Thursday's Storm
Page 1
Thursday’s Storm
The August Gale of 1927
Darrell Duke
flanker press limited
st. john’s
Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication
Duke, Darrell, 1970-, author
Thursday’s storm : the August gale of 1927 / Darrell
Duke.
Issued in print and electronic formats.
ISBN 978-1-77117-274-5 (pbk.).--ISBN 978-1-77117-275-2
(epub).--ISBN 978-1-77117-276-9 (kindle).--ISBN 978-1-77117-277-6
(pdf)
1. Windstorms--Newfoundland and Labrador--Placentia
Bay--History--20th century. 2. Shipwrecks--Newfoundland and
Labrador--Placentia Bay--History--20th century. 3. Placentia
Bay (N.L.)--History--20th century. I. Title.
FC2199.P53Z64 2013 971.8’02 C2013-904655-0
C2013-904656-9
————————————————————————————————————
© 2013 by Darrell Duke
all rights reserved. No part of the work covered by the copyright hereon may be reproduced or used in any form or by any means—graphic, electronic or mechanical—without the written permission of the publisher. Any request for photocopying, recording, taping, or information storage and retrieval systems of any part of this book shall be directed to Access Copyright, The Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency, 1 Yonge Street, Suite 800, Toronto, ON M5E 1E5. This applies to classroom use as well.
Printed in Canada
Cover design by Adam Freake
Edited by Paul Butler
Flanker Press Ltd. PO Box 2522, Station C St. John’s, NL Canada
Telephone: (709) 739-4477 Fax: (709) 739-4420 Toll-free: 1-866-739-4420
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9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
We acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program (BPIDP) for our publishing activities; the Canada Council for the Arts, which last year invested $157 million to bring the arts to Canadians throughout the country; the Government of Newfoundland and Labrador, Department of Tourism, Culture and Recreation.
This book is dedicated to the men who lost their lives with the fishing schooner Annie Healy, and their families who carried on in the hardest of times.
contents
Preface
Part I
Chapter One The Foleys
Chapter Two Annie Healy
Chapter Three The Healys
Chapter Four The Mullins Family
Chapter Five The Bruces
Chapter Six Liz Bruce’s Living Nightmare
Chapter Seven The Kellys
Chapter Eight The Midwife and Bridge King
Chapter Nine The Sampsons
Chapter Ten Uncle Watt
Photos
Part II
Chapter Eleven Leaving Home
Chapter Twelve At Sea
Chapter Thirteen August 25, 1927 Thursday’s Storm
Chapter Fourteen The Storm At Home
Chapter Fifteen Southeast of Merasheen Bank
11:00 a.m., August 25, 1927
Chapter Sixteen Argentia, 2:00 p.m.
Chapter Seventeen The Bad News
Chapter Eighteen Friday, August 26, 1927
From the Crow Hill
Chapter Nineteen Friday, August 26, 1927
More News—Better off Buried—Letters
Chapter Twenty Sunday, August 28, 1927
Poor Hearts Broken
Epilogue
Acknowledgements
About the author
Preface
Twenty years ago, in August 1993, I was standing in the seldom-used front room of my great-aunt Bernadette Murray’s home in Fox Harbour, Placentia Bay, Newfoundland. Aunt Nettin, she was known to us. I remember days and nights, years before, when she smiled more, especially in the company of her sister and best friend, Laura, my grandmother. Nanny, we called her.
Aunt Nettin and Nanny were seven years apart in age but shared the same birthday, August 23. Other anniversaries fell in the wake of their special day. Their only brother, Gus, died on August 25, 1924. Aunt Nettin was just seven, and Nanny, fourteen. Both were grown women in those times, sharing endless chores under their mother’s care.
