Did you hear what the Mayor said on Wednesday?
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NYC needs more #piers4boats! PortSide’s blog covers our WaterStories programs, urban waterways issues, the BLUEspace, development plans for the NYC waterfront, our ship MARY A. WHALEN, other historic vessels, and boats and ships of all sizes.
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DOE summary of comments they received before the 4/28/21 PEP (Panel for Educational Policy) hearing and vote on zoom is here. Comments has to be submitted by April 27, 2021, at 6:00 p.m to D15Proposals@schools.nyc.gov.
The 4/15/21 hearing has passed. The recording is here and the passcode is 5N6SLKi@
We found we had to type in the passcode and could cut and paste it.
The official DOE webpage for this “school utilization” process is here. Copying the section for Red Hook from that page (in italics) below:
The Proposed Grade Reconfiguration of P.S. 676 Red Hook Neighborhood School (15K676) from a K-5 to a 6-8 School Beginning in the 2022-2023 School Year and Future Re-siting to Building K680 and Co-location with P.S. KTBD (75KTBD)
Contact: Anne McGroarty, 212-374-0208, D15Proposals@schools.nyc.gov
PortSide testimony for this hearing - updated, version 2
Short version: PS 676 (the old 27) gets phased out as an elementary school, a new middle school with a maritime theme will built on the north edge of Coffey Park (kittycorner from Visitation Church). It will include a District 75 school (school for students with special needs). Summit Academy Charter School will remain in the building at 27 Huntington Street, and plans need to be developed for how to use the rest of the space in the building which could be used by PS 15, a new high school, and/or other ideas.
Longer version is all of the following below: Starting September 2022, the DOE will “reconfigure” PS 676 (the old 27) as an elementary school by shrinking it year by year while creating a new middle school. PS 676 will be relocated in a new school building, to be named K680, to be built at 21-31 Delevan Street, on the north edge of Coffey Park. The scheduled opening of the new school building is September 2025.
During discussions of a maritime middle school a few years ago, the NY Harbor High School on Governors Island was very involved; they are no longer involved.
PortSide NewYork is an award-winning, maritime nonprofit, and our work includes creating innovative maritime educational programs (we call them WaterStories). We look forward to having a major role in shaping the curriculum of this new maritime middle school. We have had a big impact so far. It was our programming with PS 676 that inspired the DOE to suggest to PS 676 that they become a maritime elementary school. For more about our programs with 676 see this blogpost. More about PortSide’s education programs with other schools and age ranges on our webpage EDUCATION & YOUTH. PortSide has created deep virtual educational resources that support our school programs such as our virtual museum Red Hook WaterStories which turns all of Red Hook into a living museum and our African American Maritime Heritage resource page. Some photos of PortSide education programs with Red Hook schools below. We do programs on and off our historic ship MARY A. WHALEN (so sometimes we go on other ships as well as work ashore.) Some sample photos below with students from Red Hook schools.
The way the reconfiguring of PS 676 will work is that existing 676 students will advance to a higher grade normally, but when the 1st grade class graduates in 2023, there will be no new 1st grade class admitted the following year, and then the next year there will be no 2nd grade, so the school shrinks as the students advance.
In September of 2022, PS 676, would add a 6th grade and ends pre-K and kindergarten. The next year 1st grade will be dropped and a 7th grade added. This will continue each year:
• September 2023 = Grades 2 to 7
• September 2024 = Grades 3 to 8
If all goes according to the plan the school would move to the new building in September 2025
• September 2025 = Grades 4 to 8
• September 2026 = Grades 5 to 8
• September 2027 = Grades 6 to 8
The building will also house a school for children with special needs (known as a District 75 school).
According to the plan, students who fail to graduate from a grade being discontinued will be relocated to another school.
Current PS 676 students will be able to progress into the middle school instead of going through the middle school admissions process. If this proposal is approved, District 15 students will be able to enroll in middle school at P.S. 676 beginning in the 2022-2023 school year through the middle school admissions process using an open admissions method.
Summit Academy Charter School would remain in its current building (where it is now in the old PS 27 building at 27 Huntington Street ). As to what happens to the rest of the space in that building, the EIS statement says on page 3:
“If this proposal is approved, in advance of a re-siting of PS 676 to K680, the NYCDOE will build upon the existing collaboration with CEC 15, the PAR team, and the Red Hook schools and community to develop a plan for the use of available space at K027. In the context of discussions related to this potential proposal, the NYCDOE has already been in conversation with key stakeholders to begin developing a vision for the potential space at K027, which has surfaced several ideas, such as a new district high school, early childhood programming, and/or additional space for the remaining elementary school in Red Hook, P.S. 15 Patrick F. Daly, should there be a capacity need. The NYCDOE is committed to reserving space made available by this proposal in the K027 building for a district use that is responsive to the needs of District 15 and the Red Hook community, specifically.”
CORRECTION: Our first testimony had incorrect info in a paragraph calling for more advance notice of this hearing, omitting that CEC15 had sent a 3/19/21 email about this hearing. We deleted the incorrect info in our testimony, and revised our paragraph about the need for better outreach, which we still recommend.
PortSide NewYork is a living lab for better urban waterways. We bring WaterStories to life. Our programs serve New York City (though we get national and international responses to our virtual museum Red Hook WaterStories and social media); and we have a hyperlocal focus on our neighborhood of Red Hook, Brooklyn. You can support by donating here.
This is December blogpost #3, all about maritime accomplishments this year and plans for next: we got an new vintage engine; we got partners to launch a maritime training program; and we want to get our ship to the shipyard.
Short recap of pandemic 2020: our pier was closed due to covid; our ship is no longer publicly accessible. We pivoted both in real life and virtually and made the PortSide Pandemic PopUp Minipark outside the fence which served TENS OF THOUSANDS of people and did virtual programs of all sorts. A major one was livestreaming over 150 sunsets with narration about ships, waterfowl, weather etc. More info in December blogpost #1 and blogpost #2.
While doing all the above, I worked on a massive physical project, getting a 55,000 pound vintage engine out of a power plant about to be demolished in Kennett, Missouri. That engine could restore the engine in our flagship MARY A. WHALEN. The MARY is the last of her kind in the USA, and PortSide has made her so much more than a relic. PortSide has made the MARY an ambassador to the working waterfront, a floating classroom for students from elementary school to graduate school, and a beloved icon of the NY Harbor. We have wanted to maximize her impact by bringing her engine back to life and followed every tip about engine parts for 14 years.
As Murphy’s law would have it, the City of Kennett planned to demolish the power plant as the pandemic was at its deepest in NYC and was rolling across the USA. This continually reduced logistical options; so, for some six weeks, I did iterative planning and consultation with truckers, engineers, insurers, the Kennett power plant and its demolition crew. A pack of warm-hearted people in Kennett and elsewhere went to all sorts of trouble to support our effort. The Kennett team bent over backwards to collaborate, demolishing a city powerplant in a way that saved the massive engine (plus bird nests in the way), hire a special crane, the best local trucker and more. Our high school intern Avery Steib launched a surprise birthday fundraiser on Facebook and raised over $3,000! We raised over $13,000 in total which covered the costs of the crane to lift the engine, the truck that brought it here and a bit more to cover the creation of a restoration plan . The engine arrived on August 15. The Red Hook Container Terminal — thank you — is storing it for free, outside under a tarp, because we have no building space.
Several marine engineers are advising us, and Nobby Peers of Whitworth Marine is the lead working on plans on how to combine the rump remains of the MARY’s engine with parts from Kennett.
This is perfect timing as we have been wanting to get the MARY to the shipyard, and now we can address multiple projects at once:
the resiliency upgrades on a FEMA Sandy recovery project (delayed so we could do the 2018-19 business plan)
engine restoration work
normal hull maintenance
requirements of the Coast Guard to get “Attraction Vessel” status
PortSide was quietly in several years of negotiations with the Coast Gaurd to get this Attraction Vessel status. At first, they said the MARY was not a vessel from a regulatory point of view! We appealled that and won. Next they sent a specialist inspector to make sure the MARY was fundamentally sound. We received the approval of that inspector’s report December 2019.
For our non-mariner readers, “Attraction Vessel” is like an all-in-one Building Permit + all the City permits a business establishment needs to be able to charge for services. Once we have that status, we can FINALLY rent the MARY A. WHALEN for functions, charge for events aboard and earn money with our flagship. To maximize the revenue options, we seek some relief on red tape and the lifting of some restrictions by site managers Port Authority and NYC EDC, something else we have been negotiating for years.
We will be partners in a new maritime school in this harbor, part of a two-pronged effort: a for-profit program will provide basic training and enable working mariners to maintain certifications and upgrade their licenses. The revenue from that will support our nonprofit effort to train underserved youth for deckineer licenses (deckhand + light engineer skills). PortSide has a proven track record of education programs that engage youth like this with maritime and show we are successful at youth development. The MARY A. WHALEN will be a training platform for both. Target time to launch these efforts is late 2021 if we can secure necessary seed funding. Donate now to move this along.
Trainees in the programs above can work on the engine restoration, and restoring the engine on the MARY A. WHALEN will enable our flagship to become a training ship where people get “sea time,” something necessary to get a license from the Coast Guard - a great feedback loop! As a former tanker, the ship’s cargo tanks are also an asset for training in “confined spaces;” and her large size means that the sea time aboard will support getting licenses for a wide-range of vessels. Please donate to make all this happen.
PortSide is participating in this year’s Department of City Planning’s Comprehensive Waterfront Plan process to create Vision 2030. We beg all maritime voices to speak up. An impediment to change is the maritime industry’s tendency to stay silent. We encourage all maritime voices to push NYC to become more boat-friendly and to call for some means to mandate maritime uses on waterfront property the way that waterfront-access became mandated when there is a rezoning. The current concept of “waterfront access” means just looking at the water, not use of it. Send your ideas on how to make NYC more maritime and/or observations about impediments to Michael Marrella, Director, Waterfront & Open Space Division, NYC Department of City Planning at m_marrel@planning.nyc.gov or call (212) 720-3626. If you are on social media, join PortSide in using the hashtag #Piers4boats to raise awareness of maritime uses.
PortSide is in a planning dialogue with elected officials, community leaders in Red Hook and Sunset Park and our local Community Board to seek solutions for massive truck traffic anticipated from four, possibly five, ecommerce warehouses coming to Red Hook, plus two more in nearby Sunset Park (part of our same City Council district and Community Board area). We are researching the latest trends in moving freight locally by water (short sea shipping) to share with the community, policy makers, media and ecommerce companies UPS and Amazon which have warehouses being planned in Red Hook. We are in contact with the designer/operator of new hybrid ferries to create a physical boat tour and virtual webinar for community members, elected officials, media and ecommerce shippers. Please donate to support this kind of work.
red hook concerns about impending traffic from ecommerce trucks was expressed in a float at this year’s barnacle climate justice rally & march
A ship the size and age of our MARY A. WHALEN has a lot of needs. Plus, we have small boats, a floating dock and more stuff. Interns and volunteers disappeared once the pandemic hit NYC. We are grateful for the people who showed up once re-opening began, but the pandemic told us what we already knew: we need a larger budget to have paid maintenance staff. Donating now will help make this happen. Thanks, in the order they first appear, to Avery Steib, Nobby Peers of Whitworth Marine, Tom Senenfelder, Alex Troesch, Peter Rothenberg, Carolina Salguero, Frank Hanavan, Nikki and Ivy Bartlett, Paul Strubeck, Annie Raso, Samantha Wolinski, and Joseph Olson.
In sum, during difficult 2020, PortSide did a lot despite deep funding cuts and drop in personnel caused by the pandemic. We have great plans for 2021 and beyond and ask for your support to enable us to maintain and grow our impactful work. Thanks in advance for your support! Info on how to donate here.
Celebrating the new engine parts
red hook sunsets are made for sharing - view from the mary a. whalen
chiclet says “stay warm, stay safe this holidday season!”
9/5/20 intense use of portside’s pandemic popup minipark in 4 parking spaces next to our flagship mary a. whalen
PortSide NewYork is a living lab for better urban waterways. We bring WaterStories to life. Our programs serve New York City (though we get national and international responses to our virtual museum Red Hook WaterStories and social media); and we have a hyperlocal focus on our neighborhood of Red Hook, Brooklyn. Please support by donating now.
If you missed the 1st of 4 December 2020 newsletters click here and here is its related blogpost.
As mentioned last post, ravaging 2020 presented PortSide with questions about how to program once our pier was locked to the public, once I had Covid, when interns and volunteers become unavailable, when we lack building space, and with our funding slashed and ship insurance cost rising. Below, in installment 2, are ways we did that after our early focus on virtual programs (livestreaming the sunset, curating virtual content from around the world, and extensive community networking and planning on Zoom including recruiting medical assistance for Red Hook).
By early May, New Yorkers were inching out of their apartments and looking for outdoor space where they could be socially distant. I spotted a crying man hanging on the fence next to our ship, mothers with tots picnicking on asphalt, people lying on asphalt, people perched on Jersey barriers eating their lunch, a lot of nervousness.
We got a call from opera director Beth Greenberg, who directed our knockout 2007 TankerOpera. She asked if the Santa Fe Opera could perform on our ship a new opera about Fannie Lou Hamer, a trailblazing, Black civil rights activist, for national virtual distribution. All socially-distanced with singers in special masks. We have an African American maritime heritage program, but Fannie had no WaterStories in her history as far as Peter and I could see.
After a week of thinking it over, we decided PortSide could, during the pandemic, drop the rule that our programs need to have WaterStories. We have outdoor space on our ship deck while all opera houses and performing arts places are closed (from concert halls to bars) — it was time to share — and there is a huge empty parking lot next to our ship.
We said yes to Greenberg and Santa Fe. Their October performance was performed after lots of Covid-safety checking and permit arrangements and intense logistical work to arrange noise abatement from the Manhattan heliport, the ferries, the truck driving school and more. The resulting film is being used around the USA for free educational programs until end of September 2021. Below is a 60-second teaser.
33,000 riders of the Governors Island Ferry came through here.
At least half got a seat or used the sprinkler.
LOTS of people came specifically for the popup park and the music events that occured here.
I called Ports America, the operators of the Brooklyn Cruise Terminal on the pier parallel to ours to ask if we could use the four parking spaces parallel to the fence and our ship in their parking lot. They said yes, greenlighting PortSide’s Pandemic PopUp Minipark. With our pier locked due to Covid, our popular TankerTime was not an option, so we moved ashore.
