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Harlem Boat Clubs, New York 1883

harlem yacht club city island new york

The earliest means of transportation around New York City Harbor, from Harlem to Brooklyn and Staten Island and to trading was moored offshore was rowboats from 96th Street to 155th Street.

The rowboats would unload trade goods at the rear of the buildings.

The boatmen from the rowboats who ferried from ships to coastline regularly had races and rivalries with each other. These early races were the start of rowing in the United States.

Many of the first clubs like Harlem Rowing , the Bohemians were composed primarily of immigrants from one ethnic group, who continued to carry on the traditions from their homeland.

The race among high school crews was popular, as were those among professional organizations. Policeman, trolley car drivers, and Wall Street workers were the first among the professionals that held races on Harlem River.

Harlem had become a rowing centre so much so that it was called “ Scullers Row “, because it had over 1,000 rowers by 1902. Some of the best oarsmen in the world came to row along with the Riverside Speedway Course. The most recognized names of early rowing history, including the Biglin Brothers, Thomas Hanlan, and the Ward Brothers Came to Harlem.

Harlem boat club on the Harlem River by B. J. Falk, June 19, 1902. The Harlem Yacht Club (aka Harlem boat club – see photo above), now of City Island, was initially founded at 124th Street and the East River in June of 1883.

Harlem boat club on the Harlem River by B. J. Falk, June 19, 1902. The Harlem Yacht Club (aka Harlem boat club), now of City Island, was initially founded at 124th Street and the East River in June of 1883.

It spent most of its first two decades three blocks further south at the old Randall mansion (former home of the same Randalls who owned Randalls Island), and it also operated a ‘station’ at College Point from whence most of its regattas were conducted.

In 1894, the club gave up its station at College Point in favor of one on property it had purchased at City Island. It then occupied both locations – its ‘city house’ at the Randall mansion and its City Island station– for about ten years, even conducting occasional bicycle runs from one house to the other in those early days before the advent of automobiles.

It had towed its College Point clubhouse to the new site at City Island, but decided in 1898 to replace it with a larger structure, and erected a lovely Victorian manse.

Its opening in June of 1899 was heralded by a “salute of seventeen guns … an illumination [of the fleet], and fireworks ashore and afloat.” (New York Times, June 20, 1899, p. 5)

Finally, in 1903, the club gave up its headquarters at the Randall mansion in Harlem and took up permanent, and sole, residence at its property in City Island.

The old Victorian building burned in 1915 and was promptly replaced by the club’s current three-story building, which houses a bar, restaurant, and members’ lounge on its main floor, a second-story ballroom, and third-floor offices and steward’s quarters.

The HYC was a founding member of three yacht racing associations: the New York Yacht Racing Association (no longer in existence), the Yacht Racing Association of Long Island Sound (YRALIS), and the Eastchester Bay Yacht Racing Association. These latter two are still very active today.

From its inception, the Harlem Yacht Club conducted numerous regattas and became known in local waters for its Memorial Day Regatta, which it conducted on its own initiative, then later as part of the YRALIS championship circuit.

For 60 years, this race was said to kick off the yacht racing season in western Long Island Sound. In that golden era of yacht racing, the public could enjoy following a regatta by purchasing a ticket for a steamer that followed the boats around the racecourse.

The steamers could carry up to 2,000 passengers, and this club enjoyed a popular following of such spectators in its early years on the Sound, until the practice ended with the rise of other spectator sports.

The club also ran several long-distance races such as the HYC Stratford Shoal Race, which ran from 1905 to 1920, and even evolved into a combination sail and powerboat race.

Meantime, the club’s racers also competed, and won honors, in the regattas of other clubs in the YRALIS circuit.

In its 1911 YRALIS Memorial Day regatta, the HYC hosted a historic race – the first regatta of the Star class – a small fixed-keel sloop that became immensely popular in all parts of the world and was in 1932 established as an Olympic Games class and is still raced there today.

In the late ‘30s the HYC became instrumental in the founding of the Eastchester Bay Yacht Racing Association in order to foster the growth of small boat bay sailing.

HYC Race Chairman Sidney J. Treat presided over its first race and for his efforts in promoting Star racing was also appointed Honorary and Life Commodore of the East River Star Fleet. The club boasted a fleet of 12 Stars, and several of the club’s racers were active Star competitors.

Most notable among them were Mike Treat, a champion Sound racer, and Charlie “Buster” Ulmer, who represented the East River Star Fleet in the International Championships in both Lisbon and Havana. “Buster” Ulmer later went on to found Ulmer Sails, now known as UK-Halsey Sailmakers.

With the outbreak of World War II, and because of the depletion of its members to the armed services, the club was forced to abandon the YRALIS Memorial Day Race and its Star racing program dwindled.

In the 1950s, with the rise of powerboats, the club’s members began to lean more heavily toward motor yachts.

In the ‘70s and ‘80s, as sailing reclaimed a measure of its former popularity within the club, the proportion of sailing members again rose to prominence.

The club is currently one of the four City Island yacht clubs which co-sponsor the Eastchester Bay Yacht Racing Association. In addition, the HYC enjoys a number of club races of various types.

These include an around-the-buoy race (Treat Race), an overnight (Higgins Race), a J24 one-design (Hoxsie Race), a short-handed series, and a just-for-fun race called the Vice Commodore’s Regatta in which non-sailor members are recruited to actively crew upon their host member’s sailboat.

Today, the club enjoys a complement of about 150 members, in five categories. Its fleet of 123 boats is comprised of 80% sail and 20% power.

And, although its membership still draws heavily from the immediate Bronx/Lower Westchester area, it also enjoys a sizeable contingent of New Jerseyans, Manhattanites, and others from points further out, who find its location ideal for accessing the Sound.

All are comfortably accommodated in their beautiful clubhouse on City Island, and the club continues to pride itself as being one of the friendliest on Long Island Sound.

Photo credit: Source .

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Open House | Harlem Yacht Club

The Officers and Members of the Harlem Yacht Club invite prospective Members to join us for our 2024 Open-House Sundays, on March 10, April 14, and May 19. Join us in our beautiful waterfront Clubhouse at 417 Hunter Avenue on City Island in the Bronx. We’ll be here from 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 to offer light refreshments, some sailing stories, and lots of the reasons we love the Club–for 140 years the friendliest place on the Western Long Island Sound.

If you would like to join us, pleas drop a note to Membership Chair Anthony Rosco at [email protected] , or call our office at 718-885-3078.

If you want to learn more but can’t join us on on any of our scheduled dates, please e-mail Anthony to arrange a tour when you can.

Remember: Harlem Yacht Club Open House 417 Hunter Ave., City Island, NY 10464

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Harlem Yacht Club

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Review Highlights

fra w.

“ Fantastic location with views to knock your socks off... .. we went 3 months ago to party and there was a large area to dance ..... ” in 2 reviews

mary d.

“ I have been to 2 parties here and when I went for dinner one night (do not have to be a member) there was a party upstairs and the room looked great! ” in 2 reviews

Jojo P.

“ The atmosphere is friendly and cozy , the views of the sound are amazing and the bar is awesome. ” in 2 reviews

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Bronx, NY 10464

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Photo of Greg M.

The HYC is the ultimate in yacht club "shabby chic"... Awesome bar with incredible views of Eastchester Bay. Kitchen is now in good hands too, after the previous steward left and has been replaced with the current one. I would strongly recommend dinner with a few friends at sunset...

Photo of Karen W.

Was at a memorial luncheon recently , I have to say the food and atmosphere was extraordinary!!!

Photo of E S.

Cute club. Very receptive to new members. Hoping the food is more consistent. Stunning waterfront views.

Photo of Sola H.

The Harlem Yacht Club is your cozy tucked away spot to go for a good drink with friends while enjoying the view of the city. The staff are friendly and treat you like you're a regular - extra helpful when you need and super knowledgeable. We love sitting outside with a drink by the dock with a shrimp basket, enjoying the kids learning to sail, and viewing the NYC landscape.

Photo of Mark C.

Good food, lovely setting. Nice place to spend some time

harlem yacht club city island new york

You do not have to be a Member to have dinner at The Harlem Yacht Club. The Chef, Rutilio, is the best on the island. The atmosphere is friendly and cozy, the views of the sound are amazing and the bar is awesome. You can have your wedding, shower, sweet sixteen party there. The food and the decor will suit any taste and always a winner. Check it out. Store your boat there and consider joining the Harlem Yacht Club.

