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Great boat, great sailors in FBYC history....
Hampton One-Design #1Rough Passage (a.k.a. Jasyto)by Jere Dennison The Mariners Museum in Newport News has carved out a special niche for the display of Hampton O-D #1, originally named Jasyto, amongst endless galleries of nautical history. She is a veteran of almost 70 years and symbolizes the birth of the area’s most popular indigenous one-design sailboat class. We may take special satisfaction that our Club has perhaps the strongest link to the history of Hampton O-D #1 of any club on the Chesapeake Bay. From 1940 to the early 1950’s and renamed Rough Passage , she became an integral part of the racing scene at our predecessor club, UYC, and later at FBYC after the move to the present location in 1949. J. Marshall Moseley, a founding member and past Commodore, provided historical insight into her arrival at our Club in a letter written a decade before his death: In 1947, Rough Passage was purchased by clubmember Lloyd Emory who was the owner of a daffodil farm in nearby Gloucester County. Not only were his skill and prowess a legend on the Bay, but also was his ability to consume vast quantities of rum-laced “Gloucester” Cokes without normally impairing his sailing performance. Lloyd enjoyed immediate success with Rough Passage and won the H.O.D. National Championship in August 1947.
Lloyd continued to successfully campaign Rough Passage , winning numerous Bay-wide events, until selling her in the early 1950’s in order to obtain a newer, more competitive Hampton hull. After leaving the Club, Passage likely changed hands many times before her ultimate retirement in the Mariners Museum with her original name, Jasyto , restored.
Did you know?FBYC can boast another HOD National Champion among the ranks of its members. In 1954, the late George Roper sailing hull #465 named Impulse found his way to the top of fleet. His daughter, Nancy Roper Potts is the wife of Rives Potts who served as Project Manager and crewmember on the America’s Cup 12-meter Freedom in 1980. Both remain active members of FBYC. |
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