Last modified: 2018-12-05 by rob raeside
Keywords: royal munster yacht club | munster |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
See also:
Founded in 1872 as the Munster Model Yacht Club, the Royal Munster Yacht Club
merged with the Royal Cork Yacht Club, then dormant,
in 1966; the name was retained in the RCYC’s official name.
One of this
club’s feats was the introduction of the 12 foot dinghy to Ireland, locally
built, in 1923. For many years it enjoyed the hospitality of the Cork Harbour
Motor Yacht Club at Crosshaven.
Jan Mertens, 19 May 2011
image located by Jan Mertens, 19 May 2011
Plate CII of the French 1923 Album i.e. ‘Album des pavillons nationaux et
des marques distinctives’ shows an undefaced Red Ensign and the burgee:
vertically divided red-white-blue (apparently 1:1:2); a blue shield, royally
crowned, bearing three yellow antique crowns (Munster)
is placed in the white stripe.
The image above shows both flags while the
burgee adorns an ashtray, here:
http://www.woodwards.ie/auctions/2011/apr11/catalogue_files/image279.jpg.
Main sources:
http://www.royalcork.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=15&Itemid=53
http://www.12footdinghy.org/countries/ei.asp
Jan Mertens, 19 May 2011
image by Rob Raeside, 9 November 2018
Munster Model Yacht Club
Burgee 1872 - 1886: Pennant 2:3 (print image). Blue
field superimposed by a yellow bendwise anchor with black rode.
Source: St.
Leger, Alicia. A History of the Royal Cork Yacht Club.
Crosshaven, Ireland,
2005.
Peter Edwards, 19 September 2018
image by Rob Raeside, 9 November 2018
Burgee 1886 - 1891: Pennant 2:3 (print image). White field superimposed by a
red bendwise anchor with a black rode.
Source: St. Leger, Alicia. A History
of the Royal Cork Yacht Club.
Crosshaven, 2005.
Peter Edwards, 19
September 2018
image by Rob Raeside, 9 November 2018
Burgee 1922 - 1923.
Pennant 2:3 (print image). Blue field charged with a blue
three-blade propeller upon a white 1 unit wide pale.
Source: St. Leger,
Alicia. A History of the Royal Cork Yacht Club.
Crosshaven, Ireland, 2005.
Peter Edwards, 24 September 2018