Steve Colgate

A Legacy of Dedication to the Art of Sailing

Olympian and America’s Cup competitor, and ever-present participant on the racing circuit, Steve Colgate personifies the sport and lifestyle of sailing. For his many years of dedication to sailing education for people of all ages and walks of life, for his long history of competing and winning in the sailboat racing world – Steve Colgate was inducted into the prestigious National Sailing Hall of Fame in 2015.

Steve grew up in Cold Spring Harbor, NY and started sailing Atlantic Class sailboats and Lightnings on Long Island Sound at the age of nine. A 1957 Yale graduate, he served two years as an Air Force officer and then sharpened his knowledge of all things maritime during a four-year stint at a boat supply store in New York City, before launching Offshore in 1964.

A Passion for Racing

Steve’s racing career spans seven decades and includes nearly every significant race in the world. In 1955 he crewed aboard the Spanish yacht Mare Nostrum in the 1955 Trans-Atlantic Race from Cuba to Spain, and they won. That old gray photo is of a very young Steve sharing winning accolades with champagne from the ’55 Trans-Atlantic Race 1st place trophy. He was just 19 in that race and considers it one of the greatest highlights of his life. Many years later he was on record breaking racing yachts in that same race several times!

2015 National Sailing Hall of Fame Inductee

For all Steve Colgate has done for the sport of sailing, Steve was inducted into the National Sailing Hall of Fame in October 2015. He is among the most notable sailors in the United States inducted into this prestigious organization.

Although Steve had lucrative career choices and a family that wanted him to “get a real job,” he decided to pursue his sailing passion. In 1964 he founded Offshore Sailing School and, With his partner Doris Colgate who he married in 1979, went from two boats and two instructors, to an enterprise that has introduced more than 160,000 adults and their families to sailing.

Der 1968 Olympics

In 1968 Steve joined the US Olympic team, racing on the 5.5 Metre Cadenza in Mexico. He spent several years racing on this class boat, learning how to become a sought after crew member as he advanced through the ranks. Here he is hiking out in the Olympic Trials off Newport Beach, CA with crew-mate Stuart Walker behind him. Though they didn’t win, “being part of a 13 member team was an incredible honor,” he says.

Two America’s Cup Trials

Steve competed in the 1967 America’s Cup Trials on American Eagle as foredeck chief, und das 1970 America’s Cup Trials on Heritage as tactician and helmsman. Here’s Steve steering Heritage after a long day of racing on the way back into Newport Harbor. In diesen Tagen, “the window for training on 12 Metres was during the summer prior to the finals; and we were mostly all amateurs, not paid professionals,” explains Steve. Today America’s Cup campaigns start right after the last one ends, with paid crew practicing and racing full time.

Rudder Lost 1000 Miles at Sea

Although Steve crewed in numerous class championships on one-design boats like 5.5 Metres and Solings, he loves competing in long distance races on big yachts, including six TransAtlantic Races. During the the 1963 TransAtlantic Race aboard the 58’ yacht, Dyna, they lost their rudder 1000 miles from the finish and managed to come in fourth! He has also competed in 20 Newport to Bermuda Races on many winning ocean racers, two of which broke the record for finishing first.

Ocean Racing on Maxi Yachts

On the 81’ maxi, Nirvana, Steve was principal helmsman, steering that magnificent yacht to first place class finishes in competitions across the globe. One of the early campaigns aboard Nirvana took the Colgates to Norway where post-race festivities included inviting King Olaf aboard with his entourage. Highlights of his time on Nirvana came during the Sydney-Hobart Race in gale-force winds, and sailing up the Pearl River from Hong Kong to Guangzhou, China in 1982.

Campaigning the Colgates 54’ Sleuth

Steve and Doris campaigned their own 54′ Frers designed yacht, Sleuth, during the years 1978-80, winning numerous trophies including first in their class in the famously raucous Antigua Race Week, und das 1979 Fastnet Race where 15 sailors died in winds over 80 knots. “We came through the Fastnet Race fine,” says Steve, “though our navigator was sick in his bunk the entire time.”

Around Cape Horn

Never one to say no to a sailing invitation, in January 2007 Steve joined SAIL magazine’s editor-in-chief to sail up the Beagle Channel and around Cape Horn on the skippered yacht Seal. “Each time I take the helm, no matter where I am, my body and soul relax into the rhythm of the sea,” says Steve.

Ultimate Sailboat for Training and All Reasons

Steve’s expertise extends well beyond sailing instruction. With noted marine architect Jim Taylor, he created the design concept for the Colgate 26, a performance sailboat which was awarded the 1997 Cruising World magazine “Boat of the Year,” in the Pocket Cruiser Division. Considered the definitive training boat, fleets of Colgate 26 sailboats are used by the U.S. Naval Academy, U.S. Coast Guard Academy, Maine Maritime Academy, United Kingdom Sailing Academy, and Eckerd College as well as other service institutions and sailing schools. It is also popular among sailing club racers and day sailors.