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Pea Island Life-Saving Station
Pea Island Life-Saving Station
Richard Etheridge, Early History
Richard Etheridge was born a slave on January 16, 1842, the property of John B. Etheridge in the Outer Banks of North Carolina. Large plantations didn’t exist in the Outer Banks; African Americans were relatively few and slavery limited. During his early life, Richard Etheridge, like most Bankers, learned to work the sea, fishing, piloting boats and combing the beach for the refuse of wrecks. Even though it was illegal to do so, his master also taught him to read and write.[2] After the fighting began between the States in April 1861, the Outer Banks were the site of one of the first Northern invasions, in February 1862. General Ambrose Burnside, the Union commander, employed black labor to build fortifications for his armies, and the island soon became a refugee camp for fugitive slaves. The Union eventually realized the potential that the active recruitment of Southern blacks offered their forces, not only by bolstering the Union ranks but by simultaneously diminishing the opposition’s labor supply. Black troops began being enlisted by the summer of 1863. Richard Etheridge joined on August 28.[3] The 36th United States Colored Troop, in which Etheridge enlisted, spent much of its first year of active duty like most of the other black units in the Union Army—playing secondary roles. After limited anti-guerilla actions in North Carolina, the soldiers of the 36th served as guards at the prisoner-of-war camp at Point Lookout, Maryland, occasionally raiding into neighboring Virginia for contraband goods: supplies, horses, cattle or slaves. Necessity eventually allowed the 36th to play a more prominent role in the fight for freedom and union.[4] The 36th distinguished itself during the September, 1864 Battle of New Market Heights, Virginia. During the fighting, the Union forces overran Lee’s strong position and won an important victory on the road to taking the Confederate capital at Richmond.
Keeper Richard Etheridge (on left) and the Pea Island Life-Saving crew in front of their station, circa 1890
Emblem of the U.S. Life-Saving Service Pea Island Life-Saving Station was a lifesaving station on Pea Island, on the Outer Banks of North Carolina. It was the first lifesaving station in the country to have an allblack crew, and it was the first in the nation to have a black man, Richard Etheridge, as commanding officer.[1]
Background
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Etheridge was promoted to sergeant two days after the battle.[5] While fighting on the front to end slavery, Etheridge was also active in the struggle behind Union lines to end the mistreatment of blacks. During his duty in Virginia in 1865, he and William Benson drafted the following letter to General Oliver O. Howard, the Commissioner of the Freedmen’s Bureau, protesting the mistreatment that blacks on Roanoke Island were suffering at the hands of the occupying army. “[T]he white soldiers break into our houses act as they please steal our chickens rob our gardens and if any one defends their-Selves against them they are taken to the gard house for it. so our familys have no protection when Mr Streeter is here to protect them and will not do it.” Etheridge and Benson’s letter was not merely a cry of grievance, but was also a call for action. “General we the soldiers of the 36th U.S. Co Troops having familys at Roanoke Island humbly petition you to favour us by removeing Mr Streeter the present Asst Supt at Roanoke Island under Captn James.” Etheridge signed the letter, “in behalf of humanity.”[6] At the War’s close, Etheridge, now a Regimental Commissary Sergeant, and the black troops of the Army of the James were regrouped into the Ninth and Tenth Cavalry and sent to Texas. These units would become known as the “Buffalo Soldiers.” Instances of abuse against blacks soldiers were rife in the period immediately following the fighting between the States. The men were due ten months back-pay, had had their rations cut in half, and were unruly over the continued reports of mistreatment that were coming from their families back home.[7]
Pea Island Life-Saving Station
in property was last off the Outer Banks, within sight and with little or inexpert assistance from the lifesavers on shore. The New York World reported, “It begins to be painfully clear that the terrible loss of Human life … on the North Carolina coast … must be attributed directly to the inefficiency of the Life-Saving Service.” [8] In 1879, the commander of the Pea Island station (called a “keeper”) was a white man and he had a crew of both white and black men. A rescue effort in November 1879 was bungled, and the keeper and some of the crew were held responsible. The Revenue Cutter Service investigated the situation, fired the white keeper, and appointed in his place Richard Etheridge, one of the best surfmen on the North Carolina coast, to serve as keeper. [9] In order to address the issue of inefficiency in the service, the best lifesavers would need to be put in charge of stations. Etheridge, one of only eight African Americans in the entire Life-Saving Service, was promoted from the lowest ranking surfman at neighboring Bodie Island station to take over the incompetently run station at Pea Island. The LSS inspectors who, despite warnings from locals, recommended Etheridge to the position, wrote: “Richard Etheridge is 38 years of age, has the reputation of being as good a surfman as there is on this coast, black or white, can read and write intelligently, and bears a good name as a man among the men with whom he has associated during his life.” The report concluded: “I am aware that no colored man holds the position of keeper in the Life-Saving Service, and yet such as are surfmen...I am fully convinced that the interests of the LifeSaving Service here, in point of efficiency, will be greatly advanced by the appointment of this man to the Keepership of Station No. 17.”[10]
Flawed rescue
In December 1866, Etheridge left the service at Brazos Santiago, Texas. He returned to the Outer Banks, where he married. Etheridge made his living fishing and serving in the newly-formed Life-Saving Service, first at Oregon Inlet in 1875, then at Bodies Island. In the early years, nepotism and political cronyism tainted many Life-Saving Service appointments. A series of highly publicized maritime disasters off the North Carolina coast appeared to be leading to the annexation of the LSS into the Navy. In two months, 188 lives and more than a half million dollars
