Newport Harbor loses a piece of its history
Deepa Bharath
If the harbor and bay could articulate their feelings, they would
speak endlessly about how much they would miss their longtime buddy
-- John Blaich.
Blaich, a longtime Corona del Mar resident, sailing instructor and
boating historian, died Sunday of cancer. He was 84.
Blaich got his first boat when he was only 8 years old -- a time
when other kids his age probably couldn’t think beyond the paper and
toy boats they played with. The JAB, as he called it, was actually a
rowboat, but the resourceful boy converted her to sail by using
bamboo poles for a mast, boom and gaft and an old paint drip cloth
for a sail.
Boating was no game for Blaich, his friends say. It was a passion,
an obsession and a subject worthy of serious study and research.
Blaich grew up in Whittier, but spent most summers on the Balboa
Peninsula, where his father owned a cottage.
“He was intense in things that he wanted to do,” said friend
Willard Courtney. “He had a great love for Newport Beach, for the
ocean and sailing.”
Courtney said a turning point in Blaich’s life was in 1935, when
16-year-old Blaich was one of the local Sea Scouts selected to go
aboard Capt. Fred E. Lewis’ 230-foot motor ship, the Stranger, as a
member of the professional crew. It was a six-month voyage that
traversed several countries and islands, including Panama, Ecuador,
the Galapagos Islands, Costa Rica, Cocos Island, Guatemala, Nicaragua
and Mexico. The crew collected wild animals for the San Diego Zoo.
Among the animals they brought back were several sea turtles and
alligators.
Courtney said Blaich was a different man after the voyage. He
became proficient in operating small boats.
A sailor was born.
Once he returned from the trip, he started Newport Harbor’s first
sailing school. Using his snowbird, he offered 10 one-hour lessons
for $12. In 1941, the Newport Harbor Yacht Club hired him as its
first full-time sailing instructor.
Blaich was commissioned as an ensign in the U.S. Naval Reserve in
1943, based partly on his sailing and boating experience. During
World War II, he served aboard the USS Baltimore in the Western
Pacific for more than three years. Blaich earned nine battle stars
and became a qualified underway watch and division officer for both
deck and engineering. He retired from the Naval Reserve with full
benefits as a commander in 1969.
Blaich was famous locally for his extensive knowledge about boats
and their history. In 2000, he published a coffee table book titled
“The Large Yachts of Newport Harbor before World War II.” Stan
Cochran, who worked with him on the book, said Blaich “was an
authority on Newport Beach boating history.”
“He has spent a lot of time in the harbor and knew the boats
coming and going,” he said.
Blaich also wrote stories monthly in the Daily Pilot about the
area’s shipwrecks over the years.
Marty Kasules, the former harbormaster, said he often sought
Blaich’s expertise on the area’s history.
“John’s been great at being the historian of Newport Harbor. He is
our historian,” Kasules said. “Who will step in to fill that void?
It’s a great loss to Newport Harbor to lose him.”
Cochran said he not only sailed, but raced in his 29-foot sloop,
the Ice Breaker. He had been a member of the Balboa Yacht Club for 16
years. He served on various committees and had been the club’s
protocol chairman for four years, establishing flag etiquette and
various yachting procedures including a burial-at-sea procedure that
is now widely used by the boating community in Newport Beach.
The flags that adorn the bar at the Balboa Yacht Club are also
Blaich’s legacy, Courtney said.
“He collected them from yacht clubs from all over the world,” he
said. “It was remarkable.”
Family members recall Blaich as a warm and caring man who had a
way with people.
“He was the-life-of-a-party kind of guy,” said Blaich’s nephew
Jonathan Lane. “He was a devoted lifelong sailor.”
Blaich competed in races and won as recent as a year ago, his wife
Betty said.
“We have a few trophies in our home,” she said with a laugh.
Betty spent close to 50 years enjoying several sailing trips with
her husband.
“Every year on Labor Day, we’d sail to Cherry Cove and stay there
for 10 days,” she said. “He just loved the ocean. I don’t know why.
He just loved being out there.”
Blaich is survived by his wife; nephews Christopher and Jonathan
Lane; niece Marjorie Francis; and cousins Robert Smith and Jean
Duberg. A private funeral will be held. A memorial service will be
held at the Balboa Yacht Club next week.
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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