John Nichols, Sailing Legend Passes at 100

Most of our current members never had the opportunity to meet John Nichols, longtime St. Thomas resident and St. Thomas Yacht Club member, who passed away at the ripe age of 100 in San Francisco this week. John had been living there with his son, Michael, since he moved from St. Thomas a number of years ago. John was well and alert until just a few weeks ago, when his health took a sudden downturn. He passed peacefully, in hospice, on Sundaynight with Michael at his side.

John’s accomplishments in the world of sailing are endless. He was an avid racer and member at the Larchmont Yacht Club since 1948, sailing IODs, Etchells and Shields among others. He loved team racing and participated in many team racing events including those against the Royal Bermuda Yacht Club where he became a lifelong friend of Shorty Trimingham.
John was involved in at least 3 America’s Cup campaigns as a sailor in Defender trials. He also served on the New York Yacht Club Race Committee for the America’s Cup. John was a boat yard owner, a tinkerer and an inventor. He invented many of the rope to wire splices used today. He was a race committee innovator who set up many of today’s procedures.

This is not the John Nichols that many of us who had the pleasure of knowing him remember. John was the ultimate Corinthian. He believed in sailing in the purest sense; a sailing world with no professionals, no advertising and no need for juries after races, because Corinthian sailors retired immediately if they broke a rule. Sails were white, junior sailors did not need intense coaching, simply more time on the water. In John’s day, it was a sport not a business; it was something you did seriously and for the sheer enjoyment of it, and more importantly by adhering closely to the rules.

We, who had the pleasure of spending time with John, have changed and have tried to adapt to today’s sport as its now played, but we also understand how wonderful sailing is because we got to live it John’s way, a very pleasurable way, while he was around us. For this we thank and respect him.

John Nichols time at STYC was extremely well spent and hugely beneficial to the club. He ran the Rolex Race Committee for more years than any of us can remember. He helped us run three regattas for Maxi yachts and the 50’s class. These were events that small yacht clubs like ours would never be entrusted to run. But John gave us the needed credibility to be awarded these regattas and we always performed as well or better than the big clubs because of John. He loved to teach people how to run races. He was one of the first to use the word “customer” when referring to entries.
Those of us who worked with him in race management learned

more about running fair, honest and proper races than any book or seminar can teach and we owe him whatever expertise we may now enjoy.
Besides being a great race officer, John was an internationally renowned IYRU/ISAF International Judge and is remembered well for his jury work throughout the USA and Caribbean. The International Judges at our club today were mentored by him, encouraged by him, given opportunities to perform by him and they owe their judging careers to John.

Sailing is not the only thing that John did well! He was an accomplished artist and wood worker. Anytime you stopped by his house at Pelican Point, you would marvel at his latest painting or beautiful cabinets. John was soft spoken and unimpressed with himself and always the consummate gentleman and the perfect host who, along with his beloved wife, Doris, gave the most wonderful dinner parties on their orchid bedecked terraces.

Old school, old fashioned, sometimes curmudgeonly (but only in the nicest sense), but most of all a wonderful friend and an honored and loved member of STYC.

The word “legend” fits him perfectly.