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Forum Index: DISCUSSION: Dock Talk:
8 Bells: John B. Bonds
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ms
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Jun 9, 2010, 5:41 PM

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John Bledsoe Bonds – conscience of sailing, safety innovator and authority, and former Executive Director of U.S. Sailing – died on board his boat, Alliance, at Newport, R.I., on the night of June 8. He was 70. He and his wife, Beth, lived in Mt. Pleasant, S.C.

Born in Arkansas, John Bonds was initially infatuated with the sea and boats while a student at Rice University. He became an officer in the U.S. Navy, retiring with the rank of Captain in 1988 after a broad range of duties that included command of an ammunition ship off Vietnam and serving as Deputy Dean of the Center for Naval Warfare Studies at the Naval War College. Sailing whenever and wherever he could, in 1981 he was qualified to be appointed Director of Navy Sailing.

Based at Annapolis, he had a roster of responsibilities that included supervising sail and seamanship training throughout the Navy and NROTC programs. In his next assignment as Commanding Officer of the Annapolis Naval Station he also served as the Commodore of the Naval Academy Sailing Squadron. In that position he also helped develop the design, construction, and rigging of the Navy 44 sloops.

Already active in the United States Yacht Racing Union (now U.S. Sailing), in 1981 he joined its Safety At Sea Committee and began conducting on-the-water research with midshipmen on techniques and equipment for man-overboard rescue. Some 600 tests led to the breakthrough Quick Stop maneuver, a vast improvement over the traditional Williamson Turn. He next tested life jackets and concluded that the best option was the newly introduced inflatable. The Coast Guard officer in charge of life jackets disagreed, announcing that the USCG would never approve inflatables as long as he was in charge. Several years later, John looked back and declared, with characteristic succinctness, “He was wrong.”

Inflatable life jackets, the Quick Stop, and other tools of safe sailing are widely appreciated today, but they were little known until Captain Bonds opened the Naval Academy’s safety-at-sea seminars to the sailing public in 1984. Four years later he took safety seminars on the road to Charleston and Newport, and from that sprang the well-known and highly respected nationwide system of safety seminars certified by U.S. Sailing.

To call John Bonds a missionary just for safety would be a mistake. In his exuberant Arkansas evangelical way, he was a missionary for sailing itself. He knew from his own experience that sailing can transform and enhance lives. He also knew that for this to happen, people must feel and be safe. The safety seminars that we did together, two or three times a year for a quarter century, often ended with a talk he gave that was so full of this conviction that we referred to it as “The Benediction.” This spring, John was the moderator or featured speaker at four of these all-day seminars, in Florida, Canada, New York, and Newport. He was to participate in another one before the start of the Newport Bermuda Race.

After retiring from the Navy, John served as Executive Director of U.S. Sailing from 1988 to 1994. The organization’s membership grew during his term, and the disciplines and controls he introduced left the organization financially healthy and its volunteers and staff enthusiastic. On hearing of his death, Charles Leighton, U.S. Sailing’s current Executive Director, said, “John Bonds, besides his dedication of seven years to our sport, will always be remembered for his compassion for people.”

All this time Bonds was racing his J-24 and later a J-35, while also sailing offshore in friends’ boats, often in the joint role as navigator and cook. He sailed 11 Newport or Marion races to Bermuda and regularly brought boats back home from the island, choosing for his crews novices who, like him, were enchanted by the idea of going to sea, and who wanted to advance their skills so they could do it with confidence.

Here are his concluding words in an article he wrote for the official program for this year’s Newport Bermuda Race, addressing owners: “So as you plan your race down, think about the trip home as an opportunity to improve your crew roster and all the rest. It’s a good investment for the future.”

Always moving ahead, for his most recent (and, alas, last) boat he chose the J-40 Alliance, in which he and his adored Beth cruised. There was the occasional race. On the 2009 New York Yacht Club Cruise, Alliance won the Cygnet Cup, the oldest trophy in American yachting. That had special meaning for John, who on shore was a late-blooming practicing historian. After earning his Ph.D. in his sixties, he taught history at The Citadel, in Charleston, S.C., until his retirement in May.

His professional publications include a scholarly study of post-World War II U.S. foreign policy, Bipartisan Strategy: Selling the Marshall Plan (2002). In his spare time, John played saxophone several nights a week in a jazz quartet. He recently played a big band concert at The Citadel.

For all his interests, John Bonds was never not sailing. He was active in race management and judging for many sailing organizations, including his yacht clubs, among which were the Charleston Yacht Club, the Cruising Club of America, the New York Yacht Club, and the Storm Trysail Club.

Besides his wife, Beth, John Bonds leaves a daughter, Margaret Podlich, Vice President of Government Affairs at BoatUS, of Annapolis, Md.; a son, John B. Bonds Jr., of San Francisco; and two grandchildren.

