America’s
Cup Hall of Fame - Butterworth, Fife, Haff And
Whidden Are 2004 Inductees
Bristol,
Rhode Island (March 12, 2004) – Four legends
of America’s Cup sailing – Tom Whidden
(Essex, Conn.), Brad Butterworth (New Zealand),
the USA’s Hank Haff and Scotland’s
William Fife III (both deceased) – have
been named as the 2004 inductees to the America’s
Cup Hall of Fame. The inductees will be honored
on the occasion of the Rolex America’s Cup
Hall of Fame 12th Annual Induction Ceremony to
be held Thursday, June 10, 2004. The black-tie
affair, sponsored by longtime supporter Rolex
Watch U.S.A., is scheduled for 7:00 p.m. at Rosecliff,
the Newport (R.I.) mansion modeled after the Grand
Trianon in France.
Presiding
over the Induction Ceremony will be Halsey C.
Herreshoff, President of the America’s Cup
Hall of Fame. Tickets are available to the public
by contacting the America’s Cup Hall of
Fame at 401-465-7610 or e-mailing j.russell@herreshoff.org.
Proceeds from the ceremony will benefit the America’s
Cup Hall of Fame.
Bradley
William Butterworth OBE (1959-) - In the Cup’s
long history, no other afterguard member has won
so many races in succession as Butterworth. As
tactician aboard three winning boats (New Zealand’s
Black Magic in 1995 and 2000, and Switzerland’s
Alinghi in 2003), Butterworth set a new Cup record
with 15 consecutive America’s Cup race victories.
Born
in Te Awamutu, New Zealand, Butterworth performed
with distinction in junior sailing before graduating
to big boats. He was tactician for both Chris
Dickson in New Zealand’s first America’s
Cup challenge in 1986-87, and for Russell Coutts
aboard New Zealand’s successful trial horse
in 1992, into the Louis Vuitton finals. After
that, they were always in the number one boats
while also winning world championships in match
racing. Butterworth, watch captain for Sir Peter
Blake on Steinlager II when she won the 1989-90
Whitbread ‘Round The World Race, was awarded
the Order of the British Empire
(OBE) after New Zealand won the Cup in 1995.
Butterworth
is a Grand Master in the game of maritime chess
that is the America’s Cup. “My job
is to observe the other boats when racing,”
said the always-understated Butterworth of his
role as tactician. “I have to decide where
we ought to be, in which direction we ought to
go, given the wind and the adversary’s position.”
Of course, there is a lot more to it than that,
including having a sharp mind, a fierce competitive
spirit, and intimate, trusting relationship with
his helmsman. For all those reasons, and for his
remarkable record, Brad Butterworth is elected
to the America’s Cup Hall of Fame.
William
Fife III (1857-1944) – The designer of two
of Sir Thomas Lipton’s early Cup challengers,
as well as hundreds of other beautiful, fast yachts,
William Fife III (sometimes referred to as William
Fife, Jr.) was born into his trade in his father’s
and grandfather’s shipyard in Fairlie, Scotland.
By the age of 30 he was designing and building
noted racing boats for clients who included many
Americans and Canadians. With G. L. Watson, Fife
dominated the design of large sailing yachts in
Britain in the 1890s before Watson turned his
attention to the design of steam yachts.
When
Sir Thomas Lipton decided to challenge for the
America’s Cup in 1899, he chose Fife to
draw the lines, though, because Shamrock was metal,
another builder constructed her. Potentially fast,
she was handicapped, first, by having to be heavily
built in order to survive the Atlantic crossing
and, second, by Fife’s illness at the time
of the match. After Lipton came to him again for
the 1903 challenger, Fife designed the largest,
fastest, and most advanced racing boat then known,
Shamrock III. It turned out, however, that Nathanael
G. Herreshoff went a long stride farther in producing
Reliance.
In
1907 it looked, briefly, as if Fife would get
another chance at a Cup design, but Lipton’s
negotiations with the New York Yacht Club faltered.