A major motive for making the park was the local open space crisis mentioned last blogpost, over 90% of the trees and all the lawns, playgrounds and sprinklers had been removed from Red Hook NYCHA public housing for a huge resiliency project. Many nonprofits had interior spaces too small to use during covid and faced big budget cuts, so local nonprofits faced challenges serving the community, and the budget was cut for Summer Youth Employment Program (SYEP) leaving many youth with nowhere to go. How to create Red Hook outdoor space was the urgent subject of many Zoom calls with local leaders.
Conditions in red hook nycha development due to massive sandy resiliency project. 90% of trees cut. All playgrounds, sprinklers and lawns removed
PortSide has relevant placemaking skills after years of making pop-up exhibits and events and because we have long made plans for positioning Atlantic Basin as the maritime gateway to Red Hook. With those skills, our maritime artifacts and event supplies, donated planters from a neighbor forced out by the pandemic, IKEA’s donation of a row of outdoor umbrellas, and just $1,000, we created a minipark next to our ship that has served THOUSANDS of people and has been a magnet for musicians of diverse sorts. PortSide consistently does a lot with a little.
PortSide’s flagship mary a. whalen & pandemic popup minipark alongside. Photo (c) Jonathan atkin www.shipshooter.com
Musicians were eager, desperate, to play together and to play for a live audience. The public was desperate to hear them. Multiple people told me, their voices often choking up, “this is the first time I have heard live music since March.”
If you ever doubted the power of the arts, this pandemic shows how much they matter.
Donate now to help us keep this up.
Here are some cultural events in our popup park:
(7) Weekly/Sunday performances by band Kings Country. Here is one.
(5) multimedia music events curated by Chris Pitsiokos. Here is one.
(2) Sacred Harp shape note singing events. Here is one
(1) Brackish Brooklyn concert
(1) RC Andrés concert
(4) rehearsals of Cora Dance 10/22 thru 10/25
Halloween pumpkin carving event
PortSide kept adding amenities to the popup park… a sprinkler, chalk, kids toys and books - a steady stream are donated - a mock wheelhouse created by our clever Peter Rothenberg, a bike track and hopscotch spray-painted onto the asphalt, and string lights along the fence at night. Our ship cat Chiclet is the official park host and popular presence. 🐾 We contacted Red Hook businesses to create this list of ones that would deliver here (which supports them and the visitors). Please donate to support the effort.
Little kids love the place. Stressed parents gush with gratitude for an outdoor space where they can unwind and that makes their kids happy. It’s been a cozy and serene spot for dinners, birthday parties, late-night talks, quiet time and where little kids ride bikes. It’s worked for homeschooling too.
Gratitude has been expressed many ways, including two little kids donating their piggy bank as part of Yom Kippur observances.
Red Hook’s Vanessa McKnight said “I've been there on several occasions… just to sit back n enjoy the view at sunset n beautiful evenings.... huge shout out for giving us a safe open space outlet to ease the trials of COVID19 times.”
Our Councilman Carlos Menchaca is an enthusiastic fan of the park and frequent visitor with his dog Lola.
The park also served virtually!
Sue Sardzinski on Long Island wrote “Watching traveling on the ferry as given me so much joy as I have been home due to type 2 diabetes and other chronic illnesses to avoid COVID 19. The Joy of watching the daily comings and goings of children laughter playing and others, concerts, folk music,operas, was a blessing for me to get through another day of staying at home.”
Former New Yorker Mauritius Nagelmüller in Germany: “While Sonia and I were not able to come to New York this year, looking at the pictures and videos of the park posted made us miss New York even more. It looks like such a gem in the middle of difficult circumstances and is a beautiful example of the resilience of a community in our favorite city.”
Read fan mail about PortSide’s Pandemic PopUp MiniPark here
It is work to maintain it, restock books and toys, take down umbrellas before storms, fix them, water and deadhead and replace plants, tidy up and add holiday decorations. We recently transitioned the space into the Penguin Popup Park for the December holidays. Please donate to support the effort.
Red Hook family in wheelhouse photobooth/play center created by our peter rothenberg.
PortSide’s Pandemic PopUp Minipark served thousands of people, those who came just for the park plus the 33,000 visitors who rode the Governors Island ferries leaving from Red Hook.
Governors Island also pivoted this year, seeking to create more park equity by prioritizing communities on the frontline of the pandemic, low-income Black and brown communities which have a high level of essential workers and Covid illness and death as well as a low levels of green spaces in their neighborhoods. For this reason, they chose to have their Brooklyn ferries leave from Red Hook this year and made ferries free for NYCHA public housing residents.
We worked closely with the Governors Island team to promote the new Red Hook ferry location to our community. We helped them with local wayfinding and sourcing local vendors. PortSide provided the internet for the ferry ticketing kiosk in Red Hook with donated hardware from NY Waterway. Our minipark became the official waiting area for their ferry passengers, offering a park experience before getting to the island, one that was so popular that people returned to it after the ferry ride back or on subsequent visits.
We often find hearts drawn in chalk on the asphalt.
We’ve got a lot of physical plant what with the mini park, a floating dock we built, kayaks, and a ship the size and age of our MARY A. WHALEN is like a hungry 613 ton baby with a lot of needs. So even with personnel pandemically-reduced, work has to get done. We also wanted the MARY looking her best for national showtime via the Santa Fe Opera, so we tackled a big project: dropping the cargo boom for repainting and repainting the boom mast. We are grateful for the people who showed up once re-opening began, but the pandemic told us what we already knew: we need a larger budget to have paid maintenance staff. Donating now will help make this happen.
Thanks, in the order they appear to Peter Rothenberg, Jonathan Van Dusen, Jenny Kane, Frank Bike shop…., Sam Ebersole, Avery Steib, Ralph Hassard, Diego Garcia, Nobby Peers, Osiris Mosley, Frank Hanavan, Arsenio Martinez, Capt/Engineer Matt Perricone, Brian Broker, Sam Ebersole, and all the others who helped during the Santa Fe Opera and at other times.
In sum, during difficult 2020, PortSide did a lot despite deep funding cuts and drop in personnel caused by the pandemic. We have great plans for 2021 and beyond and ask for your support to enable us to maintain and grow our impactful work. Thanks in advance for your support! Info on how to donate here.
we added to our duck amenities. Last year it was the ducknyc ramp. this year it was the duck chalet
illustration of santa fe opera aboard the mary a. whalen (c) michael arthuer of IG @inklines
PortSide NewYork is a living lab for better urban waterways. We bring WaterStories to life. Our programs serve New York City (though we get national and international responses to our virtual museum Red Hook WaterStories and social media); and we have a hyperlocal focus on our neighborhood of Red Hook, Brooklyn. You can support by donating here.
2020 is a ravaging year. We’ve been so busy, we haven’t written blogposts for months! I am writing some personal ones for the end of the year, one a week in December. Stay tuned! PortSide’s 2020 reminds me of a WWII slogan from Red Hook’s Todd Shipyard that Hank Dam shared in his oral history: “the difficult we do every day, the impossible takes a little longer.” Actually, that applies to PortSide’s history as a whole.
This year PortSide tackled questions such as “how to program when our pier is shut and our ship not accessible? When interns and volunteers become unavailable due to the pandemic? When I have Covid? How do we maintain the ship with those people gone and our union partners District Council 9 not running training programs? How do we program when we still lack building space and the ship interior is too small to socially-distance school groups and tours? How best to serve the community during these times? How do we do it with our funding slashed and costs of marine insurance set to rise 25% to 100%? (That’s due to the the insurance industry paying out for all the recent hurricanes and also for Covid.) Money is tight, so if you can donate, we deeply appreciate it.
Can you remember 2020 before the pandemic? I can’t.
I remember the pivot day, Thursday, March 12, when I decided that having PS 676 1st grade visit the next day was too much risk. I had early insight into Covid from relatives in Spain, both of them frontline doctors. I canceled the weekly 1st grade field trip scheduled for the next day and shut the ship to the public. The Mayor and Governor announced their shutdowns sometime later.
March 6 visit by ps 676 1st grade. they respond to the bells and jingles and write down how the ship would move according to those commands.
We have not seen the PS 676 1st grade in person since the visit above. Subsequent virtual experiences were heartbreakingly remote in terms of emotional engagement, and it took months before most students in that class received the DOE digital devices. In June, they were still struggling to master the mute and un-mute functions. In these trying times, how do we teach our youngest and the most disadvantaged such as these young public housing residents? These are questions that we as a society need to be asking — and answering — better during the pandemic — and always.
All this has hardened our resolve to focus on creating after-school and summer programs to provide the educational enrichment and personal support that will enhance the future of such youngsters. Please donate now to help bring such plans to life.
Covid triggered PortSide’s hurricane Sandy recovery muscles, work that earned us a White House award, plus our years of experience working on Red Hook resiliency plans since Sandy. After the coronavirus hit NYC, one of the first things I did was recruit medical assistance for Red Hook. I called Dr. Matt Kraushar to ask if he was willing to re-engage with our neighborhood. The answer was YES! Eight years before, after Sandy, he created a medical response team that helped Red Hook NYCHA residents and earned him the knickname “Medical Matt.” In regular conversations I updated update him about Who’s Who in Red Hook, current issues, etc. He teamed up with a local non-profit RHI to create a Covid response plan and worked with senior City officials at NYCs Health and Hospitals. Here are Matt Kraushar’s links to his Covid19 work:
COMMUNITY COVID CHECKUP CLICK HERE
Governor Cuomo’s first lockdown order closed our pier to the public. Our ship was suddenly inaccessible. We had no building space. I had Covid by early April and quarantined until the middle of May (with Medical Matt as my remote doctor on daily calls). These conditions prevented PortSide from pivoting like some other Red Hook nonprofits to become food pantries and frontline responders, so we went all-digital.
Our curator and historian Peter Rothenberg curated a deep list of virtual WaterStories programs from around the world.
We pumped out a heavy stream of social media posts with WaterStories content. This Facebook page is the most active.
We created a summary of Covid resources in Red Hook.
We hosted, for three months, the weekly zoom call for Ready Red Hook, helping revive a dormant resiliency group founded after hurricane Sandy. Our board member Natasha Campbell and I pushed for the group to be more inclusive with more Red Hook public housing voices and more of our Black and brown neighbors. I called for greater collaboration with all parts of Red Hook saying “resiliency is a team sport not an exercise with star athletes playing exhibition ball.”
I was busy on and off other Red Hook weekly zoom calls for nonprofits, for businesses, for planning new outdoor open space for Red Hook since the spaces of so many local nonprofits were closed due to Covid, and Red Hook faced an open space crisis. More on our response to that in our next newsletter about creating and programming PortSide’s Pandemic PopUp Minipark.
I saw panic about the impending government-mandated, coronavirus lock-down, people’s fear of isolation on top of all the economic and medical anxiety. The PortSide team learned to cope with isolation during the 10 challenging years we were stuck inside the Red Hook Container Terminal while looking for a publicly-accessible home. In 2020, PortSide had what most shut-in New Yorkers lacked: a big sky view, a vast long view of the harbor. I decided to share that via livestreams of the sunset, creating a completely new program.
Looking back over the 150+ sunsets I have streamed, the thousands of views they represent, and the effusive feedback they triggered, I can say that the sunsets, grey or sunny, became a beloved ritual for New Yorkers and people far away. A time of calm, a respite from the pandemic. I talked about ships, tides, weather, birds, marine life or was just quiet. My voice, slowed by the exhaustion I felt while I had Covid during April, proved soothing. I now remind myself to use “sunset voice” when talking. A small group watched live, chatting in the comments. Most watched late at night before bed.
Sunset-watchers called and emailed sharing their life stories, talking about the health issues that kept them inside or the illness of their spouses. I heard from people blocks away, from Virginia, California, Ibiza, Istanbul, Sarajevo. The sunsets were bedtime stories for adults, a soothing end-of day voice with stories, familiar ones after a while. Familiarity is soothing too. Most sunsets have 200-400 views. Some have over 1,000.
streaming sunset in the rain
Illustration by Michael Arthur of @Inklines
The band Kings Country peformed two virtual concerts on the ship to help us fundraise to get a vintage engine from Kennett, Missouri. Click the drawing to hear one concert. More about the engine in the next newsletter! Michael Arthur, a local illustrator of live performances, was thrilled to see one after weeks of lockdown and gifted us this drawing.
Another virtual program was a live interview with photographer and filmmaker Thomas Halaczinsky, creator of the book “Archipelago New York.”
Please donate now to support our work.
virtual program broadcast live from PortSide NewYork this year, Thomas Halaczinsky, creator of book Archipelago New York
Below are photos from before the pandemic showing high school and college interns and adult volunteers working on projects as diverse as our virtual museum Red Hook WaterStories, a harbor video game, assessing the restoration needs of our engine, sewing a custom cover for our winter water tank, restoring parts of the MARY A. WHALEN, repairing a signboard.
Volunteer help disappeared once the pandemic hit and underline our need for a larger budget to have more paid staff. Donating now will help make this happen.
Thanks, in the order they appear, to Elizabeth Alton, Sam Ebersole, Elena Kalvar, Arsenio Martinez, Engineer Bill Bailey, Johnathan Palma, Raffaela Battiloro, and Joanna Zabielska, a visiting artist from Poland.
During difficult 2020, despite deep funding cuts and drop in personnel caused by the pandemic, PortSide did a lot. We have great plans for 2021 and beyond and ask for your support to enable us to sustain and grow our impactful work. Thanks in advance for your support! Please donate now. Stay tuned for three more blog posts covering our 2020 work.
And with that, here are some images for you to enjoy.
perfectly intact seahorse found on deck. #redhookismagic as our boardmember maria nieto says
view through mary a. whalen porthole
chiclet chilling
Have you got experience repairing a 1941 Hyster Karry Krane? We could use your help! We expect to get a 1941 Fairbanks Morse engine from Kennett, Missouri in July, so we are interested in repairing our 1941 Hyster Karry Krane in order to have a crane to use to lift parts off that engine preparatory to bringing them aboard our ship MARY A. WHALEN. We will be using parts from the 1941 Kennett engine to restore the 1938 Fairbanks Morse engine in the MARY. Below is an edited version of our 2013 blogpost about our Hyster.
Our manual for the 1941 Hyster Karry Krane is here.
Another triumph! Another historic item for Red Hook! Our Hyster crane (built in 1941) has been deemed eligible to be on the National Register of Historic Places! and in record time~
In just two days, our Historian/Curator Peter Rothenberg researched the history of our 1941 Hyster and the history of this "Karry Krane" model, submitted an application to SHPO (the NYS Historical Preservation Office) to see if it was eligible to be listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and got that application approved!
We profusely thank the staff at SHPO for reviewing our application in just hours, and we also profusely thank Jenny Bernstein of FEMA who told us about the grant that prompted us to focus on the Hyster. The Hyster was flooded by Sandy, and the grant is for Sandy damage to historic and cultural resources.