First African-American crew
Richard Etheridge was the first African American to hold the rank of keeper of a lifesaving station. This meant that, under the racial standards of the times, the entire crew under his command would have to be black. Although other black men had served as surfmen at Pea Island and other stations, Pea Island Station came to be manned entirely by a
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Pea Island Life-Saving Station
crew arrived at the scene of the wreck, they found that the wave conditions were so great that the surfboat could not be launched, nor could a breaches buoy be used because the beach was so inundated by waves that the anchor for the buoy line could not be placed in the sand. Two surfmen volunteered to swim out in the waves to attempt to reach the wreck. They eventually did reach the schooner and managed to heave a line aboard. Nine times the surfmen went into the water and one by one the passengers and crew were all rescued, starting with the captain’s three-year old son.[14] According to local lore, Meekins, who was reputedly the best swimmer of the group, made every voyage out to the Newman.[15] In the following days, the Newman’s captain searched for and found the piece of the side that held the vessel’s name and donated it to the crew as an offering of his thanks. For a century, this would the only award the Pea Island crew received for their efforts. The 1896 Pea Island crew voted to give the wooden sideboard of the Newman to Theodore Meekins, the young surfman who first spotted the distress signal and who swam out to the wreck several times during the rescue. (Fifth from left in photo.) Meekins took the board to his farm on Roanoke Island and nailed it to the top of his barn. He served at Pea Island for 21 more years, until his death in 1917, when, while boating home on leave, a storm came up at Oregon Inlet, and he drowned trying to swim to shore.[16]
Pea Island USCG crewmen in 1942, showing lifeboat and boathouse black keeper and crew.[1] The other LSS stations, in North Carolina as well as throughout the nation, would be manned and run by whites.[11] Five months after Etheridge took charge, arsonists burnt the station to the ground.[12]
Rescue of the E.S. Newman
Given the scrutiny he and his men were under, Etheridge knew that the slightest error could result in his or one of his crewmen’s dismissal, that inadequacies, no matter how small, could result in the reinstatement of a white keeper and crew. So he ran the station with military ardor. All of his vigorous and exacting preparation paid off on the terrible night of October 11th, 1896 when the schooner "E.S. Newman" grounded south of the station. The captain of the vessel had his wife and three-year old daughter on board when it was driven ashore during a hurricane on October 11, 1896. The storm was so bad that Keeper Etheridge had suspended beach patrols. Still, from the station, a surfman, Theodore Meekins, thought he saw a distress signal, and fired off a Coston flare to see if there would be a response. Meekins and Etheridge watched carefully, then saw the schooner acknowledge with a flare of her own.[13] The Pea Island crew with the help of a mule team then pulled the beach card with the rescue equipment and surfboat along the beach towards where the distress signal had been seen. Huge waves washing ashore made this especially difficult. Finally, when the
Later years
Etheridge served as the keeper at Pea Island for twenty years. In January 1900, as Orville and Wilbur Wright were planning their voyage to Kitty Hawk to experiment with human flight, Etheridge, at the age of 58, fell ill and died at the station. [17] Pea Island continued to be manned by an all-black crew through the Second World War. After the war, the station was decommissioned. One of the last surviving surfmen to serve at the station, William Charles "Bill Charles" Bowser, died at age 91 on June 28, 2006. Herbert Collins, who served in the 1940s and put the locks on the station when it was closed, currently lives in Washington, DC. In 1996, the Coast Guard awarded the Gold Life-Saving Medal posthumously to the keeper and crew of the
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Pea Island station for the rescue of the people of the E.S. Newman.
Pea Island Life-Saving Station
[9] Shanks, Ralph. York, Wick. and Lisa Shanks (Ed). U. S. Life-Saving Service: Heroes, Rescues and Architecture of the Early Coast Guard. p. 131. Costaño Books. Petaluma, CA 1996 ISBN 0-930268-16-4 [10] Wright and Zoby. pp. 162, 166 [11] Wright and Zoby, Fire on the Beach. p. 175-176. [12] Wright and Zoby. p. 190 [13] U.S. Life-Saving Service.org, “Wreck of the E.S. Newman” (accessed January 13, 2008) [14] Shanks and York p. 131 [15] Wright, David and David Zoby. “Ignoring Jim Crow: The Turbulent Appointment of Richard Etheridge and the Pea Island Lifesavers," The Journal of Negro History, 80/2, spring 1996 [16] Wright and Zoby. “Ignoring Jim Crow" [17] Wright and Zoby. p. 297
Notes
[1] ^ “African Americans in the United States Coast Guard”, United States Coast Guard. Accessed January 17, 2008. "Appointed Keeper of Pea Island LifeSaving Station on January 24, 1880, Richard Etheridge became the first African American keeper in the Service.... From the time of Etheridge’s assuming command in 1880, Pea Island was staffed by African Americans until the station was closed in 1947, after which the area became a wildlife refuge.... The second all-AfricanAmerican station (Pea Island was the first) was organized at Tiana Beach, New York." [2] Wright, David and David Zoby. Fire on the Beach: Recovering the Lost Story of Richard Etheridge and the Pea Island Lifesavers. Scribner, 2001 ISBN 0195154843. pp. 24-25, 43-47 [3] Wright and Zoby. pp. 50-55 [4] Wright and Zoby. pp. 65-88 [5] Wright and Zoby. pp. 97-105 [6] Wright and Zoby. pp. 115-116 [7] Wright and Zoby. pp. 120 [8] Wright and Zoby. pp. 141, 158
See also
• Chicamacomico Life-Saving Station • United States Life-Saving Service
External links
• U.S. Coast Guard Historian’s page on Pea Island Station, with photographs
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pea_Island_Life-Saving_Station" Categories: History of the United States Coast Guard, Dare County, North Carolina, Outer Banks This page was last modified on 21 May 2009, at 06:36 (UTC). All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details.) Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a U.S. registered 501(c)(3) taxdeductible nonprofit charity. Privacy policy About Wikipedia Disclaimers
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