Photo permission of R Stearns Family Collection Note Not for Copy |
The day before the incident The Portsmouth Herald printed "the drowning season is at hand" (July 16 1902) Picture from Saturday, July 19, 1902 Paper: Boston Herald (Boston, MA) Page: 12
From A chronicle of the history of the Shoals with many photographs from a former UNH Special Collections librarian Rutledge, Lyman V. The Isles of Shoals in Lore and Legend. Barre, MA: Barre Publishers, 1965; Boston: Star Island Corporation, 1971. Also see Vaughn Cottage
Two photo ads from Libby Foster DeYoung of her ancestors Mary Marshall and Eva Marshall
Captain Frederick Miles, a local fisherman, (age 48) who resided with his wife and eleven children at 2 Hunkings Street, Portsmouth, had been engaged many seasons to take out sailing parties at the Shoals. The summer of 1902 he was so employed by Mr. Charles J. Ramsdell, manager of the Oceanic Hotel on Star Island. Miles operated an Ipswich Bay whale boat, well known locally as a reliable sailing craft for small parties. The Ipswich Bay was usually about twenty feet long (one account says the Miles boat was only seventeen feet, but that is incredible) rigged with two masts and sails. The loose footed foresail was somewhat higher and larger than the mainsail. The boat was decked over bow and stern, and was heavily ballasted with stone and iron. “There was room amidship for six or ten passengers– no more,” says an expert writing for the Boston Journal. Miles had no record of accident or careless conduct, and Mr. Ramsdell had complete confidence in his ability and judgement.
By his own account Captain Miles had
taken out a small party which included Mr. Dingley, son of the elate Gov.
Dingley of Maine, in the early afternoon, and on returning them to
Appledore was handed a message informing him that a party was waiting at
Star. Mr. William Roger Greeley, a guest at the Oceanic says he was a
member of the party which had just been out, and in a communication
dated 1958 says “We were sailing in a whale boat owned and operated by
local fishermen, when my uncle, Hon. George P. McLean, Governor of
Connecticut, noticed a black cloud in the south and asked the ‘captain’
to make haste to the wharf to escape a squall. He said there was no
danger, but my uncle insisted. As soon as we got out of the boat a
party of fourteen or fifteen–the head waiter, a fine young college
student, and a dozen or more waitresses got in over my uncle’s protest.” Mr. Greeley did not know, however, that
five waitresses refused to go, much as they desired to join the party.
Ella Adams, Helen Twombly, Nellis Collins, Nellie Raitt and Hattie
Gilmore stayed on the pier and watched the others sail off in gay
laughter. Skipper Miles said, “I never sailed a
jollier party than these young people…I said to them, “Where do you want
to go, girls?” and they told me just to sail around the islands and not
to go too far out.” There was brisk breeze from the
southeast, so the Skipper headed northwest, intending to keep within the
lee of the islands, and as he and came up the west coast of Appledore
young Oliver Adams, brother of Ella who had stayed behind, and two other
sisters who were on the boat, shouted and waved to turn back, but the
party sailed on and cruised for nearly an hour to the north and east of
Appledore.
The Rev. Charles E. Park watched the
whole performance from the piazza of the Oceanic, and after more than
fifty years revived his memory of it in a note for our “Living History.” He says:
“A young fisherman had offered to take
them for a sail; and probably it was up north toward Boon Island. On
their return they were surging merrily along, close-hauled on the port
tack to a brisk southwest breeze. The girls were all ranged along the
port gunwale to offset the list of the boat….As they opened up the
harbor between Appledore and Star, so they could see the steam-boat
pier, there was the steamer just in, and bringing another batch of
delegates. Very soon they had to go about on the starboard tack in
order to shoot up into the (Appledore) harbor. This was just what the
girls wanted, for now, with the boat listing to port they could all
crowd over to the starboard side and get a perfect view of the
passengers leaving the steamer, not 50 feet away. And then it
happened. The boat slipped into the lee of the steamer; and wind
pressure on the sail was cut off; the boat righted with a jerk, and
because all the weight was on the starboard side, she kept right on
listing to starboard until water was pouring, green and heavy, over the
gunwale. Being well ballasted to make her stiff when on the wind, she
sank like a plummet.”
The Rescue
It seems from various descriptions that
the entire list of seventeen, including the skipper were carried down
by the suction of the rapidly descending boat. No one was caught in the
rigging, and no one fell beneath the hull. The skipper said:
“My god, girls, it’s all over–we are
all gone!” I yelled; and that was the last I saw of any of the party.
As the boat sank we were all drawn under by the terrible whirl and
suction, but as the craft struck the bottom the air in her forced me up
to the surface again. I presume that the others also came to the top of
the water, but I did not see any of the party. I was down for more than a minute, I
should judge, and when I saw blue sky was some distance from where we
went under. Luckily a large soap box which had been in the boat was
floating by and I put my arms around it. This was my salvation as I
cannot swim a stroke, although I have worked on the water for more than
thirty years. I drifted shoreward and soon reached the rocks, which
bumped and brusied me to some extent. I was taken from the water in an
unconscious condition by two fishermen and carried to the hotel.” Oliver Adams was first to reach the floundering victims. He said: “Lemuel Davis and I were near the
Appledore Hotel when the party started out, and we waved them to turn
back, but the boat kept on. They had been out about an hour when we saw
the flaw strike the boat a good blow and over she went. With all
possible haste Davis and I ran to the shore and launched a dory. The
breakers were coming high and strong, but we got out there first. Davis
had the oars and I never thought we would get to the drowning girls.