PortSide applied for funding to reverse Sandy damage to the Hyster and to the replacement parts for MARY A. WHALEN's engine which were in the shed. The grant does not cover damage to historic documents which were flooded by Sandy.
We applied for for the Hyster, and for damages to MARY's engine parts we would use. (The grant would not cover damage to those engine parts we planned to sell to support the restoration of the MARY A. WHALEN's engine.) Earlier this year, we applied for FEMA Sandy recovery funds for Sandy damages, but we do not yet know if we will get funding. We did not apply until May 2013 because we were told in a November 2012 funding workshop that we were not eligible; that was corrected in May, at which point we immediately sought Sandy recover funds.
In short, getting on the National Register of Historic Places is a two-stage process: being "deemed eligible" and actually being listed. PortSide did the MARY A. WHALEN in two steps. For something to be on eligible or listed, it has to be deemed historical significant in some or all of the following ways:
Is it associated with an important person, event, or movement in history? Does it represent a significant design or technology, or is it a special example of a particular style? Is it the work of a recognized master? Could it yield important archaeological information about our past?
Here is our full application to SHPO in two parts.
Determination of Eligibility (DOE) for listing on the National Register
Supplemental History of Michael Cowhey
SHPO's response was "Thank you for pulling together this very compelling and fascinating history of the "Karry Krane" in such a short amount of time! Both myself and my colleague, Kath LaFrank of our NR Unit, have reviewed your submission and, based on the information provided, the Hyster "Karry Krane" is eligible for the State and National Registers of Historic Places. The only other somewhat similar type of property in NYS that we've called eligible is a historic steam shovel in LeRoy, NY. "
We copy excerpts from our DOE application below.
Todd Shipyard boomed during WWII. There were mobile cranes like ours in use at Todd. We have yet to check if the grain terminal used them.
The successor to our 1941 Hyster are the many forklifts used all over Red Hook.
The “Karry Krane” name was first used July 14, 1941. PortSide’s Crane is from 1941. PortSide’s crane is both one of the original Karry Kranes made and, while once common, is now one of the last of its kind.
This crane type was developed by Hyster during WWII and was very significant to the war effort here and overseas. It was used in shipbuilding facilities, in ports for cargo handling and for rebuilding after the war effort. It was such a useful vehicle that Hyster produced it overseas when it opened its first plant outside the USA in 1951. It became an international workhorse. We find documentation that shows it was used in New Zealand in addition to Europe.
This particular Hyster crane was last used by Cowhey Brother Marine Hardware in Red Hook which closed in 2005 and donated their final inventory to PortSide NewYork. The Cowhey family was in several forms of maritime business in Red Hook for about 140 years when three Cowheys wound down the business.
Cowhey’s bought the crane from the Staten Island Bethlehem Steel shipyard when that closed in the 1960s. We presume that the crane was new when purchased by Bethlehem Steel when that yard boomed during the war effort.
The crane dimensions are:
Body length 12’ 4”
Length of boom 10’ 1”
Overall length 22’ 3”
Height of body 3’ 3”
Height of boom 10’ 8”
1940: By experimental use of tractor frames, an advanced type of mobile crane is developed, later named the “Karry Krane."
1952: Hyster opens its first plant outside the USA, in Nijmegen, the Netherlands. The Hyster 40” and the Karry Krane are the first machines to be assembled there.
Criteria for evaluation.
This 1941 Hyster Karry Krane meets the following National Regsiter criteria:
(a) that are associated with history of a prominent Red Hook family and business. It is the last sizeable artifact of that business. It is related to a collection of other artifacts we have for that business. This particular crane is related to maritime history of NYC (two sites, one in Red Hook, one in Staten Island). And the crane model is particularly related to WWII history everywhere this crane became a major workhorse
(d) that have yielded, or may be likely to yield, information important in prehistory or history. It is a means to tell stories related to the Cowhey family and business in Red Hook, the Bethlehem Steel shipyard in Staten Island, WWII and reconstruction operations in civilian and military applications.
This is a 2.5 ton Hyster,the most popular World War 2,dock, lift and carry crane.they first came over on lease lend in 1941.
COLLECTION HYSTER KARRY KRANE MOBILE CRANE USAF USNAVY WWII
Establishing Willamette Ersted Co.
The company that would be known as Hyster Co. was founded by E.G. Swigert in 1929 under the name Willamette Ersted Co.[2] Initially, this company was established to manufacture logging winches for the forestry market in the Pacific Northwest, with headquarters in Portland, Oregon.
The Early Products
1934 saw the development of the straddle carrier with forks, which was one of the company’s earliest forklifts. Following this was the development of the BT, a forklift with a cable hoist system, able to lift 6,600 pounds (3,000 kg).[3] By 1940, the company began to manufacture its first piece of mobile lifting equipment, a mobile crane on a tractor frame, first known as a Cranemobile, later to be renamed Karry Krane. The Karry Kranes would prove to be very profitable for the company, as these lift trucks were used for loading and unloading massive cargo ships for importing and exporting purposes. In 1941, Willamette Ersted began recognizing a need for a smaller lift truck, and designed a new smaller model known as the Handy Andy. The following year, the Jumbo was introduced as the company’s first product to use pneumatic tires and a telescoping mast.
Operations in Peoria
In the company’s early years, one of its prominent customers was Caterpillar Tractor Co. Caterpillar held an exclusive contract with the company, whereby Willamette Ersted Co. would manufacture specialized winches for Caterpillar’s logging tractors. In light of this, the company decided in 1936 to open a warehouse and distribution center in Peoria, Illinois, where Caterpillar was headquartered. By 1940, Willamette Ersted Co. had begun full-scale manufacturing of products at its Peoria location.
For more info check out... http://www.ritchiewiki.com/wiki/index.php/Hyster_Co.
The story of this business is a means to cover several topics: how an immigrant family rises in stature, the growth of a marine business from “speculator” (eg, the maritime version of the scrap collectors with shopping carts today, someone who collected scrap metal by going boat to boat in the harbor), to a purveyor of nautical antiquities to the wealthy, then a marine hardware supplier and the operator of a port in Albany.
The Cowhey family grew in prominence in Red Hook from their speculator days in the 1860s, and at the peak of the business, they owned most of a block in the vicinity of their final outpost at 440 Van Brunt Street.
In 2005, as the business wound down, the Cowhey family operated a terminal in Albany of Federal Marine Terminals http://www.fmtcargo.com/.
Chronology of Cowhey family in Red Hook (for more, see attached history about Michael Cowhey)
John Cowhey started his business about 1862 [1937 obit says business started about 75 years ago]
By the time his son Michael Cowhey was running it, the business, John Cowhey Sons at 400 Van Brunt was a ship wrecking and salvage firm. The company was well known to decorators looking for nautical articles.
John Cowhey was famous for purchasing in 1911 the RELIANCE a racing yacht which one the America’s cup, dismantling her and selling her fittings and scrapping her parts. The 110-foot mast went to the Federal Baseball League park.
Michael Cowhey. d. 1937 had a wife Regina [or Margret according to a different source], a daughter Regina and two sons Thomas and John.
Thomas M. Cowhey in 1990 was the title holder to 440 Van Brunt which was built c. 1931, altered in 1957.
A Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Jan. 20, 1931 article describes John Cowhey as "one of the influential citizens of Red Hook" in his day.
The same article tells that Michael had in his yard several large old church bells that he had bought for scrap but had decided to hold on to. The bells rang eerily in the night but:
"If some one suggested that the ghost of an old Bailing ship skipper might be behind the tolling, he would nod solemnly. Then he would ask if his questioner had ever heard how in 1880 the wind blew so hard that Red Hook was white with scales, blown clean off the harbor fish, and how all the houses on the Hook had to be held in place by anchors. And how once it was so cold that he, Michael Cowhey, was able to walk barefooted over the ice to Staten Island. "
Sunset seen from the deck of portside’s flagship, the mary a. whalen, in red hook, brooklyn
For you! Specially selected #eWaterStories, virtual maritime and marine life programs for the COVID19 period, to educate and entertain while we all do our part at #socialdistancing and staying inside to flatten the curve. There is an ocean of resources out there produced by a wide variety of marine science organizations, museums, aquariums and educational sites. This is a growing list of selections I made to provide programs during the coronavirus era.
I list the organization websites first, and then break out the offerings such as virtual tours, live cams, games, and educational material into their own headings.
PortSide has our own virtual museum RedHookWaterstories.org, full of oral and written histories, anecdotes, maps, photographs, and other water stories (from cats to quarantines) related to Red Hook, Brooklyn on land and water.
Please check back for updates, and if you have something good to recommend, please let me know.
Peter Rothenberg
Curator, PortSide NewYork
General websites
PortSide NewYork's own offerings – some quick links
Audio
Children's Books – downloadable
Children's Books Read-a-loud (YouTube videos)
Coloring Books (with a story to tell)
Education
Games
Graphic Novellas, Comic Books and Illustrated E-books
Google Expeditions
Knots
Live Cams - Nature
Live Cams - Port Views
Live Cams - Other
On-line Collections
On-line exhibits
Photographs
Videos – Documentaries
Videos – Created for Kids - learning is fun ( just a few random ones)
Videos – Just for Fun ( just a few random ones)
Videos – Science & Sea Critters
Virtual Tours 360°
Virtual Tours (other or more than 360° tours)
Other – These don't fall into the existing categories
Australian National Maritime Museum
https://www.sea.museum/
C-MORE, the Center for Microbial Oceanography: Research and Education
http://cmore.soest.hawaii.edu/education.htm
Independence Seaport Museum
The Jamaica Bay-Rockaway Parks Conservancy (JBRPC)
JOIDES Resolution. JOIDES Resolution is a research vessel that drills into the ocean floor to collect and study core samples has a range of educational material about their work and science. It is part of the International Ocean Discovery Program funded by the National Science Foundation. There is quite a lot of educational material on this site, beyond what is listed here.
https://joidesresolution.org/for-educators/
Monterey Bay Aquarium
https://www.montereybayaquarium.org/for-educators
Mystic Seaport Museum
https://stories.mysticseaport.org/
New London Maritime Society
https://www.nlmaritimesociety.org/
National Maritime Historical Society
https://seahistory.org/
Explore lots of places not (yet) on this list
World wide Map of Museums, Programs, Historic Sites
https://seahistory.org/resources/museums-programs-historic-sites/
NY Region Maritime Museum Guide
https://seahistory.org/museum-program-site-location/new-york-region/
NY Department of Environmental Conservation, Environmental Education
Has listing similar to this one, there is some overlap, but plenty different stuff to see there too. https://www.dec.ny.gov/education/119886.html
NOAA's National Estuarine Research Reserve System - Estuary Education
https://coast.noaa.gov/estuaries/curriculum/
NOAA's Office of National Marine Sanctuaries
https://sanctuaries.noaa.gov
Ocean Exploration Trust's E/V Nautilus ocean exploration ship.
https://nautiluslive.org
Red Hook Water Stories, PortSide NewYork’s own e-museum full of histories, anecdotes, maps, photographs, oral histories and other water stories of Red Hook, Brooklyn on land and water.
redhookwaterstories.org
Schmidt Ocean Institute. In addition to their own material, they have quite a number of links to educational materials of other institutions.
https://schmidtocean.org/education/ocean-education-resources/
Smithsonian National Museum of American History
https://americanhistory.si.edu/onthewater/
Texas State Aquarium
https://www.texasstateaquarium.org/educate/learn-from-home-activities/
The Nature Conservancy Nature Lab. Nature Lab is The Nature Conservancy's youth curriculum platform
https://www.nature.org/en-us/about-us/who-we-are/how-we-work/youth-engagement/nature-lab/?vu=naturelab
The Noble Maritime Collection
http://www.noblemaritime.org/the-noble-at-home
The Thistle Project: An Archaeological survey of the SS THISTLEGORM, Red Sea, Egypt
https://thethistlegormproject.com/
Underwater Earth and Seaview 360. Underwater Earth is an Australian organization which, among other things, is creating the world's largest underwater visual archive
https://www.underwater.earth/
PortSide NewYork's African American Maritime Heritage program's website, a jumping off point for exploring the waterstories of African Americans;stories of black achievement, struggles against the sea, struggles against racism, and aspects of daily life and work. It includes short synopses and links.
PortSide NewYork's blog
redhookwaterstories.org
PortSide's virtual museum full of written and oral histories, anecdotes, maps, photographs, and other water stories (from cats to quarantines) related to Red Hook, Brooklyn on land and water. Updated often.
facebook.com/portsidenewyork
Live streams of the sunset, from the top of the MARY A WHALEN's wheelhouse, looking out on the Atlantic Basin with the Statue of Liberty in the distance every evening starting around 7:30 by PortSide's Executive Director Carolina Salguero. These have turned into a conversation and harbor tour.
