C.
Sherman Hoyt
"In the third race of the 1934 challenge RAINBOW
was down by two races and behind in the third when
C. Sherman Hoyt took the helm. This was the closest
that the New York Yacht Club would come to losing
its treasured cup until 1983. Hoyt was known for taking
the helm in light weather because of his uncanny ability
to note slight wind changes, and this time was no
exception. He outfoxed T.O.M. Sopwith, pointing well
above the course finish and forcing Sopwith to make
a covering attempt. RAINBOW sailed a straight course
to the line while ENDEAVOUR fumbled. The Cup was safe
as the tide of the challenge was turned by Hoyt's
matchless genius at the helm and Harold Vanderbilt's
ability to utilize the various talents of his crew
to the best effect
This was by no means Hoyt's first experience with
the America's Cup. A Cup enthusiast since childhood,
he served as the New York Yacht Club representative
aboard SHAMROCK lV in 1920. Of this experience, he
later said"conditioning an America's Cup yacht
is no sinecure. It requires no end of hard work, but
is absorbingly interesting, frequently amusing, and
never dull."
Hoyt served on the afterguard of ENTERPRISE in 1930
and , RAINBOW in 1934, and would later broadcast the
RANGER - ENDEAVOUR II series of 1937 for CBS. This
he found trying, as there was sparse action except
at starts and rounding marks. There was little question
of RANGER's superiority.
His fascinating life would earn him the title of
the world's most famous yachtsman of his era and bring
him in contact with the Dowager Empress of China,
Adolph Hitler, King George V, William Tecumseh Sherman
(his grand uncle), and countless others. C. Sherman
Hoyt had an extraordinary life that took him around
the world in adventures and voyages. His memoirs are
a fascinating history of sailing since the 1880's
in the eyes of a man who has seen it all.