Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Carroll A. Deering

AS STRANGE AS THE “MARY CELESTE,” AND ONE OF THE MOST ACTED UPON MYSTERIES OF the sea, is the case of the deserted five-masted schooner Carroll A. Deering. Returning to Maine from Rio de Jenairo,  the Deering stopped over at Barbados on January 9, 1921. She was next to be seen off the North Carolina coast by the Cape Lookout Lightship on January 29 at 4:30 p.m.. On the morning of January 31, the  Carroll A. Deering was found hard aground on Diamond Shoals, North Carolina. The ship was in a strange state of desertion; the eleven crew had vanished.

The launching of the Carroll A. Deering at Bathe, Maine in 1919. Courtesy of the descendants of Carroll A. Deering

The Carroll A. Deering was built in Bathe, Maine, in 1919 by the G.G. Deering company. She was a huge five-masted schooner designed for cargo service, and was christened after G.G. Deering's son, Carroll.  

As with many great mysteries, her last voyage started with several twists of fate that might have contributed to the mysterious fate of her crew.

In August 1920 the ship was preparing to set sail from Norfolk, Virginia, with a cargo of coal bound for Rio De Jenairo.  The captain was William M. Merritt. He signed on his son, S.E. Merritt, as first mate. The rest of the crew were soon hired for the trek and signed their names on the articles as Merritt wrote down a complete description. S.E. Merritt was first, his birthplace was: “Maine. Age 29, Height 5.10; Complexion: Med; Hair: Brown.” His wages per month were to be 215$, a hundred of which was to go to his mother. 

Next to scribble their names down were: Johan Fredrickson of Finland, age: 48, height: 5.6; complexion: ruddy; hair, same; $135 per month. A barely legible hand next signed his name J.A. Benjamin of the French West Indies: Age 51; Height 5.9; description: blond; $150 per month. Next: Herbert R. Bates, also of Maine, age 33, height 5.7; complexion: Fair; hair: Light; $150 per month.

Next was the first Dane to sign on board the Deering: N.P. Nielson. All the rest of the crew were from Denmark. Nielson was 24, at 5.5, Fair and Brown. He would receive, as all the Danes would, $100 per month. Niels Olsen: 30, 5.10, Fair, Brown. S. Christian Pedersen: 26, 5.5, Dark, Brown. Peter Sorensen: 19, 5.5, Fair, Brown. Alfred Jorgensen: 24, 5.2, Light, Light. Hans Carl Jensen: 18, 5.9, Light, Light. 

The crew had just enough time to get off any letters to their families before they left for the remainder of the year on the long sea voyage. Peter Sorensen wrote his family in Denmark:

                             Newport News, August 22, 1921.
   Dear All          
             I will just write a few words to let you know that I am all right and
         that I went ashore from Negros and was signed on an American schooner
         bound for Rio de Jenairo with bunkers, and I suppose it will take about
         a month before we return to Newport News; then I shall send home some
         money and I hope the rate of  exchange will be as favorable as now when we
         come back. I make 100 dollars a month as sailor, which in Danish money will
         amount to as much as Kr. 680. I know of nothing else to write this time so
         will close.
                 Many greetings, son and brother
                                 P. Sorensen
P.S. Write soon
5 M. Sehr
Adr. Carol B. Dering.*
Rio de Jenairo.                        Brasil.



Displaying the Carroll A. Deering burgee in April 1940.  The actual Carroll A. Deering, the son of Gardner Deering and namesake of the vessel, stands at left. Courtesy of the descendants of Carroll A. Deering.


  The Carroll A. Deering then set sail and departed Norfolk in late August. In a bad twist of fate, Captain Merritt was taken suddenly ill and the Deering had to put in at Lewes, Delaware. The sickness was worse than thought, much worse in fact. Merritt could not longer continue with the voyage and left ship. Naturally, S.E. Merritt also left to dutifully attend to his father, leaving the Deering without master and mate.

Deering, in later life. Courtesy of the descendants of Carroll A. Deering



The G.G. Deering company rushed to get a new captain. His name was Willis B. Wormell, a very distinctive looking man of age 66. At 6.1 and 198 pounds he was bigger than any of his crew; he was born in Lubec, Maine, on September 16, 1854. His hair was light “. . .with a prominent streak of gray, slightly wavy.” His eyes were blue. He had a light mustache. His forehead was described as “strong and high,” his teeth  “. . . somewhat yellow from tobacco; one tooth noticeable for a large gold filling   . . . Large frame, well filled out. Round shoulders, one shoulder especially rounded.” He also had a ridge on his thumb nail. He was considered a religious man and a very reliable captain that adhered to the old standards of the sea.

He also had one peculiarity which was especially noticeable when slightly nervous or intently watching his men “. . . if they were doing something that did not seem to him quite up to standard.” He would hold his hands at his side, with the palms facing down at the deck and would repeatedly openand shut his hands. He would sometimes do this with his hands “. . .partly behind him. The first shut is rather deliberate, and the successions are quick and closely following one another.” 