Audio Tour of PortSide NewYork’s MARY A WHALEN
https://redhookwaterstories.org/items/show/1738
An Accidental Sailor Vs. the Storm of the Century
https://narratively.com/a-gloriously-inept-sailor-vs-the-storm-of-the-century/
Marine Radio - New York Harbor. LIVE
The nyharborwebcam site also live streams marine radio (ship folk letting each other know where they are , where they are going, and who is there already, i.e. traffic - also pilots letting ships know how and when they will be boarding large vessels to steer them into port). Click on the letters “VHS” above the camera view to hear marine radio.
https://www.nyharborwebcam.com/
Also available (after an ad) at https://m.broadcastify.com/listen/feed/17329
The Curse of the Ship of Gold – an audio story
How a brilliant scientist went from discovering a mother lode of treasure at the bottom of the sea to fleeing from authorities with suitcases full of cash. Story by Dylan Taylor-Lehman
https://narratively.com/the-curse-of-the-ship-of-gold/
Pete Seeger in Concert in New York City, New York. 1969-11-07
Audio Tape Collection: American Archive Pilot Project Grant, WYSO 91.3 FM Public Radio Digital Archives
“Oh, For a life in the rolling sea” (28:00)
https://cdm17207.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/WYSOProgram/id/171
https://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip_27-tm71v5c162#at_2875.15_s
“Talk to the People,” WNYC, 1942-04-19
The Sunday afternoon talks by NYC Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia. Topics include wartime preparations, darkening the coast line: “...Another master advises that when off New York City, lights from Rockaway Beach will silhouette a ship at sea a distance of six miles off the beach... I appeal to all New Yorkers having their homes or places of business along the shore to be sure to dim their lights.' "Let us do this voluntarily, if you get what I mean."
https://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip_80-62f7mp4x
https://www.wnyc.org/story/april-19-1942/
Tugboat Strike, Jan 3, 1949, WNYC New York
Announcement that a meeting between disputing parties in the the tug boat labor dispute will take place the following day at the Labor Relations office.
https://www.wnyc.org/story/tugboat-strike/
Jamaica Bay Activity Book
good for kids
http://www.jbrpc.org/s/Jamaica-Bay-Activity-Book.pdf
Microbial Mysteries Coloring Book
“a ‘behind-the-scenes’ look into the Solving Microbial Mysteries with Autonomous Technology expedition aboard the R/V Falkor.” science ship in the form of a sketches to be colored in, with some real science mixed in. [Science part not aimed at young kids]
https://schmidtocean.org/wp-content/uploads/Microbial-Mysteries_-In-Situ-In-The-OMZ-Coloring-Book.pdf
Mappin’ the Floor, color-it-your-self version. Lucy Bellwood's comic book introduction to the work of scientists mapping the ocean's floor aboard the Schmidt Ocean Institute's R/V FALKOR, a state-of-the-art oceanographic research vessel. A colored version is also available.
https://schmidtocean.org/wp-content/uploads/MappinTheFloor-complete.pdf
30 days in the Gulf Stream in a Yellow Submarine – In 1969 the submarine Ben Franklin drifted in the Gulf Stream from Florida to Nova Scotia taking measurements as they went. Aside from the ocean research, NASA was interested in the effects of a long mission in a capsule. By the Post and Courier.
https://www.postandcourier.com/days-in-the-gulf-stream-a-coloring-book/pdf_6ea5bd5c-b131-11e8-bb80-27571b5df5bc.html
Water Cycle Interactive Coloring Book. Save Our Water website. On line coloring book – no paper needed. https://saveourwater.com/water-smart-kids/interactive-coloring-book
JOIDES Resolution offerings:
https://joidesresolution.org/for-educators/node2998/
Where Wild Microbes Grow: A Free Children’s Book
https://joidesresolution.org/activities/where-wild-microbes-grow/
Into the Crater of Doom introduces kids to the asteroid impact 66 million years ago that caused dinosaurs and many other species to go extinct.
https://joidesresolution.org/activities/into-the-crater-of-doom/
Uncovering Earth's Secrets: Science and Adventure on the JOIDES Resolution.
https://joidesresolution.org/activities/uncovering-earths-secrets-book/
Iceberg of Antarctica. Topics covered: climate change, microfossils, science ship JOIDES Resolution.
https://joidesresolution.org/activities/iceberg-of-antarctica-book/
Brilliant Boats by Tony Mitton & Ant Parker
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KK7Au1u-_xg
Clark the Shark: Too Many Treats | Read Aloud Storytime (read by author)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gys2buANKWk
Clumsy Crab - Story Time with Mrs. Demers
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Vcw1mik4sM
Crabby & Nabby, A Tale of Two Blue Crabs, read by author Suzanne Tate
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fZy3UMEsevk
Danny & Daisy, A Tale of a Dolphin Duo, read by author Suzanne Tate
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lkv9zwp6F3c
Ella Sets Sail
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=025ndGzv4SE
Famous Seaweed Soup
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oojFygHU3E8
Fish is Fish by Leo Lionni
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vy-VQUQMUEI
Harry Horseshoe Crab-A Tale of Crawly Creatures
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_z16usVAExw
Joshua by the Sea
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kR71m-vUdOY
Julian is a Mermaid by Jessica Love
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Y1E62CxRtM
Little Toot (1939 tugboat book)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7eVnn050Ycs
musical version
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TF3rsvYaZ9w
My Very Own Octopus
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ePdLk_pVvNQ
Ocean Animals from Head to Tail by Stacey Roderick
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2g9-nvBzEIA
One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish | Dr. Seuss Raps over Dr. Dre Beats
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I8-EXMxufG8
Over and Under the Pond read by author Kate Messner
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vts7rQQ8H4Q
Pete the Cat: Pete at the Beach
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=md_gV7eWoNw
Sailor Moo: Cow at Sea
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EJC1oDPS1N8
Sam the Sea Cow
S10E03 Reading Rainbow
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wNV2lPJU508
Picture Books Read to Kids Aloud! Age 6-9
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WsJAzW6VjNE
SEABIRD by Holling Clancy Holling Part 1 of 7
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tSGfAWqPv6c
Sneakers, the Seaside Cat by Margaret Wise Brown
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7sH6_5fQLiY
Somewhere in the Ocean
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UZ6G_XF4Rok
Tammy Turtle, A Tale of Saving Sea Turtles, read by author Suzanne Tate
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c9DZ40Nkvm0
The Bravest Fish - Read Along Aloud Story Book for Children Kids
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x9qCa0wntIY
The Lighthouse Cat - Storytime Read Aloud
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uVDUNCCzlts
The Lighthouse Keeper's Cat - Give Us A Story!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kSlaOU3Crts
The Little Red Lighthouse and the Great Gray Bridge
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9qsBv8xInQI
The OCEAN Alphabet Book by Jerry Pallotta. Grandma Annii's Storytime
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8CM3PcRQ8NI
The Oyster's Secret
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pi_YkEctlXc
The Rainbow Fish by Marcus Pfister, Kids Book Read Aloud
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z3cmddZh6t8
American Museum of Natural History’s, Ology web pages have learning, activities, videos and games for kids relating to the water.
Billion Oyster Project. In addition to their regular remote learning offerings they have started a Quarantine Ideas & Activities newsletter.
https://www.billionoysterproject.org/remote-learning
Intrepid Museum, Virtual Intrepid Adventure Programs
A variety of different family-friendly programs are offered. Celebrations Aboard Intrepid (Ages 5–15) and Life Aboard! (Ages 5–15) are two examples. The programs are limited in size and require advanced registration. Se their website for calendar and details.
https://www.intrepidmuseum.org/education/intrepid-adventures
Nature Lab: The Nature Conservancy's youth curriculum platform
A water related offering of theirs is How Water Works in Your Garden “By filtering rainwater and slowing the movement of water to rivers, lakes and oceans, your garden works as a mini-watershed. In this lesson, students calculate the permeable surface area of their garden and periodically measure rainfall amounts, acting as junior hydrologists.”
Watch Video| Download Teacher Guide Educator Support Video
Monterey Bay Aquarium's curriculum and resources
https://www.montereybayaquarium.org/for-educators/curriculum-and-resources
NOAA's National Estuarine Research Reserve System - Estuary Education,
There are a lot of lesson plans here, searchable by grade, produced by estuary organizations around the country. Many links will lead to sites with even more offerings.
https://coast.noaa.gov/estuaries/curriculum/
Here are a few examples
Coastal Acidification animation
https://oceanacidification.noaa.gov/WhatWeDo/EducationOutreach.aspx#14963
Combined Sewer Overflow
https://coast.noaa.gov/estuaries/videos/combined-sewer-overflow.html
Estuary Quiz
https://coast.noaa.gov/estuaries/curriculum/quiz.html
NY Department of Environmental Conservation, Environmental Education
https://www.dec.ny.gov/education/119886.html
Here are some of what they have related to the water
Hudson River Lesson Plans
https://www.dec.ny.gov/education/25386.html
Large Crustaceans poster (PDF): blue crab, crayfish, white-fingered mud crab, shore shrimp, amphipod, sand shrimp
https://www.dec.ny.gov/docs/remediation_hudson_pdf/hrlpixcrusts.pdf
NYC H2O HUB
Learn about New York City’s local water ecology. NYC H2O have converted their tours to an online experience.
https://storymaps.arcgis.com/collections/8a62c7993b4f4f40b49b3ac09671ce3c?mc_cid=9d50e6f914&mc_eid=8954a69305
Here are some examples:
Sea Grant: education offerings
Michigan Sea Grant:
https://www.michiganseagrant.org/educational-programs/h-o-m-e-s-at-home/
New Jersey Sea Grant Consortium : Resources for Educators
New York Sea Grant
North Carolina Sea Grant : Education Resources for At-Home Learning
https://ncseagrant.ncsu.edu/program-areas/education-training/education-resources-at-home-learning/
Steamship Historical Society of America’s Ship History Center’s website STEAMing into the Future has a good variety of educational activities for kids and adults, relating to ships.
https://shiphistory.org
https://shiphistory.org/education
Here is a sampling:
Smithonian's “On The Water” exhibit curriculum material; largely related to the children's book Keep the Lights Burning, Abbie, by Connie Roop.
https://amhistory.si.edu/ourstory/activities/water/
Teaching guide to Keep the Lights Burning, Abbie, (pdf)
A guide to looking to exploring waterways with Google Earth (pdf)
A downloadable power point on Lenses and Lighthouses
Teaching guide and recipes for hard tack and swanky (pdf)
2048: Microplastics Multiplied Edition, by Cafeteria Culture
http://create2048.com/game.php/?game=microplastics-multiplied
Cafeteria Culture worked with Red Hook's PS 15 5th grade to make the movie “Microplastic Madness”
Microplastic Madness trailer: https://vimeo.com/361115158
Be a sea searcher, observation games for K-3 by the Monterey Bay Aquarium https://www.montereybayaquarium.org/for-educators/curriculum-and-resources/games-and-activities/be-a-sea-searcher
Bubba's Tour – audio/visual tour of the JOIDES Resolution science ship and its work with questions leading to a puzzle to be solved. (Requires Flash.)
https://joidesresolution.org/activities/3317/
Fossil Fun – falling fossils matching game - like Tetras. (Requires Flash.)
https://joidesresolution.org/activities/3318/
Journey to the Bottom of the Sea, American Museum of Natural History interactive quiz game.
https://www.amnh.org/explore/ology/water/journey-to-the-bottom-of-the-sea
Kelp Forrest Game, by the Monterey Bay Aquarium
Geared for children ages eight to 11, but fun for all ages
https://www.montereybayaquarium.org/for-educators/curriculum-and-resources/games-and-activities/kelp-forest-game-and-ebook
Microbe Personality Quiz, “Which Microbe Are You?” by C-MORE
- Good for young kids -
http://cmore.soest.hawaii.edu/education/kidskorner/microbe_quiz.htm
Stories from the Cores
Three video games that let players act like scientists. Players study cores drilled from the ocean to uncover their secrets. How did the dinosaurs go extinct? How are microbes able to live inside rocks hundreds of feet below the seafloor? Why are bits of land plants found in deep sea cores far from shore? (interactive science education)
https://joidesresolution.org/for-educators/download-stories-from-the-core/
Voyage Game, by the Australian National Maritime Museum
“An educational online game based on real convict voyages!” This is a long and involved educational adventure game, one is not likely to complete in one sitting. There is a mix of planning and thinking with periodic games requiring hand-eye coordination such as catching rats and doing laundry. The game is designed to give players a sense of what it was like making the long sail from England to Australia, with both death and dancing.
https://www.sea.museum/discover/apps-and-games/voyage-game
JOIDES Resolution has published a number of graphic e-books telling the adventures of their work in a graphic novel format. (Downloadable pdfs)
https://joidesresolution.org/multimedia/
Episode 1: Tales Of The Resolution!
https://joidesresolution.org/activities/tales-1
Episode 2: Re-Fit Madness
https://joidesresolution.org/activities/tales-2/
Episode 3: Resolution Reloaded
https://joidesresolution.org/activities/tales-3/
Episode 4: Arctic Rainforest
https://joidesresolution.org/activities/tales-4/
Episode 5: Choose Your Own Tales Of The Resolution – Jobs On The JR
https://joidesresolution.org/activities/tales-5/
Episode 6: In Search Of Ancient Lava Flows
https://joidesresolution.org/activities/tales-6/
Antarctic Log Comic – Expedition 379: Amundsen Sea
https://joidesresolution.org/activities/antarctic-log-comic/
Designed to viewed on a phone with VR (virtual reality) glasses using the app but can also just be used on a computer screen, or phone screen. [Google Cardboard viewers were sort of a thing in 2014 and information about on how to make them or buy them are available on line.]
https://edu.google.com/products/vr-ar/expeditions/
Google’s spreadsheet of Google Expeditions (Google doc): https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1uwWvAzAiQDueKXkxvqF6rS84oae2AU7eD8bhxzJ9SdY/edit#gid=0
Here are some marine related ones
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea Explore an artists interpretation of the underwater world created by Jules Verne in 1872.
“Join Pierre Aronnax, Conseil and Ned Land as they inadvertently embark on an underwater journey on board the submarine Nautilus commanded by the enigmatic Captain Nemo. A voyage covering 20,000 leagues in a submarine years ahead of its time, you will feel part of the action journeying through realistic underwater scenes. Jules Verne himself would surely recommend bringing his wonderful novel to life using the magic of virtual reality.”
https://poly.google.com/view/c2BA_10LmWW
Alice Austen: Early American Photographer
Dr. Doty and the Quarantine
”In the early 1890s, 500,000 immigrants per year were sailing past Clear Comfort into New York Harbor to Ellis Island. If there were signs of infectious disease on the boat, the passengers and goods abroad and the vessel had to be inspected and sanitized. In the late 1890s, Austen was asked by a Public Health Service doctor, Dr. Alvah H. Doty, to document the quarantine stations located on Hoffman and Swinburne Islands close to the Austen family home. Austen continued to travel to the islands for over a decade to document advances in technology and conditions at the quarantine stations. She processed these photographs in this darkroom.”
https://poly.google.com/view/fsGxNPolkGj
USS Midway Museum, The USS Midway was the largest Navy ship in the world for a decade after it was commissioned in 1945. She is also the longest-serving aircraft carrier of the 20th century (47 years)
https://poly.google.com/view/1u1aO9S1sYW
Titanic Belfast . Stand in a spot and look around the SS Nomadic. “Built in 1911 as a luxury tender, she ferried 1st and 2nd class passengers to ocean liners moored off the French port of Cherbourg, which was too shallow to accommodate the big ships. (Her sister ship, SS Traffic, carried the 3rd class passengers.) In her lifetime, Nomadic served as a minesweeper, a tugboat, and a restaurant and nightclub. Nomadic has survived over 105 years of turbulent events to make it back to Belfast in one piece.
https://poly.google.com/view/6tjWCUFYtjK
Maybe now is a good time to learn some handy knots, knowing a few good ones can be useful and satisfying.
Animated Knots
https://www.animatedknots.com
Boating knots
https://www.animatedknots.com/boating-knots
The bowline is the go to knot for many
https://www.animatedknots.com/bowline-knot
I am a fan of the midshipman's hitch
https://www.animatedknots.com/midshipmans-hitch-knot
Bronx Zoo/ New York Aquarium has live feeds of the Sea Lion Pool and the Aquatic Bird House, from 10– 4 pm
https://bronxzoo.com/virtual-zoo/live-cams
Explore.org has A LOT of water options – each heading has many offerings – plus much more.