Photo of Fridah L.

Recently visited with friends who are summer affiliates. Arrived at the restaurant a little bit too early for afternoon ice cream, and bumped into such a lovely young man. Turns out he speaks several languages. He was very polite insightful and funny and we all enjoyed talking with him until we realized that he worked there and we might be keeping him from checking in for his shift. Very gracious. Later we realized that he was the dishwasher. I really hope they pay these people properly. That young man should be in a leadership position somewhere. They are lucky to have him.

Photo of Joan D.

Had dinner here when I learned you did not have to be a member. Was great. Planning a family reunion this Spring The Harlem Yacht Club is a strong consideration. Prices were right also. We have family in City Island And the Bronx so the location is great and of course Right on the water . Nice atmosphere. Joan from the Pocono Mountains of PA.

Photo of mary d.

GREAT Venue for a party large or small! I have been to 2 parties here and when I went for dinner one night (do not have to be a member) there was a party upstairs and the room looked great! The parties I have been to, 1 had a DJ, the other did not. There was enough room to dance and the food was beyond what I expected. Good staff, clean, great view right on the water!

Photo of Erica H.

I had the most amazing wedding reception at the HYC last weekend. I have been to other events here and am incredibly fond of this spot. It is the perfect mix of comfortable and charming, everyone there is friendly and helpful.....and you could not ask for a more picturesque view! To top it all off, Anne Booth's food knocks it out of the park. Anne and her husband Kwon are an amazing catering duo. They were accomadating to my special requests. And quite frankly, I have never heard so many people gush about the food at a wedding before. We had a really lovely day. I can't wait to come back to have a relaxing dinner here this summer.

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Exploring the ‘Nantucket of the Bronx,’ an island of contradictions

Sailors, artists, fishmongers, and lawyers coexist on Hunter Avenue

Near the end of an unassuming block on City Island in the Bronx, outside the 135-year-old Harlem Yacht Club, one of the oldest in the city and one of four such clubs on the island, Fordham University rowing team members hoist racing shells over their heads, wrapping up the day’s practice. In a parking lot across the street, boats named Aria, Green Lantern, Sly Fox, Breeze Meister, and perhaps the most timely and evocative, Panic Attack, sun in their dry-dock berths, awaiting their eventual return to the water. Members of the club paint and hammer and clean and otherwise ready things for the upcoming commission day—the start of the season. Gunfire reverberates across the bay, drills and target practice at Rodman’s Neck Firing Range, the NYPD training facility.

It is a late morning in early May, and I am observing these goings-on over a brick wall that separates the yacht club from the lawn next door. I’m standing with Max Krull, who has lived in a house on this property for 24 years. Max Krull is not his real name, but “everyone,” he insists, “knows me as Max.” The first time I met him, a couple months earlier, there was a thin layer of snow on the ground, which he had navigated in slippers.

This story is the first in a series in which writer Rebecca Bengal and photographer Chris Mottalini explore one block in each New York City borough.

City Island, at 230 acres, population a little under 4,500 according to the most recent census, is adjacent to the woods of Pelham Bay and Orchard Beach, the borough’s only public beach, and to the rest of the Bronx to the west and Westchester to the north. Photographer Chris Mottalini and I are exploring New York City’s boroughs through its blocks, one each in the Bronx, Manhattan, Queens, Brooklyn, and Staten Island, because we’re interested in how these blocks form their own micro-universes, and how those micro-universes fit into their boroughs.

We were drawn to City Island partly for the contrasts embedded in its name—both city and island, it is part of the Bronx and apart from it. And we landed on this particular block because it seemed to represent City Island as a whole, inhabited by artists, writers, eccentrics, scientists, lawyers, curators, art handlers, fishmongers, bus drivers, teachers, and electricians, many of whom traded rising rents in Brooklyn and Manhattan for a small town that is tethered to New York City but fairly remote, with wetlands that resemble a compressed wilderness, a place with proudly worn nautical roots, and the sense of nostalgia that seems to hover over almost all beach towns.

City Island came to be at the end of the last ice age, created by glaciers and covered in deposits of rare blue clay. The first humans who fished and hunted on City Island were the Siwanoy band of the Lenape Indians, who called it Minnewit, meaning pine, for the trees that proliferated in those times. Thomas Pell seized their land in 1654; Anne Hutchinson, seeking religious freedom, later settled there. Until 1895, when it was annexed by New York City, City Island was considered part of Westchester and was home mostly to farmers and shipbuilders and sailors and harvesters of oysters. Its first enterprise involved producing salt from evaporated seawater and its most successful enterprises, for years, were harvesting oysters and building and repairing boats and yachts, including several America’s Cup winners. The island did not get dial telephone service until 1960. It has served as the location for Long Day’s Journey Into Night , BUtterfield 8, and several episodes of Law & Order . Among its better-known residents over the years are mobster Frank Scalice of the Gambino crime family, longtime AFL-CIO leader George Meany, the comedian Red Buttons, the drag queen Coco Peru, and neurologist and writer Oliver Sacks, who, the story goes, swam over to City Island from Orchard Beach one day and liked the island so much he bought a house there.

Along City Island Avenue, which runs the length of the island, hints of those past shipbuilders remain, along with seafood restaurants that draw in weekend crowds and markers of small town life: the City Island Diner, the upscale restaurant the Black Whale, the grocery, an ice cream parlor called Lickety Split, a public library, a junk shop that specializes in pop-culture ephemera, and a local photographer who will print your picture on a brick. The proprietor of the liquor store wrote up his own theories about the island’s economy, which suffered in the 2008 crash, and has printed them up in a free handout.

Off the avenue, Hunter Avenue, the block we came to visit, is a little enclave of its own.

Near the end of the block, set back from the street, a bright minivan is parked permanently in a yard, its road-tripping days done, living out a second life as a sincere mural covered in environmental slogans— Defend the Whales!, Save the Reef, Stop Global Warming . Taped to the door of the house is a New York Times story, “ How Big Banks Are Putting Rain Forests in Peril .” The principles that rule the home of Max Krull and his wife, who prefers to remain anonymous, are clear. After years in Brooklyn and a rejection by a Manhattan co-op, it was a random detour on the way from driving their now-grown kids to summer camp in Westchester that led them to City Island. “I feel like I’m on vacation, even though I go to work,” Krull says. “I read, we have a little garden. We have these trees that grew up right around us as we lived here. Everyone knows each other.”

harlem yacht club city island new york

The house’s original bones date back to 1901, when it was part of a small farm. Two significant additions, plainly visible from outdoors, have occurred since. Inside, the house is open and many-windowed, with exposed beams and wood floors. Projects in various states spill over throughout the kitchen and living room—letters and accounting over here, a biography of Churchill over here, sections of the newspaper, work files, photographs from the ’60s and ’70s scattered over the counter.

The disarray is active and friendly—a signifier of the way Krull, like his house, seems to exist in multiple worlds and eras and languages at once, darting impulsively between years and countries and novel plots and trains of thought as he leads us through the house, through a living room relieved of much of its furniture (“my wife dances in this room,” he says) and a sunroom where succulents thrive by the windows. Krull is cheerfully unbothered that, for instance, they didn’t get around to fixing the upstairs bathroom this winter (“It’ll wait”) and more inclined to point out the wetlands around the corner that he is adamant must be protected against development, or the Austrian train station sign he swiped years ago (“the Franz Schubert Express; isn’t that great? When I got off the train in Vienna, everything smelled of fresh bread”), or the books that take up residence in every room. “I wince if I walk into a house and there are no books,” Krull says.

Krull is not the “mayor” of the block in the way that so many neighborhoods have their unofficial leaders, but rather a longtime resident who seems to embody the spirit of the place. Today he is in a reflective mood, poring over old photographs scattered across the kitchen counter. “Yesterday, May 6, is a personal holiday for me,” he mentions, and, when asked why, breezily responds, “Oh, I consider it the turning point of my life.” His own chosen alter ego, Krull, comes from an unfinished novel by Thomas Mann, Confessions of Felix Krull —“I just connected to it,” he says. (The “Max” comes from that time too; “It just felt sort of German to me,” Krull says, and it stuck.) Fifty-four years ago on May 6, he arrived in Lübeck, Germany, the town where Mann had lived; eventually he got to know some of Mann’s relatives.