Beautiful shot of the Deering at anchor. Courtesy of the descendants of Carroll A. Deering

Since the first mate had also left, this entailed a search for a replacement. Wormell hired-on a Charles B. McLellan.
     Finally on September 8, the Deering was underway for Rio. Her voyage south apparently went well and she docked at Rio de Jenairo,  where the cargo was unloaded and the men had a liberty.
   Here it is reported that Wormell met an old friend, captain Goodwin. Now we get the first hint of problems aboard the ship. Wormell confided in him that his first mate was worthless and a trouble maker. Fortunately, Herbert Bates, his engineer, was quite reliable. Goodwin agreed, as he knew of Bates. The two parted company, Goodwin wishing his old friend well.

On December 2, 1920, the Carroll A. Deering set sail bound home to Portland, Maine. Trouble apparently began to rise on the way back, and when they docked at Barbados for liberty and supplies,  McLellan proved Wormell right by getting drunk and being locked up. However, Wormell was able to get him out of jail in time to sail. Nevertheless, over some unknown argument, the
ingrate McLellan threatened Wormell's life before they left. They sailed for home on January 9, 1921, with this kind of atmosphere hanging over the ship.


When the schooner was next sighted she was off Cape Lookout Lightship, North Carolina. The date: January 29. The lightship keeper, captain Thomas Jacobson, was hailed by voice by a crewman on the Deering.  Jacobson recalled that he was standing on the quarterdeck. He remembered this so clearly because it was so unusual,  for all the crew were congregated there. Jacobson's description of this particular man later became crucial. He reported that the man shouting at him did not speak, act, nor look like an officer. He was tall, thin, and had reddish hair. This crewman shouted to Jacobson that the Deering had lost her anchors while riding out the gale south at Cape Fear,  please tell the Deering company. This said,  the schooner continued on its way and glided out of sight along the coast.

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Possibly the last photo of Carroll A. Deering, taken as she passed another vessel, perhaps the lightship, only a couple of days before she turned up abondoned. Notice the anchor is missing. Courtesy of the descendants of Carroll A. Deering



  Because the Lightship's radio was out, Jacobson attempted to contact a steamer that passed shortly afterward. As it passed, he blew the whistle of the Lightship which requires a vessel to respond. The vessel, however, which either had no name or the name covered with a tarp,  ignored the horn and continued on its way.

Shrouded in mystery,  at 8:30 a.m. on January 31, the Carroll A. Deering was hard aground on outer Diamond Shoals near Cape Hatteras,  unapproachable due to heavy coastal breakers.  All sails were set; the life boat cables hung at her sides. 

The Coast Guard was quickly notified by the Lighthouse Service. A telegram dated January, 31:
SEND TO  Keeper Coast Guard Station #183
   Five mast schooner southwest point outer Diamond,   looks as if she go ashore.                                                HARRIS,   MASTER
     February 1, the Coast Guard Cutter Seminole arrived,  but due to the pounding surf could not board the vessel. She, too, quickly requested information:
SEND TO Government
February 1, 1921— 10:31
   Request name stranded schooner and whereabouts of crew if known                                                        SEMINOLE
SEND TO Seminole
       Schooner name unknown whereabouts of crew unknown.                                                      Diamond Shoals Lightship
   On February 4, another Coast Guard cutter,  the Manning,  arrived with the tug Rescue. The Deering was finally boarded at 10:30 a.m. by the wrecking crew, which stayed aboard until 4:30 p.m.. On board they found the vessel shipshape, but strangely deserted and quiet except for the usual creaks. Curiously, all articles belonging to the officers and crew were missing. The ship's papers, chronometer, log, and all navigating instruments including the ship's clock were also gone. In the galley they found certain foods soaking in preparation for the next day's meal. The captain's room was also in an interesting condition. It appeared by three different sets of boots that three men had actually shared the cabin before the end. The spare bed was also slept in. The large map, recording the ship's movements, had been marked since the 23rd of January in another hand then Wormell's distinctive handwriting. And as the crew had informed the Lightship, the wreckers noticed that the Deering had lost her anchors. Make-shift anchors, however, had been found in their place. Red lights had been run up the mast,  an indication she was derelict or out of control.
   It didn’t take long for the wrecking crew to determine that the vessel could not be salvaged, and they left the vessel to be pounded into the sea. But before the sea was given its chance,  the Manning attempted to tow the Deering from her place, but due to the rough waters had to cut the towline and destroy the ship by mines. Thus the Carroll A. Deering and her clues perished on March 4, 1921.
   The condition of the Carroll A. Deering required an explanation,  and the investigation that followed was undertaken by 5 separate departments of the U.S. government. And the Secretary of Commerce, Herbert Hoover, took a special interest in the case when it was discovered that no less than nine ships of different nationality and varied courses had disappeared around the same time and in the same area: the sulphur transport s.s. Hewitt with a crew of 42 and captain Hans Jacob Hansen disappeared on a course from Sabine,  Texas, to Portland, Maine,  following a coastline route. Her course and speed put her remarkably close to the Deering. She was last heard from on January 25. She would remain interwoven with the Deering throughout the entire investigation. There were many more: the steamships Monte San Micelle of Italy and Esperanza de Larrinaga of Spain were heading out across the Atlantic to Europe; the tanker Ottawa sailed from Norfolk for Manchester, England, on February 2, with 3,600 tons of reduced Mexican fuel oil; thirty-three crew disappeared with captain Williams. Cargo ship Steinsund; the Italian cargo ship Florino; the Norwegian cargo ship Svartskog; the Danish bark Albyn; and the steamship Yute all vanished in late January or early February. The last heard from any of the vessels was from the Ottawa which was in speaking with the Dorington Court on February 6, 1921.
     The man placed in charge of the investigation was Lawrence Richey,  assistant to Herbert Hoover. All information that eventually came into official hands concerning the derelict was directed to him.
   Richey was particularly interested in the log books of Cape Lookout Lightship and Diamond Shoals Lightship so a definite period of time could be plotted for Deering's movements. The Cape Lookout Light vessel's log was of particular interest as it gave a specific date for spotting the Deering. Captain Thomas Jacobson was also the last witness to see the crew alive. The Log of the Lightship recording in Jacobson's own words the sighting of the schooner:

