In October 1995 doctors officially diagnosed Nerup with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). A condition that causes the sufferer to briefly stop breathing for short periods, it is estimated that 1 to 4 percent of the population of the United States suffers from OSA. Research into the condition has shown that men are significantly more likely to develop sleep apnea than women, particularly those men who have crossed over forty years of age. Both male and over forty years of age, Robert Nerup fit the bill. Coupled with the chaotic and changeable watch schedule demanded by his career, his sleep apnea likely left Nerup tired and fatigued — whether the long-time mariner knew it or not. Independent researchers contracted by the NTSB on the subject concluded it was entirely plausible that this sleep apnea played a critical role in Nerup’s decision-making abilities on the day of the accident; sleep apnea can often manifest itself with symptoms that include morning headaches, excessive daytime sleepiness, depression, intellectual impairment, and memory deficit. Whether he knew it or not, Robert Nerup’s sleep apnea, depression, and treatment for it likely affected his decision-making processes on the night of the accident.
Not that Nerup is entirely to blame. For the first time ever in a marine accident, transcripts from the ship’s voyage data recorder (VDR) were used in an NTSB investigation. Much like the “black box” in an airplane, the VDR records the parameters of all relevant technical systems on board a ship, including speed, heading, current location transmitted by global positioning satellites (GPS), and even data collected from the four radars installed aboard Star Princess. Following the accident they were sent to London, England, where they were played back for NTSB investigators in December 1995. From those playbacks, investigators were able to reconstruct the actual track of the Star Princess from the radar, gyro, and GPS coordinates contained within.
Crucially, the VDR also contains an audio track recorded from a handful of live microphones located throughout the navigation bridge. When the NTSB reviewed the tracks, the audio quality was poor. Princess Cruises, to their credit, promptly furnished the NTSB with transcripts of all conversations that took place on the navigation bridge between 01:02 and 01:59 on the morning of June 23, 1995. The discussion on the bridge between the officers on duty and the pilot in the run up to the collision revolved mainly around their family relationships and issues, and personal grooming habits. In their report, the NTSB investigators noted that “the matters discussed by the watch officers and pilot were not of a navigational nature and were not related to shipboard duties.”[5] Not a single officer on the bridge of the Star Princess questioned Nerup’s decision-making process. They were talking about how they like their hair cut, and where their wives and kids were.
The stigma of the Star Princess proved to be impossible for Robert Nerup to shake. On April 2, 1996, he surrendered his Alaska marine pilot’s licence following a decision and settlement by the State of Alaska. Bearing the identification number eighty-three, it was issued on December 9, 1980, and expired on the last day of 1996. His file was permanently marked with a clause, issued in all capitals:
LICENSE SURRENDERED — WILL NEVER AGAIN APPLY FOR MARINE PILOT LICENSE OF ANY SORT ISSUED BY THE STATE OF ALASKA.[6]
He never went back to sea.
Cruise ships have increased rapidly in size since 1995. Vessels that were once considered large — like the former Star Princess — now barely qualify as midsize. Capacities are on the rise, too, with the largest ships currently sailing in Alaska capable of carrying nearly four thousand passengers. They are, first and foremost, a safe, reliable, enjoyable way to see Alaska. In many ways, they tend to mimic their aviation counterparts in terms of safety, but also in scope and scale when something goes awry. In recent years, events like the sinking of the Costa Concordia and the loss of power aboard the Carnival Triumph have illustrated that modern cruise ships, like any technology, are far from infallible. But to sail through Lynn Canal today on one of these floating technological marvels can be as deceiving as it was on that blustery night in October 1918 when Princess Sophia steamed toward her inevitable fate. In their final report into the grounding of the Star Princess, the NTSB noted that the greatest danger in Alaska may very well be the one thing that is entirely out of human control: mother nature.
Considering the unforgiving nature of the Alaskan marine environment, with its deep, cold waters and rocky shores, and the remoteness of the areas of operation, an accident caused by the poor performance of a pilot cannot be tolerated. Too many lives are at risk.[7]
INTRODUCTION
1. Official Inquiry into the Loss of the Princess Sophia, 1919, Library and Archives Canada, lac_mikan_165657; R.G. 42, Volume 355, 8.
2. “Sport Fish Report For the Week of July 28,” Juneau Empire, http://juneauempire.com/outdoors/2014-08-01/sport-fish-report-week-july-28, accessed November 23, 2014.
