Quite the spectacle
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John Blaich
On Feb. 2, 1976, exactly 27 years ago Sunday night, in a dense
fog, the motor ship Coos Bay ran aground on the Balboa Peninsula at
Island Avenue.
The former World War II landing ship tank was coming up the coast
to San Pedro. She barely missed the Balboa Pier before running
aground about 10 p.m., just after high tide. The ship was broad side
to the beach with the bow pointing slightly seaward.
The shipwreck was first observed by a Newport Beach Police unit,
who reported the incident to the Orange County Harbor Department,
which reported it to the Coast Guard at Long Beach. Within an hour of
the Coos Bay’s hitting the beach, she was boarded by a team of U.S.
Customs officers, who were transported to the shipwreck by a Harbor
Department launch that was equipped with radar.
Lifeguards and police officers were stationed on the beach to
prevent anyone from leaving the ship. This led to rumors that the
Coos Bay was carrying marijuana or other contraband.
But Ray Spencer, a U.S. Customs supervisor out of Los Angeles,
said that the inspection was routine in such incidents and that no
contraband was found on board. Spencer said that it was routine for
Customs agents to inspect a vessel in trouble before it reached its
destination. The Coos Bay was scheduled to clear customs on Monday at
Los Angeles Harbor, but she spent Monday hard aground on the Balboa
Peninsula.
Word spread quickly about the shipwreck. All day Monday, there was
a large crowd of people out on the sand to take a look at the Coos
Bay. Many business people took an extra long lunch hour.
The incident turned into the social event of the season on the
Balboa Peninsula as hundreds of residents and business people flocked
to the beach throughout the day to watch the salvage operation. Even
classes from nearby Newport Elementary School marched down the beach
to witness the operation.
At 4:38 p.m. Monday, when there was a minus 1.5 low tide, people
could walk up and touch the sides of the Coos Bay. Fortunately,
during the period of the shipwreck, there was no wind, and the surf
was low -- surges in and out with an occasional 1-foot high breaker.
A Jacobs ladder, or rope ladder, was lowered from the deck of the
Coos Bay. Some of the crew came down the ladder and, using shovels,
dug the sand away from the ship’s rudder and propeller.
By midafternoon, the salvage tugboat Sea Otter, a Red Stack Co.
tugboat, arrived from San Pedro with Capt. Johnny Banks in charge. A
large wire-towing cable was attached to the port bow of the Coos Bay.
About 600 feet of cable was paid out so that the tugboat was
operating in deep water. A strain was maintained on the towline by
running the tugboat engines slow ahead.
The grounded freighter, Coos Bay, was en route to the Port of Los
Angeles from San Juan, Puerto Rico. She was cruising light, as she
had no cargo.
The vessel was owned by the Tieasa Corporation, a freight firm
headed by Dan Wirth of Laguna Beach. Coos Bay was skippered by Capt.
Fred Stabbert of Long Beach and carried a crew of 27.
There were no reported injuries, and the crew remained on board.
I first heard about the shipwreck when I returned home from work
in Los Angeles. After a quick supper, I hurried over to the Peninsula
from our Bayshore home -- though I had a hard time finding a place to
park -- and walked out on the sand and there was the shipwreck. There
must have been more than a hundred other people there waiting to see
what was going to happen next.
It was a very dark night. You could see the white lights on the
Coast Guard Cutter Point Divide, which was anchored off shore. A
Harbor Department boat was also out there, as was the tugboat “Sea
Otter,” whose diesel engines were idling away to keep tension on the
towline.
The Harbor Department pickup truck was parked out on the sand.
They maintained radio contact with the ships off shore. Walkie
talkies were not readily available at that time. Finally, I sat down
on the sand, bundled up inside my Navy Pea Jacket to see what was
going to happen next.
At about 8:30 p.m., an hour before high tide, the diesel engines
on board the tugboat revved up and began to labor. The tugboat was
pulling at an angle of about 20 degrees off the port bow of the Coos
Bay.
Capt. Banks on the tugboat changed his course to pull at right
angle to Coos Bay. This was done to twist the keel of Coos Bay so as
to break the suction between the keel and the sand.
Shortly after the tugboat resumed pulling in the original
direction, her diesel engines were laboring hard. Sitting there on
the sand, I was watching a white light attached to the deckhouse of
Coos Bay. I suddenly realized that it had moved a bit to my right,
then it moved more to my right, then it moved faster and Coos Bay
broke free.
She was towed well off shore in deep water, where she was left for
a complete hull inspection. No major damage was found. So Coos Bay
proceeded under her own power, in company with the tugboat Sea Otter,
to Los Angeles Harbor.
Come daylight on Tuesday morning, the only evidence of a shipwreck
were the thousands of footprints in the sand made by the many people
who walked out to see the shipwreck. These footprints did not last
long as the next winter windstorm leveled the sand.
Most of the information for this story was obtained from articles
appearing in the Daily Pilot on Feb. 2 and 3, 1976, written by my
dear friend and shipmate Almon Lockabey, the Daily Pilot boating
editor. “Al” Lockabey was a good sailor and a gentleman. He passed
away on in January 1995.
* JOHN BLAICH is a Corona del Mar resident and volunteer at the
Newport Harbor Nautical Museum. About once a month, he writes
histories of interesting boats that graced Newport Harbor.
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