Courageoussaling 00 Bost
Courageoussaling 00 Bost
Courageoussaling 00 Bost
THE
COURAGEOUS
SAILING CENTER
CONTENTS
Page
LOCATION 2
SOCIAL EVENTS 8
http://www.archive.org/details/courageoussalingOObost
CITY OF BOSTON MASSACHUSETTS
•
November 5, 1986
Leonard Greene
Safe Lite Instrument Company
White Plains Airport
White Plains, NY 10604
rely your^s,
fond L. Flynn
r of Boston
BOSTON CITY HALL '.ONE CITY HALL PLAZA • BOSTON • MASSACHUSETTS 02201 • 617/ 725-4000
1
LOCATION
The Courageous Sailing Program will be operated in the Pier 4/Dry Dock 2
area of the Charlestown Navy Yard, adjacent to the new, sixteen acre
Shipyard Park. This ideal location will provide a most dramatic permanent
home for the Courageous -- in the nation's largest and most ambitious historic
rehabilitation project. The City of Boston and the Boston Redevelopment
Authority are converting the historic Navy Yard into an active urban environ-
ment with a full range of residential, commercial, and recreational uses.
Shipyard Park is a beautiful, precious public open space on Boston's water-
front -- a centerpiece of Mayor Flynn's Harborpark program for public access
to the water — offering a variety of opportunities for active and passive
recreation including waterfront festivals, public docking facilities, sailing,
and fishing.
Location Map
PURPOSE OF THE PROGRAM
The Courageous Sailing Program will provide sail training for the youth of
Boston. The Courageous itself will greatly contribute to this program, both
as an inspirational symbol and as a training ship for the sailing program.
During the off season the Courageous will be on public exhibit.
The Program will draw participants from all of Boston's diverse neighbor-
hoods, bringing children of all cultures and income levels together to learn
the many skills of good sailing. By its very nature sailing builds not only
dexterity and physical prowess; it also builds and nurtures responsibility,
initiative, self-confidence and self-help, a respect for the forces of nature,
and courage. Sailing teaches the sailor to continually expand his knowledge
and skills, while respecting his limits. Sailing is a healthy outdoor activity;
with proper instruction it can become a lifetime family sport. The Courageous
Sailing Program, with an ever growing population of qualified sailors, will
provide an outstanding opportunity for the people of Boston to use their
greatest natural and recreational resource - Boston Harbor.
OPERATION OF THE PROGRAM
Boston Harbor presently has only one free public sailing facility, which is
located in South Boston. The Courageous Sailing Program will not only
provide additional free facilities, accessible to the blind and handicapped, but
will also provide continuing goal-oriented training for sailors once they have
learned basic sailing. The Courageous Program, a public/private partnership
between the City, the Boston Redevelopment Authority, private interests, and
the Courageous Sailing Center, Inc., a non-profit organization whose
directors and executive officers have extensive experience in sailing and sail
training. The City's Parks and Recreation Department will provide staff for
the program according to the commitment outlined below:
Permanent Staff
1 Director $ 35,000
2 Sailing Coordinators 35,000
1 Secretary 17,000
Seasonal
2 Summer Coordinators
30 Summer Youth Instructors
Miscellaneous supplies
Annual Total
The Courageous Sailing Program will use standards of achievement that give
the student an orderly learning progression and at the same time provide
benchmarks of accomplishment. There are a number of guidelines which can
be followed to assure that there is always a challenge for the student. To
sustain interest and provide opportunities for continuous growth, the
Courageous Sailing Program will offer four progressively higher level courses:
(1) basic sailing, (2) intermediate sailing, (3) a junior racing program or
basic cruising for the more experienced students, and (4) advanced racing
and cruising. At the end of a four-year stint in the Courageous Program,
boys and girls will have developed skills to hold their own in either a sailboat
race or a weekend cruise.
The Courageous Sailing Program have three sessions each year -- Spring,
will
early Summer, and late Summer. These sessions will allow students to pro-
gress from one level to the next, providing constant challenge and rewards
(certification) for completing each course.
The Spring program will consist of one session, meeting two and one-half
hours per day, designed for junior and high school students to practice
sailing as a spring athletic activity. The primary goal of the Spring program
will be to train beginning sailors, and thus help them on to their school's
team. High school sailing is already a competitive sport in the Boston metro-
politan area, so that once students develop the skills there are opportunities
for practice and competition. As a pilot program in 1987 the Courageous
Sailing Program will aim at four high schools, two public and two parochial,
each generating about 20 students. The students will spend the spring of '87
building skills with a coach and practicing racing. This will encourage them
to "come out for the team" next year, when a more extensive competitive
sailing program can be developed.
The Spring program will also allow "free sailing" on weekends for additional
practice time. In addition weekend sailing will allow those skilled enough to
sail with friends and family, so that as many people as possible can parti-
cipate in the Courageous Sailing Program.
Summer Sessions
The Summer sessions will each run for four weeks, with students attending
either in the morning or the afternoon.
Each session consist of five four-hour training periods per week for four
will
weeks - eighty hours in the classroom, rigging, and sailing.
a total of
Initially the program should be able to handle about 60 students per session
or up to 120 the first year. Some students, of course, will sign up for a
second session to build their skills, so the total number going through the
Program the first year would be somewhat less than 120.
Instruction
All instructors will be certified by either the Red Cross or the American
Sailing Association. Actual courses at each level will be structured so that
students can mitigrate easily from one level to the next. Instructors will be
provided with classroom space, video equipment, and other teaching aids.
A typical program for the sailor who follows the racing track over four years
of two summer sessions would be this:
Year One
Year Two
Year Three
Year Four
Session 1 - Varsity
Session 2 - Junior Varsity Skipper
Year One
Year Two
Year Three
Year Four
Session 1 - Navigator
Session 2 - Skipper
SOCIAL EVENTS
In order to foster friendship across the City, the Courageous Sailing Program
will schedule events such as sails on the Courageous itself, cookouts on the
Harbor Islands, overnight cruises, invitational regattas, talks by well known
sailors, and award ceremonies for the students. Much morale and comraderie
can be built through these events, especially if they are centered on such a
dramatic example of teamwork and self-reliance as the Courageous.