LOST ON VOYAGES TO NOWHERE
By W.E. Ehrman
An article about the loss of several lightships……
From “We’ve Been There” by Esther Stormer ©1992 Reprinted by Permission.
In 1820, almost a century after the British came up with the idea, the United
States began using lightships to mark the approaches to important harbors and to
guide the mariners past offshore shoals where it was impractical to erect fixed
aids to navigation. At their peak more than 50 of the floating lighthouses were
stationed along the east and west coasts of the United States and in three of
the great lakes. By 1939 when the Bureau of Lighthouses merged with the United
States Coast Guard. Only 30 lightships remained and since then, all, except one,
the lightship guarding Nantucket Shoals, have been replaced by “Texas Tower”
type off shore light platforms or large navigational buoys (LNB’s) at a
considerable savings in manpower and construction/maintenance costs.
Until recently, setting a buoy on Nantucket Shoals was deemed almost impossible
due to the rotary currents in the area which would cause the buoy to spin
continuously. But on August 10, 1982, LNB equipped with a larger mooring chain
and special swivels anchored a few miles from the lightship station. If the LNB
survives and provides satisfactory service over a period of two years or so, it
will replace the lightship and permit it to sail off into the pages of history
as the last of it’s kind.
Ed Note: Since this article was written, the lightship guarding Nantucket Shoals
has been permanently discontinued.
Lightship duty was, and until the Nantucket is replaced, and still is a
hazardous profession. In foggy weather lightships were sitting ducks for
oncoming vessels homing in on their fog signals and radio beacons, and changing
course only at the last moment. In the process, a number of lightships have been
rammed and sunk. Others have been severely damaged and all of them have had
instances of hair raising near misses. Although Nantucket is equipped with radar
and other electronic safeguards, the threat of collision still exists. A recent
one-way radio conversation between Nantucket and an unidentified merchant ship
is a case in point.
While the cutter Duane was taking a disabled fishing vessel in tow, Duane’s
Officer of the Deck heard the following voice conversation on Channel 16, the
ship to ship emergency distress frequency, “Vessel 1.6 miles from Nantucket
Lightship; request that you change course. You are on a collision course with
the lightship.”
After a period of silence, Nantucket came on the air again, “Vessel 0.6 miles
from Nantucket Lightship; you are directed to immediately change course!!!!! You
are going to collide with us!!!” In the background the Duane’s OOD heard the
lighships collision alarm and could imagine the turmoil as the lightship’s crew
scrambled to their stations. Suddenly a faint voice was heard evidently shouting
across the lightship’s bridge, at some distance from the microphone, “Skipper, I
think I see someone on the bridge (of the merchant vessel.) The all was silent.
No “Mayday.”
Duane’s report of the incident concluded with the assumption that ….. “on the
merchie the “iron mike” was taken in hand and the rudders put hard over.
Lightship No. 117, occupying Nantucket Shoals Station in dense fog on 15 May
1934 was not as fortunate. Not being equipped with electronic devices to warn
her that S.S. Olympic was on a collision course, Lightship No. 117 lost seven
crew members when the huge liner rammed and sunk her.
Fog is one of the hazards lightshipmen face. When hurricanes are in the offing
and other vessels are free to seek shelter or take evasive action, lightships
are duty bound to remain on station and “keep the lights burning.” Despite their
huge mushroom type mooring anchors, heavy spare anchors, and on later models
equipped with propulsion machinery, the use of their engines, a considerable
number of storm bound lightships have been dragged off station and have suffered
moderate to severe damage as a result. In the more extreme cases, several
lightships including Five Fathom Lightship No. 37 in 1893, the Buffalo
Lightship, No. 82 in 1913, Cross Rip Lightship No. 6 in 1918, and Vineyard Sound
Lightship No. 73 in 1944 foundered on or near their stations with heavy loss of
life.
Survivors from Five Fathom, which took four men to the bottom with her, told of
how their ship foundered after an army of mountainous waves marched across her
bulwarks, tore off her ventilators and hatch covers, and filled her with water
the the resulting deck openings.
There were no survivors when Buffalo foundered during the Great Storm that swept
across Lake Erie in November 1913, but a message from her dead Captain to his
wife tells it all. Scrawled on a board that washed ashore a few days after the
disaster, the message read, “Goodbye Nellie, ship is breking up fast ….
