E.M. South 

1929..... Clifford W. Bean 

1928..... Clifford W. Bean 

1927..... Edward J. Gallagher, Sr. 

1926..... Edward J. Gallagher, Sr. 

1925..... Fred D. Riley 

1924..... G.F. Neuberger 

1923..... Henry F. Brown 

1922..... Frank E.M. South 

1921..... Frank E.M. South 

1920..... Frank E.M. South 

1919..... Frank E.M. South 

1918..... L.J. Jobin 

1917..... L.J. Jobin 

1916..... L.J. Jobin 

1915..... George W. Bean 

1914..... Eleazer F. Drew 

1913..... Eleazer F. Drew 

1912..... Eleazer F. Drew 

1911..... Charles W. Hinckley 

1910..... Charles M. Bryant 

1909..... Charles M. Bryant 

1908..... Charles M. Bryant 

1907..... Charles M. Bryant 

1906..... Charles M. Bryant 

1905..... Charles M. Bryant 

1904..... Charles M. Bryant 

1903..... Charles M. Bryant 

1902..... Fred J. Stewart 

1901..... Fred J. Stewart 

1900..... Fred J. Stewart 

1899..... Fred J. Stewart 

1898..... Dr. Frederick A. Locke 

1897..... Hamilton Flood 

1896..... Herman F. Burkhardt 

1895..... Herman F. Burkhardt 

1894..... Herman F. Burkhardt 

1893..... William S. McFaun 

1893..... Charles Johnson 

1892..... Walter E. Burrill 

1891..... O.F. Lathrop 

1890..... D.W. Pratt


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SQUANTUM YACHT CLUB

646 Quincy Shore Drive, PO Box 67, Quincy, MA 02170. |  617.770.4811