Dolphin Club (San Francisco) Explained

Dolphin Club
Location:502 Jefferson Street, San Francisco, Calif., U.S.
Coordinates:37.8079°N -122.4213°W
Acronym:DC
Home Water:Aquatic Park Cove
Former Names:Dolphin Swimming and Boating Club
Key People:Ward Bushee (President)
Membership:1,500
Colours:Blue and White

The Dolphin Club, also known as the Dolphin Swimming and Boating Club, is an athletic club in San Francisco, California. It caters to open water swimming, rowing, kayaking, stand up paddleboarding, and 4-wall handball.

The clubhouse and boat house buildings are owned by the San Francisco Recreation & Parks Department and leased to the club. The club had 1,000 members in 2010, and claims 1,500 members today.

History

The Dolphin Swimming and Rowing Club was founded in July 1877 by a small group of German immigrants, including John Wieland,[1] Valentine Kehrlein Sr. and their respective sons, together with Edward J Borremans, Louis Schroeder, Edward Peterson, Adolph C. Lutgens and Ernest H. Lutgens,[2] who wanted to form a private sporting and social club, along similar lines to the Turnverein, a club which they had been members of in Bavaria.[3] Membership of the club was originally limited to 25 members. Emil Arthur Kehrlein, the eldest son of Valentine Sr., served as the club's inaugural president. The club petitioned the San Francisco Board of Supervisors to erect a small clubhouse/equipment shack and pier at the junction of Beach and Leavenworth Streets,[4] an area known as Bilge Water Cove.[5] They were granted permission in April 1878. A surplus building was acquired from the Union Iron Works and the new building took a month to erect.

In 1881, the club expelled seven members including Emil and his brother Valetine Jr. The brothers would later establish the nearby Triton Rowing Club, and, in 1899, founded the Hotel Nymphia brothel.[5] [6] By 1886, the club had increased to over fifty members and was formally incorporated in 1888.[3] In 1887, the club added the 40feet river barge, John Wieland, to its fleet.[3]

In 1895, facing increasing development of the waterfront the club resolved to relocate to a more protected site at the foot of Van Ness Avenue.[5] [7] Adolph C. Lutgens, an architect, was responsible for designing the club's boathouse in 1896[8] The club constructed a new clubhouse in February 1897, at a cost of $1,800, at the edge of Black Point Cove.[5]

The clubhouse/boathouse has since been moved twice, once in 1927 and again in 1937 to what is its current location on the corner of Hyde and Jefferson Streets. The relocation of the building was necessitated by the extension of Van Ness Avenue, the construction of municipal pier, and the development of Aquatic Park Cove including the municipal public bathing bathhouse (which was originally intended to be the home of the Dolphin and South End clubs) and grandstand in 1936.[5] Since 1949, the club has maintained a print magazine called the Dolphin Log.[9]

In 1956, Les Hedry, a rowing member who had done races with the club on the San Joaquin River near Stockton, organized a row from the club to Sacramento, approximately 105 miles, initially to visit the State Fair. The club would soon make the Sacramento Row an annual event.

In 1976, six women brought up a lawsuit that resulted in the Dolphin Club and the South End Rowing Club allowing women to become members.[10] Their lawyer noted that "the basis of the suit was not gender bias, but federal law that governed any institution operating on public parkland".[11] Women officially joined in 1977, and as of 2019, make up about a third of the membership.

Boat fleet

The Dolphin Club has more than 34 wooden, fiberglass and carbon rowboats, almost all with sliding seats. The club also has kayaks, standup paddleboards, and motorized zodiacs.[12] [13] Among the wooden boats, the most often rowed is the Kohlenberg, Mo-B, and Lifthrasir, respectively.[14] The Kohlenberg was rowed 136 times in 2023, or about once every 3 days.

