Sunday, August 7, 2022

Left Behind

On Sunday afternoon, November 4, 1979, the General Hoyt S. Vandenberg sailed from Roosevelt Roads, Puerto Rico, bound for a special operations area in the Caribbean.  Due to depart at 3:00pm, the ship rested patiently alongside the dock in the beautiful tropical weather while her crew tended to their duties.  Captain C.H. Harriman stood with the harbor pilot on the starboard bridge wing, watching as the last mooring lines were brought aboard.  I stood at the engine order telegraph inside the bridge and next to the helmsman.  We were to get underway in just another minute, when suddenly an unexpected visitor arrived.

Entering through the chartroom, Mitchel Salem, the first assistant engineer, asked me quietly, “Where’s the old man?”

Somewhat startled by this soft-spoken apparition, I pointed and replied, “He’s on the starboard wing.”  Then I watched as Mitch approached the old man and said something privately into his ear. Captain Harriman, the taller of the two, bent over to listen.  After a moment he stood up straight, looked around, and exclaimed in a very loud voice, “I can’t sail without him!!”

In the commotion that followed, it was revealed that the Chief Engineer was not on the ship.  He had been searched for everywhere, but to no avail.  The obvious conclusion was that he was still ashore and would miss the ship.  Captain Harriman hurriedly instructed the linehandlers to leave one head line and one stern line on the dock.  He then stepped inside the bridge to examine the Certificate of Inspection, which listed all the crewmen and their specific qualifications that the ship was required by law to carry.

In the engine room of the General Vandenberg, there were five licensed officers: a Chief Engineer, a first assistant engineer, a second assistant engineer, and two third assistant engineers.  Four of these five were required for the ship to legally sail from an American port; only the second third assistant engineer was not required by the Certificate.  But this extra third assistant, an older man from Spain named Castro, held a Chief Engineer’s license, the only one besides the actual Chief who did.  So, whether he wanted the job or not, it suddenly became his.  Captain Harriman called the engine room and spoke with him briefly.  “Mr. Castro,” he barked into the phone.  “You’re the Chief Engineer for this voyage!  I can’t sail without you!  You got it down there?”  An on-the-spot promotion.

With the crewing crisis concluded, Captain Harriman returned to the bridge wing.  The last lines were taken in, the pilot gave the helm and engine directions, and a tugboat helped ease the General Vandenberg away from the dock.  Soon she was turned around and heading out to sea.  Once the ship cleared the harbor, the pilot left and was taken ashore in a launch.

Just when we were settling in to a normal underway watch, a radio call came in from the tugboat dispatcher.  He had our Chief Engineer and would send him out to us.  Would we please slow down so the tugboat could catch up to us more easily?  At a much reduced speed, and with the pilot ladder again lowered, we waited for the tug.  When it arrived, it nudged along the starboard side, and the missing Chief Engineer climbed aboard.  I watched from the bridge wing with Captain Harriman, whose annoyance at this entire episode was obvious but restrained.

The scriptures inform us that “unto whomsoever much is given, of him shall much be required: and to whom men have committed much, of him they will ask the more” (Luke 12:48).  I’ve often heard this paraphrased in contemporary English as, “More is expected of those to whom more is entrusted.”  Captain Harriman’s translation, related to me in a litany of complaint afterwards, was “It’s one thing for an ordinary seaman to miss the ship when it sails, but it’s altogether different when the Chief Engineer does the same thing.”  Whatever the wording, though, it’s the same principle.

Working one’s way up to either Master or Chief Engineer is a long and arduous process.  If it were easy, the licenses would be meaningless.  Because it is not easy, these licenses make a statement about the men who hold them.  They certify that these men are competent and trustworthy, that they have made the grade and paid their dues.  Simply put, the Master’s and Chief Engineer’s licenses command respect.  And it is natural for those who respect the Master and Chief Engineer to expect professionalism in return.

Over the years, I’ve seen that the majority of educated and professional people conduct themselves appropriately and responsibly.  The small number who don’t are the exceptions and not the rule.  I recall a few such standouts of egregious unprofessionalism.  One of the worst of these was the director of a college library, a place where we asked people to keep their voices down.  She frequently threw public hissy fits and vicious temper tantrums over trivial matters, one day shrieking at maximum volume and with eardrum-splitting intensity at a staff member about his lack of political correctness.  Witnessing this performance, I thought but did not say, this woman is educated to the PhD level, and this is how she behaves?

Unfortunately, not everyone “to whom much is given” returns what is “required.”  Put another way, “it’s one thing for an” illiterate street urchin to scream like a banshee at another person, “but it’s altogether different when” a highly educated professional librarian “does the same thing.”  The standards for and the expectations of the two are completely different.