It was an awful suspense.
“When we got to where she went down all
were bunched. I grasped two of the girls, not knowing who they were and
rowed rapidly to shore. I kept their heads out of the water as best I
could, but it was a hard job to go through the breakers. We were about
fifteen yards from the shore wehn I was thrown out of the boat, but
still kept my hold on the girls…After a time we succeeded in reaching
dry land, and then we turned our efforts to resuscitating the two
girls. It was then for the first time that I discovered that one of
them was my sister Ena. I did not know that she was in the boat…After
fully half an hour we succeeded in restoring Miss Haggerty… My sister
was undoubtedly dead when she reached the shore…” “The last I saw of Alward and
Farrington they were struggling and trying to hold several of the girls
above water. Both were expert swimmers, but they could not hold out in
such a sea against the odds.”
Steamer Sam Adams, which had just
discharged her passengers at the dock now made for the rescue with only
her Skipper, Charles Allen, and engineer, Peter Peterson aboard. They
threw a line to one girl who proved to be Lillian Bresnahan, and drew
her aboard, but the second was too feeble to hold on, and sank. Winds
and waves were driving the steamer onto the rocks, so she had to pull
away from shore, and rescued no others. By this time the waters were in
tumult. Fishermen from Star and Smuttynose came in doreis to join the
frantic efforts of the Appledore boys. These boats, bobbing like corks
on the choppy sea managed to recover eight floating victims. These were
brought to shore where the whole population of the Islands was reaching
out for them, and Drs. Warren and Richter were directing fruitless
first aid. The bodies were carried on cots to the music room of the
Appledore Hotel, and placed in a silent row for identification by
friends and relatives from Star– nine in all, five missing, somewhere
under the still savage waves. Word had been cabled to Coroner Edward
E. Shapleigh of Kittery and Undertaker H. W. Nickerson of Portsmouth who
left Portsmouth at about 9:15 on the steamer Merryconeag. After the
bodies were identified they were carried on mattresses to the waiting
Merryconeag and taken to Portsmouth where they were to be claimed by
relatives. The next day (July 18) Michael E. Hurley
was summoned to undertake the recovery of five missing bodies. He
assembled his own diving equipment and early Saturday morning, with John
Ford of Dover as tender, went down to explore the ocean bed. He found
the whale boat intact, and announced that Skipper Miles had not been at
fault in handling his sails. Some had said he failed to free his sails
in making his tack, and it was a tight sail which caused the boat to
capsize, but Hurley found no tight sail. One at a time he discovered
the sunken bodies, at a depth of about sixty feet, but it was not until
the next afternoon that all had been recovered. Some faces were still
recognizable, but others had been disfigured by the ravages of fish.
All were taken to Portsmouth to join their silent companions, and wait
to be taken home. Guests at both hotels asked for no
service on the evening of the tragedy. Appledore recovered more quickly
after the last victim had been taken to mainland, and the seas were
calm once more. But the Oceanic could not be reconciled. Guests came
from their rooms next morning in silence and seemed confused as they
entered the dining room where only a handful of waitresses with haggard
faces were there to serve them. Out of twenty-two, sixteen were absent,
fourteen never to return to their accustomed places. Orders were given
with choked voices if at all. Many had no heart for eating but would
rise without words and return to their rooms.
Days passed and new hands came to serve, but memory lingered long over those dark hours. Dr. Park speaks for them all in his later review: “You say, why begin your reminiscences
with so sad a story? Had you been an ardent Shoaler at that time could
you have forgotten it? Could you have attended a single session for the
next fifty years without at least once during the week recalling that
fearful tragedy?” Picture from Harvard Crimson Article H Coleman Farrington
Roster of the Missing
Ena Adams, Portsmouth, NH
May Adams, Portsmouth, NH
Winfred A. Alward, Frederickon, NB
Catherine H. Bowes, Saxonville, MA
Elizabeth A. Bowes, Saxonville, MA
Bessie A. Chase, Malden, MA
Henry C. Farrington, Cambridge, MA
Laura Belle Gilmore, Exeter, MA
Bertha Graham, Danvers, MA
Isabelle Kauska, Cambridge, MA
Eva L. Marshall, Haverill, MA
Mary E. Marshall, Haverill, MA
Minnie McDonald, Cambridge, MA
Anna E. Sheehan, West Medford, MA
Springfield Republican (Springfield, MA) Issue: 98 Page: 7
1 comment:
Enjoyable, easy read, as always! Yes, I just love how Melissa finds these stories that were big news at the time they happened, but have been forgotten, and she breathes new life into them!!
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