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Elizabeth Meyer

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Elizabeth E Meyer, was born in Baltimore in 1953.[1] She was instrumental in the restoration of the J Class Yachts beginning with Endeavour in the mid 1980s.[2] She is married to Michael McCaffrey.[1]

Life

Her parents were medical doctors, a psychiatrist and an epidemiologist.[1] Her grandfather was Eugene Meyer, investment banker and first president of the World Bank.[1] He also owned the Washington Post publishing company. Her grandmother was Agnes Ernst Meyer, social activist and journalist. Elizabeth's aunt was Katharine Graham, owner of the Washington Post during Watergate.[1] Meyer attended a Quaker Friends Academy[1] and Bennington College in Vermont where she studied English. For a time she worked at sail making, also volunteering at a zoo and running a restaurant before starting a building restoration company in 1977.[2] She published Yaahting, a parody of the magazine Yachting. She also wrote for Nautical Quarterly.[1] Meyer has been politically active, opposing the Vietnam War and being involved in local politics in Newport, Rhode Island.[1] In 2013, in the waters off of the inherited family island near Deer Isle, Maine, she was charged with threatening display of a weapon[3] that was bargained to a plea no contest to a charge of terrorizing.[4] A civil suit was later settled out of court in 2016.

Yacht Restoration

Endeavour (1934), refitted 1984

In 1984 she purchased the J class yacht Endeavour and began the restoration.[2] She was also instrumental in the restoration of Shamrock V another J, and more than 80 classic yachts.[2] She is president of J-Class Management.[2] She founded the International Yacht Restoration School in 1993 which has taught 400 students in yacht building and restoration.[5] For her efforts in building and yacht restoration she has received the president’s award from the National Trust for Historic Preservation.[2] In 2011 she received the Don Turner Award from the USS Constitution Museum[6] for her work in maritime preservation. From 1975 to 1993 she owned the Concordia yawl, Matinicus and has authored books on the Ray Hunt designed class.[5] She now sails Seminole, a 1916 Lawley-built 47 ft (14.3m) gaff yawl, bought in 1996 from California unseen for a dollar. She completed its restoration in 2005[5] and has sailed Seminole with her husband over 18,000 miles.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Fales, Dan (3 October 2007). "Involved". Yachting Magazine. Retrieved 6 May 2011.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "J Class Management". Jclass.com. 6 May 2011. Archived from the original on 2010-07-14.
  3. ^ "Rhode Island woman charged with terrorizing". The Ellsworth American. 2013-09-04. Retrieved 2020-12-09.
  4. ^ "Hog Island confrontation brings plea of "no contest"". The Ellsworth American. 2014-02-04. Retrieved 2020-12-09.
  5. ^ a b c Houston, Dan (5 August 2011). "Elizabeth Meyer – Queen of the J-Class". Classic Boat. Retrieved 6 Dec 2011.
  6. ^ "USS Constitution museum, in the news". Archived from the original on 11 January 2012. Retrieved 12 January 2012.

External links