Please select your home edition
Edition
C-Tech 2021 America's Cup 728x90 TOP

Tall Ship Oliver Hazard Perry - Recap of Incident in Newport Harbor

by Barby MacGowan on 18 Oct 2017
SSV Oliver Hazard Perry after returning to her berth at Fort Adams on Monday evening. OHPRI
SSV Oliver Hazard Perry, Rhode Island’s Official Sailing Education Vessel homeported in Newport, R.I. is back safe at her berth at Fort Adams State Park after an incident that left her disabled in inner Newport Harbor.

On the evening of Sunday, October 15, the 200-foot Perry, with 12 crewmembers aboard, was moving under diesel power from Bowen’s Wharf – where it had been docked for the Bowen’s Wharf Seafood Festival – to Fort Adams, located approximately a quarter mile away in the outer harbor. When her two propellers became entangled by one of the ship’s dock lines, Perry drifted without engine power and came in contact with four boats that were docked nearby. During the incident, no one was injured and minimal damage occurred. Perry did not run aground, and thanks to the quick actions of the captain, crew, the Newport Harbor Master, Oldport Marine Services, the Narragansett Bay Marine Task Force and Coast Guard Station Castle Hill, the ship was secured in the northeast corner of the harbor with a safety zone established around her.

On Monday, October 16, after a diver cleared the propellers and both engines were operational, Oliver Hazard Perry Rhode Island coordinated with the U.S. Coast Guard to assess the situation and move the ship safely to its berth with USCG-required tugboat assistance. The relocation was completed by Monday at 5 p.m.

Owners/captains of the four affected vessels were contacted, and an investigation of the incident will be completed by the U.S. Coast Guard.

Perry’s next educational voyage is scheduled for January, 2018 and all of her 2018 voyages and plans for festival participation are expected to continue as scheduled. Perry will be required by the Coast Guard to undergo sea trials later this week to ensure the ongoing safety of the ship and crew.

SSV Oliver Hazard Perry is not a replica, but a modern, steel-hulled vessel purpose-built for training and education to the highest modern safety standards (accommodating 49 people overnight, including 17 professional crew). The first sea-going full-rigged Tall Ship to be built in America in over a hundred years, she is USCG-approved and all who participate in her sailing programs become part of the crew. No one is a passenger. Instead, everyone lives aboard and works side-by-side with professional crew to learn square-rig seamanship, including bracing the yards, steering the ship and even going aloft if they wish to do so.

Oliver Hazard Perry Rhode Island’s mission is to provide innovative, empowering education-at-sea programs that promote personal and professional growth. The mission is achieved by partnering with schools, organizations, and universities for unique experiential learning opportunities that incorporate STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts, and mathematics) educational concepts. The non-profit organization offers a variety of onboard learning experiences to program partners as well as the broader public and also participates at festivals and other events to reinforce the importance of and interest in Rhode Island’s and America’s maritime history.

U.S. Navy Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry led the first U.S. naval victory over the British in the Battle of Lake Erie during the War of 1812.
For more information on SSV Oliver Hazard Perry and its programs, visit www.ohpri.org. Follow OHPRI on Facebook and Twitter for current news and developments.
Armstrong 728x90 - Performance Mast Range - BOTTOMDoyle_SailWorld_728X90px-02 BOTTOMSOUTHERN-SPARS-MISSY-FURLING-BOOMS-728-X-90 Bottom

Related Articles

Clarisse Crémer 11th in the Vendée Globe 2024-2025
Crossing the finish line early on Monday 27th January After an exhausting last few miles in the Bay of Biscay, battling relentlessly and in contact with Benjamin Dutreux, as well as long final hours under pressure, threatened by the winds and swell of storm Hermine, Clarisse Crémer crossed the finish line
Posted today at 8:23 am
King of all wins at Festival of Sails 2025
246 boats, 1100 sailors, 100,000 visitors and close to twenty divisional champions crowned The Festival of Sails 2025 wrapped today from the Royal Geelong Yacht Club. It was quite the spectacle, with 246 boats, 1100 sailors, 100,000 visitors and close to twenty divisional champions crowned post racing.
Posted today at 8:04 am
Vendée Globe Monday 27th January Update
Too rough to approach Les Sables d'Olonne The storm in the North Atlantic has made it too rough in Les Sables d'Olonne for latest Vendée Globe finishers Benjamin Dutreux and Clarisse Crémer to enter the channel, so they've had to divert to La Rochelle for shelter.
Posted today at 7:02 am
Clarisse Crémer finishes 11th in the Vendée Globe
After 77 days, 15 hours and 34 minutes at sea This Monday at 0336 hrs (UTC), Clarisse Crémer, skipper of L'Occitane en Provence, crossed the finish line of her second Vendée Globe, after 77 days, 15 hours and 34 minutes at sea to take a hard earned, very creditable 11th place.
Posted today at 4:07 am
Bacardi Winter Series Event 2 overall
'Relative Obscurity' clinches J/70 victory with a race to spare Three days of exceptional sailing on Biscayne Bay, January 24-26, set the stage to make Bacardi Winter Series 2 a perfect event. Miami delivered stunning weather and challenging conditions that tested every aspect of performance.
Posted today at 12:28 am
2025 Midwest Women's Sailing Conference
Registration for the event on May 17th is now open! Registration for the 2025 Midwest Women's Sailing Conference in Milwaukee on Saturday, May 17th is now open.
Posted on 26 Jan
Benjamin Dutreux finishes 10th in the Vendée Globe
An impressive result for a sailor who sailed fast & smart and made some bold strategic choices The stormy skies, strong winds and big waves were not the kind of welcome home Vendéen solo racer Benjamin Dutreux would have preferred, but the determined skipper of GUYOT environnement - ??Water Family crossed the finish line of his second Vendée Globe.
Posted on 26 Jan
Clarisse Crémer set to finish Vendée Globe tonight
The skipper of L'Occitane en Provence will not be able to use the channel in Les Sables-d'Olonne. The finish is just around the corner for Clarisse, who is expected to cross the Vendée Globe storm finish line this Sunday evening between 9pm and midnight.
Posted on 26 Jan
First two non-French finishers in the Vendée Globe
Justine Mettraux became the first female entrant and first skipper from outside France to finish Justine Mettraux of Switzerland became the first female entrant, and first skipper from outside France, to complete the 2024-'25 Vendée Globe solo round-the-world race, when she crossed the finish line on Saturday afternoon in eighth position.
Posted on 26 Jan
RORC Transatlantic Race Finish
Multihull line honours and IRC class winners decided Oran Nataf's Pulsar 50 Rayon Vert (FRA) crossed the finish line outside Camper & Nicholsons Port Louis Marina, Grenada on Friday 24th January 2025 to be the first multihull to finish the 2025 RORC Transatlantic Race.
Posted on 26 Jan