The venerable
Puget Sound ferry Chetzemoka sank 8:53 yesterday morning
as she was towed down the coast to a planned new career in San
Francisco.
The 240-foot
wooden, diesel-electric boat went down nine miles northwest of
La Push, on the Washington coast, after an all-night struggle
with the seas by crewmen of the tug Express.
Tug and tow
sailed from Puget Sound over the weekend.
Monday night
the Express turned about off the coast when the ferryboat's
seams opened and she started taking water. Tugboat skipper Tom
Kent hoped to make it back into the protection of the Strait of
Juan de Fuca. But at 5:30 yesterday morning the Express
radioed the Coast Guard for help. The Coast Guard delivered three
pumps to the Chetzemoka, and two tug crewmen board the
ferry to try to keep her afloat. They were Larry Frank, 48, of
Everett and Tom McGuirk, 27, of Seattle. Frank and McGuirk couldn't
keep up with the flooding, though. A Coast Guard 42-footer picked
them off, and the Chetzemoka sank. Seattle Post-Intelligencer,
Wed. June 1977