CHAPTER 1: THE RUSH TO SKAGWAY
1. Jason Moore, “Cruise Companies Fret New Water Standards,” CLIA Alaska, www.cliaalaska.org/2008/04/cruise-companies-fret-new-water-standards, accessed March 12, 2013.
2. Pierre Berton, The Wild Frontier: More Tales from the Remarkable Past (Toronto: Doubleday Canada, 2012).
3. The Chicago Record 1897, 97.
4. “2007 Hassler Expedition — Last Days,” National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration, http://sanctuaries.noaa.gov/maritime/expeditions/hassler/last_days.html, accessed February 28, 2015.
5. Berton, The Wild Frontier.
6. J. Bernard Moore, Skagway in Days Primeval (Skagway, AK: Lynn Canal Publishing, 1963, 1997), 186.
7. Ibid., 184.
8. Pierre Berton, Klondike: The Last Great Gold Rush 1896–1899 (Toronto: Anchor Canada, 2001), 238–39.
9. Ross Anderson, “The Dawson City Gold Rush Had its Own Bill Gates,” Seattle Times, July 16, 1997.
10. “Klondike Gold Rush,” National Park Service, www.nps.gov/klgo/historyculture/dyea.htm, accessed September 10, 2014.
11. “2007 Hassler Expedition — Last Days,” National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration, http://sanctuaries.noaa.gov/maritime/expeditions/hassler/last_days.html, accessed February 28, 2015.
CHAPTER 2: “A SLOW TRIP THROUGH ALASKA”
1. Betty O’Keefe and Ian MacDonald, The Final Voyage of the Princess Sophia (Victoria: Heritage House Publishing, 1998), 46.
2. Ibid., 62.
3. Ken Coates and Bill Morrison, The Sinking of the Princess Sophia (Fairbanks, AK: University of Alaska Press, 1991), 12.
4. “The Princess Sophia Is the Largest-Engined Vessel That Ever Was Built on the Cart,” Paisley Gazette, February 1912.
5. “1005 Cook St,” Victoria Heritage Foundation, www.victoriaheritagefoundation.ca/HReg/Fairfield/Cook1005.html, accessed October 17, 2014.
6. “William Gardner Gabie,” Skagway Stories, www.skagwaystories.org/2011/01/page/3, accessed September 13, 2014.
7. “The White Pass Hospital & Dr. Dahl,” Skagway News, www.skagwaynews.com/alaskan2013.html, accessed September 13, 2014.
8. United States Court of Appeals Case #6390, I.M. BRACE vs. CANADIAN PACIFIC, 433–38.
9. Ibid., 83.
10. “Inventory and Survey of Historic Shipwreck Sites,” City of Juneau, September 1992, 29–36.
11. Dermot Cole, Historic Fairbanks: An Illustrated History (Fairbanks, AK: Fairbanks Chamber of Commerce, 2002), 115.
12. “Wells Fargo: Here For Alaskans, Now and In the Future,” The Alliance, http://alaskaalliance.com/wells-fargo-here-for-alaskans-now-and-in-the-future, accessed October 18, 2014.
13. Currency & Inflation Converter, Dollar Times, www.dollartimes.com/inflation/inflation.php?amount=35&year=1918, accessed February 2, 2014.
CHAPTER 3: THE STAR PRINCESS SETS SAIL
1. “Obituary: Ronald J. Kutz,” Juneau Empire, July 16, 2002, http://juneauempire.com/stories/071602/obi_kutz.html, accessed January 7, 2015.
2. “Marine Pilot for Cruise Ship Had Previous Accident in SE,” Daily Sitka Sentinel, June 29, 1995, www.newspapers.com/newspage/2454062
4, accessed January 7, 2015.
3. “Two Cruise Ships Collide in Skagway, Only Minor Injuries Are Reported,” The Argus Press, May 28, 1991, http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1988&dat=19910528&id=lkEiAAAAIBAJ&sjid=Ta0FAAAAIBAJ&pg=2238,2171695, accessed January 8, 2015.
4. “Ships Due Here for Collision Repairs,” Seattle Times, May 29, 1991, http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19910529&slug=1286062, accessed January 8, 2015.
5. “Accident Won’t Affect Schedule,” JOC, June 5, 1991, www.joc.com/maritime-news/maritime-briefs_19910605.html, accessed January 8, 2015.