Orcalab Base Lookout
https://explore.org/livecams/orcas/orcalab-base
Underwater
https://explore.org/livecams/under-the-water/pacific-aquarium-tropical-reef-camera
Homosassa Springs Underwater Manatees
https://explore.org/livecams/save-the-manatee/homosassa-springs-underwater-manatees
Beluga Whales
https://explore.org/livecams/beluga-whales/beluga-boat-cam-underwater
Georgia Aquarium. Fishes, otters, jellies and more.
https://www.georgiaaquarium.org/webcam/beluga-whale-webcam/
The Monterey Bay Aquarium has several amazing and memorizing live cams https://www.montereybayaquarium.org/animals/live-cams
The National Aquarium
https://aqua.org/Experience/live
The Wild Center, Tupper Lake, NY
https://www.wildcenter.org/visit/livecams
The water-themed one is their marsh turtle cam
https://www.wildcenter.org/visit/inside/marshturtlecam/
Brooklyn Bridge
https://worldcams.tv/united-states/new-york/brooklyn-bridge
New London Harbor Cam, New London Maritime Society
https://www.nlmaritimesociety.org/NLHarborcam.html
The Amistad arrived here in 1839. Electric Boat, which developed some of our earliest submarines, launched the first nuclear-powered sub, the Nautilus, here in 1954.
New York Harbor
https://www.nyharborwebcam.com/
Click on the letters “VHS” above the camera view to hear marine radio (ship folk letting each other know where they are , where they are going, and who is there already, i.e. traffic).
Port Everglades
https://www.portevergladeswebcam.com/
Port New York
https://www.portnywebcam.com/
Port of L'Ile-Rousse, France. Watch not much happening at a ferry port.
https://worldcams.tv/france/ile-rousse/port
Port of Trondheim, Norway
https://worldcams.tv/norway/trondheim/port
Rio 2 harbor barge, Czech Republic. (Camera is currently out of service)
https://www.mall.tv/lode-a-reky/lod-rio
Shelter Island. Ferry port webcam
https://worldcams.tv/united-states/shelter-island/ferry
Yokohama: よこはまし - 神奈川県, 日本. Japan. Time lapse images from a day to year. If you select a year the cruise liner comes and goes, if you select 30 days nothing changes but the weather.
https://www.windy.com/-Webcams/Japan/Kanagawa-Prefecture/Yokohama…
British Virgin Islands. Beach views from various watering holes.
https://www.bvimariner.com/webcams/
New Zealand. Weather Geek NZ has a whole page of web cams and daily time lapse views of the day to explore.
https://weather.geek.nz/nz_webcams.php
Lots of webcams from around the world, many, but not all, are water views.
https://www.skylinewebcams.com/
I liked the Boccadasse - Genoa live cam, the Dubrovnik - Fortress Revelin live cam, Santorini live cam, the Lofoten Islands - Henningsvær live cam and Paarl - South Africa live cam which had their version of duck dock someplace very green.
Photographs, artifacts, sound and ephemera that one can browse through or search by keyword. Lose yourself meandering through thousands of items.
American Archive of Public Broadcasting
https://americanarchive.org/
Several videos and audio recordings from the American Archive of Public Broadcasting are on this list, categorized under subheadings. Here is one example:
New York Voices, #324, Thirteen WNET. 2003
History and changes on the water front. Includes last days of the Fulton Fish Market, Kenneth Jackson opining on the changing use of the waterfront, Sal Catucci of American Stevedoring talking about the
Red Hook Container Terminal (13:40), discussion of Brooklyn Bridge Park (not yet built) and the City's changing views on an industrial waterfront.
Australian National Maritime Museum
http://collections.anmm.gov.au/en/collections
Here are some examples:
Postcard depicting a group portrait of a ship's crew (including ship's cat)
The stevedore rag song (sheet music cover sheet)
Photographs of AORANGI and NIAGARA ship interiors, 1924-1940
Hagley Museum, Hagley Digital Archives
Morse Dry Dock Dial, the in-house periodical for employees of the Morse Dry Dock and Repair Company of New York City (Sunset Park, Brooklyn). The digitized collection covers a period from 1919 to 1923. The covers may be of interest, even if you are not interested in the finer details of maritime history; Edward Hopper is among the artists whose illustrated covers.
Independence Seaport Museum
J. Welles Henderson Archives & Library
Search term: crew
The Mariner's Museum and Park, Newport News, Virginia
https://catalogs.marinersmuseum.org/search
Here is an example with a Red Hook connection, from the online collection of thousands of items.
MIT Museum. The museum has over 40,000 items listed as nautical in their collection that can be seen on-line, mostly of ships and ships plans. [Site when visited was a bit buggy.]
https://collections.mitmuseum.org/?s=&fwp_collection_topics=nautical
Here are some examples:
Mystic Seaport Museum
Digitized books, largely from the 19th century.From A Landlubber’s Log of His Voyage Around Cape Horn (1853) to Yachting in the Arctic Seas (1876.)
Objects (art, artifacts, photographs, vessels and ships plans)
Here are the ones with a Red Hook connection
Damaged hull of steamship SANTA MARTA at Robins Dry Dock, Erie Basin, Brooklyn, NY, May 13-14, 1923
Derelict barges on shore, warehouse of New York Dock Company, Red Hook Stores, ca. 1918
Damaged steamer CEPHEUS at Downing & Lawrence Shipyard, Brooklyn, NY, July 1894
French steamship MADONNA after fire, Atlantic Dock, Brooklyn, NY, June 28, 1907
Man and boy [and dog and monkey] on deck of tugboat, circa 1907
Munson Line steamship MOCCASIN sunk at Erie Basin, Brooklyn, NY, March 1920
Lighter HELEN F. ROBBINS with her load of burning cotton, Erie Basin, Brooklyn, NY, December 1891
Pumping out at dry dock, Clinton Street, Brooklyn, NY, May 14, 1924
S.S. IONA, at NY Dry Dock & Repair Co., Erie Basin, Brooklyn, NY
Schooner NELLIE BRUCE scuttled after fire in cargo of lime, Erie Basin, Brooklyn, NY, after 1882
Yacht WANDA sunk on Crane's Dry Dock, Erie Basin, Brooklyn, NY, October 25, 1899
Steamer ST. DUNSTAN afire and sunk at Erie Basin, Brooklyn, NY, January 9,1901
Steamship ALLEGHANY sunk in Erie Basin, Brooklyn, NY, April 11, 1903
Steamship GEORGE W. CLYDE and tugboat AMERICA, Erie Basin, Brooklyn, NY, March 9, 1896
Tugboat COLUMBIA partially sunk at Red Hook, Brooklyn, NY, circa 1896
Tugboat GEORGE L. GARLICK in dry dock at Downing & Lawrence, Brooklyn, NY, May 27, 1897
U.S. Army Transport INGALLS capsized and sunk on dry dock, Erie Basin, Brooklyn, NY, June 14, 1901 and this one
Wharf scene, New York, circa 1870 [Not Red Hook, but a view of shipping before completion of the Brooklyn Bridge]
New York State Archives
http://digitalcollections.archives.nysed.gov/
Here is a sample search:
Erie Canal - Barge Canal construction photographs
The Ben Franklin - Grumman/Piccard PX-15 Submersible - 50th Anniversary of the Gulf Stream Drift Mission:
https://oceancolor.gsfc.nasa.gov/gallery/646/
Related video: https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/10849
“At 8:56 P.M. (EDT) July 14, 1969, Grumman Aerospace Corporation's research submarine Ben Franklin slipped beneath the surface of the Atlantic off the coast of Palm Beach, Florida carrying a crew of six comprised of engineers, oceanographers and a former Navy captain. In addition, NASA sends along one crew member whose job it was to evaluate the use of the Ben Franklin as a space station analogue.
The Ben Franklin's mission was to investigate the secrets of the Gulf Stream as it drifted northward at depths of 600-2,000 feet; to learn the effects on humans of a long-duration, closed-environment stressful voyage; to demonstrate the engineering-operational concepts of long term submersible operation; and to conduct other scientific oceanographic studies.
This longest privately-sponsored undersea experiment of its kind ended more than 30-days and 1,444 nautical miles later, when the Franklin and its crew surfaced some 300 miles south of Halifax, Nova Scotia, at 7:58 A.M. August 14, 1969”
New London Maritime Society
https://mcguirelibrary1998.omeka.net/
Remembering Ellery Thompson: Fisherman, Writer, Artist, Free Spirit, (1899-1986) An exhibition of the life and times of Ellery Franklin Thompson (1899-1986), whose writings, published and unpublished, provide first-hand glimpses into the 20th century maritime history of southeastern Connecticut.
Down to the Shore: By Steamboat from Norwich to Block Island and Back
A memoir by Gerard E. Jensen (1884-1970) of his boyhood trips at the turn of the 19th century.
New London and the First Steam-Powered Atlantic Crossing
New London's unique relationship with the SS Savannah and her pioneering transatlantic voyage in 1819
Old Ironsides - New London
Photographs, documents, and other resources which tell the story of the New London Custom House's connection to America's oldest commissioned warship, USS Constitution
U.S. Maritime Service Officers School at Fort Trumbull
Career of William Douglass Alexander (1890-1949), Thames River ferry and tugboat fireman and engineer, U.S. Naval Reserve engineer, and civilian employee at the U.S. Submarine Base in his hometown of Groton, Connecticut.
The Noble Maritime Collection - Online exhibitions:
http://www.noblemaritime.org/the-noble-at-home/#exhibitions
There are several offerings such as
This is a Print, Inspired by John A. Noble’s preference for printmaking, this exhibit is organized by various methods of making prints.
http://www.noblemaritime.org/this-is-a-print-online
Ship Model Gallery
http://www.noblemaritime.org/ship-model-gallery1
Smithsonian National Museum of American History “On The Water” online exhibit
The exhibit has a lot to offer, some shortcuts are listed here but more can be found on their site.
The Exhibits:
01 Living in the Atlantic World1 450–1800
02. Maritime Nation 1800–1850
03. Fishing for a Living 1840–1920
04. Inland Waterways 1820–1940
05. Ocean Crossings 1870–1969
06. Answering the Call 1917–1945
07 Modern Maritime America 1950–Present
Sea Songs
https://americanhistory.si.edu/onthewater/exhibition/3_7.html#SeaSongs
Oral History: “Merchant Mariners and Shipyard workers remember WWII” https://americanhistory.si.edu/onthewater/oral_histories/maritime_voices/index.htm
1944 Maria Isabel Solis Thomas Shipyard Worker – (west coast) https://americanhistory.si.edu/onthewater/oral_histories/maritime_voices/assets/audio/thomas.mp3
Environment and Society Portal
The Northwest Passage: Myth, Environment, and Resources. Virtual Exhibitions 2017, No. 1 by Elena Baldassarri
http://www.environmentandsociety.org/exhibitions/northwest-passage
“Commanding, Sovereign Stream”: The Neva and the Viennese Danube in the History of Imperial Metropolitan Centers. Virtual Exhibitions 2019, No. 1 by Gertrud Haidvogl, Alexei Kraikovski, and Julia Lajus
http://www.environmentandsociety.org/exhibitions/neva-and-danube-rivers
Amazing sea creatures, oceans and related images
Earth Is Blue web page of The National Marine Sanctuary System, has a large collection of spectacular photos.
https://sanctuaries.noaa.gov/earthisblue.html
NASA's Ocean Color Image Gallery
https://oceancolor.gsfc.nasa.gov/gallery/
C-MORE Microscopy. Images of the tiniest life in the oceans from phytoplankton to viruses [Requires Flash]
http://cmore.soest.hawaii.edu/microscopy/cmore_microscopy.html
I'm a Dolphin, Brown Bag Films, 2006
Commissioned by: RTE & Irish Film Board
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CNkA8uXZ2f8
I'm A Jellyfish, Brown Bag Films, 2006
Commissioned by: RTE & Irish Film Board
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bvd-kLL99ss
I'm an Octopus, Brown Bag Films, 2006
Commissioned by: RTE & Irish Film Board
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XTSIgYla8sE
I'm a Seahorse, Brown Bag Films, 2006
Commissioned by: RTE & Irish Film Board
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lOp4bXreGmI
I'm a Seal, Brown Bag Films, 2006
Commissioned by: RTE & Irish Film Board
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3yA1YLvsH50
I'm a Shark, Brown Bag Films, 2006
Commissioned by: RTE & Irish Film Board
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tcS6h6JRBvU
I'm a Stingray, Brown Bag Films, 2006
Commissioned by: RTE & Irish Film Board
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uw5jwwfJB1g
I'm a Whale, Brown Bag Films, 2006
Commissioned by: RTE & Irish Film Board
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s1PEzOk1Q7c
This list is just a sampling, mostly from marine research institutions and aquariums
(see also ‘Live Cams’ and ‘Video - Documentaries” ) .
Americans at Work (ca. 1959), AFL-CIO Posted on NYU Preservation YouTube channel
An episode of the documentary series Americans at Work, produced by Norwood Studios for the AFL-CIO.
Features the jobs aboard the SS United States.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nVByEVakm3A&feature=youtu.be&mc_cid=7ac6d0e550&mc_eid=48691e2a2e
Earth Is Blue. The National Marine Sanctuary System, has a collection of noteworthy videos. Some have people talking and explaining things others are just underwater views with captions.
https://sanctuaries.noaa.gov/earthisblue.html
I liked the one about Hawaiian green sea turtle.
https://sanctuaries.noaa.gov/earthisblue/wk269-green-sea-turtle.html
C-MORE, the Center for Microbial Oceanography: Research and Education, has a kid friendly animated video about micro-organisms in the oceans, available in English, ‘Ōlelo Hawai‘i, Español, Italiano, Français, and Português!
http://cmore.soest.hawaii.edu/education/animation.htm
Nautilus, research vessel of the Ocean Exploration Trust
https://nautiluslive.org/photos-videos
New York City’s Oldest Inhabitants: Horseshoe Crabs in Jamaica Bay. Jamaica Bay-Rockaway Parks Conservancy
Plankton! Dr. Richard Kirby (@PlanktonPundit) is posting a series of 32 weekly, short videos narrated by David Attenborough to introduce this remarkable world of microscopic life on Twitter. Check in each week to see more fascinating microscopic life
https://twitter.com/PlanktonPundit
https://twitter.com/PlanktonPundit/status/1239966980532080640?s=20
Texas State Aquarium's recorded streams (check their site for schedule of live ones)
https://www.texasstateaquarium.org/educate/learn-from-home-activities/free-aquavision-series-recordings/
I liked the one about Invertebrates
https://www.facebook.com/TXStateAquarium/videos/252414132461483/
and Flamingos
https://www.facebook.com/TXStateAquarium/videos/234389507698875/
After the Fire, It's Happening, Oregon Public Broadcasting, 1967 - “Here's a duffy little tugboat”
Includes a short segment on moving a raft of logs (8:30). [Red Hook was once a destination for such log rafts.]