  4:30 PM. 4 mast schooner Carroll A. Deering, in passing bound North,  reported  having lost both anchors and chains off Frying Pan Shoal, asking to be reported,  but ship's wireless out of commission. Was unable to get in touch with passing vessels.
     One of these vessels to which Jacobson alluded became a center for speculation when he later said that it was a steamship and its name could not be discerned and that it failed to notice or respond to the Lightship's whistle, which can be heard for 5 miles.
   It has been suggested in several theories that perhaps the “nameless ship” was a rum-runner coming in to drop liquor along the coast and did not wish,  for obvious reasons, to recognize the Lightship's attempt to hail her, or more importantly to be recognized herself. Developing this mystery vessel's role even further, it is wondered if this vessel was not in fact, for some illegal reason, responsible for the dereliction of the Deering,  or at least picked up her crew and were forced to kill them to keep their racket of landing illegal liquor inviolable.
   It was also proposed that this unidentified steamship was in fact the Hewitt,  and she simply failed to notice the whistle of the Lightship. The log does state “vessels,”  and the Hewitt may simply have been the only vessel whose name was undiscernible.  A sidelight to this proposal is that Jacobson never reported seeing the Hewitt pass his Lightship.
     Reports of piracy quickly found there was into the press as the only excuse to cause all these disappearances: “VANISHED FLEET MYSTERY EVER, OFFICIALS FEAR,” read the New York Times for June 23, 1921. The commissioner of Navigation was quoted as saying: “I have heard many tall yarns of the sea but in this case the facts are there. The Carroll A. Deering and the Hewitt met some strange fate beyond that of ordinary vessels come to grief.” The English Admiralty wouldn't “flatly” say it was piracy but leaned toward the view.
   Russians became the predominant persons to blame for the missing fleet of ships. It was believed that Red sympathizers had captured the ships and taken them to Russia. It was noted, in a frenzy of debate,  that some of the cargos of the vessels were materials that the Russians could not buy under the embargo on the new Red regime. Rumors were circulated to the effect that vessels which had their names blacked-out were seen at Russian ports.
   But the culprit may also have been a random group of pirates linked to no particular country. According to one popular theory,  the vessel responsible for the piratical attacks might be a submarine that could put into secret ports to replenish its supplies.
   The story of pirates was really started on April 11, 1921, when a man named Christopher Columbus Gray discovered a note in a bottle off North Carolina at Buxton Beach, and reported it to the authorities. The note in the bottle read:
   DEERING CAPTURED BY OIL BURNING BOAT SOMETHING LIKE CHASER. TAKING OFF EVERYTHING HANDCUFFING CREW. CREW HIDING ALL OVER SHIP NO CHANCE TO MAKE ESCAPE. FINDER PLEASE NOTIFY HEADQUARTERS DEERING.
   Herbert Hoover ordered the examining of the cargo lists of the vessels that vanished in order to find the reason for their capture by this modern day “captain Kidd” in his oil burning boat. The Russian angle was to be maintained,  however,  as the FBI, in raiding the headquarters of the United Russian Workers in New York, allegedly came across papers detailing orders to captured American ships and take them to Russia.  The United States Navy was still ordered to look for the crews of the ships until as late as July. The Navy Department was said to lean to the belief that they were not sunk but detained in some secret port.