Krull is now a lawyer who commutes to his practice in Brooklyn several days a week, but he grew up in Bergen Beach, one of five children, the son of an Appalachian-born taxi driver and a stay-at-home mother. He worked for the telephone company after graduating from Brooklyn Technical High School, and at the urging of an older brother who’d gotten an athletic scholarship to college, he paid a visit to the only other person in their neighborhood who had been to college. “I had no pattern for how this was done, no context,” he says. Later, friends steered him to the LSATs.

To the south, Krull’s property is adjacent to a blue modernist house built in 1958 and propped up on tall stilts, sleek and simple. The New York Times once called it “the Jetson house.” In the 90s, Roger Straus III, formerly of the publishing house his father helped found, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, lived here with his wife, Doris Straus, a talented gardener who switched careers from publishing to working for the New York Botanical Garden. On City Island, she set about transforming the tennis court into a rose garden, with a recirculating pool she dug herself, surrounded by cypresses, poppies, lilies, phlox, ferns, and numerous varieties of roses. “When they divorced and she moved to Manhattan, I think Doris must have called up all her friends,” Krull says. “People showed up with shovels.”

More recently, the Jetson house belonged to the artists Jonathan Horowitz and Rob Pruitt, who split the property into two lots and eventually sold the house to Victor de Santis, an electrical contractor originally from Yonkers. De Santis welcomes us inside through a series of doors whose knobs have been replaced with hockey pucks. “I just like them,” he says with a shrug. Soon after moving in, he set about girding the place against future storms. “They had all this wood siding—forget it,” De Santis says of the house’s original redwood. His young sons quietly play video games in their room; he points out the Pinewood Derby trophies they recently won in Boy Scouts. Outside, contractors are installing an outdoor stove. The open kitchen, modern and minimalist on our visit, has since been replaced with wood pallets stained in alternating shades. The adjacent sunporch, which looks out to the bay, has been enclosed for year-round use. “I own 400 feet out in the water,” he says, nodding toward the shore; vintage stamps and old magazines are spread across a large table, a decoupage project in progress.

In May, Doris Straus’s onetime garden had the look of a carefully plotted tract gone somewhat rebellious, now emerging from a deep winter slumber. The lot was recently sold, but De Santis says he has yet to see any signs of the new owners. Until then his closest neighbors are Krull and Krull’s tenants, the occupants of a two-story Hunter Avenue bungalow painted white, pretty and inviting, with daylilies blooming in its front yard. We pay them a visit.

Katie Ennis and Orion Lillyreed met six years ago at a Park Slope bar just before the Fourth of July. Ennis, a film editor, lived nearby; Lillyreed was living in Flatbush, Brooklyn, and working in graphics fabrication; when he took a job working for Pacific Gold at the New Fulton Fish Market, his commute stretched untenably. In 2005, the legendary market moved from Manhattan, where it had been based by the Brooklyn Bridge for 193 years, to Hunts Point in the Bronx.

Lillyreed and Ennis chanced on a rental posting in City Island, where neither of them knew a soul. The unfamiliar location would shrink his commute measurably. Traveling to Gowanus, Brooklyn, where Ennis just wrapped her fifth season as a film editor on The Americans (she’s at work on the forthcoming film Sister Aimee ), is generally a 45-minute to an hour’s drive, but a compromise that felt right. They liked the yard and the block, even with its pair of abandoned houses. Their dog, Gillian, a 1 1/2-year-old pug and spaniel mix, was quickly befriended by Victor de Santis’ dog, Luna. Sometimes Coors Light, a cat who lives across the street, wanders over to play too.

Lillyreed and Ennis were also unexpectedly charmed by their new landlord. “When we met Max,” Lillyreed says, “there was instant accord. Max, he’s the kind of guy who’s just not content to be a passenger in life.” Now they share the garden that bridges the short distance between their houses, growing vegetables, tomatoes, and basil in raised beds. When they were married on July 3, they held the ceremony in Krull’s backyard.

None of the homeowners and renters we visit on Hunter Avenue are members of the Harlem Yacht Club, though it feels like the anchor of the block, linking it to the maritime past. The club was founded in Harlem in 1850 and eventually moved to City Island, to a Victorian mansion that was destroyed in a fire; the current clubhouse was dedicated in 1915.

harlem yacht club city island new york

Portraits of the club’s commodores line the walls, a veritable century’s worth of mustache chronicles, and trophies from its regattas fill glass cases. In the ballroom upstairs Kate Smith sets up a makeshift office, laptop on card table, by a window with a view of Eastchester Bay. She and her partner, Dave Jenkins, own SOUL Sailing (SOUL, she explains, stands for School of Unexplained Learning), now in its second year at the yacht club. The bayside restaurant is generally open to the public, especially popular for sunset drinks and dinners; in a clubroom nearby, sheet music and handwritten set lists are propped by a Magnum organ: “Itsy-Bitsy Teeny-Weeny Yellow Polka-Dot Bikini,” “Hey Bo Diddley,” “Some Enchanted Evening.”

Next to the yacht club, we met Becky Brown and Bill Santen, married artists who were priced out of Brooklyn and moved into a house that belongs to Brown’s parents—a classic two-story beach house, with wood-paneled walls and extra rooms they’ve turned into studios. Santen is originally from Lexington, Kentucky; Brown grew up mostly in Manhattan—when she was 8, her family moved to Stuy Town, where her parents still live; their apartment kitchen figures in some of Brown’s artwork. City Island appealed to her Massachusetts-born parents, Deborah Wye, chief curator emerita of prints and illustrated books at the Museum of Modern Art, and Paul Brown, the minimalist painter; when they bought the house, “around 2005 or 2006,” it reminded them of Nantucket. “My dad would paint here; they both find it so relaxing,” Brown says. “For lack of a better word, my mother ‘discovered’ Louise Bourgeois and she would bring her [writing on her] work out here too.”

Wye organized a retrospective of Bourgeois’s work at MoMA in 1982 and remains one of the foremost experts on the artist. It is fantastic to think of Bourgeois’s tremendous sculptures of spiders and cells, her drawings and paintings, being considered and written about here, making them imaginatively a part of the island, too. Wye and Brown still use the house on City Island, effectively sharing it with their daughter and son-in-law. “She did all the landscaping here with no training,” Santen points out. “People stop all the time to compliment us on the flowers.”

Santen works at MoMA too, as an art handler; Brown, who was between artist’s residencies at the Millay Colony and the MacDowell Colony in May, is an adjunct professor at Pratt. Both she and Santen rely on public transportation to get to work. “It can be challenging because our community—friends, art stuff—isn’t here, and it’s a long schlep to the Lower East Side or Brooklyn,” Brown says. “On a good day, it’s the best of both worlds; you’re in the city but you’re outside of it. On a bad day, it’s the worst of both worlds, because you’re still connected to the hustle.”

On weekends especially the parking lots at the southern end of the island fill up and Johnny’s Reef, Artie’s Steak and Seafood, and Sammy’s Fish Box are all vying for their business. “It seems like the entire Bronx comes back here to eat on the weekends,” Brown says.

“It’s like hours of traffic nonstop; thousands and thousands of people,” says Santen. “People have these strong associations with the restaurants they went to as a kid. That’s when you realize how much this place is still connected to the rest of the Bronx.”

One of Santen’s short 16-millimeter films, Traffic , follows the hypnotic stream of cars bound for the seafood shacks, circling the roundabouts on Pelham Bay and moving relentlessly across the bridge. Since Santen moved to City Island, the place has suffused his work. His film City Island includes the neon lobster-shaped Seafood City sign—one of the most famous icons of the island, washed away during Hurricane Sandy; the film depicts the facade of seemingly every house and structure on the island in a nearly 11-minute series of flashes.

“It’s like Ed Ruscha’s photo book Every Building on the Sunset Strip ,” Brown says. To me, it is also reminiscent of the experimental collage films of Chris Marker, with a dash of some of the footage from Bruce Springsteen’s “Born in the U.S.A.” video—Americana, but lyrical, elliptical, and connected to a yearning for some buried dream.