Their father, John Foley, was known as Jack Fowlou in Fox Harbour; Fowlou was the English bastardization of the Gaelic surname Ó Foghladha, “descendant of Foghlaidh,” meaning marauder, or someone engaged in banditry, but I imagine that such a family occupation ended many years before, in Ireland, as Jack was laid-back, seldom expressing his opinion, if he bothered to have one at all. Like most men and women, he was tired, old before his time, and, like every man, had to fish for a living. The chores once shared with his only son were now his own. He had nothing and owed everything. He was no different than any other man in Newfoundland—save many merchants, perhaps, and priests furnished and fattened by the Vatican.
Jack worked for a local merchant family, the Healys, from a schooner named Annie Healy, also known as the Big Annie. Three of his cousins—Charlie Sampson, and stepbrothers John and Patrick Mullins—were fellow crew members on the Big Annie. In a small town and on a big sea, all crew members were close, out of necessity, if nothing else. So, being a relative afforded no special considerations for the other. They needed one another to make it to the next day. If only one man had a stick of tobacco, he shared with the rest. The same went for a drink of moonshine or the rare bottle of smuggled rum. All were sons or grandsons of Irish immigrants who found their way to Fox Harbour, mostly by way of “Yankee Bankers”—ships sent to Newfoundland by fishing merchants from the eastern seaboard of the United States, Massachusetts, mostly to collect herring, squid, and mackerel for bait. Others had relatives already settled in the area, who came as servants and fishermen of English merchants and planters.
The quaintness of Fox Harbour—which had originally been named Little Gloucester by those first settlers in the late 1700s—The Sound, nearby Marquise, and Little Placentia (renamed Argentia), made never returning to the overcrowded shores of “The States” an easy decision. But the life of fishing and farming in those times of rampant and then-incurable diseases such as tuberculosis (consumption), diphtheria, pleurisy, and the common cold, among others, took its toll on every family until well into the mid-twentieth century. They all had harsh stories to tell, and the sharing of those and other tales was an anticipated art form and entertainment in the absence of radio, television, and the variations of computer-based technology available today.
The schooner Annie Healy gained the title Big Annie after record numbers of fish caught in 1909, and while she had little to boast about, before or since, the prestigious designation remained. But the Big Annie was no match for a hurricane that struck Placentia Bay on the morning of Thursday, August 25, 1927.
While I’d noticed the framed photo of a sad-looking man on Aunt Nettin’s front room wall most of my life, I’d never asked about it until that lovely summer’s day in 1993. With much hesitation, accompanied by red, welling eyes, Aunt Nettin said, “That was my father.” Without her dear sister, Laura, by her side to share the heavy details of a buried past, she told her version of the tale.
It was too much to digest at once. A week later I moved to Manitoba. There I wrote “The Annie Healy,” a song largely based on Aunt Nettin’s account. But rather than leave it at that, I went on a quest which lasted almo
st two decades: writing, calling, meeting, getting to know, and doing my best to non-invasively pry lips that had been pressed together tightly for sixty-six years. The unearthing of these and related memories and subsequent feelings inevitably unleashed torrents of tears (from both parties), along with questions they were never allowed to ask as curious but hushed, heartbroken children.
It was heavy stuff: sitting across tables from gigantic men whose hands were like catcher’s mitts, whose shoulders had borne three- and four-hundred-pound barrels; watching them bawl like babies as they peered right through me. Sometimes those big mitts clasped over my weak artist’s hands as I kept one eye on the nearest exit. But I never attempted to leave. Friendships spawned that lasted till these old men and women died. Others couldn’t have cared less if they ever laid eyes on me again, I’d upset them that much.
A son of a lost Annie Healy crew member used to appear in my driveway, blowing the horn of his truck. I’d go out, get in, and he’d hand me papers he’d dug up, or tell me other memories he’d forgotten, saying how he hadn’t been able to rest much since I last visited him.
Unknowingly I searched not only for information but also for love, the kind of love only an old person could give, the kind of love I lost when my grandparents died almost twenty years before. I found beauty seemingly lost on my generation and, in return, received silent love and respect in their nods, smiles, even their unsettled tears. A void had been filled. Now I had a book to write.
