Last modified: 2022-09-02 by ivan sache
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Flag of COM, horizontal and vertical versions - Images by TomislavŠipek, 8 February 2018
The flag of COM (photo) is white with the Committee's emblem.
TomislavŠipek, 8 February 2018
Flag of ACM - Image by TomislavŠipek, 9 July 2019
Automoblie Club de Monaco (ACM; website) was established on 26 August 1890 by 21 founding members, as Sport Vélocipédique de la Principauté (SVP), to be renamed to Sport Vélocipédique Monégasque (SVM) one week later. In the aftermath of the success of motorcars, President Henri Tairraz obtained on 28 August 1907 the renaming of the club to Sport Automobile et Vélocipédique de Monaco (SAVM).
Elected President of SAVM on 21 October 1909, Alexandre Noghès proposed
to establish a car race; two years later, his son, Antony Noghès
(1890-1978) organized the first Rallye Automobile de Monaco, ran from 21
to 19 January 1911. The 23 competitors rallied Monaco from six towns
(Paris, Berlin, Brussels, Boulogne-sur-Mer, Vienna, Geneva); Henri
Rougier won the race on a Turcat-Mercy 25HP, at an average speed of 13.8
km/h.
Alexandre Noghès edited a yearbook with the member's names and address
and road itineraries, as well. He revived SAVM in 1921, organizing the
first Semaine Automobile from 8 to 15 March 1921, in continuity with the
project initiated in June 1914 and suppressed by the First World War.
On 29 March 1925, 55 members of the club gathered in a Extraordinary General Assembly approved (49 for, 5 against and 1 abstained from voting) the renaming of the club. Noghès argued out that "the increased significance of the society requires to change its name to Automobile Club de Monaco", pointing out that "bicycling sport tends to become rare while motorsport increases". As the Commissioner General of the club, Noguès applied in Paris for the affiliation of ACM to Association Internationale des Automobiles Clubs Reconnus (AIACR), the forerunner of Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile. The application was rejected since ACM did not organize competitions on its national territory. As a solution, Noguès commissioned the pilot Louis Chiron (1899-1979) and the engineer Jacques Taffe; the wealthy Société des Bains de Mer funded the design of the circuit. On 18 October 1928, ACM was admitted as the 34th member of AIACR.
The first Grand Prix de Monaco was ran on 14 April 1929. The circuit was
inaugurated by Prince Pierre, on a Torpedo Voisin driven by Charles
Faroux, the race director, in the absence of Chiron, who had enrolled
in the Indianapolis 500 Miles (Chiron won the Grand Prix de Monaco in
1931). The English pilot Williams Grover-Williams (1903-1945) won the
race on a green Bugatti 35 B, completing 100 rounds in 3 h 56' 11"
(average speed, 80 km/h).
The success of the Grand Prix boosted membership, which increased to 712
in 1929, 841 in 1930, and 910 in 1931, "41 ladies" included. On 21 May
1950, for the first season of the Formula 1 World Championship, the 11th
Grand Prix de Monaco was won by a young Argentine pilot, Juan Manuel Fangio.
The flag of ACM (photo,
photo) is white with the club's emblem.
The emblem of ACM features on a Grimaldi background (red and white
lozenges) a white steering wheel charged in the center with a blue disc
inscribed "ACM" in white letters. Above the disc is a discrete, if not
inconspicuous tribute to the origins of the club (photo), most probably the
original emblem of SVM, a shield surmounted by a blue scroll inscribed
"S.V.M" in white letters and charged in chief with the mother of
sports bicycle, a penny-farthing / high wheeler.
TomislavŠipek & Ivan Sache, 9 July 2019
Société Nautique de Monaco
Flag and burgee of SNM - Images by Ivan Sache, 17 February 2010
The Société des Régates de Monaco (website) was founded in 1888 by Louis Adjani, Honoré Bellando, Adolphe Blanchy, Henri and Jean Crovetto, Albert De Millo, Ambroise Delpiano, Victor Lefranc, Jean and Joseph Marquet, Louis Neri and Jean Vatrican. The first rowing and sailing regatta ever organized in the Monaco Bay took place on 17 March 1889.
On 19 May 1953, the club split into the Société Nautique de Monaco (SNM), dedicated to rowing, and the Yacht Club de Monaco (YCM), dedicated to yachting.
With some 200 members of many different nationalities, the SNM, affiliated with the French Rowing Federation (FFSA), is also in charge of the Monegasque Rowing Federation, founded in 1993. Accordingly, the SNM members of
French or Monegasque nationality can compete in the French
championships, while those of Monegasque nationality can also compete
in international events under the Monegasque flag. In the Beijing
Olympic Games (2008), the skiffer Mathias Raymond, standard-bearer
during the opening ceremony, finished 22nd - incidentally, he rank 8th
in the Sexiest Competitor's Contest.
The rowers of the SNM train on sea, between Port Hercule - Monaco's main
port - and the Bay of Roquebrune - located east of Monaco, in French territorial waters. They also row on Lake Saint-Cassien (Provence), at the training base of Montauroux. SNM has closed links with the local French and Italian rowing clubs; a
main event in the rowing season is the sea rowing race San Remo-Monaco.
The flag of SNM (photo) is red with two groups of two white horizontal stripes each at the top and the bottom and a white star in the middle. A white
triangle is placed along the hoist, charged with the club's emblem.
The emblem featured on the flag is made of two oars with white and red
blades crossed in saltire quartered by the black letters "S" (left), "N"
(top), and "M" (right). The emblem is surmounted by a crown and
surmounts year "1888" in gold. On the stand-alone emblem, the letters
are omitted and the blades are superimposed with the club's burgee.
The burgee of the SNM, hoisted over the club house located on the northern side of Port Hercule, is made of nine horizontal stripes, in turn white and red, the stripes # 2, 4, 5, 6 and 8 being twice higher than the other ones. A white star is placed in the middle of the central, red stripe.
Ivan Sache, 17 February 2018
Yacht club de Monaco
Burgee of YCM, two versions - Images by Ivan Sache, 10 May 2010
On 19 May 1953, the Société des Régates de Monaco, founded in 1988, split into the Société Nautique de Monaco (SNM), dedicated to rowing, and the Yacht Club de Monaco (YCM), dedicated to yachting.
The home of big sailing and motor boats, the YCM organizes famous races such as the Primo Cup, the Monaco-New York transatlantic race and the Grand Prix de Formule 40'. Fond of historic yachts, Prince Albert II created in 1994 the Monaco Classic Week and purchased the next year the Tuiga, a cotter built in 1909 in Scotland for Duke of Medinaceli and considered by Éric Tabarly as "one of the ten most beautiful yachts in the world", today the flagship of YCM.
The burgee of YCM is vertically divided, at hoist white with a simplified version of the Monegasque coat of arms surrounded by the letters "Y" (top left), "C" (top right) and "M" (bottom), either black (photo) or red, and at fly red with two white triangular stripes; the two main fields are separated by a red fimbriation.
Ivan Sache, 10 May 2010