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![[Great Lakes Singlehanded Society flag]](../images/u/us~ycncy.gif) image by Rob Raeside, 7 November 2018
 
image by Rob Raeside, 7 November 2018
See also:
North Cape Yacht Club (U.S.), Michigan
Estb: 1962. Location: Maumee River, 
La Salle, MI.
Burgee: Pennant circa 4:6 (photo, image on club house 
chimneys). Red field charged with the horizontal white capital letters Y C on a 
blue diamond with two sides, 4 units from fly point, on upper and lower fly 
edges. The diamond’s other two sides terminate 1 unit from hoist and fimbriated 
with a thin white line. Upper red field charged with the white capital letter N 
and the lower red field, separated by a thin white horizontal line, charged with 
the white capital letter C.
"Located on the shore of Western Lake Erie, 
some eight miles north of the Ohio/Michigan border, . . .
The founding of 
North Cape Yacht Club in 1962, evolved from the efforts of several members of 
the Toledo Yacht Club (TYC) that dates from 1865. The location of TYC up the 
Maumee River frustrated the sailors of the one-design Dragon fleet who made the 
long, back and forth trek to their racing venue in the open waters of Lake Erie 
and Maumee Bay. Led by Walter Swindeman, Richard Krauss, John Holton, James 
Bernard and John Turin, in the late 1950's this group began searching for a 
location where the Dragon fleet could be moored closer to deep-water sailing. . 
. .
The site they eventually located was a match with the business plan 
of Virgil Gladieux, a Toledo businessman and entrepreneur. In 1961, Mr. Gladieux 
was planning to construct a marina on lakefront property he had acquired near 
the mouth of South Otter Creek that was then a duck marsh and the remnants of 
the old Toledo Beach Amusement Park. . . .
Because the board of Toledo 
Yacht Club declined to become involved in the project as a sailing station annex 
or possible future site for TYC itself, the group, with Walter Swindeman as a 
driving force, sought to organize a new yacht club. . . . On January 9, 1962, 
the North Cape Yacht Club was properly incorporated and the lease was assigned 
to it. The club's first commodore was founding member Walter Swindeman who was 
succeeded, after a 2-year term, by founding member Richard Krauss. . . .
In 1971, the club purchased the previously leased site for $125,000 with the 
proceeds of bonds sold to its members. . . “
Source: accessed 13 October 
2018, https://ncyc.net 
Peter Edwards, 
28 October 2018