The song had won first-place nods in myriad insignificant competitions across the country. In the summer of 1997, it made its way to a recording studio as part of an audio cassette designed by a cousin, John Whiffen, to help raise money to restore the facade of the church at Fox Harbour. The song’s original lyrics contained a misnaming of one of the crew members; this information was provided before I had the opportunity to sit with a daughter of the man, who quite promptly and nicely corrected my mistake. In 2001 the song was transcribed to musical notation by a good friend, Darryl Collins, and then performed by twelve-year-old Amy Wilson, backed on guitar by her uncle, Chris Newhook, in a Kiwanis Festival where the song placed first, defeating the usual catalogue of traditional Newfoundland and Irish music entries.
After a few months spent talking with some children of the lost crew, there was too much good information to wait for a book, so I spent eight months writing a play and called it Thursday’s Storm—The Annie Healy Story. I was fortunate enough. The timing was just right to inspire enough volunteers to fill the roles of characters for the stage. At the time, I operated a former movie theatre on the old base at Argentia that once entertained American service people and their families and friends with movies shipped from New York. It had a big stage and the room was completely acoustic-tiled, ceiling and all, and was perfect for re-enacting events of the past through live theatre. I’d also been privileged to be interviewed by CBC Radio One, Toronto, for their series the Great Canadian Story Engine and wasted no time spewing details I’d learned of the schooner and her crew’s tale, and the great impact it had not only upon the immediate families but the entire community. So, by the time the play was ready for production and its fitting debut at the old hall at Fox Harbour, I’d done radio interviews with CBC, both locally and nationally, plus received good coverage from the local newspaper, the Charter. More than 160 people squeezed into the small hall to see amateur but highly enthused actors (including myself) take the stage by storm. The play ended with the very pregnant wife of lost crew member Jim King, Bridget (Bridge), performed by Amy Smith, rocking in her chair, in candlelight, having just made a monumental pact with the local priest regarding her children in the wake of her husband’s death. A ship’s bell rang once after each of the crew’s names was called, while Stan Rogers’s heart-rending version of Otto Kelland’s “Let Me Fish Off Cape St. Mary’s” provided an audio background to the roll call. Surviving children of the lost crew sitting in the front row, including Aunt Nettin, did little to hide their tears, and they quickly exited the building when the show ended. Back to their old homes they went to digest the fact they’d just been portrayed by strangers and in an event that until that evening had been among the most privately guarded occurrences of their long lives.
Several generations of the crew’s relatives expressed their gratefulness for learning of the individual stories, character traits, and events that, in ways, may have shaped their own lives.
Following the tragedy in 1927, the collective grief of the community was so intense it became something not to be talked about in the presence of children. This silencing inevitably led to many assumptions discussed in private that eventually made their way to local legend. But, according to the children of the lost men, no one really knew what happened. And because no one really knew, perhaps it wasn’t worth discussing. All of these things make up the story of the Annie Healy, and all we, the readers, can do is accept what these unearthed memories have to offer.
A lady, in the middle of a complete breakdown of sobbing tears, whose father was lost with my great-grandfather, thanked me for bringing those memories back. She felt better, she said, after having them locked away since the age of eleven. And there she was, almost ninety. I wrote down or audio-recorded every memory and the lines spoken between her parents the last time they talked to one another. Those words, and the words and memories of other children of the lost crew, are written here to the letter. Sadly, critics have shunned those words and phrases as “parodies of Newfoundland speech.” However, there is neither room nor call for embellishment when what is important is that the vernacular of our ancestors be presented as they spoke it. These efforts are paramount in helping preserve yet another disappearing aspect of the Newfoundland people: our language. We should embrace these words and sayings with all their original wit and pass them on to our children with pride. We should do so without the mysterious shame so prevalent today.
