With a New Purpose:Roseway
Transcription
With a New Purpose:Roseway
Once a Banks fishing schooner, a WW II picket boat, a pilot schooner, and a passenger-carrying windjammer, the Roseway now serves as a floating classroom. BY CARL LITTLE Kate Wood I T IS A TUESDAY AFTERNOON IN late January on a long loading dock on Gallows Bay, St. Croix. At one end, where the Virgin Islands Port Authority is busy moving goods from ship to shore and from where the fast ferry to St. Thomas takes off, stand 31 sixth-graders from the Claude O. Markoe Elementary School in Frederiksted. At the other end, the crew of the schooner Roseway, who are also the faculty of the World Ocean School, spread out in a line. At a signal, the kids run the length of the dock, each and every one receiving high fives and fist pumps from the crew as they hurtle in. A remarkable class on the Caribbean begins. On this, the second day of the week-long program, the excited students sport red Roseway crew t-shirts with pride (the interisland trader Norma H II is the sponsor of one sleeve; Schooner Bay Market, the other). They form a circle on the dock, where crew member Stephanie Miller leads them in a series of exercises to “pump them up.” The kids count to three, then leap into the air while yelling, “I’m a star.” You can hear them even over the sound of a sea plane as it takes off from nearby Christiansted. To get them into sailing mode, the crew takes turns asking questions related to what the students learned the day before. “Why do we need a chart?” one of them calls out. “Because you could run aground,” a student shouts. “In what direction is the rope Left: The thrill of sailing is central to the World Ocean School experience. Opposite: The members of the Roseway crew come from several backgrounds but share a single goal. 32 photographs courtesy World Ocean School unless otherwise noted With a New Purpose:Roseway and the World Ocean School 33 Learning how to plot where you are is part and parcel of discovering who you are. It takes a gang of youngsters to get under way. coiled?” asks another. “Clockwise,” another kid answers. In 15 minutes they’ve covered bow and stern, halyard and sails, knots, fenders, and furling. “We are a community and a crew,” declares Miller, and everyone goes aboard. The students, a nearly even distribution of boys and girls, follow crew instructions, eager to volunteer for any task. After the vessel is under way, they break into groups named for the sails: jib, jumbo, fore, and main. Today, the four stations focus on the wind (where it comes from and how to measure it); the history of sail, including the St. Croix slave trade; navigation, where the kids learn to read charts and work with compasses; and knot-tying and coiling. They also take turns at the helm, steering with Captain Tom Ryan. The theme for the day is teamwork, but the lessons for the week include understanding the physics of a block and tackle; buoyancy (how the schooner floats); ocean optics (why the water is blue); and local marine ecology. The crew covers subjects that are being taught in the children’s St. Croix classroom, but from a nautical perspective. How do the sails convert the wind to motive power? Lift. In school the students have been reading The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle, a young adult sea adventure by Avi. Now they get to climb the ratlines. olina, Oregon, even Sweden. They have signed on to the Roseway for a year, about half of it to be spent in St. Croix, the other half in Boston. Many learned about the schooner by word of mouth, but the school also posts crew openings with the American Sail Training Association and on Craig’s List. The crew is complemented by a couple of regular volunteers, snow birds from Virginia and Maine who want to give back to their favorite island retreat via community service. The U.S. Virgin Islands are promoted by the tourism trade as America’s paradise. While St. Croix has its wealth of beaches, it is a working island with an oil refinery and rum distilleries. Many of the kids who sail aboard Roseway live in housing projects and know poverty. They are amazed that the crewmembers, who are mostly in their mid-to-late 20s, aren’t married with children. The girls will ask the women where their husbands and babies are. They are intrigued: Can anyone do this? Which leads to a conversation about going to school and having a career and, yes, maybe starting a family one day. The crew will finish the week by discussing “dreams”—what the students hope to achieve in their lives. According to World Ocean School Education Director Eden Leonard, they will be “blown away by the amount of things they have learned and experienced aboard Roseway.” 34 Sailing is physical—and empowering: these youngsters have raised a one-ton sail. They have also learned the lesson of many landlubbers, that when the sea runs rough, they may find themselves at S/V ROSEWAY LOA: 137' (41.8 m) LOD: 112' (34.1 m) LWL: 90' (27.4 m) Beam: 25' (7.6 m) Draft: 13' (4 m) Propulsion: Sail, 400-hp diesel Sail Plan: gaff-rigged schooner Total Sail Area: 5,600 sq. ft. (520.3 m²) Hull Material: white oak, pine, Douglas fir Builder: John F. James & Son Shipyard, Essex, Massachusetts, built for Harold Hathaway of Taunton, Massachusetts Launched: November 24, 1925 U.S. National Register of Historic Places U.S. National Historic Landmark the rail. Character and camaraderie are built in many different ways. The Roseway’s eight-person crew hails from Maine, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Minnesota, Georgia, North Car- MAINE BOATS, HOMES & HARBORS | June / July 2011 | Issue 115 After a week aboard Roseway, students are often more motivated to learn than they ever were. She doesn’t stop there. “No kid walks away from this experience without tremendous discovery or insight, whether it be about themselves, the world, academics, or sailing.” Leonard has proof of