He will also be missed by the world of his friends and admirers, and by the countless people who owe their sailing – in some cases even their lives – to what John Bonds brought us. -- John Rousmaniere,
June 9, 2010


EaglesPDX
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Jun 10, 2010, 9:34 PM

Post #2 of 5 (3427 views)
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Re: [ms] 8 Bells: John B. Bonds [In reply to] Log-In to Post/Reply

John Bonds was just a great guy, low key, direct and dry wit.

A John Bonds facet.

He was an innovator in more than sailing. He helped establish the original first ever online Sailing Forum on CompuServe, founded by John Lovell and run by Keith Taylor and Brion Lutz for years. It was for a long time the first and only online sailing spot, providing a home base for US Sailing and a first time online community for many in the sailing world. All long since scattered after the web's big bang.

John Bonds was one of Sailing Forums early boosters. He paid the dues to make it the first registered online yacht club in the history of US Sailing leading to an official Online Yacht Club burgee that looked like old time green line computer paper.

John was at the leading edge in more than just sailing.

See you on Fiddler's Green JB.


The Publisher
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Jun 13, 2010, 11:05 AM

Post #3 of 5 (3158 views)
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Re: [ms] 8 Bells: John B. Bonds [In reply to] Log-In to Post/Reply

From Capt. Eric Wallischeck (re, Eight Bells: John Bonds):
I had the honor and privilege to get to know John through my work as Sailing Master at Kings Point. He was already a legend within the service academy sailing community, and his professional mentorship was both invaluable and deeply appreciated. He was a great person, and someone I wanted to be around. John's gregarious personality, wit, musical talent, leadership, generous nature, formidable knowledge, and indomitable spirit infused the room, and were an inspiration to those around him.

While we can't always choose when and how we cross the bar, I can only hope that his passage, while at sea, in the company of loved ones and friends, has taken him to a fertile sailing ground, and that he is in the perpetual company of other kindred seafarers. My thoughts and prayers go out to Beth and his family. Fair weather, my friend, Captain John Bonds, United States Navy.

I think it appropriate that you print John's oft-quoted soliloquy on the merits of sail training. It has served as an inspiration for me, and the United States Merchant Marine Academy sailing program:

"We teach sailing and seamanship in the Navy to make competent seamen of our personnel, who will be the naval leaders of the future. We aren't interested in making yachtsmen of them. We encourage them to enter races in order to find an atmosphere which, like combat, stretches ability and endurance to the limit and allows character to emerge which can reach for that extra margin required for victory.

"We send our personnel to sea to learn that most basic characteristic of a professional seaman: a deep-seated sense of humility in the face of nature and her master. Our objective is simple – to produce the best possible sailor or officer for the fleet."


The Publisher
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Jun 15, 2010, 5:18 PM

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Re: [The Publisher] 8 Bells: John B. Bonds [In reply to] Log-In to Post/Reply

* From Ted Beier:
I was very sorry to read of the passing of John, who became a life-long friend since he was one of the originators of our sailing training programs. He always seemed to remember your name and always had a moment to chat. An example of his extraordinary ability to manage people came during a USYRU (as it was then) annual meeting while he was executive secretary. A frustrated committee head was complaining to John and several others of us about how her volunteer committee mnembers were "really messing things up", and asked John, "What do I do with them?" John replied, "With volunteers you tell them, 'thank you for your service'."


* From Hugh Balloch:
We were blessed by being able to sail in the 2009 Marion Bermuda Race with John Bonds as our navigator. He also safely skippered Dragon home with his usual eclectic mix of experts and novice offshore sailors. Despite less than ideal weather conditions John was irrepressibly cheerful and optimistic. But he always had a wary eye for what might go wrong and planned accordingly. He’d typically pop his head up one of the companionways with some advice or comment on every watch - a habit that earned him the nickname “Whack-a-mole” for part of the trip. We miss him, and wish him fair winds on his final sail.


The Publisher
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Jun 15, 2010, 5:27 PM

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Re: [The Publisher] 8 Bells: John B. Bonds [In reply to] Log-In to Post/Reply

* From Paul Pascoe:
I was saddened to hear of the passing of John Bonds, whom I had the pleasure of working with while living in the US some time ago.

One thing many people may not know or remember was that John was one of the early adopters of electronic communications prior to the internet becoming widespread. John had used CompuServe to send email, and harassed many other sailors into using the system, not only for email, but also for posting of results, long before the web became the standard. Results were posted on CompuServe bulletin boards, and every sailor or sailing administrator worth their salt had a CompuServe address, mostly as a result of John's pestering.

Sailing as a sport subsequently was way ahead of the game with the adoption of the internet, but John had the foresight to see the future when the internet was still in nappies.


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