It was during the administration of the U.S. President, John F. Kennedy, the presidential yacht was named the Honey Fitz.
A presidential yacht is a member of a nation's navy that is designated for usage by the president of that nation. During a fleet review, a boat is frequently named the presidential yacht.
Sewell Avery, a well-known businessman from Chicago, had the 93-foot wooden yacht built by Defoe Shipyard in Bay City, Michigan, in 1931. Sewell Avery primarily used it to travel around Lake Michigan. In 1942, the American government acquired—or perhaps expropriated—the yacht from Avery and gave it to the coast guard.
With President Harry S. Truman, the boat first attained Presidential prestige. The yacht was used by five American presidents in total—Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon—but John F. Kennedy is best known for using it as his presidential yacht and renaming it "Honey Fitz" in honor of his grandfather John Francis "Honey Fitz" Fitzgerald.
On the Honey Fitz, Kennedy is claimed to have experienced some of his happiest moments. He would frequently use it to entertain family and close friends while in office, traveling up and down the eastern shore from the Potomac River in Washington, D.C., to Cape Cod. In the end, the boat was sold to a private buyer in 1970, under the Nixon administration. The yacht just underwent a thorough, two-year repair to return it to its "Camelot" era glory days, for which it is well known.
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