this claim: the crew hears from teachers and school administrators that these students are more motivated in the classroom after a week aboard Roseway. Another proof is Arius Lawrence, a graduate of the program who is standing at the dock when Roseway returns; he will join the crew to work on the sunset cruise. Time on the vessel has inspired him to dream of college and beyond. he World Ocean School represents the fulfillment of a dream, that of its co-founders, Abby Kidder and Dwight Deckelmann. The two met at Principia College in Alton, Illinois. They later reconnected in Maine, where Deckelmann built houses and boats along the coast and Kidder worked for the Institute for Global Ethics in Camden. Over the years the two friends often spoke about how great it would be to have an education program where kids could experience something outside their daily lives—a kind of adventure in education that would transform them. The attacks of September 11, 2001, spurred them to act. “When 9/11 happened,” Kidder said, “it seemed there were suddenly a lot of unknowns in the world.” She and Dwight felt that if there ever was going to be a time to help kids understand their responsibility within a community, it was now. “In many ways,” Kidder added, “9/11 was a catalyst because it felt like it was time to contribute something bigger to the world, even if it was in our own small way.” The two developed a mission statement and by April 2002 had filed papers to establish a nonprofit incorporated in Maine. Their choice of name, World Ocean School, was important. “We wanted to make it clear that we were thinking globally and working on the water,” Deckelmann explained. It sounds “a little grand,” he admitted, “but you have to dream.” The two had planned to start slowly—raise money, maybe eventually lease or build a boat—but circumstances dictated otherwise. Deckelmann got wind of a schooner, Roseway, that was on the auction block. As it happened, Kidder had been on the vessel as a 12-year-old when her grandfather chartered it for his wife’s birthday. T www.maineboats.com | MAINE BOATS, HOMES & HARBORS The Roseway undergoing restoration in Boothbay Harbor. 35 The schooner was in poor shape, sitting in the water at Rockland Marine. Deckelmann spoke to shipwrights he knew, and they assured him the vessel could be saved. He and Kidder wrote to the owner, the First National Bank of Damariscotta, outlining their project and their need for a vessel. The bank quickly responded: Roseway was theirs for $10 as long as they could take possession of it within ten days, when the insurance would run out. The scramble began. The Allen Agency in Camden agreed to insure the vessel if it were on land. How to get a 260-ton, 137-foot vessel out of the water? Sample’s Shipyard in Boothbay Harbor (now Boothbay Harbor Shipyard) agreed to haul the schooner and undertake the repairs. To this day, Kidder isn’t sure “what those guys were thinking” when they bought into a scheme by a brand-new educational nonprofit to rebuild a schooner, really quickly, with payments to be made month by month. After managing to get the boat to Boothbay, thanks to a 3:00 a.m. hitch with a passing tugboat, Deckelmann and Kidder got serious. They quit their jobs and began a full-time focus on the vessel. Deckelmann recruited a team of boatbuilders; Kidder led the fund-raising charge. In 18 months, the schooner was ready to sail—no mean feat considering that vessels of Roseway’s vintage are often lifetime restoration projects. “Repurposed” has become a buzzword in recent years: one reads about buildings or products rescued from destruction or obsolescence by a sharpthinking entrepreneur who finds another, different use for them. Roseway has always been a schooner, but it might be the poster child for repurposing as applied to a sailing vessel. Commissioned by Harold Hathaway of Taunton, Massachusetts—the framing came from a stand of white oak on his property—the Grand Banks schooner Roseway was designed by John F. James and built at his family’s shipyard in Essex, Massachusetts, in 1925. While the origin of the schooner’s name is not certain, the most circulated story involves a Hathaway mistress “who always got her way.” In the spring of 1942, Roseway underwent its first transformation when it was fitted with a .50-caliber machine gun and assigned to the First Naval District (New England) to guide ships through minefields and anti-submarine netting. After the war it became a pilot schooner based in Boston; it was retired in 1973, the last pilot schooner in the country. The Roseway’s next incarnation began that same year when a group of Boston businessmen bought it and began to outfit it as a passenger windjammer. Their grand plan didn’t work, and Captains Jim Sharp and Orvil Young purchased the vessel in 1974; they added 14 cabins, and began to take passengers on coastal cruises out of Camden, Maine. In 1977 the vessel starred in a made-for-TV adaptation of Kipling’s novel Captains Courageous. Roseway remained in Camden under new ownership after Sharp and Young sold it, and continued to ply the tourist trade until it was repossessed by the aforementioned Damariscotta bank. In the summer of 2005 Roseway, resurrected by the World Ocean School, Light Space Beauty EXQUISITE KITCHEN & BATH PRODUCTS We design and build traditional timber-framed homes and cottages with spaces that work…beautifully. We specialize in creating harmonious designs that accommodate your needs and blend with your personal and unique style. 