The whitehalls and other wooden rowboats are built from oak, mahogany, cedar (seats, breasthook, burden boards), apple (breasthook, knees), and black locust (breasthook, ribs). Three kinds of cedar are used, Port Orford cedar from Oregon, Alaskan yellow and Spanish cedar.[15] Two kinds of mahogany are used, Honduras and African mahogany. Since 1990, the club has harvested black locust wood from a grove in Isleton, California. Black locust are known for its resistance to rot, durability and straight grain, making it desirable for use as fence posts and wooden boats.[16]

Name! colspan="1" rowspan="1"
Build YearTypeWeight lbs.Length
Wieland1887Six-Oared Sweep Barge588lb40inchesft0inchesin (ftin)
Viking1916Double Cable Car Gig270lb22inchesft0inchesin (ftin)
Farrell1917Double Dolphin Club350lb18inchesft0inchesin (ftin)
Cronin1938Double Dolphin Club376lb18inchesft0inchesin (ftin)
Hughes1938Double Dolphin Club380lb18inchesft0inchesin (ftin)
Baggiani1948Single Dolphin Club207lb14inchesft0inchesin (ftin)
Foster1948Single Dolphin Club198lb14inchesft0inchesin (ftin)
Landucci1948Single Dolphin Club209lb14inchesft0inchesin (ftin)
Spectre1973Single Whitehall261lb13inchesft0inchesin (ftin)
Good Luck1976Single Stillwater River Boat187lb15inchesft5inchesin (ftin)
Mo-B1980Wherry18 feet 0 inches (5.49 m)
Lifthrasir1985Double Cable Car Gig270lb22inchesft0inchesin (ftin)
Austin1987Single Modified Whitehall205lb14inchesft0inchesin (ftin)
Cecco1988Single Dolphin Club219lb14inchesft0inchesin (ftin)
Joe Bruno1989Single Dolphin Club212lb14inchesft0inchesin (ftin)
Ring2000Single Flat-Bottomed Dory193lb15inchesft2inchesin (ftin)
Haake2006Single Dolphin Club218lb14inchesft0inchesin (ftin)
Kupuna2006Single Dolphin Club167lb14inchesft0inchesin (ftin)
Kohlenberg2006Single Cable Car Gig189lb18inchesft1inchesin (ftin)
Commodore2016Single Dolphin Club170lb14inchesft0inchesin (ftin)
Semper Fi2016Single Dolphin Club165lb14inchesft0inchesin (ftin)

Fiber and carbon rowboats by builder, model, class and material!Name! Builder!Model!Class!Material
El NinoLiteBoatLiteRace 1xCoastal 1xCarbon Fiber
La NinaLiteBoatLiteRace 1xCoastal 1xCarbon Fiber
TempestLiteBoatLiteSport 2xCoastal 2xCarbon Fiber
StormLiteBoatLiteQuattroCoastal Gig BoatCarbon Fiber
CootMaas Boat CompanyMaas 24Open Water ShellFiberglass
FlickaMaas Boat CompanyMaas 24Open Water ShellFiberglass
GullMaas Boat CompanyMaas 24Open Water ShellFiberglass
Surf ScooterMaas Boat CompanyMaas 24Open Water ShellFiberglass
PelicanMaas Boat CompanyMaas Carbon 24Open Water ShellCarbon Fiber
MurreMaas Boat CompanyMaas FlyweightOpen Water ShellFiberglass
TernMaas Boat CompanyMaas AeroOpen Water ShellFiberglass
BananaMaas Boat CompanyMaas AeroOpen Water ShellFiberglass
OspreyMaas Boat CompanyMaas DoubleOpen Water ShellCarbon Fiber
TroneumMaas Boat CompanyMaas DragonflyOpen Water ShellFiberglass

Activities and events

Members include local residents and athletes training for swimming the English Channel.[17] According to a video from KQED, many swimmers do not wear wet suits.[18]

The Dolphin Club hosts a polar bear swim challenge where members attempt to swim 40miles in the San Francisco Bay inside Aquatic Park during the winter season.[19]

Since 1956, the Dolphin Club has hosted an annual 100miles row from the club to Sacramento.[20] [21] [22] In 1984, Jon Bielinski started hosting a weekly boat night, where members and guests would socialize and do maintenance and repair on the club's wooden boats.[23]

About twice a month, the Dolphin Club hosts a weekend swim in the San Francisco Bay. Most of the swims leave the Aquatic Park Cove. Swimmers are piloted by club boats for protection. Out-of-cove swims include swimming the length of the Golden Gate Bridge from south to north (approximately 1.2miles),[24] [25] swimming from the Bay Bridge to the Dolphin Club (approximately 3miles), and the Escape from Alcatraz swims (approximately 1.5miles), the last of which has been part of the Escape from Alcatraz triathlons.[26] [27]

