| The History of the Highland Yacht Club
The Highland Yacht Club (HYC) as we know it today has
progressed from very humble beginnings on the sandy
shore across the adjacent cove. Our first sailing season
at the new site was 1984, just after being officially
chartered with the state of Tennessee. Prior to establishing
our current home at the site of the old ARO Lodge, the
club met at the AEDC Recreation area and sailed from
there. The Highland Yacht club was originally formed
in the 1950's. HYC was an active force in developing
sailing amongst the AEDC community. Early members included
the families of Doc Goethert, Pat and Patti Clemmens,
Bob and Sally Rhodes, Don and Aulene Barton, Bob and
Eldri Paulk, Ken and Doris Templemeyer, Rogers Starr,
Jack Shea and many others. The remnants of their boats
and sailing influence can be seen in the current membership
as it was a training ground for several of the reincarnated
HYC. Sailing then was with Snipes, Thistles, Mobjacks,
Penguins and a mélange of small dinghies that
were sailed off trailers that were kept under the tree
at what is now the Gossick Leadership Center. The original
HYC faded away and was resurrected in the early 1980's
as primarily a boardsailing and catamaran sailing club.
The move to the current site was the beginning of a
growing family consisting mainly of enthusiastic boardsailors.
In hindsight, this move can be seen as the catalyst
for growth of the club. A major visionary for that move
was then-Commodore USAF Lieutenant Jim Blanner. Other
early members to the club that helped shape the club
as it is today included Cliff Wurst, Nery Mejicano,
Tom Jennings, Jim Stanford, Tom Bentley, Carlos and
Nancy Bussche, Dick Austin, Matt Crawford, Jack Shuttleworth
and Paul Stevens. After many members took the opportunity
to submit artwork for the club logo, the logo chosen
was a design by local artist and sailor Perry Waller.
That logo is still proudly displayed today.
The club has been the site for many regattas over the
past two decades. The annual Spring Regatta occurs in
mid-May, and the annual Fall Regatta is held mid-September.
In the early years of the club, a Friendship Boardsailing
Regatta, the genius of then Mistral Team Rider Cliff
Wurst, was held. More recently, the club has played
host to the Coronado 15 Southeast Regional and National
Competitions as well as the Catalina 22 Southeast Regional
Competition. We are known far and wide as a friendly
club with great hospitality, great food and beverages,
and typically great wind. Visitors to the club are often
amazed to find that most of the sailing vessels are
clean, which is a sign that we are a sailing club that
truly sails. Our clubhouse may only be an open pavilion,
and the beetles laid claim to much of our pine tree
forest in 2002, but the members of the club contribute
time, funding, and 'elbow grease' to make the HYC a
comfortable habitat for those ashore while the sailors
are on the water. Each summer, we offer classes to teach
participants the basics of sailing, and additional classes
to learn to sailboard. The local Boy Scout and Girl
Scout troops have for years spent time at HYC earning
sailing badges under the guidance of several of our
members. At Christmas, Sarah Hailey organizes a team
of club members to ring Salvation Army bells. Of course,
their efforts are rewarded at the annual Christmas party
gift exchange where some 'special gifts' return every
year
usually at the Bussche home.
In addition to the monthly meetings and regattas, the
primary social events for the HYC include a raft-up
on the 4th of July to watch the AEDC fireworks after
a day of pirate games and picnicking. Our other annual
event that is so memorable is the New Year's Day raft-up
to toast the New Year, watch new skippers make their
induction leaps from their bows and sometimes cheer
on the skiers from the Ski Club.
The women of the HYC have been an active group from
the beginning. From the days of the 'Yachtless Club'
to the summers of 'Women for Sail', they have crewed,
skippered, cheered, and of course, cooked their way
into the hearts of many a sailor.
After the loss of several beloved HYC charter members
who left the club to sail 'in the great beyond', our
club established a Fallen Sailors Scholarship. Currently,
this scholarship honors the lives of Tom Jennings, Bob
Latremore, Cliff Wurst, John Boyd, Clyde Rooker and
Harrison Shoulders.
Our club has grown and changed from a sailboard club
to primarily a club of cruising vessels and dingys.
The next generation of sailors at HYC are now learning
the skills required to out-maneuver the older generation
in weekly Sunday races. The Junior Sailing Club has
acquired a small fleet of Optimist boats and we all
hope that they continue to remember their beginnings
as 'lake sailors' when they become those world-famous
sailors they aspire to.
Over the years, our site has been the setting for so
many special times in the lives of our members. From
weddings and memorial services, both onshore and on
the water, to birthday bashes and graduation celebrations,
we have celebrated our friendships with one another.
Organizing this cookbook has been a labor of love, and
a tribute to a great group of fun-loving people.
-Wendy Moore, Editor, From The Galley
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Past Commodores of HYC
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| 1983-1984 |
Jim Blanner |
| 1985 |
Marty Lawrence |
| 1986-1987 |
Carlos Bussche |
| 1988 |
Marvin Sellers |
| 1989-1991 |
Cliff Wurst |
| 1991-1992 |
Jack Shuttleworth |
| 1993-1994 |
Jeff Utley |
| 1994-1995 |
David Brown |
| 1996-1998 |
Don Jones |
| 1998-2000 |
Paul Stevens |
| 2000-2002 |
Max Hailey |
| 2002-2004 |
Dawn Utley |
| 2004-2006 |
Matt Crawford |
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