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The Queen of the North Disaster

The Captain's Story

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks

Few recent events in British Columbia have seized the public mind like the 2006 sinking of the BC Ferries passenger vessel Queen of the North. Across Canada, it was one of the top news stories of the year. In BC it has attained the status of nautical legend. Ten years later, questions are still being asked. How did a ship that sailed the same course thousands of times fall victim to such an inexplicable error? Was the bridge crew fooling around? Why doesn't anybody in the know come forward and tell the truth?
Nobody knew the ship, the crew and the circumstances that fateful March night better than the Queen of the North's long-serving captain, Colin Henthorne, and in this book he finally tells his story.
The basic facts are beyond dispute. Just after midnight on March 22, 2006, the Queen of the North—carrying 101 passengers—struck an underwater ledge off Gil Island, 135 kilometres south of Prince Rupert. The impact tore open the ship's bottom and ripped out the propellers. In less than an hour, it sank 427 metres to the bottom of Wright Sound. Despite the crew's skilled evacuation, two passengers went missing and have never been found.
Helmswoman Karen Briker was fired. Fourth Mate Karl Lilgert was charged with criminal negligence causing death and sentenced to four years in prison. Captain Henthorne, who was not on watch at the time of the grounding, fought to keep his job and lost. It took him over six years to recover his career.
On the tenth anniversary of the tragedy, Captain Henthorne recalls with accuracy and detail that ill-fated voyage and all its terrible repercussions. The Queen of the North Disaster: The Captain's Story dispels rumours about what really happened that night, revealing a fascinating inside look at a modern marine disaster.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 23, 2017
      Henthorne, the captain of the Queen of the North ferry, which sank off the coast of British Columbia in 2006, vividly recounts his experience of the tragedy. The ship struck an underwater ledge, which tore open its bottom, and it sank in just over an hour. Although 99 of the 101 people onboard were saved, two passengers were never found. How such a disaster happened on a route the ferry had traveled thousands of times was the subject of a major investigation. Henthorne recounts the sinking and rescue operation in painstaking and technical detail—the narrowness of the channels, the weather conditions, the lack of visibility in the night and the presence of other vessels in the water, challenges getting the lifeboats in the water, searching the ship for passengers, heroic efforts by crew and passengers during the evacuation, the terrible rumbling sound as all the vehicles onboard rolled off the car decks and plunged into the water, and watching his “beautiful ship” go down. Henthorne was honored for his courage on the night of the sinking but nonetheless, lost his job. This dramatic account will be of interest to those who remember the tragedy as well as readers interested in seafaring.

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  • English

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