Although both the Raritan Yacht Club in Perth Amboy and the Riverton Yacht Club are on the opposite sides of New Jersey, they both state to have been founded in 1865. Published sources currently give the Riverton Yacht Club the bragging rights as the state’s oldest, leaving the Raritan Yacht Club holding the very dignified title of historic number 2.
The New Jersey History Project is still digging for the original paperwork to settle the matter once and for all, but until then, we are happily leaning into the mystery and treating New Jersey’s great yacht club birth race as an ongoing historical photo finish.
As with all Mr. Local History retrospectives, we often update the post as we learn new stories and receive photos from our community. We will continue to expand this piece as information becomes available. If you have any stories to share, please post in the comments section at the end of the piece. Mr. Local History Project

Let’s see what our researchers found.
The Raritan Yacht Club
When people think of American yachting History, their minds usually go first to the grandeur of the New York Yacht Club and to the global prestige of the America’s Cup. Those names represent international fame, wealth, and world-class competition. But in Perth Amboy stands a quieter and, for New Jersey, even more important story.

Founded in 1865, Raritan Yacht Club is the oldest yacht club in New Jersey and one of the state’s longest-continuously active waterfront institutions. Long before major regattas and international trophies captured headlines across New York Harbor, local boatmen, sailors, and artisans were already gathering on this shoreline to row, race, and work the bay. This is the local side of American sailing History, not built on global spectacle, but on community, continuity, and a deep connection to New Jersey’s working and recreational waterfront.

The modern Raritan Yacht Club did not begin with a wealthy patron or a formal civic campaign. It grew out of a small, practical waterfront group known as the Carteret Boat Club, formed in 1865 by residents who already lived and worked along the Perth Amboy shoreline. They were rowers and small boat sailors who wanted a permanent place to keep boats, race one another, and gather on the bay. Their first clubhouse was a modest structure on pilings at the water’s edge, built for access and function, not for display.

The members themselves chose the location, and it was entirely practical. Men joined, paid dues, shared costs, and voted on what to build and when. This stretch of waterfront offered sheltered water, working docks, and direct access to Raritan Bay. In 1874, a second local sailing-focused group, the Perth Amboy Yacht Club, formed nearby. In 1882, the two homegrown clubs merged to form the Raritan Yacht Club. The founders were not famous names. They were local water people who knew this shoreline, trusted this harbor, and built their club exactly where they already lived their boating lives.
When people think of American yachting History, their minds usually go first to the grandeur of the New York Yacht Club and to the global prestige of the America’s Cup. Those names represent international fame, wealth, and world-class competition. But here in Perth Amboy stands a quieter and, for New Jersey, even more important story. Founded in 1865, the Raritan Yacht Club is the oldest yacht club in New Jersey and one of the state’s longest continuously active waterfront institutions. Long before major regattas and international trophies filled headlines across New York Harbor, local boatmen, sailors, and artisans were already gathering on this shoreline to row, race, and work the bay. This is the local side of American sailing History, built on community, continuity, and a deep connection to New Jersey’s working and recreational waterfront.
The story begins with roots that reach back to 1865, when local boatmen formed the Carteret Boat Club along the Perth Amboy waterfront. It was founded before organized yacht racing became the focus. In 1874, a second organization, the Perth Amboy Yacht Club, was established by local sailing enthusiasts seeking organized yacht racing on Raritan Bay.