“Here's a duffy little tugboat. A rugged little machine built out of solid steel, has a powerful engine and the operator on it is very much like a cowboy rounding up cattle as he pushes and shows and noses these logs away from the point where they're dropped into the water into the rafting area. There are some rather skilled workers walk around with their calked boots on top of these logs and push them into the arrangement that they would like to have.
https://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip_153-91fj71x1#at_575.759_s
American Fisheries, Telemark Films, 2008
“Explores both the transformation of the living ocean and the embattled fishing industry. Bringing to light one of the most significant environmental disasters in history, it nevertheless raises hope for the future.
Around Cape Horn, 1929
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=114&v=9tuTKhqWZso&feature=emb_logo
On the Peking – Dramatic footage.
Around the World in a Square Rigged Ship, 1939
Outward from Copenhagen to Australia by way of Cape of good hope in 91 days and returning via Cape Horn to England in 98 days. Four masted ship PASSAT
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=96cRjLkIKlE
Black Journal, WNET New York Public Television. 1969
Includes a section on blacks working in a shipyard in New Orleans
https://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip_512-7659c6sv19
Ferryboats of the Connecticut River, Telemark Films, 2017
The history, heritage, controversy and uncertain future of the last remaining ferryboats on the Connecticut River.
Filter Feeders. A look at the oyster restoration movement in New York City, as its concerned citizens work together to improve the water quality of New York Harbor and Flushing Bay. Made in 5 days concept to finish for the Project Earth Documentary Challenge hosted by The Audience Awards and Fusion Network.
https://vimeo.com/183121528
Following the Seas, Journeyman Pictures, 2017
Bob and Nancy Griffith made twenty ocean voyages over two decades, fulfilling a dream of freedom and adventure in their 53-foot sailboat
https://vimeo.com/ondemand/followingseas
History of Tugboats
Late 1990s documentary
https://youtu.be/vux2zpwawMU
Lamu New Year’s Dhow Race, Kenya
“Every January 1, on the island of Lamu off the Kenyan coast, crews of local watermen gather on Shela Beach for the most prestigious race of the year. The traditional Arab dhows, unchanged for centuries, are made by hand from local mangrove wood and fabric.”
https://vimeo.com/156870692?fbclid=IwAR0VIWun4ZxIrkFrOCF7iFnaDir5Mj7jfvbTKJSfydQbAn6l9ZTrxWuBuwM
Lightship Overfalls (6:40)
A visitor's tour of the Lighship OVERFALLS
“Lightships were permanently stationed at fixed locations off the coast where lighthouses could not be located. GPS has made them obsolete and none remain in service. When I was young I fished with my father near Scotland Lightship outside New York Harbor. This is an inside tour of one such ship.”
Microplastic Madness (trailer)
Cafeteria Culture worked with Red Hook's PS 15 5th grade to make the movie, PortSide’s Carolina Salguero has a cameo.
https://vimeo.com/361115158
New York in the mid 1930's in Color!
Compilation that includes several harbor views, including the SS Normandie and RMS Queen Mary
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZpXnEvW0XD0
New York Voices, #302, Thirteen WNET. 2002 “Is Red Hook, Brooklyn the New Bohemia?”
Starts off with Sunny, Greg O'Connell, Nick FeFonte,
New York Voices, #324, Thirteen WNET. 2003
History and changes on the water front. Includes last days of the Fulton Fish Market, Kenneth Jackson opining on the changing use of the waterfront, Sal Catucci of American Stevedoring talking about the
Red Hook Container Terminal (13:40), discussion of Brooklyn Bridge Park (not yet built) and the City's changing views on an industrial waterfront.
New York Voices, #502, Thirteen WNET. 2005
Topics include the rezoning of a major portion of North Brooklyn's old industrial waterfront and Hidden Harbor Tours – with some footage of Erie Basin before Ikea (12:40).
https://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip_75-72p5j143#at_1151.49_s
Replacing Z-Drives Onboard the Coast Guard Cutter BARBARA MABRITY, 2013
Coast Guard Industrial Production Facility New Orleans renews two thirteen-ton Z-drive propulsion units onboard the Coast Guard Cutter Barbara Mabrity at their dockside facilities near New Orleans East, March 11, 2013. The Barbara Mabrity, a 175-foot buoy-tender, has since returned to their home port in Mobile, Ala
Saving Jamaica Bay – THIS IS A LIMITED TIME NO COST OFFER
Watch the award-winning documentary, Saving Jamaica Bay. Follow the residents of Jamaica Bay as they battle against government and natural disasters to protect the rich ecosystem of the bay. http://www.jbrpc.org/video Worksheet for students
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1AhTz7lJgvYOs0slyYNfcPMtqQfWXAKn2G_HlQ2OkAEc
Sea Rescue. Full length documentary
https://youtu.be/Wa1NrfNQxWM
Shipyard Tools Tour, Mystic Seaport
https://stories.mysticseaport.org/shipyard-tools-tour-digital-museum/
Sludge, The Robert MacNeil Report, 1976
https://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip_507-9c6rx94090#at_904.679_s
Tanker Turning on the KVK (4:19)
McAllister Tugs turning an oil tanker from the berth at IMTT Bayonne NJ and out to sea.
The Charles W. Morgan, Telemark Films, 2014
Story about America’s last wooden whale ship and the incredible saga of the first global industry dominated by America.
The Fight for Maritime Unity, National Maritime Union ca. 1947.
NYU Preservation YouTube channel
Starts with an introduction by the head of the National Maritime Union, listing the goals of the union and a call for unity among all the unions in the industry. References to the merchant marines during WWII; longshoremen loading bulk cargo; chipping, scrapping and painting; heroes yesterday, bums today, the broken strike of 1921; “getting my coffee and doughnuts and praying in the mission”; “shipping crimps” (racketeers who controlled access to shipping jobs, often operated out of rooming houses – the seaman often ended up with a job but no pay to keep at the end of his stint); the shape up “a nightmare of intimidation and insecurity”; industrial unionism; 1934 West Coast waterfront strike; Marine Federation of the Pacific; victory; rotary hiring system; the need for greater unity to maintain and expand gains. Music by Pete Seeger and Joe Jaffe,
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2XIthhMpDc0&feature=youtu.be&mc_cid=7ac6d0e550&mc_eid=48691e2a2e
The Old Tugboat That Still Can, NYC Lens (Columbia University) ca. 2012
“The only thing that's changed about the 54-year-old steel tug Thornton Bros. is the crew that guides her through the choppy waters of New York Harbor”.
The Real McCoy, Telemark Films (56 minutes)
The story of Bill McCoy, the pioneer rum runner of the Prohibition era, who fuelled the Roaring Twenties by transporting over 2 million bottles of "un-cut" alcohol to the Speakeasies of New York. McCoy never broke the law or diluted his alcohol, earning the name “The Real McCoy.” - Winner of 5 Emmy® Awards.
The Revolutionary River, Telemark Films, 2009
The story of the Schuylkill River National and State Heritage Area, known as “The Revolutionary River” due to its involvement in the American Revolution, Industrial Revolution and Environmental Revolution.
The Salvage Prince, 1979 (22:22)
“This is a documentary short filmed in 1979 about my parents, Jock, and the late Suzanna Brandis. I was told it was unavailable for purchase after so many years, so I wanted to share it with friends and family. Three intrepid individuals undertake the restoration of an old tugboat destined for the scrapyard. Through great inventiveness, they slowly rebuild it from recycled and scavenged materials.
From a rusted hulk, it becomes a home, albeit without the luxuries. This documentary is as much an account of their life on and around the tug as a lyrical record of how they restored its battered hide.”
Timelapse videos of wharves, beaches and containerports by Keith Loutit, Sydney Australia
Bathtub II, 2008
Bathtub III, 2008
Bathtub V, 2009
https://vimeo.com/5137183
The North Wind Blew South, 2008
Traditions: Curtis Creek Ship Graveyard, Human Being Productions.(1:48)
Archaeologist documenting a ship graveyard in Maryland
https://vimeo.com/307756699
Traditions: Tugboats On The Harbor. Human Being Productions.
“Drinking a beer at Ó Flynn’s on Hanover Street is where we met Captain Mark Stephen Rooney of McAllister Towing of Baltimore. There, he started to tell us all about his life growing up near the Port of Baltimore and the path that led him to becoming a Baltimore Tugboat Captain.”
Tugs. By Jessica Edwards, Narratively, 2011
Profile of Millers Launch, includes footage of the annual Tugboat Race
“The waterways are the city's sixth borough, with history, industry and recreation that are largely overlooked by most New Yorkers. Profiling the humble tugboat was my way of showcasing this unheralded part of the city.”
https://narratively.com/tugs/ and https://vimeo.com/50619799
US Army Divers’ School, 1957
https://vimeo.com/408430168
Using the Standard Deep Sea Diving Outfit - US Navy Training Film MN-9915c, 1966
Workhorses of the Harbor, ca. 1940
Tug dispatchers in NY 1940s
https://vimeo.com/113807700
Yacht Building; Maine Public Broadcasting, American Archive of Public Broadcasting, 1983
The making of a fiberglass yacht
Callahead Nautical Themed Video Intro
Mutiny on the Bounty with Captain Ringo Bligh, The Beatles (cartoon) 1962
Silly cartoon in which Ringo dreams he is Captain Bligh, and the Beatles sing “Chains”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tE6aJp0EIW4
Octapodi (cartoon), 2008
Octopus, short animation film, award winning. Not science.
http://www.oktapodi.com
Yellow Submarine, The Beatles
The song, not the whole movie, but using the art.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m2uTFF_3MaA
These tours allow one to look around in all directions. Some have points to click on for more information while others are just unguided explorations. They can be viewed on a computer screen or on a phone, some with differing effects. [Also see the related Google Expeditions section.]
S.S. Thistlegorm. Tour the wreck of this ship that sunk in the Red Sea.
This video was captured and produced as part of The Thistlegorm Project, an initiative by Nottingham University, An Shams University and Alexandria University, funded by the British Council and Newton Fund.
https://thethistlegormproject.com/360-underwater-video/
Virtual dive with sea lions in Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary
One of the narrated offerings of NOAA's Office of National Marine Sanctuaries Virtual Dives website.
https://sanctuaries.noaa.gov/vr/
https://sanctuaries.noaa.gov/vr/channel-islands/virtual-dive-with-sea-lions.html
JOIDES Resolution Research Vessel Tours
https://joidesresolution.org/about-the-jr/jr-vessel-tour/
See where the ship is now with MarineTraffic.com
A virtual tour of a replica of James Cook's HMB Endeavor, owned by the Australian National Maritime Museum. 360 degree views of the ship and seaport from numerous vantage points within and without. Clickable points for more information and a virtual tour guide pops up at various locations; by the mast she talks about lightning strikes and exploding masts.
https://www.sea.museum/anmm_files/VirtualEndeavour/Virtual-Endeavour.html
Stan Tug 1907, a model of tug built by the Netherlands based, Damen Shipyards.
http://virtualtours.damen.com/damen-stu1907/stu1907.html
Maersk Inventor, an offshore support vessel. 360 degree walk through. No descriptions.
https://avcimmedia.com/MaerskInventorWalkthrough/
See where it is now with MarineTraffic.com
Nourish: A 360° Video Poem ( Baltic Sea), an Environment and Society offering
http://www.environmentandsociety.org/exhibitions/360o-visual-journey/nourish-360deg-video-poem-baltic-sea
Noble's Houseboat Studio - The Noble Maritime Collection
http://www.noblemaritime.org/houseboat-studio
Robbins Reef Lighthouse - The Noble Maritime Collection
Salt Symbiosis on the Black Sea (Bulgaria), an Environment and Society offering.
http://www.environmentandsociety.org/exhibitions/360o-visual-journey/salt-symbiosis-black-sea-bulgaria
Google Earth – the World's Oceans
This is self-described as “Street View” for the oceans. Various spots around the globe with e underwater places one can move around in. https://earth.google.com/web/@1.88301841,-46.619023,-1114.05572934a,46340242.7790928d,35y,0.0000003h,0.00001646t,0r/data=Ci4SLBIgNjZlNzQ1NjM3OGMwMTFlOGJmMTZhMTM2MjYyMmZhYjAiCG92ZXJ2aWV3
Virtual Erie Canal, Tugster: A Waterblog
scenes from the sixth boro and gallivants beyond by any and all the crew
”My information and photos result from working on the Canal for five of the past six years, returning there with a camera and drone in the off season, and lots of reading and conversation, all making an ongoing accretion of familiarity.” https://tugster.wordpress.com/virtual-canal-guide/
Boat Courses – learn proper and safe boating. National Association of State Boating Law Administrators
https://www.nasbla.org/education/taking-a-boat-course
“Bizarre Spinosaurus makes history as first known swimming dinosaur”
National Geographic, April 29, 2020
A newfound fossil tail from this giant predator stretches our understanding of how—and where—dinosaurs lived.
Build Your Own Olympia! 1896 paper cut out to make at home.
Independence Seaport Museum
https://phillyseaport.org/images/Education/olympia%20model%20kit.pdf
Ernst Haeckel, Kunst-Formen der Natur (Art Forms in Nature) 1899
The drawings in Ernst Haeckel's Kunst-Formen der Natur inspired early 20th-century art, architecture, and design particularly the Art Nouveau movement. His work brings science and art together. The Bryozoa on plate 23 is worth seeing, but then it all is.
https://archive.org/details/KunstformenDerNaturErnstHaeckel/page/n23/mode/2up
How a Nuclear Submarine Officer Learned to Live in Tight Quarters: You get comfortable being uncomfortable.
By Steve Weiner April 9, 2020
http://nautil.us/issue/84/outbreak/how-a-nuclear-submarine-officer-learned-to-live-in-tight-quarters?utm_source=pocket-newtab
Hudson River Sloop Clearwater has started making YouTube educational videos during the Covid19 shutdown. (Told more are on the way.)
