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The United States Sailing Association (US Sailing) is the national governing body for sailing in the United States. Founded in 1897 and headquartered in Bristol, Rhode Island , US Sailing is a 501(c) (3) non-profit organization.
It's one of the hosts of US Sailing’s premier events: the Sailing World Cup Miami, the only North American regatta to be included in World Sailing’s World Cup series since 2008. [2] CGSC hosted the Snipe Western Hemisphere & Orient Championship in 2006, [3] and has been the longtime host of the Don Q Snipe Regatta.
US Sailing's Miami Olympic Classes Regatta is an annual sailing regatta at the US Sailing Center in Miami, held since 1990. [1] It hosts the Olympic and Paralympic classes. [1] It was part of the ISAF Sailing World Cup. [2] Since 2021 it is part of the US Open Sailing Series together with regattas in Ft. Lauderdale and Clearwater.
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The event is sailed in cat-rigged boats which have been designed for singlehanded sailing or which are adaptable to singlehanded sailing. [ 3 ] The winner of this Championship may be invited to sail in United States Singlehanded Championship for the George O’Day Trophy organized by US Sailing with partial fees to be paid by ICSA .
The Mug Race is an annual sailing race held on St. Johns River in the US state of Florida. Billed as the "World's Longest River Race", the course starts in Palatka and ends in Jacksonville . To compete, masts must be under 44 feet in order to clear all bridges along the course.
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American Sailing is the predominant standards bearer and codifier in the arena of recreational sailing education in the Americas and beyond. The organization was founded in 1983 by television producer Lenny Shabes, who felt there was no recognized educational system in place to learn the sport of sailing.