Thursday, October 4, 2007

Irving Johnson
The Tall ships Irving and Exy Johnson can be found at Irving Johnson (Tall ship)
Irving McClure Johnson (July 4, 1905 - January 2, 1991). Born in Hadley, Massachusetts, United States. Johnson was an author, adventurer and sail training pioneer.
Early home movies shows an impressionable young Johnson training for a life at sea climbing telephone poles in his backyard and tells of wrestling to prepare for the inevitable fights he perceived would occur after reading the novels of Jack London and Joseph Conrad.
Johnson would work small boats near his home during the summers and join the Merchant Marine in 1926 serving on board various steamers and freighters. An amateur filmmaker, his footage on the barque Peking in 1929 would produce the now famous film Around Cape Horn.
Serving as mate on board the Wanderbird, Johnson would meet his future wife, mate and life long partner. Marrying Electa "Exy" Johnson (née Search) in 1933, the Johnsons would circumnavigate the world on board two different boats both named Yankee, each trip with a new crew of boys and girls armed only with a sense of adventure and curiosity. For 25 years beginning in the late 1930's, Irving and Exy did what was thought impossible, and lived a life now legendary.
Many of the Johnsons' voyages have been documented through their many articles, books and videos produced by National Geographic and others throughout their sailing career. With an amateur crew, they traveled hundreds of thousands of miles through the Panama Canal to the islands of the South Pacific, ports of call in Southeast Asia, around the Cape of Good Hope and home to Gloucester without incident 18 months later not once, but seven times over.
In Pearl Harbor on that fateful day in 1941, Johnson would be called into service like many of his contemporaries to serve in World War II, his innate knowledge of the South Pacific making him a natural choice in advising the Pacific Fleet the intricacies of various tides, swells, currents, depths and shoals around the treacherous reefs and atolls of the South Seas.
Much as his colleague Alan Villiers, Johnson would continue to educate the public of the majestic age of sail throughout his life, personally narrating showings of Around Cape Horn on board the Peking, now docked at South Street Seaport in New York City and working with Mystic Seaport, serving as a Trustee at both organizations until his death in 1991.
The Los Angeles Maritime Institute have recently honored Irving and Exy by naming their twin brigantines for use with their award winning Topsail Youth program after them.
The doyenne of modern sail training, Exy Johnson would personally oversee the christening ceremonies of the vessels she was instrumental in constructing prior to her death in 2004.
Former crew members of their voyages include actor Sterling Hayden and Dr. Christopher B. Sheldon. Dr. Sheldon's experience on board the ill-fated brigantine Albatross served as the basis for the movie White Squall (1996). Capt. Johnson also mentored yachtsman Jim Stoll, who became one of the directors of the Flint School.

Articles

Yankee Sails Across Europe (National Geographic Society, 1967)
Voyage of the Brigantine Yankee (National Geographic Society, 1968)
Irving Johnson: High Seas Adventurer (National Geographic Society, 1985)
Around Cape Horn (Mystic Seaport, 1985) (from original 16 mm footage shot by Irving Johnson, 1929)

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