After the Chief Engineer was safely returned to the General Vandenberg, he resumed his duties in the engine room.  Mr. Castro stepped down and resumed his duties as third assistant, but he received a day’s pay as Chief for his brief promotion.  The General Vandenberg then set forth on an uneventful voyage to her operations area, and after that, northwestward to Port Canaveral, Florida.  She arrived there on Wednesday, November 14, 1979.  These events took place so long ago, but I’ve always remembered the day the Chief missed the ship and was almost left behind.  I was very young then, and this episode made an impression on me.  It showed me that I could learn valuable lessons by simply observing the actions of others.

Sunday, June 5, 2022

Commuting to Alaska

With two of my grandchildren resident in Alaska, I must endure an uncomfortable imprisonment in the middle seat of an airplane for seemingly endless hours in order to visit them.  Actually, two middle seats aboard two airplanes, first from Boston to Seattle, and then from Seattle to Anchorage.  Miss Patty occupies the window seat; a stranger sits by the aisle.  Thus confined through the long and dark night, I sleep intermittently and occasionally study the on-screen navigational map.  Despite the discomfort, I realize what a blessing it is to be able to travel so far so quickly.  More importantly, I know that the reasons for this travel, our granddaughters Miss Katie and Miss Abby, are themselves the most sublime and supernal of all blessings.  It is always an honor to visit with them.

This point became all the more clear in church one Sunday morning.  As the speaker held forth on the importance of family, the two girls took turns climbing on laps, alternating between me and their Oma.  Their sweet innocence, unfeigned affection, and complete trust spoke volumes, “for of such is the kingdom of God” (Mark 10:14).

Our visits to the Alaskan grandchildren often involved opportunities to visit the Alaskan coastline as well.  The majestic beauty of Nature showed forth in a grand confluence of geology and oceanography as the snow-capped Chugach and Kenai Mountains intermingled with cold North Pacific waterways.  Far-flung seaport villages dotted this sparsely settled coast.  Two of them, Seward and Whittier, lay near enough to Anchorage to make day trips feasible.

On Monday, October 4, 2021, then, we drove to Seward on the Kenai Peninsula and visited the Alaska Sea Life Center.  This marvelous facility consisted of an aquarium, an aviary, a museum, and a research laboratory.  Birds, fish, and marine mammals abounded.  One sea lion in particular took a liking to Miss Katie and Miss Abby and put on an impromptu demonstration of diving, jumping, splashing, and making faces at them through the glass wall of the tank.  Naturally, the two girls loved the attention.

The back porch of the Sea Life Center overlooked Resurrection Bay.  This view was magnificent with the snow-capped Kenai Mountains nearly surrounding an expansive and placid fjord of Pacific seawater.  Local lore held that Captain James Cook of the Royal Navy discovered Resurrection Bay on Easter Sunday and named it in honor of the occasion.  The historical record indicated otherwise, however. This showed that it was actually named by Alexander Baranov, a Russian colonist and the first governor of Russian America.  His ship took refuge in the bay during a severe North Pacific storm and then emerged in calm weather on Easter Sunday.[1]  He also founded the port of Voskresenskii, which was later renamed Seward, on the bay’s western shore in 1793.[2]

The discrepancies between fact and folklore notwithstanding, our visit to the Alaska Sea Life Center and Resurrection Bay was a fascinating and unforgettable experience filled with breathtaking natural beauty evocative of “the works of the Lord, and his wonders in the deep” (Ps. 107:24).

On Sunday afternoon, May 15, 2022, we drove to Whittier and visited the commercial shipping docks.  Two grand vessels were in port that day, the cruise ship Nieuw Amsterdam of the Holland America Line, and the ferry Aurora of the Alaska Marine Highway.  Both of these ships were part of our family history, and it was good to see them again.  Our family, then lacking grandchildren, had sailed aboard the Nieuw Amsterdam in the Caribbean in February of 2012, and I had seen the Aurora at her dock in Whittier on my first visit to Alaska in October of 2015.

Whittier stood on the south side of the Passage Canal, which was not a canal at all but an alcove adjoining the larger Prince William Sound.  Captain James Cook discovered this body of water in 1778, and it was subsequently named after the third son of King George III.[3]  In time, Whittier developed into a busy commercial, military, and fishing port with highway and railroad links to Anchorage.  The Nieuw Amsterdam docked there so passengers could make a convenient connection to the Alaska Railroad.  The Aurora docked there to load and discharge passengers and their private automobiles.  Surrounding both ships was a pristine oblong fjord nearly encapsulated by tall and jagged snow-covered mountains.  It was truly a view of the majesty of Creation, one that “let the beauty of the Lord be upon us” (Ps. 90:17).

The two granddaughters watched in rapt attention as the diminutive but elegant Aurora made her approach.  She passed directly in front of us as she turned and then backed down to her dock.  After the stern ramp was lowered the traffic started off the ship, and this, too, held the girls’ attention.  With her business concluded after only half an hour in port, the Aurora took in her mooring lines and got underway again.