Williams.”
Cross Rip left no messages or survivors when she vanished on 5 February 1918.
Observers on the shore reported seeing the helpless lightship torn loose from
her moorings by a huge mass of windblown ice and carried away. The aged wooden
vessel had no masts, sails, or other means of motive power and not being
equipped with a radio, her fate, and that of her six-man crew remained a mystery
for 15 years. In July 1933, a government dredge working in the Vineyard Sound
area brought up splintered pieces of oak planking and ribs and a section of a
windlass believed to be from the lost lightship. If the recovered material was
from the lightship, there is reason to believe the Cross Rip was crushed in the
massive ice field and sank before her crew could launch a boat into the ice that
was grinding along her sides.
All hands were lost when the Vineyard Sound Lightship No. 73 foundered during a
1944 hurricane and although her storm battered wreck was located and explored by
divers a few weeks after she foundered and again twenty years later, the actual
cause of the sinking of the veteran lightship remains somewhat of a mystery.
This account of the incident and the rather intriguing aftermath is dedicated to
her crew who remained at their post until the end.
Lightship No. 73 was 123 feet long, displaced 693 tons and was powered by a 400
horsepower steam engine. She was built in 1901 with an iron hull, masts, and
deckhouses, had wooden decks and bulkheads, and little or no water tight
integrity. It was not until after the Nantucket Lightship No. 117 was rammed and
sunk in 1934 that the new model lightships were constructed with three
watertight compartments.
On September 14, 1944, Lightship No. 73 was guarding Sow and Pigs reef off the
tip of Cuttyhunk Island, Massachsetts in company with Lightship No. 83 which was
occupying Hen and Chickens shoal some four miles to the northwest. The
lightships greeted the dawn on that fateful day with hurricane flags flying to
warn shipping of an approaching tropical hurricane while their crews calmly went
about their duties, secure in the knowledge that both lightships had weathered
numerous hurricanes in the past. They might have had second thoughts, however,
had they known this particular hurricane was akiller storm which earlier in the
day had been responsible for the foundering of a Navy Destroyer leader and two
125 foot Coast Guard Cutters off the coast of North Carolina.
Lightship No 73’s crew consisted of her Skipper, BOSN Edgar Sevigny and eleven
crewmen, five of whom were due to be relieved the following day by the
lightship’s Executive Officer, Chief Boatswains Mate Arthur F. Love and four
crewmen who were ashore on compensatory leave. Had it not been for an earlier
two day storm in the Buzzard’s Bay area which delayed their return to the
lightship, Chief Love and his party would have been back on board the day before
the hurricane and their lives rather then those of the men they were scheduled
to relieve on the 15th would have been in jeopardy.
Gale force winds in advance of the hurricane reached the Buzzard’s Bay area at
about 1700 and the accompanying rain squalls reduced visibility to near zero.
The beacons aboard both lightships began to flash their individual patterns
light pattern into the gloom night air and the raucous sound of their fog
signals echoed across the windswept waters. The wind continued to increase until
about midnight when the eye of the storm passed over Providence, Rhode Island
and moved onward in a northeastly direction. A short time later, the hurricane
curved again and roared back out to sea across the turbulent waters of Buzzards
Bay and in passing, the wind shifted to the southeast and peaked to over 100
knots.
Since all hands went down with the ship, her logbook was never recovered and her
radio-telephone was strangely silent throughout her ordeal, nothing is known
about conditions on board lightship No. 73 during the height of the storm. It
was a different story aboard Lightship No. 86 which was being dragged
relentlessly in a northwesterly direction. At about 0130 on September 15, her
watch sighted a series of red and white flares streaking across the cloud filled
skies in the general direction of Lightship No. 73’s general direction. Some
residents of Westport, Massachusetts observed similar flares, but were prevented
by the fury of the storm from approaching the beach area to try to identify the
source. After the storm had abated somewhat, they struggled down to the beach,
scanned the murky horizon with their glasses and discovered that the lightship
guarding Sow and Pigs Reef had vanished from her station.
