A Third Chance for the Levin J Marvel

 The old schooner was built in 1891 and had spent a career hauling timber from North Carolina to Baltimore and returning with fertilizer. The three-master had squat lines, like a barge. Shallow draft, with a centerboard, the Marvel was also very slow. It belonged to a class of boats built in Bethel, Delaware, called “ram schooners.” 

As trucks and trains became a faster and more economical option for transporting most cargoes, the freight schooners on the bay needed to find other work. Many were unceremoniously dismasted and converted into diesel powered freight boats, hauling oysters or produce from rural areas to city markets. Fate had very different plans for the Marvel and its sister, the Edwin and Maud. The big schooners were sold to Herman Knust, a former B&O Railroad executive who had a good idea for a new line of business.

He bought the boats for $18000 each in 1944 and took them to the shipyard and had them overhauled as passenger cruise vessels. The spacious cargo holds were piped with running water and built out with 17 staterooms, each with a porthole and sink. There were heads built in and a dining saloon. Knust correctly intuited that there was a market for windjammer cruises on the Chesapeake on the rustic old boats. The idea was a “dude cruise,” with passengers getting a taste of the seafaring life by helping out lines, enjoying evenings on the deck and visiting historic ports of call like St. Michaels, Maryland, a tiny fishing village, now home to the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum. 

Chesapeake Bay Vacation Cruises had a successful run. Knust sold the Edwin and Maud to a windjammer operator from Maine, who changed the name to Victory Chimes. This vessel, with its long history, is still operating today as a passenger cruise boat in Rockland, Maine. It is on the National Register of Historic Landmarks and enjoys a popular following. We will report more on the Victory Chimes later this summer as the blog will be posted from the deck on the anniversary of the Marvel’s foundering. 

The Marvel was not as lucky as the Victory Chimes…Knust laid her up in Salisbury, Maryland, far up the winding Nanticoke River and there she was mothballed until 1954, when John Meckling purchased her for $7500. He had dreams of reviving the dude cruises. 

By then, the Marvel was in quite rough shape. Meckling and his silent partner, short of working capital, made enough repairs to the hull to get the ship back in service. Getting to Booz Brothers Shipyard Baltimore was quite a trip in itself…stay tuned for that story.

Off to a Rocky Start

Meckling purchased the Levin J Marvel in the summer of 1954. The boat was mothballed on the Wicomico River in Salisbury, Maryland. Meckling, a talented tinkerer, set to work immediately and planned on getting the old boat to Annapolis in time to start cruises in late July. In fact, he began an advertising campaign, placing ads in Philadelphia and New York papers, as well as the Baltimore Evening Sun.

He hired the captain who had run the Marvel’s sister ship, Edwin and Maud, to help him deliver the boat to Annapolis. The ships’ company also included Bill Hall, a 16-year old Wicomico High School rising senior, as cabinboy, two local men as deckhands, Meckling’s 6-year old son and two parakeets. On July 16, 1954, the Marvel set sail for the first time in over a year.

About eight miles into the voyage, Capt. Tawes noticed the ship was sluggish and it’s bow was riding lower in the water. Meckling discovered that seams in the stern were open and the old ship was taking on an alarming amount of water.

“Bill turned green with the fright,” Meckling recalled in a newspaper article. The captain grounded the Marvel intentionally to keep it from sinking. The Salisbury Fire Department boat came to pump it out but needed further assistance from Coast Guard. After several hours, the Marvel refloated on high tide with no injuries and only an escaped parakeet. Meckling took the boat to Brown’s Marine Railway in White Haven. The captain returned to Salisbury with he cabinboy, leaving Meckling and the deckhands to pick up the pieces.

This first setback might have spooked a less optimistic boat owner, but Meckling was undaunted. He quipped to the local paper hat the near sinking was actually good, the planks of he old wooden ship needed to swell and a $50 recaulking was all that was needed to get underway. The railway was too busy to haul him quickly so the Marvel was off to Baltimore for the repairs.

Already, Meckling was behind schedule, his first cruise had to be cancelled and angry ticket holders mollified.

Captain John Meckling

A jaunty Capt. Meckling in the Salisbury Daily Times

Bill Hall, before the near-sinking, the Daily Times

An Adventure Turns to Disaster

On August 12, 1955, the schooner Levin J Marvel capsized in the Chesapeake Bay near the town of North Beach, Maryland. The ship sought shelter from Hurricane Connie in Herring Bay during a weeklong adventure cruise that became deadly. The Marvel’s 23 passengers and 4 crew-members were washed into the storm about a quarter mile from shore. The townspeople organized a remarkable rescue effort in severe conditions and saved many lives that day. In the end, fourteen passengers lost their lives, the largest number of fatalities on the Chesapeake to this day.

For the Marvel’s captain, the storm was just the beginning. The Coast Guard decided to make the disaster an object lesson in order to persuade congress to legislate an inspection regime for passenger vessels. He was painted as the incompetent master of a decrepit ship and charged with negligence and manslaughter. He might have ended his days in prison if not for the pro bono work of a retired Baltimore magistrate.

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