Watching it, I am reminded of Max Krull, telling stories of long-ago years in Paris as he made coffee on the stove. He’d quoted Hemingway: “Ernest Hemingway wrote that if ever a young person has a chance to live in Paris, wherever that person goes in life after that Paris will follow them forever because Paris is a moveable feast.” Is City Island then, Paris too? Krull reflexively raised an eyebrow, let a half smile show. “I love living here,” is all he’d say.

harlem yacht club city island new york

Rebecca Bengal lives in Brooklyn and writes fiction and nonfiction. Recent and forthcoming publications include the Guardian, Aperture, Vogue, Bookforum, the Paris Review, Oxford American, and Lapham’s Quarterly .

Chris Mottalini is a photographer based in New York City. Much of his work deals with the photographic preservation of Modernist architecture and its place in the American landscape. His most recent book is Land of Smiles.

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ANNE BOOTH CATERING

Anne Booth Catering

The Harlem Yacht Club

Anne Booth Catering has been the official caterer of Th e Harlem Yacht Club on City Island, New York, for almost a decade. This historic club house boasts views of the Manhattan skyline and breathtaking sunsets over the water. The Banquet Hall has a capacity of 160, and the dining area, bar and lounge a re also available to rent. Call us now at 914-497-4267 to inquire about booking an event.

Harlem Yacht Club

On Site Catering

From gorgeous lake view weddings in upstate New York, pastoral farms hidden in the country side of Connecticut to the intimacy of a clients private home, Anne Booth Catering has traveled far and wide offering their professionalism in creating the most memorable events.

Serving the Greater New York, Connecticut and New Jersey areas, Anne Booth and her team are available to travel to your ideal location bringing the most delectable foods and accommodating staff to ensure your special day is one to remember. 

Contact us to find out details on how we can make your event something to savor. 

harlem yacht club city island new york

City Island Yacht Club

Incorporated 1907.

Sailing picture

City Island Yacht Club (CIYC) sits at the confluence of the East River/New York Harbor and Long Island Sound providing strategic access to a variety of cruising destinations and experiences. The CIYC Cruising Committee is pleased to offer several cruises and seminars during the 2024 season.  Cruises are generally held over a weekend to enjoy the attractions of the planned destination and often coordinated with members from nearby Harlem Yacht Club.

We would love to have you join us for one or more of this year’s cruises and seminars.

Participants can register on our Eventbrite club page or check the club calendar for details and updates.

2024 Season Cruising Excursions and Seminars

Apr 17 – Heavy Weather Sailing Seminar  CIYC member Jim Austin will present his experience cruising to Newfoundland in 2023 and his preparations for heavy weather sailing.

May 8 – Sail Trim Seminar Dallas Murphy, CIYC member and author of a book on the topic, will present a seminar for cruisers on sail trim helping us to “see like a sailor”.

Jun 22 – 23 Cruise to the Riverside Yacht Club in Greenwich, CT , a new destination for our cruises.

Jul 12 – 15 Four-day cruise to the Thimble Islands with stops in Norwalk, Branford, and Westport. Further information about this trip and registration in EventBrite . 

Aug 17   –   Join us for a fun raft-up to Hempstead Harbor where we will BBQ, swim, and hang out until we sail back in the evening.

Sep 14 – 15 Cruise to Northport , one of our favorite destinations. This cruise will include a “predicted log” competition testing your knowledge of your boat’s speed under different cruising conditions. Registration here . 

Cruising News and Updates 

Neaera cruising

Looking back on the 2023 Cruising Season

America's Boating Club Logo

Marine Navigation Course starts January 13, 2024

Upcoming events, city island sail & power squadron meeting, sayers series race, private event, garden club of city island meeting.