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Winter programming in St. Croix began in November 2006. he Roseway, which is a U.S. National Historic Landmark, is a stunning sight, from the 103-foot-high mainmast to the original wrought-iron steering wheel manufactured by A.P. Stoddard of Gloucester. What was once the fish hold has been fitted with cabins, planned to maximize space, for the students. All is functional; the only art on board is a small oil portrait of the vessel by Maine artist Colin Page. Deckelmann is the Roseway’s maintenance czar. “During the year the crew is constantly sanding, scraping, varnishing, and painting,” he said. The vessel is hauled out at Gloucester every fall for seam work and bottom painting. Two years ago, the rudder was rebuilt; last year the Duradon sails, which are a distinctive tanbark, were replaced. In recent years the engine room has T been remodeled to make it more user friendly and also to make space for the 600-gallon-per-day reverse-osmosis water maker. Next up: rebuilding the old cabin and rudder trunks. When the latter work is completed, said Deckelmann, “There will not be a part of the major structure we have not addressed.” Because it was used mainly for pleasure cruising in its early years and never fished aggressively, Roseway experienced less wear and tear than other Grand Banks schooners. “When we got her,” Kidder recalled, “she still had her shape, which is pretty amazing for a boat that old.” With its incredible history, Roseway makes for an out-of-the-ordinary educational platform. “She is the real thing,” said Kidder, and that is part of the reason why the kids and crew become invested in the vessel and eager to take care of it. n addition to the winter programming in St. Croix, World Ocean School offers a Summer Ambassador program. The 20 or so 12- to 16-year-old students in the program, a number of them from the Virgin Islands, spend two weeks-plus I MAINE BOATS, HOMES & HARBORS SHOW Exhibitor . August 12 – 14, 2011 aboard Roseway, learning about the vessel and participating in a variety of outreach programs along the way. Last year, navigating the Great Lakes, the students mentored kids from a Boys and Girls Club. The year before, they helped finish building a daycare center on Vinalhaven Island in Maine. The program is meant to help the new sailors understand what it means to participate in community. “Roseway is a community in and of itself,” Kidder pointed out, “and we practice what that means in terms of how we care for the boat and for each other.” She reported that several of the St. Croix students from the 2010 trip became more involved in their island communities, volunteering and tutoring after school. The ambassador program is pretty intense for the new sailors, some of whom have never been away from home, let alone lived on a sailing vessel. “We demand a lot of them,” Kidder noted, from standing watch to community service, and all their electronics—cell phones, music players, etc.—are left behind. This summer, Roseway will sail to Nantucket, Block, and Cuttyhunk islands, 37 Satisfied Marine Insurance Clients the World Over. and then to Sag Harbor and New London, where they will visit the Coast Guard Academy. (WOS has made a point of introducing the students to the possibility of maritime education and careers.) During the rest of the summer it will be in Boston, engaged in programs with Boys and Girls Clubs, YMCAs, and several schools around the city. The school is actively seeking new partnerships with the National Park Service, camps, and other organizations in the region. Come next winter, Roseway will be back in St. Croix for its sixth year working under contract with the Virgin Islands Department of Education. Governor John de Jongh has been supportive of the program, as have the teachers. The school now serves 750 island students between November and May. As part of its year-round fundraising efforts, but also to make the historic landmark available to the public, the Roseway crew also hosts a sunset sail out of St. Croix every day. Former President Jimmy Carter chartered the vessel for an evening in 2010. While Deckelmann and Kidder consider the World Ocean School’s future— expansion, new programs, fundraising— certain experiences keep them focused and moving forward. One that sticks in their mind is a teenage girl from St. Croix who looked back at her island from Roseway saying in wonder, “My island is so big and beautiful—I’ve never seen it.” Kidder is realistic: “Who knows what it all means in the long run,” she said. “Is there more we can do? What’s the bigger picture for these kids? How can we help?” Such questions inspire Roseway’s crew to consider new ways to make the most of their remarkable floating school. “We are still a nonprofit struggling to survive,” said Kidder, “but we’re ready to make the leap to the next level.” Deckelmann concurred; he wants “to expand the program, have a greater reach, affect more kids.” And then he added: “to build another Roseway, because she is unbelievable.” N Carl Little is a freelance writer and poet who lives on Mount Desert Island. Offices in Camden, Rockland and Southwest Harbor, Maine. AllenInsuranceAndFinancial.com (800)439-4311 38 MORE INFORMATION: www.worldoceanschool.org. The school offers some scholarships for students. MAINE BOATS, HOMES & HARBORS | June / July 2011 | Issue 115 FRESHWATER STONE JEFF GAMMELIN Substantial. Unites form and function. Timeless. PHOTOGRAPH JAMIE BLOOMQUIST Business Partner Since 2002 “Solid.” “Any time you work with stone, whether it’s a wall or a chimney, you need a good foundation. We started our relationship with Maine Boats, Homes & Harbors in the pages of the magazine, built on that success by exhibiting at the Rockland show starting in 2005, and now regularly advertise online. The type of stonework we do is highly specialized and custom—from landscape design to home interior accents— and we need to talk to discerning clients. The magazine, the website, and especially the show provide a chance to start conversations with people who can appreciate what we do. Because everything Maine Boats, Homes & Harbors does is about quality and craftsmanship, these conversations begin on a solid foundation.” — Jeff Gammelin In Print. Online. In Person. ® www.maineboats.com 207-594-8622