Notable members / alumni

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Yenne, Bill. San Francisco Beer: A History of Brewing by the Bay. Arcadia Publishing. 2016. 44. 9781625855060 .
  2. Book: Schall, Rebecca. Historic Photos of San Francisco in the 50s, 60s, and 70s. Turner Publishing Company. 2010. 74.
  3. Toogood . Anna Coxe . June 1980 . A Civil History of Golden Gate National Recreation Area and Point Reyes National Seashore, California . . Historic Resource Study . 2 . 177-121 . San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park  - Library Collection, Internet Archive .
  4. Web site: Black Point Beach Club . Boswell . Benner . Benner Boswell . March 3, 2020.
  5. Book: Pickelhaupt, Bill . San Francisco's Aquatic Park . 2005 . Arcadia Publishing . 9780738530840 . 7–10.
  6. Book: Pickelhaupt, Bill. Shanghaied in San Francisco. Flyblister Press. 1996. 117. Maritime Series . 9780964731226 .
  7. National Park Service Cultural Landscapes Inventory - Aquatic Park: San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park. 2001. 2–3. National Park Service.
  8. Web site: A guide to the Patrick Cunneen collection of South End Rowing Club photographs, 1880-2003. . March 4, 2020.
  9. Web site: Dolphin Log . Dolphin Club.
  10. Book: Meyer, Amy. New Guardians for the Golden Gate: How America Got a Great National Park. University of California Press. 2006. 9780520929296. 226.
  11. Web site: It is the East Bay and Juliet is the sun. Leah. Garchik. August 11, 2010. SF Gate.
  12. Web site: Rowing Fleet . Dolphin Club . March 3, 2020.
  13. Book: 2015. Dolphin Swimming & Boating Club 2015 Rowing Training Guide. March 2015. Dolphin Club. March 3, 2020.
  14. Web site: Fleet Usage Only . 2024-02-21 . Google Docs . en-US.
  15. Into the Woods, with Jon Bielinski. Dolphin Log. Fall 2017.
  16. Web site: Robert P. Barrett . Tesfai Mebrahtu . James W. Hanover . Black Locust: A Multi-purpose Tree Species for Temperate Climates. . October 2, 1997 . 2020-03-07.
  17. News: Baptism in the Bay / Why do men and women persist in taking on the frigid waters of the San Francisco Bay? . . Tim . Holt . January 25, 2014 . March 2, 2020.
  18. Web site: Dolphin Club Members Brave the Cold to Swim in San Francisco Bay . . March 2, 2020.
  19. News: Eng . Sherri . Even the 142-Year-Old Dolphin Club Can't Unplug from SF's Tech Debate . February 20, 2019 . The Frisc . March 2, 2020 . limited.
  20. Sacramento Row references from Dolphin Club and its members:
    • Web site: The Sacramento Row . Dolphin Club . Susanne . Friedrich . September 9, 1998 . March 3, 2020.
    • Web site: Sacramento Row . Neal . Mueller . NealMuller.com . November 1, 2009 . March 4, 2020 .
    • Web site: Rowing up the river . Jay . Dean . December 5, 2014 . Exposure . March 5, 2020 .
  21. Dolphin Log . Fall 2014 . Dolphin Club . Docplayer . 2020-03-07.
  22. Web site: ROWING UP THE RIVER by Jay Dean on Exposure. Exposure. en. 2020-03-07.
  23. News: Shibata . Stephanie . Meet Jay Dean . March 29, 2017 . Sea Magazine . Duncan McIntosh Company.
  24. News: Nolte . Carl . Chilly waves, advancing years can't stop Golden Gate swimmers . September 9, 2017 . . March 3, 2020 . limited.
  25. Web site: The Golden Gate Bridge: Your Questions, Answered . Placzek . Jessica . May 26, 2019 . KQED.
  26. News: Lyons . Jenna . Triathlon contestants enjoy shark-free swim from Alcatraz . October 19, 2015 . SF Gate.
  27. News: Elle . Jean . White Shark Sighting a Concern for Escape From Alcatraz Triathlon Swimmers . October 13, 2015 . . March 3, 2020.
  28. Web site: Podcast: Kim Chambers on swimming with sharks off the California coast. October 2, 2018. . Gregory . Thomas . June 1, 2020 .