2024 September 16

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  • Temple University
  • Commonwealth of Nations
  • New York Post
  • Big East Conference
  • Nielsen Media Research
  • Senate Committee on the Judiciary
  • Amnesty International
  • University of Maryland
  • Villanova University
  • Education Department (US)
  • Major League Baseball Players Assn
  • Science (Journal)
  • Group of Seven
  • Los Angeles Times
  • Muslim Brotherhood (Egypt)
  • Moody's Investors Service Inc
  • Council of Europe
  • Charlotte Hornets
  • Legal Aid Society
  • United States Olympic Committee
  • Oklahoma City Thunder
  • Kent State University
  • Bear Stearns Cos
  • Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center
  • Purdue University
  • University of Wisconsin
  • Nature (Journal)
  • League of Women Voters
  • Augusta National Golf Club
  • Bank of Canada
  • General Services Administration
  • Comedy Central
  • Ferrari SpA
  • Liverpool (Soccer Team)
  • University of Nebraska
  • Church of England
  • Turner Broadcasting System Inc
  • Voice of America
  • Lord & Taylor
  • New York Daily News
  • Fidelity Investments
  • Senate Committee on Intelligence
  • New York Red Bulls (Soccer Team)
  • Actors Equity Assn
  • Korean Air Lines
  • Patrolmen's Benevolent Assn
  • Providence College
  • London Stock Exchange
  • Alibaba Group Holding Ltd
  • Getty, J Paul, Museum
  • Mazda Motor Corp
  • Citizens Budget Commission
  • Juilliard School
  • Saks Fifth Avenue
  • Cadillac Division of General Motors Corp
  • Burger King Corp
  • Ninety-Second Street Y
  • House Committee on the Judiciary
  • Boston Globe
  • Senate Committee on Banking
  • Vodafone Group Plc
  • Health and Hospitals Corp
  • Danspace Project
  • Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo
  • Moderna Inc
  • Middlebury College
  • Ernst & Young
  • National Football League Players Assn
  • American Symphony Orchestra
  • Senate Committee on Foreign Relations
  • University of Massachusetts
  • Hearst Corp
  • United Steelworkers of America
  • FX (TV Network)
  • Jehovah's Witnesses
  • HarperCollins Publishers
  • Huawei Technologies Co Ltd
  • Universal Music Group
  • Discovery Channel
  • Indy Racing League
  • Sony Pictures Entertainment
  • Louis Vuitton
  • Reuters Group PLC
  • Wake Forest University
  • Arts & Entertainment Network
  • Free Syrian Army
  • TPG Capital
  • Reynolds, R J, Tobacco Co
  • Houston Oilers
  • Lloyd's of London
  • Kansas State University
  • Polaroid Corp
  • Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
  • Advertising Council
  • Clear Channel Communications Inc
  • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc
  • Iowa State University
  • Council of Fashion Designers of America
  • UJA-Federation of New York
  • Joffrey Ballet
  • Afghan National Security Forces
  • Senate Committee on Armed Services
  • Pershing Square Capital Management
  • National Basketball Players Assn
  • Anti-Defamation League
  • Wagner Group
  • Time Warner Cable Inc
  • Gagosian Gallery
  • University of Missouri
  • Turner Network Television
  • American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees
  • New Jersey Symphony Orchestra
  • Los Angeles Philharmonic
  • United States Golf Assn
  • Rolling Stone
  • American Basketball Assn
  • Sports Illustrated
  • Marquette University
  • Professional Golfers Assn
  • Hudson River Museum
  • Atlantic Coast Conference
  • Health and Mental Hygiene Department (NYC)
  • Likud Party (Israel)
  • Assn of Tennis Professionals
  • Northern Alliance
  • American Kennel Club
  • House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform
  • Correction Department (NYC)
  • HealthCare.gov
  • Quaker Oats Co
  • United Nations Human Rights Council
  • WhatsApp Inc
  • United States Tennis Assn
  • Victoria and Albert Museum
  • New York Civil Liberties Union
  • Vanguard Group Inc
  • Federal Open Market Committee
  • Philadelphia Inquirer
  • Fairleigh Dickinson University
  • Winnipeg Jets
  • Reebok International Ltd
  • Consumer Reports
  • Organization of American States
  • Universal Pictures
  • Tottenham Hotspur (Soccer Team)
  • People's Liberation Army (China)
  • California Institute of Technology
  • Blackstone Group, The
  • Symphony Space
  • McCarter Theater
  • National Endowment for the Humanities
  • Bottega Veneta
  • BuzzFeed Inc
  • Current Biology (Journal)
  • Nordstrom Inc
  • Apollo Global Management
  • BioNTech SE
  • Royal Shakespeare Co
  • Chicago Tribune
  • Fairfield University
  • Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
  • Berlin Philharmonic
  • National Geographic
  • Union of European Football Assns (UEFA)
  • Committee to Protect Journalists
  • Silver Lake Partners
  • International Energy Agency
  • Malaysia Airlines
  • Reserve Officers Training Corps
  • Institute for Supply Management
  • Volvo Car Corp
  • People's Bank of China
  • European Court of Human Rights
  • New Republic
  • United States Capitol Police
  • New York Road Runners Club
  • National People's Congress (China)
  • International Assn of Machinists and Aerospace Workers
  • American Composers Orchestra
  • USA Network
  • American Bankers Assn
  • ABN AMRO Holding NV
  • Educational Alliance
  • Charlie Hebdo
  • Ensemble Studio Theater
  • New Jersey Performing Arts Center
  • World Boxing Council
  • State University of New York at Purchase
  • Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee
  • Congressional Black Caucus
  • Broadway League
  • House Financial Services Committee
  • Village Voice
  • Baker Hughes Inc
  • Greenwich House
  • Elliott Management Corp
  • Royal Opera House
  • Financial Industry Regulatory Authority
  • Yves Saint Laurent
  • Billboard (Magazine)
  • Tokyo Electric Power Co
  • Wieden & Kennedy
  • Pro Football Hall of Fame
  • Alternative for Germany
  • House Committee on Armed Services
  • Theranos Inc
  • Miami Herald
  • Lenox Hill Hospital
  • Neuberger Museum of Art
  • Scotland Yard (Metropolitan Police Service)
  • CW Television Network
  • Butler University
  • Politico, The
  • Bellevue Hospital Center
  • European Court of Justice
  • San Francisco Symphony
  • Le Poisson Rouge
  • Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc
  • Washington Mystics
  • Kickstarter
  • Federation of Protestant Welfare Agencies
  • London Symphony Orchestra
  • Financial Times
  • Oberlin College
  • Law and Justice (Poland)
  • PEN American Center
  • American Federation of Musicians
  • YES Network
  • Miller Theater at Columbia University
  • San Francisco Opera
  • Senate Committee on Ethics
  • Katonah Museum of Art
  • Saudi Aramco
  • Christian Democratic Union (Germany)
  • El Al Israel Airlines
  • Weinstein Co
  • Directors Guild of America
  • Lancet, The (Journal)
  • International Boxing Federation
  • Japan Airlines
  • United Nations High Commission for Refugees
  • Qantas Airways
  • Los Angeles Sparks
  • People's Daily
  • National Health Service
  • Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School (Parkland, Fla)
  • Equifax Inc
  • International Assn of Athletics Federations
  • Hartford Stage Co
  • Yale Center for British Art
  • Theater for a New Audience
  • Federal Security Service
  • Armani, Giorgio, SpA
  • Science Advances (Journal)
  • National Front (France)
  • Afghan National Army
  • Consumer Federation of America
  • Cargill Inc
  • Forest City Ratner Companies
  • Office of the Comptroller (NYC)
  • Economic Development Corp
  • Paris Opera
  • Atletico Madrid (Soccer Team)
  • Kurdistan Workers' Party
  • Morris, Mark, Dance Group
  • Deutsche Borse AG
  • Steinway & Sons
  • Westport Country Playhouse
  • Abrons Arts Center
  • Snapchat Inc
  • Aston Martin
  • Institute for Advanced Study
  • University of Memphis
  • History Channel
  • National Symphony Orchestra
  • Supreme Court of India
  • Orpheus Chamber Orchestra
  • Court of Arbitration for Sport
  • New York City Football Club (Soccer Team)
  • Village Vanguard
  • Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra
  • International Tennis Federation
  • Social Democratic Party (Germany)
  • Knopf, Alfred A, Inc
  • Jemaah Islamiyah
  • Kosovo Liberation Army
  • Royal Canadian Mounted Police
  • House Committee on Energy and Commerce
  • Real Estate Board of New York
  • Grolier Club
  • American Media Inc
  • Santa Fe Opera
  • Rockefeller University
  • San Francisco Ballet
  • Financial Conduct Authority (Great Britain)
  • Coalition for the Homeless
  • California State University
  • Valentino Fashion Group SpA
  • Health Department (NYS)
  • Dish Network
  • Riverside Church
  • New Jersey Turnpike Authority
  • Museum of Fine Arts (Boston)
  • KLM Royal Dutch Airlines
  • Long Island College Hospital
  • China Central Television
  • Frito-Lay Inc
  • Singapore Airlines
  • John Jay College of Criminal Justice
  • Empire State Development Corp
  • MSG Network
  • Xavier University of Ohio
  • American Repertory Theater
  • Emerson String Quartet
  • Baltimore Colts
  • Winged Foot Golf Club
  • Virgin Atlantic Airways
  • Universal Studios Inc
  • Kennedy Space Center
  • Bennington College
  • McLaren Racing
  • Acura Division of Honda Motor Co
  • Carrier Corp
  • National Ballet of Canada
  • House of Commons (Great Britain)
  • PLoS One (Journal)
  • New Orleans Pelicans (Basketball)
  • International Cycling Union
  • Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation
  • Connecticut Sun
  • E! Entertainment Television
  • Lyric Opera of Chicago
  • Goodspeed Opera House
  • Montclair Art Museum
  • Nature Communications (Journal)
  • Merkin Concert Hall
  • Cantor Fitzgerald LP
  • Bank of China
  • Tehrik-e-Taliban
  • Homeless Services Department (NYC)
  • LG Electronics
  • American Honda Motor Co
  • Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF)
  • Heineken NV
  • Dodge Division of Chrysler Corp
  • Straphangers Campaign
  • Marshall Chess Club
  • Dominion Voting Systems Corp
  • Big Apple Circus
  • Avery Fisher Hall
  • Michelin Group
  • Little Brown & Co
  • Department of Investigation (NYC)
  • Occupy Central
  • Nassau County Museum of Art
  • Celine (Fashion Label)
  • Hudson's Bay Co
  • Indianapolis Motor Speedway
  • Food Network
  • Afghan National Police
  • Scientific Reports (Journal)
  • Five Star Movement (Italy)
  • Minnesota Lynx
  • Board of Elections (NYC)
  • Justice and Development Party (Turkey)
  • Kaiser Permanente
  • Harvard Medical School
  • All Nippon Airways
  • Zagat Survey
  • Hynix Semiconductor
  • Sinaloa Cartel
  • Shubert Organization
  • NFL Network
  • Take-Two Interactive Software Inc
  • Pratt & Whitney
  • Broadcom Corporation
  • White House Council of Economic Advisers
  • Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd
  • Basketball Hall of Fame
  • Kronos Quartet
  • Flea Theater
  • Conservative Party (Canada)
  • Proceedings of the Royal Society B (Journal)
  • International Rescue Committee
  • Coinbase Inc
  • Ballet Hispanico
  • Alcoholics Anonymous
  • World Wildlife Fund
  • Boise State University
  • Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS)
  • Walker Art Center
  • Carnival Cruise Lines
  • Ritz-Carlton Hotel Co
  • Canadian Football League
  • Bowery Ballroom
  • Bell Laboratories
  • Time (Magazine)
  • Belmont Park
  • Petroleos de Venezuela SA
  • Commonwealth Fund
  • Phillips Auctioneers LLC
  • Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd
  • Cleveland Museum of Art
  • Brooks Brothers
  • Duquesne University
  • Tencent Holdings Ltd
  • Vienna State Opera
  • USA Basketball
  • Atlantic Monthly
  • IAC/InterActiveCorp
  • Chicago Sun-Times
  • Kitchen, The (Manhattan, NY, Performance Space)
  • Gerber Products Co
  • Rattlestick Playwrights Theater
  • International Organization for Migration
  • TBS Network
  • Lucasfilm Ltd
  • Dow Chemical Company
  • United Food and Commercial Workers Union
  • Detroit Symphony Orchestra
  • United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
  • National Marine Fisheries Service
  • Des Moines Register
  • Gilead Sciences Inc
  • Beard, James, Foundation
  • Neiman Marcus Group
  • Jeep Division of Chrysler
  • Cultural Affairs Department
  • Theater for the New City
  • Auschwitz Concentration Camp
  • Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons
  • Minnesota Orchestra
  • Environmental Defense Fund
  • Hayden Planetarium
  • Newark Liberty International Airport (NJ)
  • American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
  • Prado Museum
  • Anthology Film Archives
  • National Rally (France)
  • Third Point LLC
  • Global Times
  • United Methodist Church
  • Mozilla Foundation
  • New York Public Library for the Performing Arts
  • Charter Communications Inc
  • English National Opera
  • CVC Capital Partners
  • Jazz Standard
  • Colorado State University
  • Liberal Democratic Party (Japan)
  • Chinese Nationalist Party (Taiwan)
  • Southern Poverty Law Center
  • Juul Labs Inc
  • House Committee on Foreign Affairs
  • Dunkin Donuts
  • Islamic State Khorasan
  • National League for Democracy (Myanmar)
  • Lincoln Motor Co
  • Business Roundtable
  • Sequoia Capital
  • World Boxing Assn
  • Rhode Island School of Design
  • Virgin Group
  • International Contemporary Ensemble
  • Expedia Inc
  • Wichita State University
  • Primary Stages Co
  • International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees
  • International Chess Federation
  • Movement for Democratic Change
  • Friars Club
  • Hollywood Foreign Press Assn
  • Boston Ballet
  • Guardian Angels
  • Suzuki Motor Corp
  • White House Correspondents Assn
  • Breitbart News Network LLC
  • Gannett Company Inc
  • National Republican Congressional Committee
  • House Committee on Ethics
  • National Review