Riding high at anchor. Courtesy of the descendants of Carroll A. Deering


Whoever had caused these ten ships to disappear, the solution lay between Bolsheviks, Prohibition boozerunners, or a modern day captain Kidd in a sub. There was no easy explanation proposed for only one reason: the Carroll A. Deering. The absence of the crew of a sound and stable ship anchored all the missing vessels together as being of an unusual cause.
   Lula Wormell, the daughter of Willis Wormell, was undertaking an investigation of her own with the aid of the local minister, Rev. Dr. Addison B. Lorimer. Lula Wormell had obtained a  copy of the scribbled note that Gray had discovered at Buxton Beach in April and had some
handwriting experts examine it. This showed that the handwriting on the note did indeed closely match that of Herbert Bates, the Deering's engineer, from examples of his handwriting she obtained from Bates' wife. It might not be considered so coincidental that this was the man that Wormell thought was very reliable. To her the note had to be genuine. Thus a search for the oil burning boat and the culprits responsible was of the highest order to try and locate the crew of the Deering and the other ships. The man who would champion this view was Dr. Lorimer.
   The possibility of pirates was fueled by the genial Reverend on trips to Washington where he inquired of the case, made contacts, and advanced Lula's beliefs in the note's authenticity. The Coast Guard had also sent the bottle in which the note was found to Miss Wormell who, through Lorimer, now offered it to Richey if he wanted it for the investigations. This bottle was traced to a type made in no other place than Rio de Jenairo. The note in the bottle now looked doubly real in light of the circumstantial evidence. It was really quite widely believed that some pirate vessel had kidnapped the crew and taken them aboard a mysterious “oil burning” boat.
     Most other letters Richey received were of little aid. And what was worse they were mixed in with communiques from foreign governments pestering him for information concerning their vessels that had vanished. The Italian Embassy was particularly curious and repeatedly wanted to know if the American investigation has provided an answer to the loss of their vessel, Monte San Michelle.  The updates for information met with the same answer: “The inquiry above mentioned has not been concluded and as yet no very definite results have been obtained.”
   Richey was still trying to figure out the case. But by September, 1921,  when the last Italian inquiry was dated, there was little mystery in the minds of American investigators surrounding Monte San Michelle or most of the other vessels.
   It was discovered in July that the Atlantic was experiencing the worst hurricane in 22 years last February, and the majority of the vessels that disappeared were heading out into the Atlantic into its clutches. The idea of a mass pirate attack quickly began to fade away. The only mystery to remain was the Deering and Hewitt which were the ones traveling coastal routes, away from the hurricane. The other ships thus removed from the calculations, the idea that the Deering was just one cog in the plan of a pirate attack or Bolshevik conspiracy also faded away. More and more she looked like an isolated incident. This meant one thing: Mutiny.
   The major obstacle remaining for the theory of mutiny was that note Christopher Columbus Gray found describing an oil burning boat kidnapping the crew. But not for long. On August 26, the world was told that the note Christopher Columbus Gray found at Buxton Beach was indeed a fake. Without knowing it, Gray confessed to writing the note himself. He told this to none other than an undercover operative. And when the investigators came to Buxton Beach,  for the coup de grace,  Gray took off like a rabbit to avoid arrest.
   Gray's eventual capture was a stroke of luck and ingenuity on Richey's part, and he didn't mind crowing about it either. Earlier that year, after Gray had found the note, he had applied for a job at the Lighthouse Keeper's Station, hoping that his discovery would help get him the job. Through “acquaintances” Richey had a message leaked to Gray that he should come to the Lighthouse Keeper's Station concerning his job application. Gray came, thinking it was only about his application, but was greeted by Federal agents who took him into custody. The full details then came out why Gray had faked the message; he hoped it would get him a job!
     When it was all over, Richey made the comment that the entire investigation into the case of the Deering was much like a detective story. Richey received the kudos, and publicly the Deering case was more or less over. The exposure of the false mystery around the other vessels,  and then Gray's exposure rubbed off on the 8 month old incident and the Deering,  if she was still spoken about publicly, was linked in some way with the others vessels lost by storm, and her crew perished in the breakers in their life boat.
   However, the detective story was not over. Storm buried the pirate stories and Gray's exposure destroyed the “captain Kidd” in a sub story.  This left only mutiny for the Deering. This is the lead that Richey would follow. But then this idea was something he had suspected for quite sometime.
     There is documentation that conclusively proves that the U.S. government did not believe the carefully constructed view of the Deering and Hewitt's fate to be as the other ships lost in the storm, nor believe the encouraged notion that the men simply perished in the tide after abandoning ship because of its lost anchors. Long before Gray was exposed, the government was geared to accept mutiny. Consular and Government offices were instructed to be on the lookout for any man answering the descriptions of sailors from the Deering or Hewitt. These Consular offices were still searching diligently for any seaman as late as 1923, long after the public controversy was put to an end. These instructions were maintained in confidential files at American embassies and also included a complete description and name of every sailor on both vessels.
   The confidential circular of the Department of State issued on June 4th and 17th, 1921, File No. 1115 C 22 regarding the crews of the Deering and Hewitt:



        DEPARTMENT OF STATE                                                 
     Washington, June 17, 1921  CONFIDENTIAL.                                                        DISAPPEARANCE OF THE CREW OF THE CARROLL A. DEERING
To the American Consular Officers at Seaports. Gentlemen:
       Referring to the Department's confidential instruction of June 4, 1921,  reporting the loss of the American schooner CAROLL A. DEERING under circumstances which are at least suspicious, you are informed that the American steamship HEWITT, carrying a cargo of 8,000 tons of sulphur from Sabine,  Texas, to Boston, Massachusetts, and Portland, Maine, disappeared on or about the same date and in about the same locality. There is nothing to connect the two casualties,  except the similarity of date and place of occurrence. However,   the Department is desirous of obtaining any information possible regarding the  present whereabouts of any member of the crew of either vessel in order to determine whether or not there has been foul play.
         With this in mind, a description of the master of the CAROLL A. DEERING and a list of the crew of both vessels is appended. The description of the master of the     CAROLL A. DEERING was furnished by his relative, and the list and  descriptions of the crew of the HEWITT and CAROLL A. DEERING were taken  from the Shipping Articles.
         You are instructed to place this list among the names of suspected aliens and  to  check all crew lists of vessels presented to you against it before visaing them.     However, if you suspect that any member of either crew is aboard any vessel, the crew list of which is presented for visa, you will refuse to visa it, but will notify the Department by telegraph of the presence aboard the vessel of the suspect in order that steps may be taken to make a complete investigation upon the vessel's arrival in the United States.
           I am, Gentlemen,
                     Your obedient servant,
                           For the Secretary of State:
                                       WILBUR J. CARR
 
