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View Full Version : David Nutt Sr., schoonerman, slips his cable. A good man.



rbgarr
01-19-2008, 08:48 AM
David C. Nutt

of Etna, N.H., died Thursday, January 10, in Hanover, N.H, age 88.
Born in Cleveland, Ohio on June 21, 1919, he was the son of Joseph Randolph Nutt and Elizabeth Hasbrouck Nutt. He graduated from Dartmouth College with a degree in Botany in 1941. In 1943 he married Babs Wright and they moved to Etna, N.H. in 1946.

From 1935 until 1940 he accompanied Captain "Bob" Bartlett to Greenland on the schooner Morrissey serving as a seaman, a navigator and a curator for the Smithsonian Museum. Upon graduating from Dartmouth College he served until 1943 as Executive Officer on the schooner USS Bowdoin in Greenland under Captain Donald MacMillan. He then served as Exec. and Commanding Officer on the USS Sumner, a Navy survey ship, and was involved in operations at Ulithi, Guam, Iwo Jima, Leyte, Okinawa, Korea, China, and Bikini. On Mt. Suribachi he dropped into a foxhole and landed alongside his old college roommate, Marine Captain Robert White, "while Hell's kitchen was flying overhead."

After the war he pursued a career in the Arctic. In 1948 he acquired the 100-ft schooner Blue Dolphin, which he based in Boothbay Harbor. She was refitted for Arctic oceanographic research and from 1949 to 1954 surveyed the fjords and estuaries of Labrador. This research resulted in a vital baseline for the thermal and compositional history of subarctic estuaries which contained cold Arctic bottom waters. Nutt and his crews also used dog teams and small boats. He later did research on the Greenland icecap and developed methods to determine the atmospheric conditions at the time the ice was formed.

He was an Officer and later Chairman of the Arctic Institute of North America, was on the Board of Governors of the American Polar Society, the Board of Directors of the New England Grenfell Association, the Board of Directors and President of the Early Sites Foundation, the Board of Directors and President of the Aviation Association of New Hampshire and was an Honorary member of the American Polar Society and earned the Elisha Kent Kane Medal for Arctic Service.

He was a long-time member of the Boothbay Harbor Yacht Club and served as Commodore. David also was a Selectman in Hanover, N.H. and served several terms in the New Hampshire State Legislature. He retired from the United States Naval Reserve with the rank of Captain.
He and his wife, Babs, both experienced pilots, owned and operated the Post Mills Airport in Post Mills, Vermont for many years.

Oldsalt
01-19-2008, 09:01 AM
Rbgarr, was he the well known boatbuilder up your way?

rbgarr
01-19-2008, 09:55 AM
No, his father.

Flying Orca
01-19-2008, 10:30 AM
Blue Dolphin? As in the Stan Rogers song "Man With Blue Dolphin"?

It was just like him - he had to pick
A boat gone from dowdy to derelict
In half a dozen years
Of searching for an owner
She may have lost her heart in the harbour mud
But she really caught his at the flood
And he wonders how she knew
That she was waiting for a loner

Blue Dolphin, built by the Rhuland men
She's lying on the bottom again
With only him to care
That Bluenose had a sister

He lost the house and he sold the car
His wife walked out, so he hit the bars
And hit up every friend
To raise the Blue Dolphin

And even afloat she's a hole in the water where his money goes
Every dollar goes
And it's driving him crazy
He pounds his fists white on the dock in the night and cries, "I'm gonna win!"
And licks the blood away
And he's gonna raise the Dolphin

Blue Dolphin's lying like a wounded whale
She's hungry for a scrap of a sail
To get her underway
Back to salt water
Now there's a man lying spent in the winter sun
He wonders what the hell he has done
And who would ever pay
To save his schooner daughter

For even afloat she's a hole in the water where his money goes
Every dollar goes
And it's driving him crazy
He pounds his fists white on the dock in the night and cries, "I'm gonna win!"
And licks the blood away
And he's gonna raise the Dolphin.

Simon G
04-02-2008, 09:15 AM
It is the same Blue Dolphin. I sing the song from time to time and got interested in what happened to the boat.

Built in 1926-27 for a grandson of John Deere for hunting around Newfoundland. 2 books were published about trips to the Galapagos Islands on it, the trips are in the early 1930s; the second book written by a 95 year old in the 2003.

After submarine hunting in WWII it was bought by David Huff Sr. In 1953 it took measurements of the gulf stream for Wookey Hole - I am pretty sure these were the first; when you see charts of gulf stream temperature etc - quite common in the global warming debates - they start in 1953.

After 1954 facts are thin on the ground. By the late 70s - early 80s a supermarket owner from Detroit had the wreck of the Blue Dolphin moored in Sarnia, it sunk at least twice here and a Canadian sailing magazine wrote about his attempts to refurbish the boat. This is when Stan Roger's heard about and wrote the song.

At some point he managed to move it to Detroit, and it was there in the early 90's on its side in a dock near the Goatyard. I have one unconfirmed report of it still being there around 2003, but can't confirm this. Looking on google maps aerial photos it doesn't appear to be there now.

I wonder if anyone in Detroit remembers this wreck of what must have been a magnificent boat. A boat with a song plus at least 2 books (also features in a book on research in Labrador) - not many boats can claim that.

nathan fancy
07-21-2009, 04:42 PM
as it happens i sail in detroit and know exactly where the blue dolphin is...she has been at this location for many years has sunk and been raised a number of times and currently rests on the bottom with parts of the deck still out of the water .. her sails and rigging are intact and in storageanyone interested in further details feel free to e-mail me and i'll tell you what i can... n8fancy@gmail.com the link below is a google map of the location.http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&geocode=&q=&ie=UTF8&ll=42.357262,-82.962468&spn=0.00089,0.001725&t=h&z=19 (http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&geocode=&q=&ie=UTF8&ll=42.357262,-82.962468&spn=0.00089,0.001725&t=h&z=19)