The Coast Guard launched an immediate air and sea search hoping that, as
happened in the past, the errant lightship had torn loose from her moorings and
had sought shelter in some secluded cove or had headed out to sea to ride out
the storm. Unfortunately, neither of these assumptions proved to be correct. On
September 16th after the battered remains of Lightship No. 73’s dory washed
ashore on Cuttyhunk Island and the bodies of two of her missing crewmen were
recovered from the surf, a team of Navy divers began searching the bottom in the
vicinity of the lightship’s station.
On September 22nd the sunken wreck of the missing lightship was located in 70
feet of water about 1.5 miles northwest of her station, but the divers found no
traces of her missing crewmen either in the wreck or in the surrounding area.
Appearing before a Coast Guard Board of Inquiry, the divers testified that the
wreck was resting on the bottom in a near vertical position with her stack and
both masts snapped off flush with the deck and her main anchor chain heading out
of it’s hawsepipe for a short distance until it disappeared beneath the sand.
Her spare mushroom anchor was resting on the bottom with very little slack in
it’s chain indicating that it had been dropped or fallen at a time when the
stricken lightship was directly over her final resting place. The limited
underwater visibility prevented the divers from distinguishing the name or
number painted on the lightship’s sides but they were able to distinguish the
letters, “USLHE” and the numerals, “1981” inscribed on her huge fog bell. The
latter reading had obviously been in error because the lightship had been built
in 1901. However the wreck was positively identified by the ship’s Executive
Officer, Chief Love, who testified that the ornate fog bell lanyard brought up
by one of the divers was the handiwork of Coxswain Harold W. Flagg, another
off-duty member of the lightship’s crew.
The fact that Lightship No. 73 had lost her stack and both masts led the Board
of Inquiry to believe that, like Five Fathom Lightship No. 37, she had foundered
as a result of openings through the deck. LCDR Roy W. Whittemore, a former
Commanding Officer of the lightship, vetoed the idea. While not questioning the
fact that wave damage was responsible for the loss of the top hamper, the former
Skipper expressed the opinon that the damage must have occurred after the vessel
began to found and was riding lower in the water than usual, since her bulwarks
were higher than those of most other lightships. When asked for his opinion as
to the source(s) of leakage into the lightship’s hull which would have caused
her to settle prior to sustaining the wave damages, Whittemore suggested that
the water probably entered through a hole caused by the spare anchor crashing
through the hull, or through an opening in her shell plating caused by the
pounding of the seas, or through the cargo ports in the hull if the doors had
been carried away.
Unable to pinpoint the exact cause of the lightship’s sinking, the Board of
Inquiry gave, as it’s opinion, “The foundering of Vineyard Sound Lightship No.
73 was caused by a leak through the hull at some undetermined point” and
recommended that, “The Lightship be strickened from the Record of Public
Property.” Lightship No. 73 ended her gallant 43-year career on that final note
marked only by a wreck symbol on the chart that eventually proved to be wide of
it’s mark.
The board may have been inconclusive in it’s findings, but most of the local
boatmen firmly believed that “Old Sow and Pigs” as they fondly called her had
been the victim of a fractured hawse pipe which permitted her unfettered anchor
chain to saw through her tender bowplates, leaving a gaping hole for the influx
of sufficient water to cause her to founder.
Most of the nation’s newspapers were to preoccupied with the war news of the day
to devote any space to the loss of the Vineyard Sound Lightship No. 73., but the
New Bedford Standard-Times carried daily accounts of the tragedy and it’s
aftermath. In it’s September 20, 1944 edition, it published the following eulogy
to the lost lightshipmen……..
LIGHTSHIP HEROES
Measured by the loss of life, the sinking of the Vineyard Sound Lightship with
all it’s officer and crew …. Twelve men all told …stands as the worst single
disaster caused by the hurricane.
The precise circumstances under which these members of the Coast Guard lost
their lives can only be conjectured. All that is known is the vessel, rugged as
she was, foundered in the storm.
Other shipping, warned several days in advance, was free to seek shelter.
Lightships, anchored at their stations, are supposed to stay put and take
whatever comes. They are built to withstand severe storms, but there is tragic
proof that Vineyard Sound could not survive it. The men who died did so at their
post, in the performance of their duty, helpless against what faced them. That
takes courage of a rare sort. These men had it ……..
Commander W. E. Ehrman is a retired Coast Guard Officer