A flurry of communications started followed circles when a sailor was suspected:                                                            
AMERICAN CONSULATE GENERAL LISBON, PORTUGAL
July 28, 1921
Subject: Mysterious Disappearance of American Vessels.
The Honorable The Secretary  of State
Washington
   Sir:
     I have the honor to report to the Department that an individual bearing the name of Augusto Frederico Martins and presenting a Portuguese passport issued in Glasgow, Scotland, on May 5th, 1921, a copy of which is attached hereto, appeared in this Consulate General yesterday asking to be signed on the articles of the American S.S. “WEST MAXIMUS” bound for Rio de Jenairo, Brazil. Although this man had the appearance and bearing of an experienced A.B. Seaman, he willingly accepted the position of second cook as Captain Jamison was not in need of other services. An A. Martins is mentioned in the crew list of the American S.S. “HEWITT,” which was furnished this office in connection with the department's Confidential Circular of June 17, 1921, and in the description given rather closely resembles Augusto Frederico Martins. The latter was therefore questioned concerning his movements as closely as possible without arousing  his suspicions. He admitted having recently been in Brazil and Argentina but when asked how he arrived in Glasgow he became very noncommittal and rather contradictory in his statements, finally saying he had been left there by a Portuguese vessel from Oporto, although he appeared to have no papers to substantiate this statement.
       A cable setting forth these facts was sent to the Department yesterday evening, as it would seem possible that this man may have been a member of the lost S.S.          “HEWITT.”
     In this connection, the attention of the Department is respectfully called to the following coincidences:  (a) The U.S. Navy Collier
“CYCLOPS,” which mysteriously disappeared some years ago, was on a voyage from Rio de Jenairo to the United States, as was the American Schooner “CAROLL A. DEERING” [sic], from which all its personnel mysteriously disappeared.  (b) The S.S. “WEST MAXIMUS” on which the A. Martins has shipped, has cleared from Lisbon for Rio de Jenairo.
       I have the honor to be, Sir,
                 Your obedient servant,
                                         W. STANLEY HOLLIS


