On Sunday, April 25th, Christopher White, author of the newly published and critically-acclaimed book, Skipjack: The Story of America’s Last Sailing Oystermen (St. Martin’s Press, www.skipjackthebook.com), will appear at the Decker Theatre on the campus of Washington College in Chestertown, Maryland. Joining White will be four legendary skipjack captains from the Eastern Shore of Maryland, including 89-year old Captain Arthur Daniels, Jr. and his son Captain Stan Daniels, both of Deal Island, plus Captain Wade Murphy, Jr. and Captain Stanley Larrimore of Tilghman Island.
Skipjack: The Story of America’s Last Sailing Oystermen is the saga of a quickly vanishing way of life and a culture unique to the Chesapeake Bay. The skipjack, an iconic wooden sailing vessel, has been used for dredging oysters since the nineteenth century. Once numbering in the hundreds, the number of working skipjacks has fallen to little more than a handful as the annual oyster harvest has been drastically reduced due to disease, pollution, and mounting social and economic pressures. A way of life that has sustained the watermen and their communities for generations is now on the verge of extinction.
Christopher White moved to Tilghman Island for two years in order to immerse himself in the watermen’s culture. During that time he crewed on skipjacks owned by the island’s most formidable captains, such as Captain Wade Murphy, Jr. of the Rebecca T. Ruark and Captain Stanley Larrimore of the Lady Katie. White also ventured down to Deal Island to work with the Chesapeake’s oldest working skipjack captain, 89-year old Arthur “Art” Daniels, Jr. and his sons and grandsons aboard the skipjack City of Crisfield.
The book that came of out this experience chronicles a life of hardship and frequent danger as these men work through the winter navigating unpredictable waters and an equally volatile economic seafood marketplace. The story beautifully reveals the abiding passion these watermen hold for working the waters of the Chesapeake Bay. At Washington College, the author and captains will speak to the traditions and future of the watermen’s singular livelihood.
Skipjack: America’s Last Sailing Oystermen is co-sponsored by the C.V. Starr Center for the Study of the American Experience and the Center for Environment and Society at Washington College. The event will also include an exhibition of skipjack-inspired art, including photography by Marion Warren, A. Aubrey Bodine, M.C. Wooten, Constance Stuart Larrabee and others, plus ship models, poetry and a post-program reception. All events will take place in the Daniel Z. Gibson Center for the Arts at Washington College in Chestertown, Md.. The conversation with Christopher White and the Chesapeake watermen will begin at 5:00 p.m.
For more information or to make reservations, contact Michael Buckley, Program Manager, C.V. Starr Center for the Study of the American Experience, Washington College (410) 810-7156, or email [email protected]. This event is free and open to the public but reservations are strongly suggested.
John says
This seems like an interesting way to spend a Sunday afternoon. We’re lucky to have one of the few operating skipjacks on the Bay right here in Chestertown, Echo Hill Outdoor School’s Elsworth.