The Last Days of the Schooner America

A Lost Icon at the Annapolis Warship Factory

Foreword by Gary Jobson
Published by Lyons Press
Distributed by Simon & Schuster

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About The Book

2025 BREWINGTON BOOK PRIZE WINNER

The schooner America was a technological marvel and a child star. In the summer of 1851, just weeks after her launching at New York, she crossed the Atlantic and sailed to an upset victory against a fleet of champions. The silver cup she won that day is still coveted by sportsmen. Almost immediately after that famous victory, she began a decades-long run of adventure, neglect, rehabilitations, and hard sailing, always surrounded by colorful, passionate personalities. America ran and enforced wartime blockades. She carried spies across the ocean. And she was on the scene as yachtsmen and business titans spent freely and competed fiercely for the cup she first won. By the early twentieth century, she was in desperate need of a thorough refit. The old thoroughbred floated in brackish water at the United States Naval Academy, stripped of her sails and rotting in the sun. Refitting America would be a massive project—expensive and potentially distracting for a nation struggling to emerge from the Great Depression and preparing for a world war. But the project had a powerful sponsor.

On a windy evening in December 1940, the eighty-nine-year-old America was hauled “groaning and complaining” up a marine railway at Annapolis: the first physical step in a rehabilitation rumored to have been set in motion by President Franklin Roosevelt himself. The haul-out brought the famous schooner into the heart of the Annapolis Yacht Yard, a privately owned company with a staff capable of completing such a project, but with leadership determined to convert their facility into a modern warship production plant on behalf of the United States and its allies.

The Last Days of the Schooner America traces the history of the famous vessel, from her design, build, and early racing career through her lesser-known Civil War service and the never-before-told story of her final days and moments on the ground at Annapolis. The schooner’s story is set against a vivid picture of the entrepreneurial forces behind the fast, focused rise of the Annapolis Yacht Yard as the United States prepares for and enters World War II. As wooden warships are built around her, America waits for a rehabilitation that would never happen. To bring this unique story to life, Annapolis sailor David Gendell delves into archival sources and oral histories and interviews some of the last living people who saw America at the Annapolis Yacht Yard.

About The Author

Product Details

  • Publisher: Lyons Press (August 6, 2024)
  • Length: 364 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781493084456

Raves and Reviews

“In The Last Days of the Schooner America: A Lost Icon at the Annapolis Warship Factory, Mr. Gendell writes with authority on the subsequent history of the America.”

– The Wall Street Journal

The Last Days of the Schooner America is a methodically researched history of a boat that clearly captivated the author, perhaps more for her demise than her achievements. Fortunately Gendell, the cofounder of Spinsheet magazine, is an adept storyteller who is able to weave the nearly 100-year history of America into a tale worthy of 300 or so pages.”

– Sailing Magazine

"A text of flawless prose with an eye to the sheer physical beauty and excitement of the great vessel."

– Ocean Navigator

I strongly recommend this book. History and sailing buffs alike will definitely enjoy learning more about this iconic vessel.

– Carol Newman Cronin, award-winning writer/editor and an Olympian

Gendell deftly weaves together firsthand reminiscences and archival documents to capture a unique moment in history. He also shows the interwoven tension between two seemingly unrelated narratives: the wish to restore a glorious but ancient race boat, and the need to win a world war, all overlaid by the timeless limitations of manpower and waterfront workspace. . . . I strongly recommend this book. History and sailing buffs alike will definitely enjoy learning more about this iconic vessel.

– Carol Newman Cronin, award-winning writer/editor and an Olympian

All sailors know about the story of America winning the race around the Isle of Wight, but few know what happened to one of the greatest yachts in the history of the sport. David Gendell tells a beautifully crafted story about the fascinating, sad fate of this engineless vessel that sailed for nearly 100 years.

– Tom Whidden, America’s Cup winning tactician, 1980, 1987, 1988

The Last Days of the Schooner America is an extraordinary story brilliantly told by David Gendell. While most sailors know of America’s famous upset victory in what would become the America’s Cup, few of us know that the beautiful and legendarily fast schooner was also an eyewitness to the country’s maritime history. America stirred sailors across generations, from blockade-running rogues during the Civil War, to the President of the United States who sought to preserve her during the frantic early days of WWII. Meticulously researched and filled with insights from an author who is also a seasoned sailor, you will find yourself turning pages and hoping for a miracle at the end.

– John Kretschmer, author of Flirting with Mermaids, Sailing a Serious Ocean, and At the Mercy of the Sea

The story of the schooner America’s upset win at Cowes is familiar to all racing sailors. The silver cup her owners and crew first won in that race continues to represent the pinnacle of our sport. Although we continue to compete for the cup, the schooner’s story after she won the race has not been widely told—until now. The Last Days of the Schooner America is a fast-paced, eye-opening read. The research and descriptions are amazing. An inspiring home-front World War II story runs through the book and is expertly woven into the schooner's final years. A must read for all who love sailing and history.

– Terry Hutchinson, skipper, New York Yacht Club’s American Magic campaign for the 37th America’s Cup

From the “near fetishized research” that attends the building and infant career of the schooner America—eponymous queen of the America’s Cup—author Dave Gendell has turned his gaze and ours to the surprising hole in our knowledge about her last days on the Annapolis waterfront. With rich page-turning prose that reads like a novel, Gendell gives us a work of creative nonfiction that evokes not just one yacht but two fully conceived and populated worlds with ninety years between them. Together with its ample notes and sources, the book will satisfy history geeks through a northeast winter, or armchair readers through a good long gale. Last Days is a story for the ages—an essential addition to America’s yachting heritage.

– Tim Murphy, Cruising World editor-at-large and author, Adventurous Use of the Sea: Formidable Stories of a Century of Sailing from the Cruising Club of America

In The Last Days of the Schooner America, David Gendell provides a captivating view into the history of an iconic sailing yacht and the people and places that kept her in our national consciousness for over a century. In his meticulously researched account that reads like a novel, he lets the waning years of the schooner America highlight the important contributions of the Annapolis Yacht Yard, the Naval Academy, and the people of Annapolis during the World War II era. The book kept this Naval Academy history major enthralled!

– Rear Admiral Robb Chadwick, USN (Ret.), 87th Commandant of Midshipmen, United States Naval Academy

After two decades of research and interviewing those involved, David Gendell has produced a well-written and compelling chronicle of the most famous schooner in history, focusing on the never-before-told story of her final days ashore in his native Annapolis and the tragically unsuccessful effort by committed believers to restore the iconic vessel during World War II.

– Bill Bleyer, Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist and author of Long Island and the Sea: A Maritime History and The Sinking of the Steamboat Lexington on Long Island Sound

There is no doubt that David Gendell tells a good story, and his account of the legendary schooner America is one of his best: true and detailed, well-sourced, and fun to read. Of special interest is the story of what happened to that vessel at a small yacht yard across Spa Creek from Annapolis, Maryland. Gendell’s rigorous, careful research into public and private papers, his interviews with men and women who worked in the Annapolis Yacht Yard during the war, and his own sailing experience enable him to fill the book with the suspense, the excitement, and the determination of those men and women who made Annapolis a center of the war effort.

– Jane Wilson McWilliams, author, Annapolis, City on the Severn: A History

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