Thursday, May 10, 2012

Masonic Ring Saves Captain and Crew.


Searsport sea captain hero not forgotten, thanks to town historian

Posted May 09, 2012, at 6:06 p.m
SEARSPORT, Maine — History is best told through people, Charlene Farris believes. And the story of one of Searsport’s legendary sea captains, one she knew when she was a child, relates a part of history in dramatic, heroic terms.
Named official historian at town meeting in 2010, Farris has a way of making those people come to life in simple, vivid terms. That skill may have come from 35 years teaching fifth grade at Searsport Elementary School, a job from which she retired last year.
Her passion for local history is well-known but her approach has changed. Instead of trying to tell Searsport’s story in chronological form, Farris now immerses herself in the town’s interesting characters and relates their stories, usually at her annual talks before the Searsport Historical Society.

 One of the more compelling stories is that of Edwin Earle Greenlaw, which includes bravery, leadership and a ring that may have saved lives.
Farris knew Greenlaw as the father of neighbor children with whom she played as a child, growing up on Steamboat Avenue. She remembers the captain speaking to her sixth-grade class.
“I can’t remember a thing he said, but I remember he was handsome,” dressed in his captain’s uniform, Farris recalled.
So last summer, as she was considering the subject of her next historical biography, she was reminded of him.
“I walked down Steamboat Avenue right by Capt. Greenlaw’s house,” she recalled, and her task was clear.
Born in Rockport in 1901, Greenlaw learned the ways of the sea sailing Friendship sloops. As a man, he began working on coal and oil ships, and during a stop in Searsport, a local man, Harrison “Bunny” Jackson invited Greenlaw home to meet the family.
Jackson’s sister, Hazel, was a beauty, Farris said. A victim of polio, she couldn’t walk, yet refused to use crutches, relying on canes and sheer determination. Greenlaw and she married and began living near where Mosman Park is today.
Greenlaw didn’t like staying ashore, though, and began working for the American-Hawaiian Steamship Company.
When World War II began, the U.S. government took control of merchant ships. Late in 1943, Greenlaw was captain of the S.S. Alaskan, a 5,369-ton vessel hauling a cargo of 800 tons of chrome ore from South Africa to Dutch Guiana in South America. The ship did not have a military escort, but did have deck guns.
At 4:30 a.m. on Nov. 28, during a pouring rainstorm, a look-out saw the wakes of two torpedoes approaching the ship. One missed, but the other struck the middle of the ship, destroying the engine and two lifeboats, the work of a German submarine.
“The deck buckled, it listed to port, but didn’t sink,” Farris said. The German U-boat surfaced and its officers ordered the men to abandon the ship. More than 50 crew members, officers and armed guards jumped into lifeboats.
The sub then shelled the ship until it sank at 8:10 a.m.
One of the lifeboats swamped, drowning four men. Another, with 29 men, eventually landed in Angola, in Africa. Thirteen more men climbed aboard a raft, and later were picked up by a Spanish vessel and taken to the Canary Islands.
As captain, Greenlaw was the last to leave the vessel, taking time to destroy documents he deemed security threats. After Greenlaw boarded a raft with eight other survivors, the U-boat captain brought the sub alongside and ordered Greenlaw to board the sub. The sub captain questioned Greenlaw, who gave only basic information. He was then returned to the raft.
Later, Greenlaw would tell his sons he noticed the U-boat captain wore a ring signifying his membership in the Masons, a fraternal organization. Greenlaw wore a similar ring. That link saved his life, Greenlaw believed.
The German captain told Greenlaw he was sorry the sub sank his ship, “but this is war. Why don’t you tell America to get out of the war?”
Four hundred miles from land in a leaking raft, Greenlaw summoned his leadership and maritime skills, Farris said. He ordered the men to keep a lookout for one of the unoccupied lifeboats. Three days later, they found it and raised and bailed it out. The men fashioned a sail and mast, using their only tool, Greenlaw’s pocket knife.
The lifeboat had emergency supplies including 53 tins of pemmican, which Farris said “were molded cakes of fat, flavored with meat and berries.” There also were 106 bottles of malted milk tablets, 65 chocolate bars and 15 gallons of water.
Greenlaw ordered the armed guard commander to ration the food and water.
After being becalmed in the equatorial waters, the trade winds picked up, rains came replenishing drinking water, and the men were able to catch fish and snare birds to eat — raw.
Thirty-nine days after being torpedoed, the men sighted land and went ashore on French Guiana on Jan. 5, 1944. The locals thought they were prisoners escaped from Devil’s Island, but the men were able to convince them otherwise.
 Farris said Greenlaw kept the men focused, disciplined and hopeful, which helped them survive. His twin sons, Edwin — known as Bing who lives in Thorndike — and Eugene — known as Biff who lives in Stockton Springs — remember their father as a kind man who loved to laugh. That demeanor probably helped him keep spirits up during those 39 days of deprivation.
Greenlaw worked another 18 years for the American-Hawaiian Steamship Company. Sadly, he decided in 1962 to take one more voyage as captain before retiring, picking up oil in Iran. While there, he contracted hepatitis and lingered in a hospital for weeks before dying in early 1963. He is buried in the town’s Gordon Cemetery.
Residents should be proud of Greenlaw, Farris said: “He was handsome, charming, professional and kind. In short, Hollywood’s version of the perfect sea captain.”

