Bound for history
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Alex Coolman
It 1938, John Blaich was reading the Balboa Times when something
caught his eye.
“It was a contest,” the 81-year-old Corona del Mar resident recalled.
“You had to identify yachts.”
Blaich entered the contest, won, and came away $50 richer. He also
acquired a new hobby, learning about the details of boats, that would
stick with him for the rest of his life.
Now Blaich, who has been writing the Daily Pilot’s Monday column
“Yachts of Yesteryear” for the last 30 weeks, has put his knowledge
acquired from a life of loving yachts into a book that will go on sale
Tuesday.
“The Large Yachts of Newport Harbor Before World War II,” which Blaich
is publishing himself, documents a lost era of yachting in Newport Beach
and the changes that the war brought to some of the area’s most
impressive boats.
It’s a period, Blaich says, that hasn’t been captured in any great
detail by earlier writers.
“I suddenly realized,” he said, “that I was the last of the young
old-timers around here, so I thought I ought to put all this information
together.”
Blaich’s credentials for compiling such a work are formidable. After
growing up on the Balboa peninsula, he served on the USS Baltimore in the
Western Pacific.
His knowledge of things that go on in and around the water, said
Balboa Yacht Club rear commodore Josh Walker, is tough to beat.
“He’s a guy who knows these kinds of things,” Walker said. “He
understands the traditions. He’s a throwback to a time when we did things
just a certain way.”
Turning through the pages of Blaich’s book, which is illustrated with
a number of photographs, will offer the reader an awareness of the
transforming effects the advent of World War II had on some aspects of
Newport Beach life.
The harbor entrance was blocked off in 1941 because of concerns about
enemy activity, Blaich noted.
“They had a log boom across the harbor entrance. The only people who
could go out were the fishermen.”
All sailing was confined to the waters within the harbor.
But the war also affected the look of many boats.
The 138-foot yacht Paragon, for example, was converted to military use
by the Navy. The boat had its home port in Newport Harbor in 1939 and was
wrecked in the harbor entrance when the famous hurricane swept through in
Sept. 21 of that year.
But the boat was restored, turned into “PYC36” by the Navy and used
for antisubmarine patrols.
Another vessel, the 234-foot yacht Vida, the largest yacht to ever
enter Newport Harbor, metamorphosed into the USS Crystal and helped
defend Midway Island.
In addition to the boats that were remarkable because of their
military use, Blaich’s book features images of some of the vessels that
became famous for their celebrity owners.
Santana, the yacht Humphrey Bogart owned, is prominently featured in a
picture of the actor and Lauren Bacall.
Also featured is the Swift of Ipswich, a boat owned by actor James
Cagney’s brother Bill.
Proceeds from sales of the book will benefit the Newport Harbor
Nautical Museum. The book is available in the museum’s gift shop.
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