CHAPTER 4: THE STORM
1. Victoria Daily Colonist, April 5, 6, 7, 1918.
2. Coates and Morrison, The Sinking of the Princess Sophia, 53.
3. Official Inquiry into the Loss of the Princess Sophia, 454.
4. Ibid., 456.
5. Moore, Skagway in Days Primeval, 92–95.
6. “Reports of Captain L.A. Beardslee, U.S. Navy, Relative to Affairs in Alaska, and the Operations of the U.S.S. Jamestown, Under His Command, While In the Waters of that Territory” (1882), U.S. Library of Congress, https://ia601501.us.archive.org/15/items/reportsofcaptain00unit/reportsofcaptain00unit.pdf, accessed October 20, 2014.
7. “The Grounding of the Princess May,” Silodrome Gasoline Culture, http://silodrome.com/grounding-princess-may, accessed February 2, 2014.
8. Official Inquiry into the Loss of the Princess Sophia.
CHAPTER 5: THE TURN
1. National Transportation Safety Board Report, “Grounding of the Liberian Passenger Ship Star Princess on Poundstone Rock, Lynn Canal, Alaska, June 23, 1995,” 1997, 55.
CHAPTER 6: THE ACCIDENT
1. United States Court of Appeals Case #6390, I.M. BRACE vs. CANADIAN PACIFIC, “Brief of Appellees,” 1919, 15.
2. Ibid., 16.
3. Ibid., 16.
4. Coates and Morrison, The Sinking of the Princess Sophia, 173.
5. Official Inquiry into the Loss of the Princess Sophia, 457.
6. Ibid., 89.
7. Coates and Morrison, The Sinking of the Princess Sophia, 172.
8. Ibid., 171.
9. Official Inquiry into the Loss of the Princess Sophia, 102.
10. Ibid., 106.
11. Ibid., 466.
12. Ibid., 39.
13. Ibid., 42.
14. Ibid., 467.
15. Coates and Morrison, The Sinking of the Princess Sophia, 172–73.
16. Official Inquiry into the Loss of the Princess Sophia, 106.
17. Ibid., 106.
18. Ibid., 109.
19. Ibid., 55.
20. Log, Diary of Governor of Alaska Thomas Riggs, Jr., July 8, 1918–December 25, 1919, 37–52, http://library.alaska.gov/hist/hist_docs/docs/asl_ms273_1_1918-1919_transcript.pdf, accessed October 25, 2014.
21. Ibid.
22.Ibid.
23. “Cannery Tender,” Lake Union Virtual Museum, www.lakeunionhistory.org/Cannery_Tender.html, accessed October 25, 2014.
