Published: Saturday, 12/26/2015 - Updated: 18 minutes ago
Fitzgerald film takes a personal approach
Documentary highlights ship’s crew
BY DAVID PATCH
BLADE STAFF WRITER
Jack McCarthy had a recurring nightmare.
The first mate of the S.S. Edmund Fitzgerald was in a ship’s pilothouse staring at a wall of water.
The ship was taking a nose dive to the bottom, he told a fellow crewman.
Whether or not you believe in premonitions, this one proved true: Mr. McCarthy was one of the 29 who perished when the Big Fitz plunged to Lake Superior’s bottom during a November storm 40 years ago.
Mr. McCarthy’s nightmare is among the many stories told in the Great Lakes Historical Society’s 57-minute documentary, A Good Ship and Crew Well Seasoned: The Edmund Fitzgerald and Her Legacy, which recently premiered during a local fund-raiser that commemorated the disaster.
Beginning today, the film will be shown to general audiences in the National Museum of the Great Lakes at 1702 Front St. in East Toledo.
While the Fitzgerald’s sinking inevitably plays into the film’s narrative, it avoids rehashing the 40-year mystery of why the ore freighter went down. It concentrates on recollections from people who worked or visited aboard the vessel during its 17 years of sailing.
“What we tried to do is capture the humanity” of the people who worked aboard the Fitzgerald, Christopher Gillcrist, the historical society’s and museum’s executive director, said.
Ed Perrine, a Fitzgerald crewman who started as an oiler and learned to read after exposure to the vessel’s library, said in the film he resented Gordon Lightfoot’s ballad, “The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald,” because “it reminded me of all my good friends” who went down with the ship.
But he added the lingering publicity caused by the song probably changed safety standards in the Great Lakes maritime industry too.
Others interviewed for the film were relatives of crew members or guests of the Oglebay Norton Co., a mining company whose Columbia Transportation subsidiary operated the Fitz as its fleet’s flagship.
The Fitz had many veteran sailors aboard. Some, including captain Ernest McSorley of Ottawa Hills, were planning their imminent retirements, although contrary to some Fitzgerald lore, an early-November departure from upper Lake Superior would not have been a lakes freighter’s final scheduled voyage for the season.
Mr. Perrine recounted in the film that Grant Walton, uncle of retired Blade editor Thomas Walton, had signed onto the Fitzgerald because working as a conveyor man on one of the Oglebay Norton fleet’s self-unloading vessels “was eroding his health.
“He transferred to the Fitz for less hazardous work — and died,” Mr. Perrine said.
Thomas Walton worked on the Fitz one season as a porter before deciding maritime life — pursued by his father, as well as his uncle — wasn’t for him.
After the sinking, Mr. Walton said, “I realized the fragile nature of life — that it’s all temporary.”
The film will be shown in the National Museum of the Great Lakes Community Room at noon and 2 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday, and at 1:30 p.m. Sunday, through June. It also will be shown at noon and 2 p.m. on Tuesday, but starting in January, the museum will only be open Wednesday through Sunday until midspring.
Admission to the film is a $3 surcharge on regular museum admission prices, which are $8 for adults and $7 for seniors older than 65 and children ages 6 to 18. Children younger than 6 are admitted free of charge.
Contact David Patch at:
dpatch@theblade.com or 419-724-6094.
Read more at
http://www.toledoblade.com/local/201...4pwmcAiYr2Y.99