http://bangordailynews.com/2012/05/09/news/midcoast/searsport-sea-captain-hero-not-forgotten-thanks-to-town-historian/ 

Friday, May 4, 2012

Masonic admin offices relocate to East Holden from Portland


More than 50 people, including Masons and their friends and relatives, gathered in East Holden on Saturday, April 21 to dedicate the new location for the Grand Lodge of Maine administrative offices, library, and museum.
Since the early 1900s, those facilities occupied rented space at 415 Congress St., Portland, said Grand Secretary Gerald Leighton. “We had to move out because of the administrative costs of staying in that building.”
“The building was built in 1910. We had to use an elevator to reach the third floor where our offices were,” said Grand Master W. Louis Greenier II. “There’s no parking there in Portland.”
A site-selection committee studied locations in Maine, including a former branch bank at the intersection of Routes 1A and 46 in East Holden. Approximately 3,000 square feet in size with a similarly dimensioned basement, the building was constructed 19 years ago.
Masons attending a Grand Lodge meeting held Dec. 10, 2011 in Bangor “accepted the proposal to purchase the building and move to Holden,” Leighton said. The sale to the Maine Masonic Charitable Foundation took place on Dec. 30, 2011.
“It fit our requirements and needs quite nicely,” he said. “In today’s world with electronic messaging and faxes, it didn’t matter where we were.”
The Grand Lodge of Maine had been headquartered in southern Maine for almost two centuries, according to Greenier. “When the Grand Lodge of Maine formed in 1820, we got our charter from the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts,” he said. “Back then, everything was in the southern part of” Maine.
As Maine’s population expanded north and east, so did Masonic membership. Today the Grand Lodge of Maine has some 20,000 members spread across 24 districts and 185 lodges. According to Greenier, relocating the administrative offices to Holden made sense “masonically wise,” because “there are more [members] in the central part of the state than in the southern part of the state.
“I have a deputy who lives 15 minutes from [the] Grand Lodge [offices in Portland] and has never been there,” Greenier said.
After acquiring the Holden building, the Grand Lodge undertook some renovations. “We had to remove the teller cages, and we put ceramic tile throughout the building,” Greenier said. “We painted it. The cost was nothing as significant as it would cost us if we had to build a new building.
“They did a nice job inside, renovating it,” he said. “It’s very pleasant to work there.”
According to Leighton, three people will work full time at the administrative offices. He described the facility as “a multi-use building” that “also houses the Grand Lodge museum and library.” The administrative offices “will support the local lodges” throughout Maine, Leighton indicated.
The site has 22 authorized parking spaces, and the existing drive-through lanes could be enclosed to add another 800 square feet to the building. The Grand Lodge of Maine wants to expand its library; “we have a lot of members who have libraries [of Masonic material] who want to donate them,” Greenier said. “You wouldn’t believe the Masonic material that is available: thousands and thousands of books.”
The April 21 dedication featured a Masonic “cornerstone laying” ceremony and a brief welcoming speech by Holden Town Council Chairman Robert Harvey. Interviewed after the dedication, he said that “I welcome the Grand Lodge of Maine and their library and museum to the Town of Holden.
“I’m pleased to have the building occupied,” he said. “It’ll bring people in … from all over the state to view the library and museum.”
“It’s a beautiful building,” Greenier said. “It’s a nice location, and it’s pretty convenient to Bangor, the interstate, the coast. We couldn’t have found anything any better.
“We’re excited,” he said. “We’ve found [that] we’ve had more people in the [Holden] administrative offices in the last few weeks than we did in our last six months in Portland.
“We’ve got a lot more possibilities in Holden than we had in Portland,” Greenier said.
http://bangordailynews.com/2012/05/02/the-weekly/masonic-admin-offices-relocate-to-east-holden-from-portland/