From our overstocked archives
Sam Smith -
It's a Friday evening in 1964. The crew has been granted early liberty.
The wind is making up to forty knots out of the Northeast. The ship is
on Bravo-2 status meaning it must be ready to leave on two hours notice.
The Officer of the Deck has the number of every bar and restaurant in
Bristol handy.
Because of her heavy weather abilities and because of the growing
unseaworthiness of the Coast Guard's older search and rescue vessels,
the Spar had been assigned responsibility for heavy weather rescue
missions. In fact the 125 foot search and rescue patrol boat at Woods
Hole, the General Greene, was built during Prohibition and now
considered of such dubious seaworthiness that she was not permitted out
in anything more blustery than small craft warnings. This humiliating
restriction for a ship intended for rescue was instituted after the
captain sailed halfway to Bermuda during a storm because he did not dare
turn the General Greene around.
As operations officer and navigators, I had cancelled plans to go to a
party in Providence and instead was having dinner at the Lobster Pot,
first leaving the phone number with the quartermaster of the watch.
About 10:30 pm, a message, operational immediate, arrives at the cutter
Spar from Commander, First Coast Guard District, telling of a fishing
vessel in distress 150 miles southeast of Cape Cod. There is a
description, a loran fix and orders to "proceed and assist."
A waitress at the Lobster Pot comes over and tells me that the crew is
being recalled. I pay the check and return to the ship. Bill Miller,
Quartermaster First Class, is already up in the chart room plotting a
course. "It's going to take 18 hours to get to her," he says. The Spar
was not a fast ship.
The special sea detail is set and we get underway. After an hour's
cruise down the Bay we take departure of the well protected East Passage
and enter Rhode Island Sound. At first, the Spar only nods gently at
the sea. Soon, however, she is rolling and pitching relentlessly.
Lying in my bunk, waiting to go on watch, the ship seems determined to
throw me to the deck. I hang on and feel the internal organs of my body
trying to do the same. I wonder whether that was my liver or my spleen
that took a sudden lunge in the direction of my throat. Placing my
laundry bag next to the bulkhead and my life vest next to the bunk guard
rail, I construct a make-shift straitjacket to keep me from sliding
from side to side. Now I just roll with the ship.
To survive a North Atlantic winter gale the Spar will have to keep
punching like a cocky little fighter, always on her toes, always moving.
She will alternate rolls of up to forty-five degrees while leaning way
back and then plunging into the sea. Sailors call the motion
corkscrewing. And don't like it much.
It seems better to be on watch. At least there is something to do other
than just think. The red glow of the darkened wheel house is deceptively
restful. Outside the wind chips at the skin, the high bow strikes out
at each wave, sometimes slapping it down, sometimes ducking under.
And it might not be as bad as the night I found myself on the bridge
with the conn, supposedly 45 feet above sea level, but looking up at the
crests as we dipped into each trough. Then one even higher wave had
suddenly stopped and shook the Spar's 180 feet, bringing a call from
below, "What the fuck you doing up there? You just knocked two guys out
of their bunks." This one tonight is just an ordinary storm.
If you feel ill, you have only the marginal solace of companionship. The
bridge, being the only access to the outside during bad weather, is
host to crew members seeking the leeward wing from which to relieve
themselves.
Free of the protection of the land, the wind is blowing stronger. I
grasp the handles of the radar set and try to find my balance. I try to
amuse myself by plotting the course of a large blip that has appeared on
the scope. I am reminded of the even larger blip I had once spotted in
the fog that kept closing on our stern. I called the captain and by the
time he had come to the bridge a large Russian fishing and surveillance
vessel had broken through the shroud 100 yards away. The captain went
below to wire Washington.
Tonight, as the ship takes a heavy roll, the quartermaster slides past
me and hits his shoulder hard against the starboard bulkhead. On the
radio I hear a freighter tell the Narragansett Bay pilot he'll be at the
entrance in two hours. The blip on the scope is that freighter. Its
crew will be pulling liberty in Providence tonight. We won’t.
During a normal watch there are three men on the bridge: the officer of
the deck (in this case me), the quartermaster of the watch and the
helmsman. The rest of the ship is tending to its business or asleep.
During the lonely hours of the mid-watch, those on the bridge are a trio
of adventurers on an empty planet. They are the only ones who will know
what took place that night. They will become acquainted with the
thousand voices of the sea.
A few curt bits of information are exchanged when the watch is relieved:
"This black beast is on a course of 136 degrees true, making good
eleven knots, 0330 position is on the chart, the radar scope is empty. ,
. ." But aside from that no one will ask them about the watch. And the
log will read simply: "Underway as before."
Throughout the next day the Spar pounds along towards the object of her
search - a 69-foot green fishing vessel with a white superstructure,
orange dory, 7 persons aboard, and engine failure. Towards mid-afternoon
we approach the area and make radio contact with the trawler as we have
several times during our trip out. The skipper speaks on 2182
kilocycles with a thick Scandinavian accent. He says that all on board
are well, that his vessel comes from New Bedford, and is owned by a man
whose name had an unmistakably Portuguese sound. The Spar's only
radioman, who has brought his mattress to the radio shack so he can grab
a few moments sleep between messages that flow in and out around the
clock, asks the trawler for a long count. The skipper counts slowly, the
Spar's radio direction finder searches for the direction of his voice,
the needle finally coming to rest five points off the starboard bow. The
ship alters course and heads for the disabled craft.
A mast is sighted ahead. The Spar approaches the trawler wallowing in
the heavy sea. Our gunner's mate, wearing a bright red vest, aims his
line-throwing gun across the bow of the other ship. There is a report
and a thin line soars over the water. In less than ten minutes the
fishing vessel is in tow and the Spar headed back towards New Bedford.
Now the seas begin to abate. I start to feel like eating good food
again. Early in the trip I had given my lobster saute to Neptune as a
peace offering and thereafter had subsisted on dry bread and Coca Cola.
But now the smell of the cooks preparing cream of tomato soup and
grilled cheese sandwiches wafts through the passageways, a sure sign
that good weather was back.
Finally, we are in Rhode Island Sound and then Buzzards Bay. The fishing
craft is turned over to the commercial towboat Captain Leroy at the
entrance to New Bedford harbor. We haul in the towline and where once
had been a fishing vessel find a sack of deep sea lobsters, secured
there by the trawler crew. The Spar turns back down Buzzards Bay towards
Bristol. Steaming up Narragansett Bay in the morning light, the sun
causes a million reflections on the water to play tag with one another.
Rose Island, Buoy 17TTR, Poppasquash Point and Bristol Harbor draw
closer at a steady 12.1 knots.
A few months earlier, just as I was bringing the Spar into the dock a
crew member came out on the deck and called up, “The president’s been
shot.” No one left the ship for hours. But this morning it is neither
hot nor cold and the wind does not bite. There are no disabled fishing
vessels, no gales, no Vietnam, no Dallas, no Birmingham, no hunger, no
fear, no weariness, no pain, nothing but a world in which all is well.
The ship approaches the dock.
"Put out all lines when you can."
A gentle nudge and the Spar is home again.
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
May 31, 2024
Tales from the Attic: Another night on the Coast Gaurd cutter Spar
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