A new plaque to celebrate the yachting history of the Dublin Bay 21 fleet of yachts has been erected on a granite plinth at Dun Laoghaire's East Pier bandstand ahead of the first Dublin Bay Sailing Club (DBSC) race of the 2025 summer season.
As regular Afloat readers know, the fleet has been occupying a trot of moorings adjacent to the bandstand since last season, following an exciting project that breathed new life into six defunct 120-year-old Irish yachts that happen to be the oldest intact one-design keelboat class in the world.
As the inscription in Irish and English on the East Pier reads:
"The fleet of identical boats of different colours moored in line in front of you are the historic Dublin Bay Twentyones. They were specifically designed in 1902 by Alfred Mylne of Glasgow for the Dublin Bay Sailing Club to encourage affordable racing with a class of boats of identical design.
Only seven were ever built, between 1903 and 1908.
All the boats are now collectively owned by the Class Association, which is having them expertly rebuilt in Kilrush, Co. Clare.
The boats sail from here, with their distinctive gaff rig, during the sailing season from April to September and go racing on Tuesdays (18.30) and Saturdays (13.30)"

















