When they were resumed in 1912, Charles E. Nicholson
had become Britain’s most prominent yacht
designer, and, with Fife’s help, he designed
Lipton’s last two Shamrocks.
Although
not America’s Cup winners, Fife’s
Shamrocks and his many other boats, set a standard
of excellence for the creation of able, fast boats
of remarkable beauty. Long celebrated as one of
the best yacht designers in history, his induction
in the America’s Cup Hall of Fame places
his name on the list of the best designers of
Cup yachts.
Henry
Coleman Haff (1837-1906) – Nobody in America’s
Cup history has sailed in the afterguard of more
successful Cup boats than Hank Haff, skipper or
tactician of four winners between 1881 and 1895.
As of 2004, only Nathanael G. Herreshoff, C. Oliver
Iselin, and Dennis Conner have matched his remarkable
record.
Haff
learned to sail while fishing in catboats off
Islip, Long Island. His talent as a racing sailor
was soon recognized and he rose to the position
of "advisor” (tactician) in the afterguard
of two America’s Cup winners, Mischief in
1881 and Mayflower in 1886. In 1887, he was captain
of Mayflower and beat back the dangerous challenger
Thistle from Scotland. After serving as skipper
of the unsuccessful 1893 defense candidate Colonia,
in 1895 he won the Cup again as captain of Defender,
crewed by professional fishermen whom he had recruited
from Deer Isle, Maine.
The
man whom Cup historian Herbert L. Stone called
“that foxy old Hank Haff” had a long
white beard and was 58 years of age in 1895, making
him one of the oldest winning skippers in Cup
history. He briefly came out of retirement in
1901 for his sixth America’s Cup season
as captain of the defense candidate Independence.
Two of his sons later sailed aboard Cup defenders.
One
of the very best skippers in the generation before
Charlie Barr, Hank Haff dominated big boats in
a way matched by few captains, before or since,
winning the Cup four times in 14 years. For that
he is elected to the America’s Cup Hall
of Fame.
Thomas
A. Whidden (1948-) – Tom Whidden was the
most successful America’s Cup tactician
of the 1980’s, helping to win three of the
contests (1980, 1987, and 1988). He has been active
with the Cup ever since. “When I was 16
my dream was to become a sailmaker and race in
the America's Cup,” said Whidden of his
years as a junior sailor on Long Island Sound.
He fulfilled both wishes: as a sailmaker he became
President of North Sails, and, after he earned
Dennis Conner’s respect by besting him in
ocean races, Whidden was asked by Conner to help
out with the ultimately successful Freedom campaign
as trial-horse helmsman and sail trimmer.
As
Conner’s tactician aboard Liberty in 1983,
Whidden played a key role in the historic match
in which the slower defender pushed the faster
Australia II to the limit. In the decisive seventh
race, after leading most of the way around the
course, Liberty was caught on the second-to-last
leg. “Our best Cup race ever may have been
the one we lost,” said Whidden. In 1987
he helped Stars & Stripes regain the Cup in
Perth, Australia, and a year later won his third
Cup match in four tries -- aboard Stars &
Stripes, the catamaran. Whidden again saw Cup
action as a tactician in 1995, but lost to the
dominant Kiwis. In two subsequent campaigns at
Auckland, Stars & Stripes, with new helmsmen
advised by Whidden, came up short in the challenger
eliminations.
Of
extreme significance is Whidden’s leadership
in the design and manufacture of superb, modern
sails at North Sails. Since Whidden became president,
the art and science of sail making has been advanced
so completely that every America’s Cup contender
of 2003 used North Sails.
In
America’s Cup history, very few sailors
have been involved with as many campaigns (eight)
or won as many (three) as Whidden. For his brilliance
as a tactical advisor, his soundness as a crew
organizer, and his mastery of winning in difficult
boats under the most demanding conditions, Tom
Whidden is elected to the America’s Cup
Hall of Fame.
