Sea Drift conjures up memories
John Blaich
* EDITOR’S NOTE: John Blaich is a Corona del Mar resident and
volunteer at the Newport Harbor Nautical Museum. About once a month,
he writes the history of interesting boats that graced Newport
Harbor.
Most yachts of this size would be manned by at least three or more
professional crewmen; not so with Lyman Farwell’s schooner yacht Sea
Drift. She went to sea with an all-Corinthian Crew made up of members
of the extensive Farwell family and close sailing friends. Brother
Byron Farwell, a Lieutenant Commander in the Naval Reserve who was
captain of a destroyer escort during World War II, sailed as the
navigator. Farwell’s wife, Kay, and daughter, Nancy, prepared the
menus and were responsible for purchasing and getting the sea stores
on board. Every crew member made his own bed and was expected to help
with the mundane tasks on board Sea Drift.
Bud Landers, a former crew member, told me about the time he was
helping out in the scullery. There was a special square, stainless
steel garbage can there that Farwell had made. This can fit into a
certain space adjacent to the galley sink. Bud carried this stainless
steel garbage can topside and down the ship’s accommodation ladder to
empty it and to wash it out with seawater. The can slipped from his
hands into the bay and started to sink. Bud jumped in, clothes and
all, to rescue the valuable container. Bud was a good swimmer, but
with his clothes on and wrestling with the weight of the garbage can,
he had a problem. By this time, his fellow crew members had lined up
on the rail and were making sport of Bud’s predicament. After Bud
came up for air the third time, they realized the seriousness of the
situation. Two crew members dove in and retrieved Bud and the garbage
can. After this, a lanyard (short piece of rope) was attached to the
can.
When the new section of Irvine Terrace at Corona del Mar was
developed in the 1950s, a street -- Seadrift Drive -- was named after
this famous Schooner Yacht. Farwell entered Sea Drift in the 1958 San
Diego to Acapulco Yacht Race. After the finish at Acapulco, they
leisurely cruised up the Mexican Coast in company with Windward,
another Newport Harbor yacht that was an 83-foot M Class racing
sloop. They were both anchored in an open roadstead off Yelapa,
Mexico. When all of the crew of Windward were ashore in broad
daylight, a link in the yacht’s anchor chain failed. Before members
of the crew could get back on board, Windward drifted into the surf.
Then Farwell and his salty crew on board Sea Drift rallied to the
occasion. Sea Drift was anchored off shore and a heavy line was put
on board the floundering Windward. Sea Drift became a tugboat. Sea
Drift then took in on her anchor chain and, with her engine running
full speed ahead, began pulling Windward out of the surf. Things
looked promising until a link failed in the Sea Drifts’ straining
anchor chain and the salvage efforts had to be aborted. Windward
eventually broke up in the surf and was a total loss.
In 1961, Farwell reluctantly sold Sea Drift. She was purchased by
Warner M. Williams of New York. Sea Drift left the Peninsula for the
last time to cruise to her new home in New York.
In 1962, from the top deck of a large excursion boat, I was
watching the first race of the America’s Cup challenge by Australia,
which was being sailed off Newport, R.I. Suddenly, there, among the
large spectator fleet, was Sea Drift, under power, with her
distinguishing black hull and tan canvas sail cover. It is still
vivid in my memory; it was like unexpectedly running into an old
friend from home in a faraway place.
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