Royal Melbourne Yacht Squadron

Royal Melbourne Yacht Squadron is a yacht club located at St Kilda Beach in the suburb of St. Kilda in Melbourne, Australia. The squadron was founded in 1876. It has occupied its grounds on Pier Road in St Kilda since prior to incorporation.

Royal Melbourne Yacht Squadron
Short nameRMYS
Founded1876 (1876)
LocationSt Kilda Beach, Melbourne, Australia
WebsiteRoyal Melbourne Yacht Squadron

History

Sailing began on the approximate site of the current Royal Melbourne Yacht Squadron club house in the 1870s.[1] The St Kilda Sailing Club was incorporated in 1876. It changed its name to St Kilda Yacht Club in 1884. After the grant of a royal warrant on 9 April 1924, the name of the club was again changed to Royal St Kilda Yacht Club. The Royal St Kilda Yacht Club amalgamated with the St Kilda 14-Foot Sailing Club in June 1961 and adopted the current name "Royal Melbourne Yacht Squadron".[2] The Squadron was registered as a company limited by guarantee under the National Companies Code on 21 February 1983. The squadron was the control centre for the 1956 Melbourne Olympic Games yachting events.[1]

Purpose

The squadron has been promoting the sport of sailing and providing sailing facilities to members since the 1870s.

Sailing is mostly in keel boats with some off the beach and junior sailing available. The club organises races on Port Phillip throughout the year on Saturdays, Wednesdays and some Sundays.

The squadron has a floating marina in St. Kilda Harbour, constructed in 2014, with about 250 pens. The squadron also manages approximately 115 swing moorings located in St. Kilda Harbour.

Weather station

A Bureau of Meteorology weather station, which is limited to wind speed only, is located on top of the club house.[3]

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gollark: I mean, unless you need your memories for something.
gollark: So, <@!854350605702660106>, don't worry very much!
gollark: If it gets particularly bad, the hypervisor software just wipes the instance and reloads from the latest clean backup.
gollark: Obviously our clusters include partial protection against dangerous thoughtform incursions.

References

  1. Club History Royal Melbourne Yacht Squadron
  2. Ferris, J H (1990). The Long Hard Beat : a history of the Royal Melbourne Yacht Squadron. ISBN 0-646-01210-X.
  3. Latest Weather Observations for St Kilda Harbour


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