  • South Street Seaport Museum
  • Chocolate Factory, The
  • Seattle Storm
  • Democratic Progressive Party (Taiwan)
  • International Automobile Federation
  • DraftKings Inc
  • Americans for Prosperity
  • University of Toronto
  • Cathay Pacific Airways
  • Chautauqua Institution
  • Politburo Standing Committee of the Communist Party of China
  • House Committee on Appropriations
  • Kentucky Fried Chicken
  • World Chess Federation
  • Baltimore Sun
  • St Louis University
  • X (Formerly Twitter)
  • Aam Aadmi Party (India)
  • Charles Schwab Corporation
  • Honeywell International Inc
  • Dallas Museum of Art
  • National Geographic Channel
  • Dallas Morning News
  • Catholic Charities Archdiocese of New York
  • Tate Britain
  • National Institute of Standards and Technology
  • Independent Budget Office
  • National Assn of Manufacturers
  • BTS (Music Group)
  • National Museum of African American History and Culture
  • Nord Stream AG
  • Baltimore Museum of Art
  • Alfa Romeo Automobiles
  • American Theater Wing
  • Electronic Frontier Foundation
  • Popular Party (Spain)
  • Jaguar Land Rover
  • Save the Children
  • Automobili Lamborghini SpA
  • Warburg Pincus
  • L'Oreal SA
  • National Amusements Inc
  • Morehouse College
  • Oprah Winfrey Network
  • New York State Thruway Authority
  • Weather Channel
  • Agence France-Presse
  • Jil Sander AG
  • Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc
  • Musee d'Orsay
  • Goodman Theater
  • Sullivan & Cromwell
  • New York Public Interest Research Group
  • Hertz Global Holdings Inc
  • Harvard Law School
  • Cravath Swaine & Moore
  • Annals of Internal Medicine
  • International Air Transport Assn
  • Caramoor Center for Music and the Arts
  • Knights Templar
  • Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS)
  • Hilton Worldwide Holdings Inc
  • Telegram LLC
  • Steppenwolf Theatre Co
  • Mitsubishi Corporation
  • Hebrew University
  • Donmar Warehouse Theater
  • Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union
  • Norwegian Cruise Line
  • National Institute of Mental Health
  • Black Entertainment Television
  • Los Angeles Opera
  • Corcoran Group
  • Congressional Research Service
  • Grambling State University
  • Council on American-Islamic Relations
  • Sesame Workshop
  • Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art
  • United States Mint
  • New Jersey Institute of Technology
  • Apple Music
  • Ethiopian Airlines
  • Little League Baseball and Softball
  • Office of Personnel Management
  • University of North Dakota
  • Euronext Stock Exchange
  • Warner Bros Discovery
  • New York Review of Books
  • Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra
  • North American Soccer League
  • Van Cleef & Arpels
  • Daily Beast, The
  • Miami City Ballet
  • Storm King Art Center
  • Wooster Group
  • Guernsey's
  • Dalton School
  • Diller Scofidio & Renfro
  • China Daily
  • International Skating Union
  • Brooklyn Cyclones
  • Amalgamated Transit Union
  • Al Aqsa Mosque (Jerusalem)
  • Democratic Unionist Party (Northern Ireland)
  • Gardner, Isabella Stewart, Museum
  • Baltimore Symphony Orchestra
  • Harper's Bazaar
  • Pennsylvania Ballet
  • Riverkeeper
  • Einstein, Albert, College of Medicine
  • Newcastle United (Soccer Team)
  • Atlanta Dream
  • Bentley Motors Ltd
  • Taco Bell Corp
  • United States Chess Federation
  • World Wrestling Federation
  • Workers' Party (Brazil)
  • Biology Letters (Journal)
  • Old Vic Theater
  • Dia: Beacon
  • Cardinal Health Inc
  • Independent Film Channel
  • Infosys Technologies Ltd
  • Banana Republic
  • St Louis Symphony Orchestra
  • Vegas Golden Knights
  • Chloe (Fashion Label)
  • Spirit Airlines
  • Office of the Chief Medical Examiner of the City of New York
  • Trader Joe's
  • Liberal Democrats (Great Britain)
  • Shakespeare's Globe Theater
  • Senate Committee on Appropriations
  • International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia
  • Metropolitan Room
  • Maserati SpA
  • Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria
  • Bay Street Theater
  • State University of New York at Albany
  • Johnson Space Center
  • Department of Environmental Protection (NYC)
  • Syrian Observatory for Human Rights
  • Simon Property Group Inc
  • Israel Museum
  • Economist, The
  • Yum Brands Inc
  • Hollywood Reporter
  • Hockey Hall of Fame
  • Lower East Side Tenement Museum
  • Princeton University Art Museum
  • United States Conference of Mayors
  • Juilliard Orchestra
  • NBC Sports Network
  • Scottish National Party
  • MCC Theater
  • Club for Growth
  • Emirates Airlines
  • Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
  • Repertorio Espanol
  • Fisker Automotive
  • Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
  • Johnson Controls Inc
  • Crossroads Theater Company
  • League (Italian Political Party)
  • University of California, San Francisco
  • Bolshoi Theater
  • Fox Searchlight Pictures
  • Energy Information Administration
  • Heckscher Museum of Art
  • Cox Enterprises Inc
  • Norfolk Southern Corporation
  • Audemars Piguet Group
  • Borussia Dortmund (Soccer Team)
  • Texas Tribune
  • IMG Worldwide
  • Koch Industries Inc
  • University of California, San Diego
  • Nassau Coliseum
  • Transportation Alternatives
  • Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species
  • Rolls-Royce Motor Cars
  • St Martin's Press
  • Lexus Division of Toyota Motor Corp
  • Houston Grand Opera
  • Pearl Theater Co
  • New York Hall of Science
  • Leicester City (Soccer Team)
  • United States Africa Command
  • Liberal Party (Canada)
  • Roulette (Brooklyn, NY, Performance Space)
  • Syrian Army
  • Cherry Lane Theater
  • Center for American Progress
  • Two River Theater Co
  • Reporters Without Borders
  • Der Spiegel
  • Phillips Collection
  • Musica Sacra
  • New World Stages
  • Seattle Sounders
  • Chelsea Market
  • Mint Theater Co
  • Motown Records
  • Swiss National Bank
  • New Juilliard Ensemble
  • GRU (Russia)
  • Fidesz Party
  • Almeida Theater
  • Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America
  • Citgo Petroleum Corp
  • Drexel University
  • Confederations Cup
  • Denver Post
  • PNC Financial Services Group Inc
  • Actors Studio
  • Warner Media LLC
  • Pulse (Orlando, Fla, Nightclub)
  • Trump Media & Technology Group
  • Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
  • Harvard Business School
  • AMC Entertainment
  • Monty Python
  • High Museum of Art
  • Pacific Northwest Ballet
  • Kimbell Art Museum
  • Center for Constitutional Rights
  • PPG Industries Inc
  • Interpol (International Criminal Police Organization)
  • DoorDash (Mobile App)
  • Banco Santander S A
  • Department of Housing Preservation and Development (NYC)
  • Financial Stability Oversight Council
  • Bang on a Can
  • National Hot Rod Assn
  • National Book Foundation
  • Shakespeare Theater of New Jersey
  • New Jersey Repertory Company
  • United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
  • Cell (Journal)
  • Blue and White (Israeli Political Party)
  • California Public Utilities Commission
  • Swedish Academy
  • International Crisis Group
  • Monmouth University
  • Bay Area Rapid Transit
  • New York Herald Tribune
  • Soros Fund Management
  • Negro Ensemble Co
  • Royal Danish Ballet
  • Pan American World Airways
  • Trust for Public Land
  • Patek Philippe SA
  • Royal Society Open Science (Journal)
  • Al Shifa Hospital (Gaza Strip)
  • JAMA Internal Medicine (Journal)
  • Recording Academy
  • Foo Fighters
  • Gulf Cooperation Council
  • Terra Firma Capital Partners Ltd
  • San Quentin Prison
  • Scripps Institution of Oceanography
  • Silverstein Properties
  • Field Museum
  • Gateway Playhouse
  • Anbang Insurance Group Co
  • Socialist Party (France)
  • Kushner Cos
  • Syfy Channel
  • Royal and Ancient Golf Club
  • Compagnie Financiere Richemont SA
  • Peloton Interactive Inc
  • Trian Fund Management LP
  • British Secret Intelligence Service
  • Air National Guard
  • Autonomy Corp PLC
  • Deutsche Grammophon
  • Robin Hood Foundation
  • American Hockey League
  • National Sawdust (Brooklyn, NY, Performance Space)
  • TEFAF (The European Fine Art Fair Stichting)
  • Digital World Acquisition Corp
  • Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf
  • Starboard Value LP
  • International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies
  • SolarCity Inc
  • Uffizi Gallery
  • Opera Theater of St Louis
  • Omnicom Group Inc
  • New York Youth Symphony
  • Florida A&M University
  • United States Army Special Forces (Green Berets)
  • Central Bank of Russia
  • Internet Research Agency (Russia)
  • Frontier Airlines Inc
  • Pediatrics (Journal)
  • Greenlight Capital Inc
  • Golden Dawn (Greece)
  • Citizens United
  • New Mexico State University
  • Mabou Mines
  • Industrial and Commercial Bank of China
  • Wiesenthal, Simon, Center
  • London Philharmonic
  • Didi Chuxing
  • National Gallery (London)
  • Roma (Soccer Team)
  • West Ham United (Soccer Team)
  • Grey Art Gallery
  • Bugatti Motors
  • British Library
  • National Urban League
  • American Institute of Certified Public Accountants
  • New York Aquarium
  • American Astronomical Society
  • Yonkers Raceway
  • Democratic Party (Italy)
  • La Scala Opera House (Milan, Italy)
  • T Rowe Price Group Inc
  • Mellon Foundation
  • Hong Kong Stock Exchange
  • National Action Network
  • LAByrinth Theater Co
  • New York Theater Ballet
  • FreshDirect
  • Westin Hotels & Resorts
  • Housing Works
  • New York State Council on the Arts
  • Serious Fraud Office (United Kingdom)
  • Aston Villa (Soccer Team)
  • Emily's List
  • Department of Motor Vehicles
  • Entergy Corporation
  • Bard Graduate Center for Studies in the Decorative Arts
  • Children's Museum of Manhattan
  • Limon Dance Co
  • RM Auctions
  • United Nations Development Program
  • Judson Memorial Church
  • Tanglewood Music Center
  • Young Concert Artists
  • Town Hall (Manhattan, NY)
  • Institutional Revolutionary Party (Mexico)
  • Cathedral Church of St John the Divine (Manhattan, NY)
  • United Technologies Corporation
  • Carnival Corporation
  • Assn of Flight Attendants
  • American Guild of Musical Artists
  • Maersk Line
  • Spelman College
  • Advent International Corp
  • Sing Sing Correctional Facility
  • American Society of Clinical Oncology
  • Family Research Council
  • Polisario Front
  • Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine
  • Urban Bush Women
  • University of Wyoming
  • Tinder (Mobile App)
  • Green-Wood Cemetery (Brooklyn, NY)
  • House of Lords (Great Britain)
  • Green Party (Germany)
  • RT (TV Network)
  • Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Ltd
  • Workers' Party of Korea
  • Chicago Sky
  • Institutional Shareholder Services Inc
  • Korean Central News Agency
  • Barbican Center
  • De Beers Group
  • Columbia Records
  • Red Bull Racing Ltd
  • Nature Medicine (Journal)
  • Family Dollar Stores Inc
  • Priorities USA
  • Trinity Church (Manhattan, NY)
  • Sunderland (Soccer Team)
  • Kohl's Corporation
  • Reserve Bank of India
  • Getty Images
  • Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria
  • New York Taxi Workers Alliance
  • National Restaurant Assn
  • Bruce Museum of Arts and Science
  • Zabar's
  • Walter Reade Theater
  • Biogenesis of America LLC
  • Gallaudet University
  • Reed, Walter, National Military Medical Center
  • Tatmadaw (Myanmar)
  • British Academy of Film and Television
  • Apple Daily
  • Michelin Guide
  • CSX Corporation
  • Comedie Francaise
  • Physicians for Human Rights
  • International Tennis Hall of Fame
  • Brooklyn Historical Society
  • National Assn of Insurance Commissioners
  • Smithsonian American Art Museum
  • Getty Center
  • New York Transit Museum
  • National Security Archive
  • Independent Democratic Conference (New York State Senate)
  • Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
  • Signature Center
  • Four Seasons Hotels Ltd
  • Koninklijke Philips Electronics NV
  • NYC & Co
  • Indian Premier League
  • Clark, Sterling and Francine, Art Institute
  • Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
  • Benchmark Capital
  • Occidental Petroleum Corporation
  • Lone Star Funds
  • Keen Company
  • Williams-Sonoma Inc
  • Jujamcyn Theaters
  • Guinness World Records
  • Weather Underground
  • Children's Television Workshop
  • Burisma Holdings Ltd
  • Tree of Life (Pittsburgh, Pa, Synagogue)
  • Eleven Madison Park (Manhattan, NY, Restaurant)
  • Artists Space
  • Producers Guild of America
  • Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund
  • Irving Plaza
  • Boston Consulting Group
  • Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
  • United Nations Population Fund
  • Southern Christian Leadership Conference
  • Supreme Court of Israel
  • Vox Media Inc
  • Warner Brothers Pictures
  • Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority
  • Wrigley Field (Chicago)
  • Tax Policy Center
  • Lower Manhattan Cultural Council
  • Subway Restaurants
  • Costa Crociere SpA
  • Acting Company
  • Boston Pops Orchestra
  • Advance Publications Inc
  • Focus on the Family
  • Sainsbury, J, PLC
  • Police Department (San Francisco, Calif)
  • Corinthian Colleges Inc
  • Meredith Corporation
  • Albertsons Inc
  • Judson Dance Theater
  • International Ice Hockey Federation
  • Turner Classic Movies
  • Blizzard Entertainment
  • Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
  • Red Army Faction
  • Maimonides Medical Center
  • Smith, Alfred E, Memorial Foundation
  • New Federal Theater
  • San Jose State University
  • Peking University
  • MGM Resorts International
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hyc-burgee-geometric-horizonal-new.jpg