CHAPTER 7: THE TURN
1. National Transportation Safety Board Report, “Grounding of the Liberian Passenger Ship Star Princess…,” 7.
2. Ibid., 7.
CHAPTER 8: STRANDED ON THE ROCKS
1. Official Inquiry into the Loss of the Princess Sophia, 184
2. Ibid.
3. Ibid., 5.
4. Ibid., 25.
5. Coates and Morrison, The Sinking of the Princess Sophia, 172.
6. Ibid.
7. Ibid., 173.
8. Ibid.
9. United States Court of Appeals Case #6390, I.M. BRACE vs. CANADIAN PACIFIC, 24.
10. Official Inquiry into the Loss of the Princess Sophia, 64.
11. Ibid., 67.
12. Ibid., 460.
13. Coates and Morrison, The Sinking of the Princess Sophia, 173.
14. Ibid.
15. Official Inquiry into the Loss of the Princess Sophia, 62.
16. United States Court of Appeals Case #6390, I.M. BRACE vs. CANADIAN PACIFIC, 25.
17. Official Inquiry into the Loss of the Princess Sophia, 43–44.
18. Ibid., 149–50.
19. United States Court of Appeals Case #6390, I.M. BRACE vs. CANADIAN PACIFIC, 27.
20. Official Inquiry into the Loss of the Princess Sophia, 65.
21. Ibid.
22. Ibid., 66.
23. United States Court of Appeals Case #6390, I.M BRACE vs. CANADIAN PACIFIC, 27.
24. Official Inquiry into the Loss of the Princess Sophia, 151.
25. Ibid.
CHAPTER 9: BEACHING THE STAR PRINCESS
1. National Transportation Safety Board Report, “Grounding of the Liberian Passenger Ship Star Princess…,” 11–12.
2. Ibid.
3. Ibid., 12.
CHAPTER 10: THOSE LAST MINUTES
1. United States Court of Appeals Case #6390, I.M. BRACE vs. CANADIAN PACIFIC, 27.
2. Official Inquiry into the Loss of the Princess Sophia, 67–68.
3. Ibid., 68.
4. Ibid., 69.
CHAPTER 11: AFTERMATH
1. United States Court of Appeals Case #6390, I.M. BRACE vs. CANADIAN PACIFIC, 28.
2. Log, Diary of Governor of Alaska Thomas Riggs, Jr.
3. Official Inquiry into the Loss of the Princess Sophia, 476.
4. Ibid., 477.
5. Ibid., 84.
6. Ibid., 82.
7. Ibid., 83.
8. Ibid., 88.
9. Coates and Morrison, The Sinking of the Princess Sophia, 127.
10. Ibid., 145.
CHAPTER 12: STAR PRINCESS SAILS ON
1. United States Court of Appeals Case #6390, I.M. BRACE vs. CANADIAN PACIFIC, 28.
2. Log, Diary of Governor of Alaska Thomas Riggs, Jr.
3. Official Inquiry into the Loss of the Princess Sophia, 476.
4. Ibid., 477.
5. Ibid., 84.
6. Ibid., 82.
7. Ibid., 83.
Considering how little about the Princess Sophia is in the public consciousness, a surprising amount of information relating to the shipwreck exists to this day. The primary sources of information I relied upon were the Canadian and American inquiries into the sinking. The Official Inquiry into the Loss of the Princess Sophia, 1919, is now conveniently available online, and contains hundreds of pages of first-hand accounts. Another, even more extensive, resource is the American inquiry, United States Court of Appeals Case #6390, I.M. BRACE vs. CANADIAN PACIFIC. Much of it repeats the information present in the Canadian inquiry, but American investigators pressed witnesses repeatedly and with a kind of force not generally present in the Canadian inquiry.
I also drew upon two other contemporary sources, namely Bill Morrison and Ken Coates’ excellent Sinking of the Princess Sophia, and Betty O’Keefe and Ian MacDonald’s The Final Voyage of the Princess Sophia. For a portrait of Skagway and Alaska during the beginning of the gold rush, J. Bernard Moore’s Skagway in Days Primeval was absolutely invaluable. It turns out some things in Skagway never change: the mosquitoes were just as bad in 1887 as they are today. You can visit Moore’s homestead in Skagway, and see the desk where he penned his memoirs. He seems like a neat guy who, regrettably, suffered through a difficult marriage and lost most of his money in the years after he left Skagway.
Another invaluable source of information came from Lea Edgar, librarian and archivist at the Vancouver Maritime Museum, who furnished me with entire file folders filled with old newspaper cuttings, letters, archival photographs, and other materials that have been slowly but steadily collected and rounded up by people across the country over the years. It is from these archives that a faded, unclear photocopy of Princess Sophia’s general arrangement plans were found, along with numerous press clippings relating to her launch in Scotland and subsequent entry into service on the west coast.
With my hands strapped into latex gloves that seemed to be two sizes too small, I slowly worked my way through the vast mountain of infor
mation until I arrived at a letter penned by Captain Locke on January 2, 1918, and mailed that afternoon. Written on Canadian Pacific stationery, it told me quite a bit about Leonard Locke the man: his handwriting was impeccable. Flawless, even. This was the work of a cautious, measured man. Ten months later, those very qualities would work against the experienced mariner in ways he could have never anticipated.
Of course, except for the testimony of the would-be rescuers and the various wireless messages that were passed among the ships, we really don’t know exactly what happened aboard the Princess Sophia in those last hours on Vanderbilt Reef. I made a conscious choice to attempt to portray what was happening on the ship; who was doing what, where people were. Based on what is known about the folks on board the ship from the friends, colleagues, and loved ones they left behind, and the testimony of people like Selmer Jacobson, who actually dove down to the wreck in the weeks following the sinking, I felt I could draw some reasonable (and careful) conclusions about where people were, and what they were doing, by connecting the dots between these known facts. It’s not difficult to imagine, for example, that Walter Barnes would have remained in or near the cargo holds for most of the ordeal, given how attached he was to his beloved horse, Old Billy.
I also made a conscious choice to avoid the trial and to “time jump” as little as possible. The trial was so extensive and filled with information that an entire book could be written just on those proceedings alone. Those hours up on the reef were what fascinated me most. Therefore, I’ve focused more on the facts surrounding Princess Sophia’s journey from Skagway, and the plight of her would-be rescuers.
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