MMA’s training ship ‘State of Maine’ pauses in Bahamas to pay respect to ‘El Faro’ crew

Tue, 05/11/2021 - 11:30am

    On May 1, officers, students, faculty and crew aboard Maine Maritime Academy’s training ship, State of Maine, paused on the sea, near the final resting place of El Faro off Crooked Island in the Bahamas. They gathered on the deck to honor the lost ship and its crew, which included five MMA alumni who perished on October 1, 2015.

    They were Mike Davidson, Class of 1988; Danielle Randolph, Class of 2005; Mitchell Kuflik, Class of 2011; Mike Holland, Class of 2012; and Dylan Meklin, Class of 2015.

    As part of the ceremony, TSSOM flew signal flags with the first letter of the last name of each of the MMA fallen. A moment of silence was followed by a musical performance of “Crossing the Bar” by Alfred Lord Tennyson, and the presentation of a life ring that was designed by two students to honor those who were lost. The memorial life ring will now proudly hang in the forward mess.

    The State of Maine has been on its annual training cruise, sailing the East Coast, and arrived in Norfolk, Virginia, last week under blue skies and fair weather. The vessel sailed past the Norfolk Naval Station and into Lambert’s Point, navigating through one of the busiest ports on the Eastern Seaboard.

    TSSOM was met pier-side by Mr. Phillip Miller, MARAD’s new Division of Atlantic Operations Ship Operations and Maintenance Officer. During the inbound transit, the ship passed an array of Navy, MARAD, and commercial ships moored in the Elizabeth River. Pilotage and docking, both arriving and departing, were performed by Maine Maritime Academy alumni providing cadets with a glimpse of future career opportunities. In addition to enjoying cellular service overnight, many personal letters and packages were received bringing large smiles to the students who had anxiously awaited their delivery.

    Prior to its arrival in Virginia, TSSOM sailed from Maine to Boston, staying near the coast to avoid offshore gales.
     
    A day-long stop in Boston allowed for excellent navigational training and an opportunity to take on fresh stores, according to a news release from MMA.
     
    From there, the ship sailed south on a Caribbean transit through the Bahamas, west through the Old Bahama Channel, then north along the Eastern Seaboard.
     
    At each step of the voyage, students engaged in hands-on training opportunities, putting skills to the test on open water. Engineers tweaked equipment to adjust for ocean temperatures that ranged from the low 40s in Maine to the mid-80s in the Caribbean and back again. While not on watch, in training, or preparing for Coast Guard exams, students enjoyed the Caribbean sunshine and marine life around the ship.
     
    “Participation in our summer training cruise marks the culmination of years of hard work and these young men and women are proving themselves as capable and dedicated mariners,” said John Cashman, Commandant of Midshipmen. “On this trip, they have had the opportunity to practice their skills, hone their instincts, and begin to really understand what it means to have a career at sea.”
     
    For the remainder of the 37-day cruise, the vessel will sail along the mid-Atlantic coast before returning to Penobscot Bay.
     
    Following the stop in Norfolk, the ship will spend six days offshore, moving in and around approaches to various ports then sail into New York Harbor. Against the backdrop of the New York City skyline, students will observe Ellis and Governor’s Islands and the Statute of Liberty as TSSOM makes its way through the Narrows and up the East River to pier 36 in lower Manhattan.
     
    For the engineering students, the transition to coastal and inland waters and changes to the plant status provides opportunities to integrate regulatory requirements, machinery changes, and vigilant watchstanding. 
     
    For the deck students, observing the Master & Harbor pilot interaction, managing terrestrial navigation with multiple vessel contacts, and experiencing mooring operations with tugboats coalesces the knowledge derived from the classroom.
     
    “New York Harbor, one of the busiest in the world, is an excellent opportunity for the students to experience true teamwork, manage a complex watch at the highest levels, and build the confidence that will buoy their careers,” said Captain Gordon ‘Mac’ MacArthur, TSSOM’s Master.
     
    “The integration of faculty training officers with the ship’s crew, including our temporary watch officers reinforces to the students that each day at Maine Maritime Academy provides them opportunities to learn and build skills that are vital to their career,” said Cashman. “The Chief Steward and galley crew keep spirits high with excellent meals and morale events. Eating meals together and enjoying these events facilitates the camaraderie that makes a career at sea unlike any other.”
     
    Following the two-day stop in New York, TSSOM will again venture offshore then enter Massachusetts Bay to anchor outside of Provincetown.
     
    After Provincetown, TSSOM will make its way up the coast of Maine and into Penobscot Bay on May 20 then moor in Castine on May 21.
     
    The 260 students and crew will remain aboard the vessel until training officially ends on May 23, at which time seniors will take the five-day U.S. Coast Guard license exams on the MMA campus. Friends, family, and fans are invited to follow the ship’s journey through the cruise blog at cruise.mainemaritime.edu.
     
    About Maine Maritime Academy
    Maine Maritime Academy is a co-educational, public college on the coast of Maine offering programs of study in engineering, management, science, and transportation. The college serves approximately 950 undergraduate and graduate students in career-oriented degree programs. The annual job placement rate for MMA graduates is approximately 90 percent within 90 days of graduation. The college is consistently recognized for providing a high-value education by organizations such as the Brookings Institution, U.S. News and World Report, and Money Magazine. For more information, please visit mainemaritime.edu.

    Related articles:

    Proposed El Faro Salute! memorial rises as fifth anniversary of sinking nears

    Flags in Knox County to half-staff in in honor of 'El Faro' crewman, Dylan Meklin

    NTSB learns navigation bridge, data recorder missing from wreckage of sunken 'El Faro'

    Update: Fifth Maine Maritime graduate among those missing at sea in El Faro sinking

    NTSB issues update on investigation into sinking of 'El Faro'

    Flags in Knox County at half mast to honor 'El Faro' second mate, Danielle Randolph

    El Faro crew from Rockland not among group of 10 to settle with ship's owner TOTE Maritime

    UPDATED: NTSB releases public docket video, photos of 'El Faro' debris field

    Lawsuits filed on behalf of Rockland 'El Faro' crew members

    UPDATE: U.S. Coast Guard Board of Investigation hearing into 'El Faro' sinking underway

    NTSB to launch second mission to search for El Faro evidence, clues

    NTSB locates voyage data recorder of sunken cargo ship El Faro

    Marine Board investigators told El Faro captain thought he could avoid storm

    NTSB: Specialized equipment needed to recover El Faro voyage data recorder

    Search for El Faro voyage data recorder pushed to August

    Authorities working to recover details, dialogue from recovered 'El Faro' data recorder

    NTSB releases El Faro voyage data recorder bridge audio transcript, among other factual documents