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"Amaya"
a 1925 Stephens
The
classic yacht Amaya, is enjoyed in partnership
by Reynaldo
& Jody Terrazas and John & Trudy
Anderson. She is the first of Stephens Brothers
large series yachts. The Amaya is a 47 foot
combination raised deck cruiser with cabins
of solid teak. Her keel was laid in 1925 and
she was launched at Stephens boat yard in Stockton
in 1926.
Amaya
was built for industrialist and yachtsman,Mr.
D. F. Axelson of Los Angeles, at the cost of
$12,500. Mr. Axelson cruised her from the Channel
Islands to Catalina Island and down the coast
to Baja. He christened her Amaya and kept her
in Los Angeles until 1943 when he sold her to
Dr. William X. Okker of Oakland, California.
After
taking posession of his new yacht, Dr. Okker
sailed the Amaya North along
the California coast to the San Francisco Bay,
stopping at port each night. This was war time
so he was allowed only a day's provisions on
the chance he might be apprehended by the enemy's
submarines.
In
1946, Dr. Okker had the Amaya documented and
renamed her the Cardinal Chief. Dr. Okker was
an avid sailer and he took great pride in maintaining
the Cardinal Chief. The vessel was berthed at
the Oakland Yacht Club in a covered berth until
the time of Dr. Okker's death in 1976.
From
1976, until the Terrazas purchased the Cardinal
Chief in January 1988, the vessel had several
owners and the documentation was surrended following
change of ownership in 1982. In January 1988,
the boat was reinstated with the original documentation
numbers and theTerrazas renamed the boat to
its original name, the Amaya.
When
the Terrazas purchased the Amaya she had spent
8 years in neglect, butin spite of this, the
boat had not been altered from her original
layout. The teak wheelhouse doubles as a second
stateroom with two berths concealed in the walls.
Forward is the cruise quarters, but now the
kids have replaced the crew. The galley is spacious
for a boat its size with the unique feature
of having the engine box double as a table.
The original oak ice chest is still in use.
The aft stateroom retains its original character
with double settees that becomes berths.
From
stern to stern she is a perfect example of yachting
elegance of bygone days. Once she graced the
harbors of Catalina Island, and now can be seen
cruising the Bay and Delt or attending Classic
Yacht Association meets. The Amaya has given
the Anderson and Terrazas families many happy
hours and with loving care she will sail into
the future of a lovely lady of the past.
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