About the America's Cup Hall of Fame
The America's Cup Hall of Fame was created to
honor the challengers, defenders, and legendary
personages of the world's most distinguished sporting
competition. The present prototype Hall of Fame
was established in 1994 in an historic building
on the grounds of the former Herreshoff Manufacturing
Company in Bristol, Rhode Island, where yachts
were constructed for eight consecutive America's
Cup defenses between 1893 and 1934. The Herreshoff
Marine Museum, situated on this historic site,
operates the America's Cup Hall of Fame. Commencing
with its first induction ceremony in 1993, 59
legends of the Cup have been invested with membership.
Candidates eligible for consideration include
skippers, afterguard, crew, designers, builders,
organizers, syndicate leaders, managers, supporters,
chroniclers, race managers, and other individuals
of merit. Each nominee is judged on the basis
of outstanding ability, international recognition,
character, performance, and contributions to the
sport. The 22 members of the Hall of Fame Selection
Committee bring a wealth of knowledge to the selection
process. They are persons intimate with the America's
Cup tradition of yacht racing and committed to
the integrity of the Hall of Fame.
The
Herreshoff Marine Museum and America's Cup Hall
of Fame are dedicated to preserving, exhibiting,
and interpreting the accomplishments of the Herreshoff
Manufacturing Company and demonstrating the influence
of America's Cup Competition, for the purpose
of education, research, and the inspiration of
excellence in the world of yachting. For more
information, visit www.herreshoff.org, or contact
the Museum at P.O. Box 450, One Burnside Street,
Bristol, RI 02809-0450, Phone: 401-253-5000, Fax:
401-253-6222.
Selection
Committee for the Hall of Fame
B. Devereux Barker, III, Chairman
Henry H. Anderson, Jr.
Bruno Bich
John S. Burnham
Dr. William Collier
Edward I. du Moulin
Halsey C. Herreshoff
Nathanael G Herreshoff, III
Frederick E. Hood
George F. Jewett, Jr.
William H. Dyer Jones
Bruce Kirby
Stanley Livingston, Jr.
Robert W. McCullough
Elizabeth E. Meyer
Peter Montgomery
David M. Philips
John Rousmaniere
Olin J. Stephens, II
Bruno Troublé
David B. Vietor
William G. Winterer
1993-2004 Hall of Fame Honor Roll
Charles
Francis Adams
James L. Ashbury
Charles Barr
J. Burr Bartram
Robert N. Bavier, Jr.
John Bertrand
Baron Marcel Bich
Sir Peter Blake
Alan Bond
Dick Brown
Edward Burgess
W. Starling Burgess
Malin Burnham
Bradley W. Butterworth OBE
James E. Buttersworth
William F. Carstens
Dennis Conner
Russell Coutts
Briggs S. Cunningham
Sir Michael Fay
William P. Ficker
William Fife III
Henry Coleman Haff
Sir James Hardy
Nathanael G. Herreshoff
F.E. “Ted” Hood
Chandler Hovey
Sherman Hoyt
C. Oliver Iselin
Gary Jobson
Arthur Knapp, Jr.
William I. Koch
Sir Thomas J. Lipton
Harry “Buddy” Melges
Edward I. du Moulin
E.D. Morgan
Henry Sturgis Morgan
Emil “Bus” Mosbacher, Jr.
Frank J. Murdoch
Charles E. Nicholson
Sir Frank Packer
General Charles J. Paine
Victor A. Romagna
Morris Rosenfeld
Stanley Rosenfeld
Tom Schnackenberg
George L. Schuyler
Henry Sears
T.O.M. Sopwith
George Steers
John Cox Stevens
Olin J. Stephens, II
Roderick Stephens, Jr.
R.E. “Ted” Turner
Harold S.Vanderbilt
Gertrude Vanderbilt
George L. Watson
Thomas A. Whidden
The Earl of Wilton