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Power
boats - especially the lovely vintage wooden boats - hold a special
place in the history of Lake Tahoe. Read on for their story.
Summer
Playground for the Well-Heeled ...
As the 1900s grew up into its teens and twenties, many San Francisco
families discovered the beauty of Lake Tahoe’s sapphire waters and
the surrounding pine-covered mountains. The turn of the century
saw tourists and summer residents come to Tahoe in increasing numbers.
Naturally, those
summering in Tahoe joined together for holiday boating gatherings,
and in the midst of these social functions the wooden boat tradition
was born. Burnished mahogany hulls appointed with gleaming chrome
became the "must-have" status symbol for the social elite, and several
boat dealerships including Chris Craft, Gar Wood, and Century established
a brisk trade along the shores of Tahoe.
Tahoe
Yacht Club: Established 1925
Predictably, racing became a favorite
pastime, and enthusiasm for some sort of organized competition spurred
a handful of gentlemen, many of whom were members of the St. Francis
Yacht Club in San Francisco, to form the Tahoe Power Boat Club (later
to become Tahoe Yacht Club) in 1925. It was an illustrious bunch:
among the founding members were prominent names including Newhall,
Ehrman, Metcalf, Townsend, Dollar, Fleishacker, Scott, Kendrick,
Pope, and others.
At the helm
was Edwin Letts Oliver, a brilliant San Francisco businessman who
was chosen as the club's first Commodore. "At the time, the club’s
headquarters was a file drawer in Oliver's San Francisco office,"
says R. Randolph Walker, who has been a "member" of Tahoe Yacht
Club since the day he was born in 1933. "The first facility was
a picnic area on the Ehrman Family’s grounds (now Sugar Pine State
Park) and a pier which was only big enough to accommodate two large
Gar Woods," remembers Walker.
The first
casual contests grew in popularity, and soon the typical summer
agenda included several regattas, attracting large crowds of spectators.
The Club quickly increased its membership through the years and
added new events to its calendar, including water ski carnivals
(complete with a reigning Queen), Junior Outboard Regattas, sailing
regattas, and, beginning in 1972, the Concours d'Elegance.

TYC continues
to celebrate its power boating heritage with many summer events,
including the Commodore's Cruise, Over-the-Bottoms,
Waterski/Wakeboard Carnival, ACBS Woodie Whoopies, and of course,
the world-famous Wooden Boat Week and Concours
d'Elegance.
In the late
1800s and throughout the early part of the century, the Steamer
Tahoe served the transportation needs of the lake. However, with
the development of the highway system around the Lake Tahoe, this
beautiful steam-powered boat became obsolete and was eventually
scuttled in 1940. August 29, 2000 marked the sixtieth anniversary
of William Seth Bliss' order to open the seacocks on the SS Tahoe
and begin the process of flooding her bilge. Read more about her
history here.
For more information
on TYC's summer events, see the updated calendar
of events or call the clubhouse at (530) 581-4700.
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