    Consul General
P.S. A copy of this despatch is being sent to the American Consul General  at Rio de Jenairo. Another copy is being sent to the American Consul at Glasgow with a suggestion that he  endeavor  to obtain from the Portuguese Consul at that place, as well as from the available sources regarding this A. Martins and to report the result of his investigations directly to the Department.
   The American consul at Glasgow, G.E. Chamberlain, was immediately notified and investigated the claims of A. Martins, and responded on August 3, 1921 that A. Martins had been a member of the crew of the Portuguese ship “Portugal” since July of 1920 and it was positively established that he was in Glasgow at the time of the incident. All that for nothing!
     The circular of June 4 also brought about results in the American Consulate in Rotterdam. On January 31, 1922, the State Department was informed that the Danish steamship Frederiksborg sailed for Hampton Roads on January 28 and had on board two Danish seaman, Niels Peter Nielson and Peter Sorensen. They not only shared the same names, but “are identical in every manner to the men with the same names on the schooner CARROLL A. DEERING. . .” The only difference was that Sorensen was listed as 29 not 19.
   The FBI was notified and was standing by at Hampton Roads to question the sailors before they could leave the ship. Agent H.S. White contacted the Maritime Exchange in Norfolk to ascertain the position of the Frederiksborg but discovered, to his surprise, that the Frederiksborg had not left Rotterdam yet, but was still listed as in that port. It appeared that the Consul had mis-named the ship that departed thinking it was the Frederiksborg. The case,  since it was outside of American jurisdiction,  was considered closed by White. The Niels Nielson and Peter Sorensen, whoever they were, were headed to some other distant port on a different ship, thus being spared interrogation.
     During the period of this investigation it was suggested and quickly quashed that the information that two men suspected in the Deering case were heading for the U.S. should be released. A communique dated February 3, 1922, probably from Richey, states the official reaction clearly: “I think it is extremely important that this information be not given out, at least until after the arrival of the vessels and the examination of the members of the crew who are suspected. I believe that it would be inadvisable to give the information out even after the arrival of the vessels, because it would indicate the method by which the Department is endeavoring to find trace of any members of the crews of the lost vessels who may be alive, and, if there is any reason why the seamen would desire to keep their identity a secret, it could be done by avoiding vessels coming to the United States.”
     The other vessel the communique was referring to was the S.S. Tranquebar,  a Danish ship which arrived at Galveston, Texas, on January 4, 1922. The FBI was ready to meet the ship and question two men aboard by the names H.C. Jensen and Peter Nielson who matched the names and description of the two sailors on the Deering. The FBI had been informed five days earlier by an alert Consul at Vera Cruz who sent the following despatch dated December 31, 1921:
       Referring to the Department's circular instruction dated June 17th relative to the schooner CAROLL A. DEERING, I have to report that the Danish vessel    TRANQUEBAR cleared for Galveston on December 31st. The alien crewlist of this    vessel contains the names of H.C. Jensen, No. 14, and Peter Nielsen, No. 24, who   answer the descriptions. . .”
   Agent A.G. Sullivan inspected the crew list of the vessel as soon as she docked at 9 a.m. January 4, at pier 38. Then the two men were discreetly taken with Sullivan to the office of Hans Guldman, the Danish Consul, in room 425 of the Security Building, Galveston, where, according to Sullivan,  they cooperated “very cordially.” Sullivan reported: “The subject H.C. Jensen speaks English quite well, but the subject Nielsen does not speak English at all.” However, through the cooperation of Mr. Guldman the following stories were brought out.
     Jensen claimed the only time he had been near Hatteras was on the bark Elizabeth in 1919 sailing from Copenhagen to Hampton Roads, Virginia. He had stated that at the time of the incident he was a sailor on a small boat, the Pioneer traveling from Copenhagen to Banthelmer. In Nielsen's case, he said he was arrested in Odense, Denmark, on January 1st, 1921, for “intoxication,” and after he was released he worked on the docks. Nielsen claimed never even to have heard of the Carroll A. Deering.
     Naturally, the two men's statements had to be taken at face value since there was no immediate way to determine their validity. They were released and sent back to the Tranquebar. But Mr. Guldman told the captain to deny them the usual liberties and shore leave until their stories could be verified. Mr. Guldman was very cooperative in the matter, referred to as a real “gentlemen” by agent Sullivan and also was a naturalized American citizen. Guldman also told Sullivan he would keep the Department posted on the ship's next port of call. However, between the 14th and 19th of January, the Tranquebar sailed out of the port for her next destination. The information was never forthcoming from Denmark to confirm their stories and do not exist in any documentation. If any information was ever turned up that did prove the men lied about their positions at the time in question, it came too late and this Jensen and Nielsen could never be linked or not linked with the Carroll A. Deering sailors of the same name. The Nielsen and Jensen of the Tranquebar faded from the story as hazily as they entered it. Probably more the grateful.
     For another sailor connected with the incident it would not be the same. The following telegram was sent July 14th, 1921, to the Secretary of State from the Consul at Constantinople, Turkey:
   July 14th, 10am.
       B.O. Raney, second assistant engineer United States Shipping Board vessel    MOPANG sunk in Black Sea, is proceeding to New York on Greek steamer MEGALI HELLAS.
         We suspect his being identical with B.O. Rainey, third assistant engineer steamship HEWITT. Department's confidential instructions June 8. Have warned Athens and Patras. Details by Mail.
                                 RAVNDAL
     Before he contacted the State Department, Gabriel Ravndal had taken the necessary precautions to insure that Raney would in fact make it to New York and come under American jurisdiction. He sent the following information to the American Consul at Athens before the above despatch:
       July 11; 8 P.M.   The following message should be treated as confidential and    urgent. The crew of the S/S  MOPANG which was sunk in the Black Sea, is due to   transship at Piraeus from the S/S POLICOS to the S/S MEGALI HELLAS. Among this crew is the Second Assistant Engineer Raney whose complicity in the loss of several American vessels is suspected by this Consulate General. Please refer to the June  4th and 17th confidential instructions of the Department. Kramer, the first mate,  holds a collective passport for the shipwrecked crew. Without arousing suspicion please be sure that Raney gets off on the MEGALI HELLAS for New York and cable the Department and Consuls at ports of call. An arrangement should also be made with the  Captain of the MEGALI HELLAS to keep the suspected engineer under an informal guard until he can be delivered to the American authorities. A telegraphic acknowledgement is requested.
                                         RAVNDAL
   Well, the more specific information Ravndal referred to in his July 14th was dated July 20th. Besides the above information, Ravndal had discovered that when the 33 members of the Mopang arrived at Constantinople on July 6th to be repatriated to the United States, one quickly stood out when he inquired “about the possibilities” of enlisting in the Allied Police Corps at Constantinople. This was Raney. He did not give a reason for this, but did state in regard to his query that he did not wish to return to the United States. Instead, Raney later requested a passport to travel in Europe, but because of his lack of proof of American citizenship, the request was denied and he was told to ship to the U.S. with the other destitute crew for repatriation. It was when armed with this information that the Consul at Athens and captain of the Megali Hellas made sure their interesting passenger was sent safely to America for questioning in a condition not to arouse his suspicion lest he jump ship at a convenient port or disappear before the ship sailed for America from Piraeus.    


  A picture of Raney was sent ahead with his thumb print. Raney was a medium height, a cocky and confident young man by his picture, with his cap tilted to one side and a hand on his hip waiting for it to all be over but enjoying the attention.
   Neither Consul Ravndal nor the American Consul at Athens were overreacting to the situation. When Raney finally arrived at New York, he was questioned concerning the entire incident, and if he was, in fact, B.O. Rainey, listed as signing on the Hewitt on her last voyage. He was! There was no mistake in this case. This time the FBI finally had the real article! . . . He did, however, have an excuse for being alive. He did not sail out on her, he told them; he had left the Hewitt twenty minutes before she sailed . . . so he said anyway.
     On August 18, 1921,  the State Department finally acknowledged Ravndal's communication of the 20th of July in which he gave the specific information about Raney. Wilbur J. Carr responded: “The Department appreciates the prompt manner in which you handled this matter and through your efforts the Department of Justice was able to examine Mr. Raney upon his arrival in the United States. However, it has been ascertained that Mr. Raney left the HEWITT about twenty minutes before its clearance from
the port of Sabine and was, therefore, unable to furnish any information regarding the loss of the vessel.”