HARLEM YACHT CLUB

Established 1883

COME SAIL WITH US!

The Harlem Yacht Club has three levels of membership for people of all backgrounds, abilities, and interests (plus an affiliate membership for boat owners who would like to get to know the club before joining). No matter which type of membership is right for you and your family, you’ll enjoy a sense of camaraderie and friendship… all with a view of beautiful Eastchester Bay.

harlem yacht club city island new york

ACTIVE MEMBER

Active membership is right for the sail or power boat owner. You’ll enjoy full use of all club facilities including the clubhouse, grounds, Club Boat program and all marine facilities, and have voting rights. You can moor vessels in HYC's special anchorage in the well-protected north end of Eastchester Bay, have the right to use and store dinghies (including dock-launched sailboats), and have full use of the club's launch service.

INTERMEDIATE MEMBER

Intermediate members are entitled to use the Club Boat program and to store and use dinghies and dock-launched sailboats, and enjoy limited use of all other marine facilities. This membership is limited to occasional use of HYC launch service and moorings and is required for part-owners of moored vessel with shared with Active members. Additionally, Intermediate members are entitled to participate in all Club events and use of the club grounds. An Intermediate member elected to the board has the right to vote.

SOCIAL MEMBER

Social membership is designed for people who do not own a boat but still want to participate in the club's social activities and make use of the bar and restaurant. Social members may join other members on their boats and may also take sailing lessons at the club at discounted prices.

