SIMPLE
COURAGE: A True Story of Peril on the Sea
2006 - Frank Delaney
Random House ISBN 1-4000-6524-0
Perhaps my prior total lack of knowledge of the true
events portrayed in this
book stemmed from the date of my birth,
a mere 6 weeks following the official conclusion of
findings of the Merchant Vessel Inspection Division
in the United States Coast Guard. Possibly it was
the normality
of life in a small village on the shores of the Great
Lakes, or maybe it was simply the timing of the events
unfolding with the ocean freighter Flying Enterprise
and her skipper, Captain Kurt Carlsen in December
of 1951, locally obscured by the larger picture of
the Korean War, or the later prominence of an unfolding
Cold War when I was still just a child, or the monumental
growth of a civil rights movement, the Cuban missile
crisis, a presidential assassination, a new involvement
in a war in southeast Asia and on and on, as I grew
in recognition of my own world and larger world affairs,
that kept me from discovering this story, until now.
Frank Delaney has created a superb historical narrative
and matter-of-fact description of a ship, a man of
courage and integrity, a family possessing strength
in unfettered devotion to one another, and has captured
a in this story examples of a type of positive moral
character exhibited by people, seemingly, much more
commonplace in a world, at the time I was born, traits
that I keenly value, but unfortunately recognize with
less prevalence today. A time described, that I can
still only somewhat imagine, but which is now more
clear to me through this unpresupposing gem of seafaring
lore.
Told through reference to numerous historical maritime
and newspaper accounts and wrapped with reminiscences
of the author’s childhood, his family and especially
of his father, the record of the 1951 voyage of the
Flying Enterprise, becoming fully disabled during
its voyage into hurricane conditions building before
it in the North Atlantic, the subsequent actions of
Captain Carlsen, his crew, his passengers, and daring
actions of other vessels, lending assistance with
their own courageous crews participating in the rescue
effort of stricken fellow ocean voyagers, this story,
without fanfare or extraneous embellishment will likely
hold your undivided attention and concern for the
fate of the individuals involved in a way that no
amount of fictional creativity could ever hope to
impart upon the reader. This story of vessels, passengers,
cargos, history and personal relationships tried and
also newly formed in the turmoil of a raging sea,
left me feeling fortunate, first to have found out
about this incident, and secondly to feel that I have
gained new insights into levels of human faith, endurance
and determination to survive and to overcome odds
that seemed many times greater than those odds immediately
apparent in the sheer measured height of the seas
described within these pages.
To be fair with my high recommendation for a great
read, this particular story brought to me much more
than just the ability to vicariously imagine the emotions,
thoughts and determinations of those involved in this
1951 tale. During this reading I was also reminded
succinctly of an incident in my own childhood, one
which I had quietly put away for decades, one of having
been wakened by the phone ringing, hearing unfamiliar
adult voices and commotion throughout my family’s
home, and then of a view out my own bedroom window,
seeing the silhouettes of my father, my grandfather
and several other neighborhood men, flashlights dancing
in a star-lit, pre-dawn snow scene, heading down to
the bay, responding (I discovered later) to news of
a commercial fishermen in trouble after breaking through
the ice on the way to tend gill nets. The cool bedroom
floor, the paisley pattern frosted window panes, white
road framed in shadowed old cedars, my mother’s
hands on my shoulders turning me back to my bed and
quietly urging me back to my dreams. Then memories
of my neighborhood, the lumber mill, the dock pilings,
smoothed-stone beaches devoid of break walls and floating
fiberglass mansions, all of us still children, yet
occasionally accompanying these same fishermen in
fully housed, gill-netters, watching the world for
the first time from the blue water, motion under our
feet, limestone bluffs reaching skyward, smells of
diesel and whitefish, and the scream of the swarming
gulls in our wake, continual twinkling flash of ripple
reflected clear morning sun.
Unlikely as it may be in the boats featured and built
here, and unlikely as it is that the visitors to this
digital destination will ever encounter conditions
such as those experienced by the passengers and crew
of the Flying Enterprise, or will ever meet circumstances
that demand calling upon the immense personal resolve
demonstrated by Captain Kurt Carlsen, I have a feeling
that many of the readers of these pages will easily
enjoy settling into a favorite chair and voyage through
the next, late spring snow storm, wrapped in a warm
throw, sipping hot tea and transporting into this
particular place and time in 1951. I am certainly
glad that I did. I am grateful for this wonderful
work produced by Mr Delaney and the delicious memories
it stirred in me.
Don Freix
Fish Creek |