From Gdynia to the Atlantic. Dar Młodzieży sets sail for Sail4th 250 marking U.S. independence anniversary

From the port of Gdynia, one of the world’s most recognisable sail training ships, Dar Młodzieży, has begun preparations for its next transatlantic training voyage. On 16 April 2026, the Polish full-rigged ship will depart on a new stage of her sail training programme, culminating in participation in the international Sail4th 250 event in the United States.

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11 april 2026   |   15:46   |   Source: Gazeta Morska   |   Prepared by: Kamil Kusier   |   Print

fot. Uniwersytet Morski w Gdyni

fot. Uniwersytet Morski w Gdyni

The Sail4th 250 celebrations, scheduled for 3–8 July 2026, will mark the 250th anniversary of the adoption of the United States Declaration of Independence. The highlight of the event will be a large parade of tall ships and naval units on 4 July, coinciding with U.S. Independence Day.

The gathering is expected to bring together sail training vessels and tall ships from around the world, forming one of the largest maritime commemorative events of the decade.

For Dar Młodzieży, the voyage represents another chapter in Poland’s long-standing transatlantic sail training tradition, which remains a cornerstone of maritime education.

Atlantic as a training classroom

Operated by the Gdynia Maritime University, Dar Młodzieży carries cadets and maritime students from Poland and partner institutions abroad. The voyage is an integral part of their sea-going training.

Daily life on board includes navigation watches, sail handling on the yards, manoeuvres under full sail, and life in a traditional watch system. The Atlantic crossing provides future merchant marine officers with their first experience of long-distance ocean navigation under real operational conditions.

Sail4th 250 – global tall ships gathering

During July, Dar Młodzieży will join an international fleet assembled for Sail4th 250. The event will combine maritime tradition, historical commemoration, and international cooperation, bringing together some of the most iconic sail training vessels in the world.

The participation of the Polish ship continues a long tradition of Polish tall ships representing the country during major U.S. maritime celebrations and international sail events.

A legacy from Dar Pomorza to Dar Młodzieży

The 2026 voyage also carries a strong historical dimension.

Half a century earlier, Poland’s former flagship sail training vessel, Dar Pomorza, took part in the Operation Sail 1976 event, held during the bicentennial celebrations of U.S. independence. The gathering brought together some of the largest and most famous tall ships in the world and remains one of the most significant maritime diplomacy events of the 20th century.

Today, Dar Młodzieży continues this tradition, sailing to the 250th anniversary celebrations. Within the maritime community, such voyages are often seen as part of a continuous Polish presence across Atlantic sail training generations.

The current ship is also expected to be among the last major transatlantic deployments before the introduction of a new sail training vessel planned to eventually replace her in service.

A symbol of Polish maritime education

Since entering service, Dar Młodzieży has remained one of the flagship training vessels of the Polish merchant marine education system. As a sailing training ship of the Gdynia Maritime University, she combines traditional seamanship with modern maritime education.

Each voyage represents not only a journey, but an intensive training process – from navigation and watchkeeping to teamwork under demanding ocean conditions.

An Atlantic historical continuum

The 2026 voyage forms a symbolic continuum:

  • 1976 – Dar Pomorza at Operation Sail during the U.S. Bicentennial
  • 2026 – Dar Młodzieży at Sail4th 250
  • future – the next generation of Polish sail training ships continuing the Atlantic tradition under the white-and-red flag

Together, they reflect a continuous legacy of Polish sail training and maritime presence on the world’s oceans.

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Kamil Kusier
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