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A City is Stunned by the Loss of her Pride

On the morning of May 19, 1986, the early morning quiet of the McGeady family home in Severna Park was shattered by the insistent ringing of the telephone. The caller was Joe McGeady who reported that he was calling from the deck of the Norwegian tanker TORO approximately 250 north of Puerto Rico. Pride of Baltimore had been struck and sunk by a violent squall (what the US Coast Guard later called a microburst squall) some four days earlier. The captain and three crew members were missing and presumed dead.

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The word spread quickly - to the staff and Board of Pride, to the families of survivors and those lost at sea, to the news media. In the following days as reports came out, the residents of the City and State watched and prayed with stunned disbelief as the details became known. During a dramatic news conference with the recently rescued survivors at Glen L. Martin Airport a few days later, it was confirmed that Pride of Baltimore had sunk on May 14, having capsized in 80 mile per hour winds that developed suddenly and with no warning. The vessel had been struck and sunk so quickly that there had been no time to radio for help. Eight crew members climbed into a five by five foot rubber life raft where they floated helpless for four days and seven hours with little food or water. The captain and three crew members did not emerge from the wreckage and were presumed lost. Although the survivors saw six vessels during their ordeal, only the TORO spotted them. That was at night - the ship saw an SOS signaled with a flashlight.

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Those lost were:

Armin Elsaesser, 42, captain

Vincent Lazarro, 27, Engineer

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Barry Duckworth, 29, Carpenter

Nina Schack, 23, Seaman

The tragedy brought an abrupt end to the adventures of a noble sailing vessel - but not an end to her mission. As the minister at a memorial service for the drowned crew members reminded his audience, "Those who go down to the sea in ships feel particularly close not only to nature, but to God."
Memorial A permanent memorial to the original Pride of Baltimore has been erected in the Inner Harbor on Rash Field. The memorial consists of the characteristic raked mast of a Baltimore Clipper along with the names of those lost in the tragedy carved into pink granite. The memorial reminds those who visit it of the precariousness of life at sea, a lesson the citizens of this great port city once knew well but had long forgotten. Memorial Service

Laying flowers at memorial
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