The Carteret Boat Club was formed in 1865 by residents who already lived and worked along the shoreline. They were rowers and small-boat sailors who wanted a permanent place to keep boats, race one another, and gather on the bay. Their first clubhouse was a modest structure on pilings at the water’s edge, built for access and function, not for display.
The members themselves made the decisions. Men joined, paid dues, shared costs, and voted on what to build and when. The site offered sheltered water, working docks, and direct access to Raritan Bay. In 1874, a second localsailing-focused group, the Perth Amboy Yacht Club, formed nearby. In 1882, the 2 homegrown clubs merged to form what would become the Raritan Yacht Club. The founders were not famous names. They were local water people who knew this shoreline, trusted this harbor, and built their club exactly where they already lived their boating lives.
When the two clubs merged on May 10, 1882, they created the Raritan Yacht Club, combining the rowing, canoeing, and sailing traditions that had already taken hold along the bay. After a devastating fire destroyed the clubhouse in December 1915, the club secured its future by purchasing the Thomas E. Cooper Estate at 160 Water Street in 1916. More than 160 years after the first members gathered on the waterfront, the Raritan Yacht Club remains an active steward of New Jersey’s maritime heritage, connecting today’s sailors with a legacy that began with the Carteret Boat Club in 1865 and the Perth Amboy Yacht Club in 1874.
In 1905, a new two-story clubhouse was erected on the site of the old building. The old building was moved to the street line and became a locker and refreshment room.
Tragic Fire of 1915
The club’s turning point came in December 1915, when fire destroyed the original clubhouse. In response, the membership made a decisive and forward-looking move. In 1916, they purchased the Cooper Estate at 160 Water Street and adapted the former waterfront residence into a new clubhouse. The location placed the club directly on deep, protected water with immediate access to both open sailing water and the busy harbor corridor. Just as important, the building itself was already one of the city’s more substantial and recognizable waterfront properties. The decision was not simply to replace what had been lost, but to establish a permanent home and a visible civic presence on Perth Amboy’s working shoreline. That choice anchored the club at its present site and helped secure its future as New Jersey’s oldest yacht club.
On the night of December 22, 1915, a fire completely destroyed the Raritan Yacht Club’s clubhouse along with its records, paintings, photographs, models, and memorabilia. Faced with rebuilding from scratch, the club’s Board of Governors decided instead to purchase an existing waterfront estate.
In early 1916, following the loss of its clubhouse to fire, the Raritan Yacht Club purchased the former Thomas E. Cooper Estate at 160 Water Street and transformed the stately waterfront mansion into its new headquarters. Built in 1865 for Thomas E. Cooper (1834–1901), a prominent Perth Amboy industrialist, banker, and civic leader, the property offered expansive grounds, waterfront access, docking facilities, and ample room for growth. Following Cooper’s death in 1901, the estate passed through his heirs before being acquired by the club, which continues to call the historic mansion home today.
Today, the Raritan Yacht Club is still operating from that same historic waterfront home at 160 Water Street. More than 160 years after local boatmen first organized themselves here, boats still sail from the same harbor, races and regattas still fill the calendar, and new sailors are still trained on the bay. In a state where so much of the working waterfront has vanished, the club remains a rare, living link to New Jersey’s maritime past, not preserved behind glass but still doing exactly what its founders set out to do.
Two events define the club’s modern racing identity. The Red Grant Regatta and the Macan Regatta remain the signature regattas on the Raritan Bay calendar. The Red Grant Regatta honors longtime member and racer Adolph Red Grant and celebrates the competitive spirit and social traditions that shaped the club’s racing culture. The Macan Regatta, named for Nelson J. Macan, recognizes the importance of fair and well-run handicap racing and the volunteers and organizers who make that competition possible. Together, these 2 regattas reflect how a locally built New Jersey club continues to carry forward more than a century of organized sailing on its home waters.
What remains truly iconic about the Raritan Yacht Club today is that it is still a large, active, working sailing club with 300-plus members across multiple generations. It runs a full seasonal racing calendar, cruising and social programs, and a strong junior and youth sailing pipeline that continues to feed local high school and college sailing. Above all, it remains a club built around getting people on the water, the same purpose that brought a small group of Perth Amboy boatmen together on this shoreline in 1865.
The Riverton Yacht Club – Riverton, New Jersey

On July 1, 1865, just weeks after the end of the Civil War, a small group of Delaware River boating enthusiasts gathered at 503 Bank Avenue in the riverfront community of Riverton, New Jersey, and founded what would become the Riverton Yacht Club.
The meeting was held at the home of Edward H. Ogden, one of Riverton’s early residents and civic leaders. The club’s first Commodore was Caspar W. Morris, a prominent Philadelphia physician and yachtsman whose summer residence overlooked the Delaware. Most of the founders were affluent Philadelphians who had established summer homes in Riverton, a planned riverside community created in 1851 as a retreat from city life.
They organized the club for a simple reason: they loved the river. Sailing, rowing, and pleasure boating had become popular pastimes among Riverton’s residents, and they wanted a formal organization where members could race, socialize, improve seamanship, and celebrate life on the water. What began as a gathering of neighbors along the Delaware River grew into the oldest yacht club on the river and one of the oldest continuously active yacht clubs in America.