The specifics of the examination were never made known and this is the only document, a letter to the Consul, that alluded to the questioning. How it was ascertained, it was never mentioned in the documents, and B.O. Raney quickly fades away. It was rather anticlimactic for the Consuls in Constantinople and Athens, considering the subtlety they went through to get Raney to return.  

This anticlimactic end is also present in the last documented sighting of a man alleged to be similar in name and appearance to a member of the Carroll A. Deering's crew. This was on September 14, 1922, when a sailor named Peter Sorensen was known to have shipped out on the Danish ship Kronberg from Valparaiso, Chile.
   The FBI quickly began to check into the movements of the ship and discovered it was at Mejillones, Chile, its first loading point. The ship was then to head for Balboa, Panama Canal, due there October 6th. From there it might go to Jacksonville, Fla, or Savannah, Georgia and then to Philadelphia.
   Mr. Doubleda of the ship's company said he would keep the Department informed of the ship's movements. The FBI agent recommended the offices be contacted at Philadelphia to await the ship. This is the last heard of Kronberg and Sorensen, or any part of the case of the Carroll A. Deering. *
   (* From 1923 on the records of the FBI are still housed at the FBI building, Washington. The relevant documents to complete this last report must still be there. But since I could not prove that Sorensen was dead, they would not nor were required to release anything to me under FOIA.)
     What is rather interesting about the sightings for a crewman of the Deering is that they all represent one of the Danes on board. Never Fredrickson, the ruddy Finlander, Benjamin the veteran cook, and lastly never Bates, the reliable engineer. Only once a possible McLellan was seen— he who has been fingered as the lead mutineer in most critiques. (Richey's committee, while checking into the reality of a mutiny, did in fact concentrate their suspicions on Charles McLellan, the man who had a bad reputation and was allegedly disliked by Wormell. Richey even learned of McLellan's threat against Wormell's life in Barbados.)
   This sighting, furthermore, is one of the most piquing. A Cyril A. McLellan curiously emerged into existence within only a month after the Carroll A. Deering dereliction. On March 20,  1921, he was issued an A.B. Seaman certificate #20, 694 by the local board of Steamboat Inspectors in Portland, Oregon. The Department of Justice followed this up with an inquiry into the man's address and movements. In response to this, the Collector of Customs discovered that this Cyril McLellan was an untraceable person. He gave his address to the board which issued him his A.B. Seaman certificate as 88 Third Street, Portland— “This is the address of the sailor's Union,” wrote back the Collector of Customs, A. Moore,  “and upon inquiry they state that they have no knowledge of this person and it is not found that he shipped out of here on any vessel bound for foreign. The above information from the local Inspector's is all that this office is able to procure.”
     Neither could the Commissioner of Navigation's office find anything on a Cyril McLellan “. . . in the records of this office, nor in the records of the Sailors' Union of the Pacific at this port.” (San Francisco).
   The man was never traced. He emerged briefly in Portland, gave false information, and was never heard from again.
   In light of the theory that McLellan instigated the mutiny,  Jacobson's description of the man who called out to him becomes crucial. This description fits Johan Fredrickson,  the ruddy Finlander. If the most popular theories are correct that McLellan was responsible for the mutiny,  that the captain was dead,  and that Bates, the reliable engineer, was out of the way,  Fredrickson,  as the Bos'n, would be the next highest officer apart from McLellan. The fact that the Bos'n called out from the poop deck argues strongly for the supposition that the officers were either dead or, in McLellan's case,  occupied with covering the other men at gun-point.
     The chart from the captain's cabin was a windfall of information for Lawrence Richey. It is the greatest evidence that Wormell was dead.  As it is already known, this conclusively showed that Wormell marked the chart up to the 23rd of January, 8 days before she went aground at Diamond Shoals. After this, another hand took over the marking on the chart. The amount of time— 6 days— it took the Deering to traverse from Cape Fear Lightship to Cape Lookout lightship, which is only about 80 miles, caught Richey's eye. It was in this period of time that the captain must have been murdered as witnessed by the change in handwriting on the chart. But what caused the delayed amount of time for the vessel to cross that minimal distance of sea? Was the mutineer collecting his thoughts about his plan and ordered the vessel to sail about?
     Prosaic theories have never accounted for this.
     The cause of her abandonment resting on the fact she lost her anchors, as Edward Rowe Snow speculated (Mysteries and Adventures Along the Atlantic Coast) can be discounted since anchors are not a necessity for navigation. The fear of not being able to bring the ship to a secure stop would hardly inspire a crew to carefully desert their ship at sea under full sail, while taking the captain's possessions as well, instead of waiting until the calmer waters of Delaware Bay or the harbor where she could,  theoretically, tie along another ship after slowing under reduced sail.
   The reality of the Deering being under full sail is confirmed by the earliest reports of her finding on Diamond Shoals. A five masted schooner would hardly be at full sail is rough weather as ships reduce speed in heavy weather so as to take the waves and troughs more slowly and not crack up. Thus the theories founded on the crew being frightened of the rough weather and without anchors took to the boats only to drown in the rough tides off Cape Hatteras is so completely out as to be laughable. A crew in this condition would not have the time nor inclination to carefully pack their personal belongings.
       In developing the theory of mutiny or just plain murder,  it was speculated that McLellan was in a place of concealment and was holding the crew under gun-point when Fredrickson called out to Jacobson on the Lightship. Thus Jacobson only noted that the men were congregated on the poop deck, where they should not have been (officers' territory). It is also theorized that McLellan also caused the abandonment of the Deering to escape justice. By heading for the shore and disposing of the surprised and frightened crew in the long boat with gun fire, McLellan then could escape on his own. Until this time, McLellan may have kept some members of the crew locked up in the captain's cabin thus explaining the evidence of different men having slept in the master's room. Cooped up in this room on the ship, McLellan could easily keep a watch on them. But this would logically seem also to require that he had an accomplice. After all one man could not run the big Deering on his own.
     This really does not seem to account for the evidence, however. Why pass the lightship at all? If mutiny had occurred,  McLellan would simply avoid the coastline route,  avoid being spotted, and ditch the vessel at a safe location. Why bother to report the anchors as lost
     All speculations agree upon one thing:  the Carroll A. Deering was without a doubt not under the command of Willis Wormell at the point of contact with the Cape Lookout Lightship. Had he died of natural circumstances that close to their destination, the crew of the Deering would have reported that the captain was dead, which is immensely more important than the loss of the anchors. Also, if it was a simple accident it would have been McLellan or Bates calling out to Jacobson, not Fredrickson. Had Wormell only been sick below decks in his cabin, he never would have allowed for the dereliction of the ship for any reason. His cabin would also not show signs of having been slept in by other members of the crew, and the chart marked in another hand.
     There is reason to consider murder on the Deering, but is there reason to consider mutiny?  The following letter from a captain gave another time clue to the dereliction of the schooner. It was some of the more helpful information with which Richey had to contend. To this day, it is generally not known that the schooner was seen the day before she went aground, and indeed in a suggestive appearance.
       In connection with the stranding of the American schooner CAROL A. DEERING on North Carolina coast, January 31st, 1921. I can report that while bound from Sagua La Grande, Cuba, toward Baltimore on January 30th, 1921,  about 3:30 p.m. we sighted a five-masted  schooner about two points on our starboard bow. The wind was S.W.   moderate and she had all sails set and steering about NNW making about seven miles. We passed her about 5:45 p.m. about one-half mile off our port side. We were then about twenty-five miles S.W. true from the Diamond Shoals Light Vessel. From the description of the DEERING, we think that this schooner was her but we could not read her name, there was nothing irregular to be seen on board this vessel but she was steering a peculiar course. She appeared to be steering for Cape Hatteras. We sighted Diamond Shoals Light Vessel about 7 p.m. and passed it at 8:32 p.m. The lookout on the schooner should have sighted Cape Hatteras Light, also the Light Ship at Diamond Shoal a little later than we did but in plenty time to avoid going on shore as the weather was clear and cloudy with good visibility. There was a couple of more ships in the vicinity steering a course parallel with us which should have convinced the Captain of the schooner that he was steering a wrong course.