That same lady reluctantly came to see the play. Sitting in the front row, armed with tissues galore, she watched a young girl onstage portray her as she was when her daddy was lost—the part where she overheard men talking about the storm and the ship with her daddy aboard. According to audience members, one of the most moving moments of the play was when her great-uncle brought news of the schooner’s demise to the kitchen of her parents’ home. The collective display of shock and grief led by her mother’s pleas for a better ending to her husband’s life immediately followed. It was too much, and at that moment I fretted; what had I done? I stood to the side of the stage, watching my new, old friend doubled over in her seat, her son comforting her. Her own nightmare was replaying, and she pleaded, “No!” through frantic cries, as if she were that little girl all over again. I wanted to end the show, but having learned it was always hardest to do the right thing, I reluctantly let it end naturally. When the play finished she clapped, smiling through tears. She hugged me like I was one of her own and thanked me again. She meant it. The cast and crew soon surrounded her, offering their appreciation for her open heart—for having the courage to sit through the performance.
It was the men, mostly, who didn’t go to the play’s debut in the old Fox Harbour hall. One called later to say he was on his way and got sick. I wasn’t surprised. The others simply didn’t want to relive it. Who could blame them?
Following the national exposure provided by CBC Radio’s the Great Canadian Story Engine, CBC Radio One, Toronto, picked up the story, integrating it with a program feature on “Perfect Storms,” coupling it with details and imagery from the then-new Hollywood movie The Perfect Storm. CBC Radio NL also attended the debut and interviewed some of the surviving children on their way out the door, along with offspring of Annie Healy herself. From a tale of much death, the story now had new life. And some of those silent, sad folks were now celebrities, whether they liked it or not.
The following year the play was awarded the annual Cultural Heritage Award from the Placentia Historical Societ
y for the preserving of local history. Board members of the Argentia Management Authority, responsible for a newly created walking trail in the area, decided it was important to have an Annie Healy Lookout, a peaceful spot overlooking the sea surrounding Fox Harbour and Argentia where the Big Annie last sailed. Citizens of Fox Harbour, too, made sure the schooner and her lost crew wouldn’t be forgotten, erecting a storyboard monument and holding a special ceremony in honour of the lost men at the water’s edge, as well as collecting memorabilia from the crew’s families for display at their quaint museum.
Like their parents before them, the busy adult lives of the lost crew’s children didn’t offer enough “spare” time to try and piece it all together. Now they were old, exhausted, and, mostly, without the ability to express themselves—not to mention a bit cynical and weary of a nervous young man asking too many questions. And he not even from Fox Harbour! The latter fact alone was obstacle enough.
Luckily or not, my grandfather, (Poppy) Jimmy Houlihan, taught school there for fourteen years, and he lived there a further twenty-five years while working across The Reach at Argentia. He met Laura just after her Dad, Jack Foley, was lost with the Big Annie and crew. Jimmy’s father was a well-respected, well-to-do businessman, fisherman (he was really a rum-runner), and politician who afforded Jimmy a college education and a radio—something no one else in Fox Harbour owned at the time. Awaiting word of the missing crew and other news of the storm consumed all ears in the company of Jimmy and his radio, then boarding at the home of Dan and Agnes McCue. His introduction to the community was a good one, and he soon won Laura’s heart. His love of song, poetry, and storytelling would do wonders in mending her hurt then and in the hard years yet to come.
While some of my interviewees hated his strict way of running the one-room school, others thought Poppy was the best thing they ever had. Some of the undecided folks he’d eventually win over with his passion for sports, introducing basketball, softball, and soccer, and forming teams whose roots and some then-future players, and their children, are now embedded in Newfoundland sports history. He was also instrumental in helping form the town’s co-op store. These and other examples of Poppy’s devotion to his new community did wonders in getting me, the writer, inside doors to ask questions about the Annie Healy tragedy, while others had little time for a big shot, or “educated person.” I, too, received my official designation as a big shot when I called and asked for “Mister” So-and-So, complete with a please and thank you. “Who is it?” he called out from the background. “I don’t know,” she said, disgusted. “Some big shot!”