Riverton Yacht Club Champions
The Riverton Yacht Club champions list is quite a list of accomplished sailors. The club has an impressive list that we’ve compiled at the end of this story. Feel free to review at the bottom of this page. But take a look at the clubs over the champions list:
World Champion (3), International Champion (26), Western Hemisphere Champions (4), North American Champions (22), South American Champion (1), National Champions (47), Canadian National Champions (1), Midwinter Champions (16), and Laser Masters Champion (1). The single most productive year in the entire record is 1956, with 4 championships in total, and those titles were Western Hemisphere Champion in the Star Class by Robert Lippincott, North American Champion in the Star Class by Howard Lippincott, Midwinter Champion in the Comet Class by Blair Fletcher, and National Champion in the Duster Class by Bob Seidelmann.

Tale of the Tape
| Category | Riverton Yacht Club | Raritan Yacht Club |
|---|---|---|
| Founding date | 1865 | 1865 |
| Primary water | Delaware River | Raritan Bay |
| Street address | Riverton Yacht Club, Main Street and Bank Ave, Riverton, NJ 08077 | Raritan Yacht Club, 160 Water Street, Perth Amboy, NJ |
| Burgee description | White triangular pennant with a red St George-style cross positioned near the hoist | River-based racing and locally developedone-design sailing culture |
| Membership structure | Private membership club with applicants sponsored and approved by the membership | Private membership club with applicants sponsored and approved by the membership |
| Approximate number of members | Approximately 175 members | Approximately 300 plus members |
| Primary club identity | Bay and harbor-based racing and regional sailing gateway club | Long-running Duster Class fleet racing and Riverton hosted river regattas centered on the locally created Duster Class |
| Website | https://www.rivertonyachtclub.org | https://www.ryc.org |
| Notable perpetual trophies or signature events | Historically significant boat or Class | Red Grant Regatta and Macan Regatta |
| Duster Class sailboat, created and developed by club members for Delaware River racing | Early bay racing yachts such as Indian and Natirar, and a long tradition of handicap and fleet racing | Commonly cited as the 2nd-oldest yacht club in New Jersey by published sources |
| Historic distinction in New Jersey | Commonly cited as the oldest yacht club in New Jersey by published sources | Represents the river and a small boat, locally built, in the side of New Jersey sailing History |
| Core historical role in the state | River-based racing and locally developed one-design sailing culture | Represents the bay, harbor, and regional racing side of New Jersey sailing History. |
About the Author
Brooks Betz, the author, grew up in Westfield, New Jersey, sailing first in the Pocono Mountains but later chasing competition out of the Shore Acres Yacht Club on Kettle Creek and Barnegat Bay. His parents were in the business,s and we were members of the Lake Naomi Sailing Club, Hunterdon Sailing Club, Shore Acres Yacht Club, and the New York Yacht Club. A New Jersey Sunfish Class champion, Brooks was also heavily involved in competitive windsurfing across the United States and, as a researcher, has written about some of his experiences for the Mr. Local History Project. However, he’s still a big fan of New Jersey sailing.
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Riverton Yacht Club Champions List
| Champion Type | Class | Sailor | Years |
| World Champion | Finn | Paul Van Cleve | 1983 |
| World Champion | Star | Robert Lippincott | 1950 |
| World Champion | Star | John A. MacCausland | 2013 |
| International Champion | Comet | Edward Merrill | 1938 |
| International Champion | Comet | Bob Seidelmann | 1964, 1965 |
