The New York Schooner Yacht "America" Commodore J. C. Stevens, sailing the great match with the English Schooner Yacht Titania Commodore Stephenson the 28th August 1851
Object summary
Title
The New York Schooner Yacht "America" Commodore J. C. Stevens, sailing the great match with the English Schooner Yacht Titania Commodore Stephenson the 28th August 1851
A trimmed, black-and white lithograph of the schooner yacht 'America' winning the first America's cup with the 'Titania' trailing behind in the distance. The yacht is identified by the legible name written across its stern.
In 1851, the Royal Yacht Squadron proposed a race around the Isle of Wight. A group of New York Yacht Club members, led by Commodore John Cox Stevens, built a yacht designed to compete in such races. Despite the great engineer, Robert Stephenson, designing the 'Titania,' she lost against the 'America.' The victory of the American yacht gave its name to one of the oldest and best-known trophies of the sport: the America's Cup.
Inscriptions
Type
stamp
Location
recto, bottom left
Text
Clark Collection MIT
Type
graphite
Location
verso, top right
Text
Yacht "America" in her match with the "Titania" off the Isle of Wight August 1851. / twenty miles to leeward and return / won by the "America" August 1851