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrwbzv9MBhRjOvx1rsjzOcQ
MarineTraffic - the world’s leading provider of ship tracking and maritime intelligence. Membership is required to get specifics of ships, but a lot of information is freely available. Recommend looking at the “Live Map.” A great way to get a perspective on global shipping, or just have fun moving around the oceans and clicking onicons of random ships to see who they are.
https://www.marinetraffic.com/
[Marine Traffic generously provides ship tracking information to PortSide NewYork's e-musuem RedHookWaterstories.org, which seamlessly explores the neighborhood’s land and water.}
NASA's Ocean Data – for academics or academically minded (or just good to look at).
https://earthdata.nasa.gov/learn/discipline/ocean
NASA Scientific Visualization Studio
Ocean Color Image Gallery link: https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/search/?search=gene+feldman&sort_by=relevance
NASA's World View – for academics or academically minded (or just good to look at). Visually explore the past and the present of this dynamic planet from a satellite's perspective. See, for example, glaciers and hurricanes. https://worldview.earthdata.nasa.gov/
Sea-Fever blog
Exploring maritime culture, history and heritage. The blog goes back over 10 years and includes links to many interesting maritime videos (most of the links still work, too).
Thirty-six Thousand Feet Under the Sea: The explorers who set one of the last meaningful records on earth.
By Ben Taub. Photographs by Paolo Pellegrin. The New Yorker, May 10, 2020
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2020/05/18/thirty-six-thousand-feet-under-the-sea
When A Flu Reined In New York, April 28, 2020 New York State Parks
https://nystateparks.blog/2020/04/28/when-a-flu-reined-in-new-york…
Camille Casaretti, President of the Community Education Council 15 (CEC15), stopped by to see how the sign and map could be used for educating school groups. She was greeted by PortSide Executive Director Carolina Salguero dressed as Bio Luminesence and PortSide Historian and Curator Peter Rothenberg.
On the 7th anniversary of hurricane Sandy, October 29, 2019, PortSide NewYork unveiled a Sandy High Water Mark sign at the pedestrian entrance to Atlantic Basin/NYC Ferry/Brooklyn Cruise Terminal in Red Hook, Brooklyn.
PortSide’s role in the creation of the Sandy High Water Mark FEMA/OEM program
Creating Sandy high water mark signs was a PortSide proposal at the White House event where we received our Champions of Change award for Sandy work. The structure of the award event was to put all the honorees on a panel and pepper us with questions to harvest ideas. The senior Federal Disaster Recovery team sought a follow-up with PortSide and come to meet us for many hours aboard the MARY WHALEN. According to Ken Curtin, the Federal Disaster Recovery Coordinator FEMA for Sandy in NY (see his video below), PortSide was the first to propose such a sign program. FEMA executed the idea and created the Sandy High Water Mark program, and NYC Emergency Management is now involved in the program.
PortSide also unveiled a banner with a map of Red Hook Sandy flooding made by a local cartographer Jim McMahon. See a copy in our e-museum here.
Carolina Salguero, Executive Director of PortSide NewYork, articulating the message from Bio Luminescence, a costume worn for Red Hook Barnacle Parade, commemorating Sandy, as well as the unveiling of a sign marking Sandy’s high watermark. The parade followed shortly after.
Assistant Commissioner Christina Farrell, NYC Emergency Management speaks. October 29, 2019.
Ken Curtin, recently retired FEMA Federal Disaster Recovery Coordinator speaking. He explained the backstory that led to the creation of the program that makes these signs, citing PortSide’s role in that story.
Carolina Salguero, Executive Director of PortSide NewYork (and Bio Luminescence for Red Hook's commemorative Barnacle Parade), speaks. October 29, 2019
PortSide NewYork's unveils a sign marking the high watermark at Red Hook's Atlantic Basin during hurricane Sandy on its seventh anniversary. Natasha Campbell, Founder of Summit Academy and PortSide NewYork board member, speaks. October 29, 2019
Unveiling the Sandy High Water Mark sign and a Sandy hurricane flood map of Red Hook by cartographer by Jim McMahon.
Dan Wiley, Congresswoman Nydia M. Velázquez's District Director of Southwest Brooklyn, speaks. October 29, 2019
Copied below
Press Release Unveiling of Atlantic Basin Sandy High Water Mark sign Red Hook Sandy Flood Map
Tues 10/29, 3:15-3:45pm
Unveiling of Atlantic Basin Sandy High Water Mark sign Red Hook Sandy Flood Map
Pedestrian gate to Atlantic Basin/NYC Ferry/Brooklyn Cruise Terminal
West end of Pioneer Street at Conover Street, Red Hook, Brooklyn, NY 11231
Followed by 4pm Barnacle Parade which musters at Pioneer and Van Brunt, one block away.
On the 7th anniversary of hurricane Sandy, October 29, 2019, the nonprofit PortSide NewYork will unveil a Sandy High Water Mark sign at the pedestrian entrance to Atlantic Basin/NYC Ferry/Brooklyn Cruise Terminal in Red Hook, Brooklyn. This sign is an official program of FEMA and NYC Emergency Management. Sandy’s surge was 5.75 feet high at this location.
PortSide will also unveil a banner with a map of Red Hook Sandy flooding made by a local cartographer Jim McMahon. See a copy in our e-museum at https://redhookwaterstories.org/items/show/919.
Immediately after the unveiling, joins us in Red Hook’s Barnacle Parade that kicks off at 4:00pm half a block up Pioneer Street and proceeds to pass the new signs. This parade is the way Red Hook memorializes Sandy since 2013 on the “Sandyversary” of 10/29.
Carolina Salguero, Founder and Executive Director of PortSide says “After riding out hurricane Sandy on our ship to protect her from the storm, I and our Historian/Curator Peter Rothenberg came ashore to Red Hook. I was heartbroken to find the condition of our community. I told the PortSide crew that we’re going to try and help. Our first move was to set up a pop-up aid station at Realty Collective which we ran the month of October. PortSide has worked since that time, in many ways, to help Red Hook recover and become more resilient and to help foster resiliency for New York as a whole. Understanding the potential of our waterways is the crux of PortSide’s mission, and Sandy amplified our mission to include understanding marine weather and the destructive potential of water. This year, PortSide’s resiliency work includes the installation of this Sandy High Water Mark sign, and next to it, the Red Hook Sandy flood map created by Jim McMahon that shows where Sandy flooded Red Hook and land elevation around our beloved but vulnerable peninsula. I hope that these signs will help educate students and adults and help them prepare for future floods.”
The unveiling of these signs sign is another phase in PortSide’s recovery and resiliency planning work since hurricane Sandy. PortSide received a “Champions of Change” award from the Obama White House for Sandy prevention work (protection the MARY A. WHALEN) and Sandy recovery work for Red Hook.
https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/champions/hurricane-sandy/carolina-salguero-(portside-newyork)
The New York State Senate also honored PortSide for their Sandy recovery work.
https://www.nysenate.gov/legislation/resolutions/2013/j2531
PortSide founder Carolina Salguero was appointed by the Governor’s office to the NY Rising committee (the precursor to Resilient Red Hook) that created a resiliency plan for Red Hook. For further information about Sandy and resiliency planning, visit PortSide’s e-museum Red Hook WaterStories (RHWS) www.redhookwaterstories.org
Rep. Nydia M. Velázquez (D-NY):
“Today, seven years to the day Superstorm Sandy hit, we remember the damage our entire community endured and how we came together to help one another. This high-water mark sign sends a message that we must all continue to build community resiliency and fight climate change. I would also like to recognize PortSide NewYork’s role in Sandy recovery for which it received the White House ‘Champions of Change’ award in 2013. PortSide dreamed up a project like High Water Mark Initiative which FEMA created and NYC Emergency Management has been implementing here and around the city. This program helps alert residents and visitors alike to the dangers of storm surge and the need to be ready with a plan for the next storm. For my part, I will keep working with officials at all levels of government to promote Red Hook and our City’s resiliency and sustainability.”
New York State Senator Velmanette Montgomery says, "The Barnacle Parade represents the strength of Red Hook in the wake of super storm Sandy and serves as a reminder to all of us how climate change impacts our communities more and more each year. I am proud to represent Red Hook residents and organizations like PortSide New York who took this as a call to action and have been working tirelessly to build a more resilient community."
Councilman Carlos Menchaca says, "Red Hook’s water mark sign is a reminder of our community's resilience and how much more is needed to prepare for the next storm. The symbolic gesture must force us all to take seriously the urgency of this moment, and to do everything in our power to protect our most vulnerable neighbors from the worst effects of climate change. Thankfully, we have organizations like PortSide New York to keep us laser focused on this threat while celebrating what we've accomplished."
NYC Emergency Management Commissioner Deanne Criswell: “This High Water Mark sign is a reminder of the life-threatening risks associated with storm surge. It also highlights the strength of the Red Hook community, and serves to educate individuals about the importance of preparing for a coastal storm,” said NYC Emergency Management Commissioner Deanne Criswell. “Through this and other initiatives, we remain dedicated to working closely with community leaders to build a culture of preparedness through stronger, more resilient neighborhoods.”
Ken Curtin, formerly of FEMA says “I was the FEMA Federal Disaster Recovery Coordinator for Sandy in NY. We came to meet the PortSide team in Red Hook since we were impressed with the recovery and resiliency ideas that they shared at the White House ceremony where they won a Sandy recovery award. Their ideas were practical, actionable and common sense, except that common sense is not so common any more. PortSide proposed that signs be installed to mark Sandy flood levels to help communities prepare for future floods. I’m glad that this program was implemented by FEMA and then adopted by NYC Emergency Management.”
Gita Nandan, co-chair of Resilient Red Hook says, “We are thrilled about the installation of the high water mark sign. Having a physical marker in remembrance of Super Storm Sandy helps keep the memory alive of this turning point in Red Hook. As a waterfront community, Red Hook is on the forefront of climate change, and this will help keep us activated to ensure we build a resilient community for future generations.” Resilient Red Hook is made up of concerned residents working together to steer the future of Red Hook. More at https://www.resilientredhook.org/
Michael Racioppo, District Manager, Brooklyn Community Board 6 says, “The high water mark high of Superstorm Sandy is something that should remind us throughout the year, not just during Halloween week, how scary the impact of climate change is. Reminding us to be vigilant in order to maintain great waterfront, and great waterfront neighborhoods, is the continuation of the work PortSide does.”
About PortSide NewYork www.portsidenewyork.org & www.redhookwaterstories.org
PortSide is a living lab for better urban waterways. PortSide connects New Yorkers to the benefits of our waterways and ports. PortSide produces WaterStories programs on and off the historic ship MARY A. WHALEN in education, culture, resiliency and job training.
# # #
10/27/19 We are reposting this 2013 blogpost to foster flood preparation. The post describes four days of preparing for Sandy. Today’s gale and the approaching date of 10/29 is reminding us of Sandy - and we want you to know about PortSide’s event on 10/29/19 at 3:15pm, the unveiling of a Sandy High Water Mark sign at the pedestrian entrance to Atlantic Basin, Red Hook, Brooklyn, corner of Pioneer and Conover Streets. At 4pm, the Barnacle Parade kicks off up the block. The parade is the way Red Hook commemorates Sandy since the one-year anniversary of the devastating storm.
This is PortSide NewYork's hurricane Sandy story, installment one.
Installment one is a personal report by Carolina Salguero, Director of PortSide, speaking as Shipkeeper of the MARY A. WHALEN. This installment covers PortSide's time in port preparing for Sandy, riding out the storm on the tanker, assessing our damage. We think the ship-related segment of our Sandy story is important because it shows how the maritime community in the port of NY-NJ spent days preparing for Sandy. The maritime community has something to offer inland neighbors in terms of understanding how to assess flood risks and prepare for them.
The second installment of our Sandy story will cover PortSide's effort to help inland Red Hook, Brooklyn recover from the storm.
The third installment will cover lessons learned and ideas for the future.
Thursday, 10/25/12, Sandy minus four, the PortSide crew is excited to be hosting an elementary school class aboard the tanker MARY A. WHALEN. After finishing a TankerTour and jolly lunch for 30 on deck with the City + Country School and waving goodbye to their coach bus, Dan Goncharoff says “have you been looking at this storm coming up the coast?”
C + C School visit, Thursday morning
I check the weather websites. This looks like hurricane Irene plus some.
We convene a crew meeting and start hurricane preparations. School docents become a Sandy prep squad. By end of day, the deck was cleared of anything that could blow, and I am calling and emailing around for crew to help prepare and to ride out the storm on the ship.
Friday morning, after more info about the storm, I am trying to find a protected berth for the tanker MARY A. WHALEN. Just days before, we received word that our application had been accepted; the ship was on the National Register of Historic Places! Since the MARY is not fully restored, she lacks some equipment that would help her in a big storm: a working engine (eg, the ability to run away), machinery to raise her anchors if dropped to hold us in place, and a winch to haul in docklines under load. Compensating for that involves some extra forethought.
Despite our efforts, we can’t find a good alternate berth for the MARY outside of the Red Hook Container Terminal. Hughes Marine says “We’re out of space. You’ll be able to walk across Erie Basin by the time this is over; it will be so full of vessels.” A contact at a shipyard says “we flooded during Irene, and this one looks to be worse, you sure you want to be over here?” “No and good luck,” is my answer.
After more checking of the weather, I decide to move the MARY where she rode out Irene, on the other side, the north side, of our current Pier 9B. (The south side lines up with the end of Degraw Street). For non-sailors, here’s how this kind of calculation goes:
Winds were expected to start from NE, swing around to the East and end up SW, but this could always change. If rough weather were coming from anything west to southwest, our current position has us exposed to the wind from the southwest and the fetch (long stretch of water over which wind can build up waves) from Staten Island up the Buttermilk Channel.
The fendering (the wooden cribbing protecting ship and pier) is not robust on this side. A big advantage to the north side are some pilings at the inshore end that stand much taller than the pier and which would help prevent the tanker from riding up onto the pier if the surge were really high.
The north side would have us more exposed from winds at the start of the storm, but the hill of Brooklyn Heights and the pier to the north of us (even though it has no shed) would provide a compensating wind break.
As the wind clocked around to the south, a wall of containers near the bulkhead would provide a windbreak to the east, and the pier shed would be an enormous windbreak once the wind went south of east.
A final consideration was that in the extreme case of docklines failing while we were on the northside, the tanker had a chance of bouncing around inside the space between the two piers for a while, maybe long enough for us to get other lines out or call for help; whereas, on the southside of the pier, if our docklines broke, tide or wind could shove the ship up on the rocks nearby to the south (surely the death of the tanker) or shoot us down the Buttermilk Channel towards unknown risks.
I began calling tugboat companies to request a tow. Everyone is busy with storm prep so getting a tug takes a while. I have the tug turn the MARY around so her stern faces east, putting her heavier end towards the expected wind direction. Her light bow is my worry.