Hoping this may be of some value we are
                                   Very truly yours
                               Henry Johnson
                                 Master S.S. LAKE ELON
                                       E.V. Ferrandini, Chief Officer.
   Was the Deering intentionally being directed to destruction on the breakers? How can one explain all the evidence? Perhaps McLellan murdered Wormell in a fit. Perhaps Bates took out McLellan but was fatally wounded  in doing so. Who is left? Only the  crewmen— the bos’n, the cook, all the deckhands. What are they going to report at shore? ‘Our captain was murdered . . . but we had nothing to do with that. The first mate was murdered . . .but we had nothing to do with that. The second mate was murdered. . .but we had nothing to do with that.’ What do you think the local magistrates are going to think about that story? Could the crew have thought it best to quietly fade away instead of trying to explain the unbelievable truth?
   It has been said that the binnacle and the steering equipment on the Deering was found smashed with a mallet. Although this is lacking in official documentation, it is completely possible. This was probably done (if true) to  give incentive for the crew, in the “graveyard of ships” at Hatteras, to think it better to abandon ship instead of trying to steer around the shoals in a blind and disabled schooner. Who did it? Frederickson, to encourage all the men to abandon her and simply disappear? If it was mutiny, was it McLellan to make sure the crew would think it best to abandon ship?  He would then find it easy to dispose of them in the long boat while he stayed aboard. He then would steer the Deering into the shoals to be destroyed. Voila! No evidence. He may even have run up the red lights to make it look like an uncontrolled accident overtook the ship, if it were spotted.
   When the Lake Elon sighted the Deering steering for the shoals,  this formless murderer, whoever he was,  may have been the lone occupant of the Carroll A. Deering, carefully kept from the view of the Lake Elon's spyglass. The only evidence that he was on board may have been his shadow casting upon the deck from some place of concealment as he waited to abandon the ship in another lifeboat for safety and to assume a new identity . . . to leave the Deering to her fate in the breakers
     But the Deering survived to preserve within her cabins and upon her decks a riddle of the sea. Some explanation must be called upon to answer all the chain of events for those days in January, and all the evidence found on the vessel that windswept morning. But this sadly has never been accomplished to the satisfaction of anyone who has ever heard of the strange case of the Carroll A. Deering.





 All that was left, Decades later: curious wreckage on a North Carolina Beach.
What really happen to Caroll A. Deering and to Hewitt?












     
     

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