The Nieuw Amsterdam, by comparison, was much larger and more stationary.  She would sail late in the evening, long after our return to Anchorage.  Meanwhile, she dominated the waterfront with her immense size and graceful lines, and yet she was dwarfed by the surrounding mountains that towered over her.  We found a small floating dock and attached gangway near her bow to be the best vantage point for viewing, photographing, and reminiscing.

On Thursday, May 19, 2022, I set out alone and on foot from the house during the granddaughters’ naptime.  Fifteen minutes of walking brought me away from the activity of the city to a pedestrian and bicycle trail paralleling the Cook Inlet.  This stretch of water extended from the open Pacific northeastward to the Anchorage International Airport and thence to downtown Anchorage.  The trail connected these two areas, covering a distance of several miles.  Scenic lookout spots, where one could sit quietly and imbibe the view, dotted the path.

My favorite of these lookout spots gave me unobstructed views in several directions.  To the northeast stood the modern skyscrapers of downtown with the Chugach Mountains behind them.  To the northwest and across the inlet from the city the Panamanian cargo ship Bunun Wisdom of the Wisdom Line[4] lay anchored near the opposite shore.  To southwest the airport occupied a peninsula from which every ten minutes or so an airplane took off into the northerly breeze.  Surprisingly, the distant roar of the jet engines did not seem intrusive, nor did the occasional sounds of locomotive horns from the freight trains on the nearby railroad tracks.  More quietly, though, spread out directly in front of me were the extensive low tide mud flats of the Cook Inlet backed by a much larger expanse of blue water.  It was a truly magnificent vista.  I could have stayed there all afternoon, but the granddaughters’ nap time would not last that long!

Of course, these granddaughters, along with our sons and daughters-in-law, were the reasons why Miss Patty and I had traveled to Alaska in the first place.  All the sightseeing was a nice bonus and an uplifting spiritual experience.  The family, however, was paramount.  With this family we had wonderful vacations, times that went by much too quickly, but also times that reminded us of how fortunate we were to have both children and grandchildren, as well as good children-in-law.

Two great spiritual events took place during these family reunions.  The first was Miss Katie’s baby blessing on Sunday, March 4, 2018.  Following the family tradition, she wore the christening gown which her great-great-grandparents, Robert Burns and Julia Murphy, had purchased in 1949 for their first grandson, and which has now been used by three generations of our family.

The second, and the true spiritual summit of our visits, took place in the evening of Wednesday, October 6, 2021, in the Anchorage Temple.  Miss Patty and I gathered in the sealing room with our two sons and daughters-in-law and carried out the requisite sealings for my deceased parents.  First they were sealed to their parents, then to each other, and finally to me.  Afterwards, we retired to the celestial room for an interval of quiet contemplation before leaving.

While one need not fly to Alaska in order to enjoy a happy family gathering and a meaningful religious experience, the investment of time, effort, and discomfort in traveling makes the trek seem like a pilgrimage, and thus it enhances the intensity of the occasion.  Such were my thoughts during my confinement in the awkward middle seats of the airplanes on the long nocturnal flights home.  Now, I look forward to going back and doing it all again!

Next, let’s look at some pictures:

At the Alaska Sea Life Center in Seward, a sea lion meets one of our granddaughters on Tuesday, October, 4, 2021.    

 
A view of Resurrection Bay from the rear balcony of the Sea Life Center on the same day.


The ferry Aurora of the Alaska Marine Highway arrives in Whittier on Sunday, May 15, 2022.


Same day; same ship.  The Aurora discharges passengers and their vehicles at the dock in Whittier.


Same day; different ship.  The Nieuw Amsterdam reposes quietly at the main commercial dock in Whittier.  She is a large vessel, but the mountains easily outsize her.

 
A view of the Cook Inlet in Anchorage on Thursday, May 19, 2022, with the anchored cargo ship Bunun Wisdom.


"And the light shineth in darkness" (John 1:5).  The steeple of the Anchorage Temple on Wednesday, October 6, 2021, following the completion of my parents' sealing ordinances.

Some lights shine just as well in the daytime.  The steeple of the meetinghouse of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on West 40th Avenue in Anchorage, where my sons and their families attend church, on Sunday, May 15, 2022.

Neighbors.  Across the street stands Our Lady of Guadalupe Cathedral.  Built in the Spanish Mission Revival style, the cathedral has twin belfries, each topped with a Mediterranean-style red tile roof surmounted by a Latin cross.  A traditional symbol of Christianity, the cross reminds us of the brutality and suffering involved in the Atonement, a point we should always remember and appreciate.



[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resurrection_Bay. 

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Andreyevich_Baranov.

[3] https://wikipedia.org/wiki/Prince_William_Sound.

[4] Information from marinetraffic.com.