The tug’s crew helps us put out storm lines, more lines than we would normally use, and double and triple parted lines. (Instead of a line just going from boat to dock, a triple-parted line goes from dock to boat to dock to boat). The lines are set with a lot of slack to allow the boat to rise during the expected surge. During Sandy, Peter Rothenberg and I will go out in the wind and rain to ease the lines as necessary
From Thursday until Monday, a changing array of volunteers bang through a punch list: gangway lashed to the deck. Gas generator moved near entry hatch and tested. Gasoline, food, and water bought. Weepy portholes caulked. PortaSan moved inside the pier shed so it can't blow away.
More calls to look for crew... Commercial boats have paid crew, but most historic vessels rely on a corps of volunteers and; with so many boats to protect, available bodies were scarce. Compounding that, due to the danger, some spouses do not allow their partners to volunteer on the historic ships during the storm. Danger is one thing for paid crew; as a volunteer, it's another.
I ask Peter Rothenberg, our volunteer museum curator, if he wants to be crew. Peter makes a speedy calculation, “I hesitated for a moment, thinking this may be really unwise, and then said yes, probably being more reckless (brave?) than normally, because I had just lost my mother, and thus she was unable to question my judgment.”
Peter Rothenberg
The harbor is abuzz with chatter on phone, email, and texts sharing weather info, plans, moral support. Mike Cohen has info on the South Street Seaport ships. Mike Abegg is dealing with the Harbor School boats. I talk to tug captains and ask Jan Andrusky, Logistics Manager of Weeks Marine, if she can share weather and Coast Guard updates as she had during Irene. Answer, “yes!” Jan is responsible for floating equipment on the eastern seaboard, the Gulf of Mexico, and more, and has lots of experience and access to weather data.
Bobby Silva, captain of a Reinauer barge up in Albany sends a text: “wish I gave you my keys to move my truck. My baby will be a goner.” Other Reinauer crew who have not been sent out of town on vessels moved their vehicles from Erie Basin to the second floor of the garage at the Gowanus Home Depot and all their vehicles survived.
About a day before Sandy hit, the word comes that the surge would be at least 8 feet. Time to lengthen docklines.
A sign that things will be worse than Irene is that the port moves the stack of containers along the bulkhead. My windbreak to the east is gone. We also hear that the Port Authority will evacuate the port and lock the gates at midday before the surge, so there would be no new help getting to us. I ask the Port Authority Police officer if he will leave port if it gets really bad, “no, I will just drive a dump truck on patrol” is his stalwart answer.
Somewhere in all this, there is an announcement that subways would stop running in advance of the storm, and Mayor Bloomberg declares evacuation for Zone A areas, which include our neighborhood of Red Hook. An evacuation order is not changing my plans, though it could limit my getting help.
My mother calls “you’re not staying on the boat during this are you?” My responsibility is to protect the MARY A. WHALEN and to protect her from doing damage to the property of others. AT 172’ long and 613 gross tons, she is big enough to cause a lot of destruction if she breaks loose.
Sandy is due Monday night. Sunday night, I am one of many recipients of an email telling Red Hook people which bars will be open and what movies are being screened. This makes me wonder: Is the community ashore prepping for Sandy? Has anyone evacuated? After that email, PortSide’s maritime world feels separated from our shoreside neighbors by more than six blocks and a fence.
Monday day, the weather rachets up. My weather station is set up in the galley. A laptop, a clipboard with regular print-outs of NOAA marine weather, updates from Jan, the worst news highlighted in yellow. Peter nabs the ship's cat Chiclet and locks her in. As the weather rises, Chiclet cleans herself incessantly.
I read the shocking news that the HMS BOUNTY has sunk in the storm, at sea. I hear from Paul Amico, a dockbuilder advising us, “I just saw a Don Jon tug heading up the North River with waves breaking over the wheelhouse.” That means 18’ waves in the Hudson.
HMS BOUNTY sinks. Photo courtesy of U.S. Coast Guard
It gets colder and damper. I fire up the galley’s diesel stove, patented in 1918, as much to dry the air as to heat it. As winds rise, Peter and out go out to add extra lines to the tarp covering the wheelhouse windows. After warming up over tea, I get word that the surge would be at least 12’ and would hit in about 5 hours, right at high tide.
12’ is NOT good news. I am keen to keep the ship’s light bow from blowing or floating up onto the pier, my big worry during Irene, a risk to both boat and pier. The MARY’s stern is heavy and sits about 8’ in the water whereas her bow is actually up out of the water -- the forward engine room has been stripped, the forepeak has no ballast water, and she is carrying no cargo. Paul Amico calls, “have you considered a preventer line?” Yes. I turn to Peter, “time to go back out, time for a preventer line.”
We run a line to Pier 9A, the pier 265 feet to the north of us. We have a large collection of lightly-used docklines from tugboat friends. I bend together (that means tie together in mariner speak) two heavy eight-braid tug hawsers, and then add all our other dock lines. To drag this through the water, we tie together an agglomeration of light line (rope) and hand-haul the collection around to the other pier.
We are making the line off to a cleat on Pier 9A as the waters start to rise fast. While heading back to the tanker, the waters crest the bulkhead and pool into the port.
The string piece of the pier is several feet higher than the port landmass, which gives us about 5 minutes to disconnect our shorepower cord, pull it up onto the boat, haul in the ladder, and start the generator.
Somehow, between unplugging the shorepower from the shed and getting the cord onto the shed, our electrical system develops a short. This means the generator turns off every time I plug in the shorepower cord. Peter then runs an extension cord to the generator to keep the laptop and mini fridge running.
So begins 35 nights, of relying on flashlights and one 15-amp extension cord, until our shorepower connection can be repaired.
The waters rise. The port’s exterior lights go out. A container lifts and bobs our way. Humps appear in the water along the pier, like a long Loch Ness monster. I realize I am looking at all the tire fenders floating as high as their straps would allow. Somehow the overhead lights inside the shed stay on, and the windows in the doors afford the surreal view of an indoor sea.
Peter and I watch orange bursts of light over Manhattan. “Probably transformer explosions,” I say. Manhattan goes dark. I watch the water for several hours to make sure it isn’t rising and then sleep for several hours.
Lower Manhattan without power except at Staten Island Ferry Terminal. Jersey to the left, midtown to the right.
Upsticking bolts show where head logs were ripped off the pier by Sandy.
Tuesday’s plan is to shorten the docklines and get off the boat; but the wind is still so high that, even though the shed is a windbreak, the wind roaring over the shed is enough to grab the tippy top of the tanker and push us off the pier. The ebb tide pushes us back onto the pier, and we pull in a little line; then the wind blows us off again. Given how many lines we had out and that they were double and triple parted and since we don’ have a working winch, it takes us three hours of floating back and forth to shorten all the lines and get the boat to the pier.
I get a few worried calls and emails asking us if the MARY is aground. Perplexing, until I learn that a similar tanker, the JOHN B. CADDELL, is aground on Staten Island, a cautionary tale of what can happen if a ship is not well tended before and during such a storm.
This is not us! Tanker JOHN B. CADDELL aground on Staten Island. Via Twitter
At dusk, some volunteers make it in. Jenny Kane, Amy Bucciferro, Paul Amico after inspecting the damage at the DUMBO ferry dock.
I tell Peter that PortSide had historic documents stored in one room in the shed.
Peter looks startled, then irked at me and, as he told us weeks later, “This was news to me and I scrambled to rescue what I could. Unlike riding out a storm on a ship, dealing with wet paper artifacts I was familiar with. I had worked in museums for years, with collections stored in leaky basements, and had rescued a lot of paper ephemera after 9/11. Fearing fused wet paper and mold, I turned the tables on Carolina and charged her to get as many dry sheets and towels as she could find fast.”
PortSide's archive of historic documents is somewhere beneath all this.
I kick in the door to the stevedore's lounge, and we all schlepp tables up the stevedore’s lounge (I find the height of the second floor oddly comforting after the flood). Modern books we junk. Peter begins a painstaking process of separating wet papers, blueprints and photographs, blotting them dry, interleaving them with sheets, weighing them down. I am bushed and crash into my bunk.
Peter works until 4 am, bringing things aboard and slowly toasting some near the galley stove.
Over the next several days, Peter covers most horizontal surfaces in the tanker with drying antique documents. “Some of the blue prints lost most of their blue to the water, and the modern pulp paper fared worse than the rag paper of the 1800s but in the end most of the important items in the collection, if a little worse for wear, were salvaged.”
Wednesday, the Halloween that never was, Peter and I head into the shed to inspect more things.
The hard-to-find vintage engine parts that could repair MARY’s engine have been submerged. Ditto all the historic artifacts from Todd Shipyard. Ditto our electrical transformer.
I make some calls and am told to douse the transformer in fresh water, dry it, and then spray it heavily with di-electric cleaner. We retrieve buckets of water from our rain barrels (there is no running water connection to the ship) and pour them over the transformer. I locate one outlet with power (which blessedly worked for a few days), plug in a fan and park it in front of the transformer. (10/27/19 update: The treatment above worked. We are still using this transformer!)
Drying our rinsed transformer. We were so lucky! Right after several days of drying, the power in the outlet went out. The ebbing waters pinned lots of dunnage around our transformer.
The engine parts are beyond us, and we turn to the artifacts.
Once upon a time, Peter had carefully wrapped each one in paper and identified each with a number and a photo. That labeling system is gone. We unwrap it all and leave stuff to air out. I console myself with the thought that shipyard artifacts have likely been wet before.
An email arrives saying Red Hook restaurants are cooking their food at a community BBQ rather than have it be wasted, BYO charcoal, and Peter and I bike into Red Hook toting some charcoal.
I leave the port with my spirits high. The ship is fine, the artifact loss was minimal. Irene had been a great preparatory experience; we had survived Sandy.
A few blocks down Van Brunt my spirits drop. I was a photojournalist for some 15 years and worked in rough places overseas, and I recognize the signs of disaster. A burm of garbage three to four feet high lines Van Brunt Street. Dazed and muddy people mill around at the corner of Pioneer Street amid the clatter of generators and a tangle of electrical cords.
Peter remarks that it looks like a macabre Christmas. Santas, which had been stored in cellars, are now muddy and atop garbage heaps, or, at the bar Bait and Tackle, set up by the door like a dark joke. In short, the mess ashore is bad, much worse than the damage to PortSide NewYork. I immediately decide that PortSide should come ashore to help our neighbors.
More on that in the next installment.
PortSide NewYork would like to thank the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey for their support during Hurricane Sandy while we were in their Red Hook port.
For our latest Sandy relief info, see our blogpost, follow us on Twitter.
Additional reporting and editing by Dan Goncharoff and Peter Rothenberg.
The kind of thing we prevented: how a vessel went up on a pier during Sandy.
Photo by Frank Yacino, crewmember of tug KRISTY ANN REINAUER
After seven months of PortSide programs with PS 676 in Red Hook, Brooklyn, this K-5 school has decided to become a maritime STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Art, Math) school—the FIRST public elementary school in Brooklyn with a maritime focus! Here’s how this came to be, with info about PortSide programs with PS 676 and how students and community benefit. At the bottom is a list of ways you can support and get involved.
Read MorePortSide is pleased to have participated in the first "NYC Poets Afloat," the brainchild of poet-paddler-preservationist Brad Vogel, as part of National Poetry Month. We hosted two poets, Stefan D-W and Michelle Yasmine Valladares, aboard our tanker MARY A. WHALEN. Our Captain’s Cabin was theirs to use. A total of four historic vessels were involved in “NYC Poets Afloat,” and a reading was held on the South Street Seaport Museum vessel WAVERTREE on Sunday, May 19, 2019. More about the program in the press release.
The photo above right shows Stefan D-W studying our anchor winch which appears as a pivot point in his poem “Xmas: on the rocks” invoking tankers, fuel, oil spills, age, youth and our own mortality inspired by the MARY A. WHALEN’s famously going aground on the Rockaways in 1968. Our maritime library is a springboard for the ruminations of his second poem “Slocum & Distracted by the Library.”
Michele’s poem “Home, Again” evokes the personal inner seas of the womb and the blood circling within us, and her verse flows outward to include the huge spaces of the Atlantic and our “floating city” and evoke our oneness with the global.
Here are the poems inspired by the tanker MARY A. WHALEN:
More about Michelle and Stefan:
Michelle Yasmine Valladares is a poet and filmmaker. She is the author of Nortada, The North Wind (Global City Press). Her awards include “The Poet of the Year” by the Americas Poetry Festival of New York. Her poems have been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Her new manuscript First Map of Her New World, includes poems on Vasco da Gama’s journey from India to Portugal, stowaways and cartographers. She was thrilled to be one of the resident poets included in NYC Poets Afloat on the MARY A. WHALEN. She is currently the Director of the MFA Program in Creative Writing at The City College of New York, CUNY in Harlem.
Stefan D-W’s poetry and songs are rarely seen or heard. He included verse in the plays he wrote for children at Touchstone Theatre in Bethlehem, PA and as Director of Education at Spokane Civic Theatre. Stefan performs his songs and poetry at Thicket in Williamsburg and at an annual fundraising event in Brooklyn. He recently completed a series of 57 poems on utopia. His essays on New York maritime history are a regular feature in Waterwire. A native of Staten Island, Stefan took the ferry to school for kindergarten and first grade. He started working in museums in his early teens, including vessel operations at the National Canal Museum. From 2011-2014 he worked at the Center for Wooden Boats in Seattle where he lived aboard a sailboat with his cat. In 2019 he produced a series of boat tours and performances celebrating the Erie Canal bicentennial in New York Harbor and the Resilient River Festival of dance and science in a changing ecosystem at West Harlem Piers. He is the Seamen’s Church Institute’s Associate Archivist and also works at the Waterfront Museum.
PortSide’s next artist in residence is Donna Maria deCreeft who will use the Captain’s cabin and deck spaces during June 2019 as a studio to further her work inspired by diatoms, single cell algae. Stay tuned!
UPS wants to tear down the former foundry building with ties to Red Hook’s proud maritime past. But the needs of the future can be accommodated without obliterating all of the past.
Read MoreGet your testimony ready! Two big waterfront items being discussed at the NYC City Council, Wednesday, 4/17/19. Creating a new Office of the Waterfront? Creating a new Director of Ferries and moving NYC Ferry control from the NYC EDC to the NYC DOT?
Read MorePortSide partners with Red Hook's P.S. 676, provides programs for all grades.
Read MorePortSide NewYork’s 2019 Black History Month program about African American Maritime History (#AfAmMH) is all digital since we have no building space for public programs. We will be posting to our Facebook pages, Twitter and Instagram and updating this blogpost with content over the month. Please send us ideas, comment and share.
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