Description
Here’s an explosion of color and ocean spray. Sailing along the California coast can be incredibly dangerous. Wouldn’t want to run aground on rocks like those, would you? Well in 1923, the US suffered the largest lost of peacetime ships along the coast of Santa Barbara in the Honda Point Disaster. It was like a pre-Pearl Harbor, and it was also the fault of the Japanese (I jest).
A week before the disaster, the Great Kanto Earthquake ripped through Honshu killing about 150,000 people, generating a 40 foot tsunami in Japan, and absolutely devastating the countryside leaving millions homeless. I can’t find any data on how much the ground moved, but suffice to say, it was probably a lot. There were many many aftershocks, and this sent huge force waves rippling across the Pacific.
7 days later, the waves began hitting California creating all kinds of problems for the squadron of destroyers who were heading from San Francisco down to San Diego. 14 brand new Clemson-class ships with a complement of 116 people each … and I have no reason to think they weren’t fully complemented as they were doing military exercises on the way… so well over a thousand US Navy guys. As the squadron approached the Santa Barbara Channel, in heavy fog, at 11:00 o’clock at night naturally, they were slammed into the coast partly because of 1. no one could see anything 2. the captain didn’t believe the measurements they were getting off their equipment and 3. crazy swells were pounding the coast. Seven of the ships sank, two ran aground but managed to get off the rocks, and the remaining five declined to participate in the mess.
Nearby Lompoc’s ranchers swung swiftly into action. It was by now the middle of the night, but all hands were on deck for the rescue. They set up those cable and pulley things to swing people off the boats, got out the old climbing gear and started rappelling down the cliffs to save the stranded sailors who were trapped between the rocks, the ships and those pounding earthquake shock swells. Several local fishermen set out in their boats and picked up the wrecked crew of two of the destroyers at great risk to their own vessels. The remaining Destroyers could pick people out of the water, but couldn’t get too close to those rocks or risk getting sunk themselves. All in all, of the thousand sailors, only 23 died.
The US Navy courtmartialed the fleet commander, Edward Howe Watson, who argued successfully that the was solely to blame for the incident, and that it was all his navigational error, thus getting the court to acquit several other officers who had been courtmartialed over the incident. He was commended by the Navy and his fellow officers for in a ‘we’ll strip you of your rank, and give you a medal at the same time, jolly good form,’ sort of thing. The wrecks were so bad and in such a difficult area, that no salvage was made by the USGovt, who eventually sold all that iron, 13 million dollars worth of 1923 dollars, for a thousand bucks to salvagers (I can’t find which salvage company). More info than you can shake a stick at here, including pics: web.archive.org/web/2016111123…
Xander is eaten by sharks here:
Comments: 91
Ananiel [2018-05-04 07:34:59 +0000 UTC]
Went so well!
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Venom-V13 [2018-05-04 04:31:43 +0000 UTC]
Stunning work!
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phinghar [2018-05-01 05:10:37 +0000 UTC]
Beautiful artwork !!! Amazing !!!
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Rat-Terrier [2018-04-25 18:12:18 +0000 UTC]
Incredible use of color! I love the way you framed it too.
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William0116 [2018-04-18 19:59:20 +0000 UTC]
Looks really good!!! Beautiful artwork
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TheLadyAND [2018-04-17 20:12:34 +0000 UTC]
Wow this is stunning!
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PanRod [2018-04-15 17:20:30 +0000 UTC]
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billh38 [2018-04-14 07:00:48 +0000 UTC]
OH heck ! You are a genius !
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Gogomechy [2018-04-14 01:25:37 +0000 UTC]
What a story! And Admiral Watson sounds like quite the man-taking the fall, no effort to dodge responsibility or share the blame. Very honorable.
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chateaugrief In reply to Gogomechy [2018-04-15 03:24:05 +0000 UTC]
That's the general idea I got from that transcript. Crazy freak accident that!
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Beensaind [2018-04-13 17:49:16 +0000 UTC]
nice work.
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Sega-Superstar [2018-04-13 03:28:11 +0000 UTC]
Beautiful use of oranges here contrasting on that dark blue ocean
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chateaugrief In reply to Sega-Superstar [2018-04-15 03:22:58 +0000 UTC]
Thank you! I hadn't done pure orange in a while...got inspired.
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lonermade [2018-04-13 02:05:51 +0000 UTC]
I always enjoy your history lessons that accompany your paintings, both are well composed, interesting and I feel I know a bit more about these places. I have no idea how you find time. A big well done and I am glad I'm watching.
This is another Turneresk painting with burning sunset over thrashing water, I'll leave any simile of your writing to someone that knows than me (just about everyone).
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LorenzoTurtle [2018-04-13 01:48:32 +0000 UTC]
woah looks amazing
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Unseeming [2018-04-12 21:34:27 +0000 UTC]
Beautiful ! Love the colours.
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strawberry-doqqy [2018-04-12 16:28:43 +0000 UTC]
omgosh amazingly beautiful i cant describe
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arrog [2018-04-12 13:34:18 +0000 UTC]
Flagged as Spam
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ConceptArtistHD [2018-04-12 09:24:55 +0000 UTC]
amazing work as always
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mpz28 [2018-04-12 08:01:02 +0000 UTC]
Wow! very nice
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Lucas1996Garcia [2018-04-12 06:35:09 +0000 UTC]
OH MY GOD!!! IMPRESSIVE!!!
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robert-kim-karen [2018-04-12 05:39:29 +0000 UTC]
i really enjoy all the info you give us on your paintings. makes the experience so much more than 'a quick glance and move along kind of thing'. It's amazing how for every place there is a history attached.
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chateaugrief In reply to robert-kim-karen [2018-04-12 18:20:38 +0000 UTC]
The thing is, there's hardly a place I could paint that doesn't have some interesting story attached...all I have to do is look it up. It's amazing that I'm surrounded by so much history! I get such an appreciation for my surroundings when I know the old stories that go along with them.
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robert-kim-karen In reply to chateaugrief [2018-04-14 06:23:08 +0000 UTC]
Used to drive my kids nuts when they were out with me. If I knew the story of a location, I'd tell it to them when we were there. Horton Plaza, Old Town, US Grant Hotel. Just anything really. "Dad, we just want to shop!"
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chateaugrief In reply to robert-kim-karen [2018-04-14 16:03:29 +0000 UTC]
ouch! shopping with whose money, little whippersnappers? haha that's kids for you though! i remember all the stories my dad told me when I was a kid...those sorts of things last a lifetime. <3
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