| International Champion | Comet | Phillip Sommerville | 1940, 1941, 1946, 1952 |
| International Champion | Comet | Dave Oberg | 1971, 1976 |
| International Champion | Comet | Jim Merrill | 1947, 1948 |
| International Champion | Comet | Jim Lippincott | 1977, 1979 |
| International Champion | Comet | Howard Lippincott | 1949, 1950, 1954, 1955 |
| International Champion | Comet | John A. MacCausland | 1984, 2019 |
| International Champion | Penguin | Gardner Cox | 1958, 1960, 1964 |
| International Champion | Penguin | John A. MacCausland | 2000, 2001, 2003 |
| International Champion | Penguin | Mike Hecky | 2008 |
| Western Hemisphere Champion | Star | Robert Lippincott | 1953, 1956, 1967 |
| Western Hemisphere Champion | Star | John A. MacCausland | 1998 |
| North American Champion | GP-14 | John A. MacCausland | 1980, 1981, 1982 |
| North American Champion | Comet | Dan Curran | 2018 |
| North American Champion | Comet | Dave Oberg | 1986 |
| North American Champion | Comet | John A. MacCausland | 1982, 1983, 1985, 2019 |
| North American Champion | Moth | Jim Greenfield | 1960, 1962 |
| North American Champion | Lightning | Bob Seidelmann | 1964, 1966 |
| North American Champion | RC Laser | Rob Seidelmann | 2018 |
| North American Champion | Star | Robert Lippincott | 1953 |
| North American Champion | Star | John A. MacCausland | 1983, 1984, 1987, 2004, 2008, 2012 |
| North American Champion | Star | Howard Lippincott | 1956 |
| South American Champion | Star | Jim Lippincott | 1976 |
| National Champion | American Canoe Sailing | David Breinig | 2014 |
| National Champion | College Sloop | Bob Oberg | 1993 |
| National Champion | Comet Junior Nationals | Tom Slook | 1984 |
| National Champion | Duster | John Knight | 1946 |
| National Champion | Duster | Bob Lunstedt | 1947 |
| National Champion | Duster | Frederick Steiner | 1948 |
| National Champion | Duster | Marter Carhart | 1949, 1950, 1951 |
| National Champion | Duster | Bob Seidelmann | 1955, 1956 |
| National Champion | Duster | Elwood McCord | 1957 |
| National Champion | Duster | Bob Lippincott, Jr. | 1963 |
| National Champion | Duster | John Morton, Jr. | 1964 |
| National Champion | Duster | James Walter | 1965, 1968, 1970, 1971, 1972 |
| National Champion | Duster | Peter Mullen | 1966 |
| National Champion | Duster | David Styer III | 1969 |
| National Champion | Duster | Robert Martin | 1979, 1993, 1994 |
| National Champion | Duster | Barbara Martin Smyth | 1980 |
| National Champion | Duster | Greg, Cole, & Brett Maute | 2007 |
| National Champion | Duster | Greg & Brett Maute | 2008 |
| National Champion | Duster | Greg & Dean Maute | 2012, 2016 |
| National Champion | Duster | Greg Maute | 2013, 2016 |
| National Champion | Laser | Patrick Curran | 2004 |
| National Champion | Mariner | Nick Mortgu | 1981 |
| National Champion | Mariner | Allan Crew | 1998 |
| National Champion | Mariner | Richard Martin | 2005 |
| National Champion | Mariner | Rob Seidelmann | 2015, 2017 |
| National Champion | Mariner | Dan Walsh | 2009, 2012, 2016, 2018, 2019, 2021 |
| National Champion | Optimist | Patrick Curran | 1998, 1999 |
| National Champion | PHRF | Bob Obert | 2007 |
| National Champion | Shields | Peter Denton | 2007 |
| Canadian National Champion | Star | John A. MacCausland | 1999 |
| Midwinter Champion | Comet | Edward Merrill | 1939 |
| Midwinter Champion | Comet | Howard Lippincott | 1952, 1962 |
| Midwinter Champion | Comet | Blair Fletcher | 1956, 1957, 1958 |
| Midwinter Champion | Comet | Jim Lippincott | 1977 |
| Midwinter Champion | Comet | John A. MacCausland | 1980 |
| Midwinter Champion | Lightning | Bob Seidelmann | 1962, 1963, 1965, 1966 |
| Midwinter Champion | Lightning | Jim Lippincott | 1977 |
| Midwinter Champion | MC Scow | Rob Seidelmann | 2010, 2015, 2017 |
| Laser Masters Champion | Laser | John A. MacCausland | 2013 |