SUMMER AFFILIATE PROGRAM

In addition to membership, Harlem Yacht Club offers a Summer Affiliate Program designed to introduce new boat owners to the advantages of belonging to our Club to see if this is the right choice for your boating adventures. It is a one-time offering for the summer season, which runs from April 15th to August 15th. For a nominal fee, Summer Affiliates are able to use all the facilities of the Club, including the loan of a proper mooring for their vessels; full use of the Club's launch service, restaurant and bar; and an open invitation to attend all social functions. A summer spent sailing or cruising with our members is the best way for a prospective member to fully appreciate what the Club has to offer. 

Interested in joining the Harlem Yacht Club?  Please contact our Membership Chair at  [email protected] .

IMAGES

  1. Harlem Yacht Club in City Island, NY, United States

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  2. The Legendary Harlem Yacht Club Harlem New York 1883

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  3. Harlem Yacht Club in City Island, NY, United States

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  4. Harlem Yacht Club

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  5. Open Houses

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  6. Services

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VIDEO

  1. NORTHSTAR 2 CITY ISLAND

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  3. Driving on Throgs Neck Bridge, from City Island, New York 👍

  4. CITY ISLAND AQUARIUM NEW LFS IN NYC #fish #aquariumstore #fishaquarium #fishstoretour #cityisland

  5. What does harlem River Yacht Club mean? #HarlemRiverYachtClub

  6. Biking from Harlem to city island

COMMENTS

  1. The Harlem Yacht club

    The Harlem Yacht Club, founded in 1883, is one of the oldest yacht clubs in the United States. We've been based here on City Island since 1894. This unique New York City community is the gateway to the cruising grounds of Long Island Sound to the east and New York City to the west. With a full complement of services and activities for boat ...

  2. Club History

    HARLEM YACHT CLUB • 417 Hunter Ave, City Island NY 10464 • [email protected] Lat. 40° 51' 00" N Lon. 73° 47' 24" W. VHF 72 • 718-885-3078

  3. The Legendary Harlem Yacht Club Harlem New York 1883

    The Harlem Yacht Club, currently based on City Island in the New York City borough of The Bronx and incorporated in 1883. Is the third oldest continuously functioning yacht club in the City of New York, the first being The New York Yacht Club, founded in 1844 in Harlem New York. The Club is currently active in Manhattan and in Newport, Rhode ...

  4. Harlem Yacht Club

    The Harlem Yacht Club, currently based on City Island in the New York City borough of The Bronx and incorporated in 1883, is the third oldest continuously functioning yacht club in the City of New York, the first being The New York Yacht Club (founded in 1844, and currently active in Manhattan and in Newport, Rhode Island), and followed by the ...

  5. Dine

    It's common opinion among locals that we have the best food on th e Island. ... New England or Manhattan Clam Chowder $7. ... HARLEM YACHT CLUB • 417 Hunter Ave, City Island NY 10464 • [email protected]. Lat. 40° 51' 00" N Lon. 73° 47' 24" W. VHF 72 • 718-885-3078

  6. Harlem Boat Clubs, New York 1883

    Harlem boat club on the Harlem River by B. J. Falk, June 19, 1902. The Harlem Yacht Club (aka Harlem boat club), now of City Island, was initially founded at 124th Street and the East River in June of 1883. It spent most of its first two decades three blocks further south at the old Randall mansion (former home of the same Randalls who owned ...

  7. Harlem Yacht Club

    City Island Yacht Club Incorporated 1907. Navigation Menu Close. Membership; ASA School; Sailing. Cruising; Regattas & Racing; Club Boats; Junior Sailing. Summer Program; Junior Racing; Teams and Staff; ... Big Tom City Island Cup Harlem Yacht Club 417 Hunter Avenue, City Island, NY, United States .

  8. Open House

    The Officers and Members of the Harlem Yacht Club invite prospective Members to join us for our 2024 Open-House Sundays, on March 10, April 14, and May 19. Join us in our beautiful waterfront Clubhouse at 417 Hunter Avenue on City Island in the Bronx. We'll be here from 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 to offer […]

  9. Harlem Yacht Club

    Harlem Yacht Club. 1K likes · 3,310 were here. Harlem Yacht Club

  10. Harlem Yacht Club

    An urban oasis in the heart of Manhattan, the 843-acre park encompasses rolling fields, woodlands, trails and waterways, plus a number of family attractions. One of the oldest yacht clubs in the United States, the Harlem Yacht Club offers more than just regular opportunities for members to compete in boat races or enjoy river and ocean cruising.

  11. Harlem Yacht Club New York City.com : Profile

    The Harlem Yacht Club is located on City Island, a nautical community within the boundaries of New York City which is renowned for its maritime history. Many America's Cup yachts were built on this tiny island. Situated on the western end of Long Island Sound, in the most protected part of Eastchester Bay, the HYC offers access to the best ...

  12. Visitor Info

    The Harlem Yacht Club is a sponsor of ActiveCaptain.com. Visit our marker to see what other visiting captains are saying about HYC. HARLEM YACHT CLUB • 417 Hunter Ave, City Island NY 10464 • [email protected]. Lat. 40° 51' 00" N Lon. 73° 47' 24" W. VHF 72 • 718-885-3078

  13. Harlem Yacht Club, 417 Hunter Ave, Bronx, NY

    Welcome to Harlem Yacht Club Harlem Yacht Club is located on City Island, a nautical community within the boundaries of New York City which is renowned for its maritime history. Many America's Cup yachts were built on this tiny island. Situated on the western end of Long Island Sound, in the most protected part of Eastchester Bay, the HYC ...

  14. Harlem Yacht Club in City Island, NY, United States

    Harlem Yacht Club, City Island, NY, United States Marina. Find marina reviews, phone number, boat and yacht docks, slips, and moorings for rent at Harlem Yacht Club.

  15. HARLEM YACHT CLUB

    The Harlem Yacht Club is your cozy tucked away spot to go for a good drink with friends while enjoying the view of the city. The staff are friendly and treat you like you're a regular - extra helpful when you need and super knowledgeable. ... New York Athletic Club - Travers Island. 1. Boating, Swimming Pools, Beaches. American Yacht Club. 4 ...

  16. Best Sailing & Yacht Clubs in New York 2024

    417 Hunter Ave. #3. Stuyvesant Yacht Club. Stuyvesant (SYC) is a private, member-owned yacht club and is located on City Island, the gate way to Long Island Sound—convenient for residents of New York City, Westchester County, northern New Jersey, and lower Connecticut. We are in our 120th year of service to the sailing co...

  17. Upcoming Events

    HARLEM YACHT CLUB • 417 Hunter Ave, City Island NY 10464 • [email protected] Lat. 40° 51' 00" N Lon. 73° 47' 24" W. VHF 72 • 718-885-3078

  18. How to get to City Island in the Bronx

    Part of New York City, block by block. Near the end of an unassuming block on City Island in the Bronx, outside the 135-year-old Harlem Yacht Club, one of the oldest in the city and one of four ...

  19. Catering New York

    Anne Booth Catering has been the official caterer of The Harlem Yacht Club on City Island, New York, for almost a decade. This historic club house boasts views of the Manhattan skyline and breathtaking sunsets over the water. The Banquet Hall has a capacity of 160, and the dining area, bar and lounge are also available to rent. Call us now at ...

  20. Cruising

    City Island Yacht Club (CIYC) sits at the confluence of the East River/New York Harbor and Long Island Sound providing strategic access to a variety of cruising destinations and experiences. The CIYC Cruising Committee is pleased to offer several cruises and seminars during the 2024 season. Cruises are generally held over a weekend to enjoy the ...

  21. Services

    The club enjoys a private mooring field in the special anchorage zone designated west of City Island. The club employs a professional mooring service, but individual members are responsible for their own moorings and mooring tackle. ... HARLEM YACHT CLUB • 417 Hunter Ave, City Island NY 10464 • [email protected]. Lat. 40° 51' 00" N Lon. 73 ...

  22. Site Map

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  23. Join

    In addition to membership, Harlem Yacht Club offers a Summer Affiliate Program designed to introduce new boat owners to the advantages of belonging to our Club to see if this is the right choice for your boating adventures. It is a one-time offering for the summer season, which runs from April 15th to August 15th. For a nominal fee, Summer ...