Ghosts of the
SS Watertown
James
Courtney and Michael Meehan, crew members of the S.S. Watertown,
were cleaning a cargo tank of the oil tanker as it sailed toward the
Panama Canal from New York City in December of 1924. Through a freak
accident, the two men were overcome by gas fumes and killed. As was
the custom of the time, the sailors were buried at sea off the
Mexican coast on December 4.
But this was not
the last the remaining crew members were to see of their unfortunate
shipmates. The next day, before dusk, the first mate reported seeing
the faces of the two men in the waves off the port side of the ship.
They remained in the water for 10 seconds, then faded. For several
days thereafter, the phantom-like faces of the sailors were clearly
seen by other members of the crew in the water following the ship.
On arrival in New Orleans, the ship's captain, Keith Tracy, reported
the strange events to his employers, the Cities Service Company, who
suggested he try to photograph the eerie faces. Captain Tracy
purchased a camera for the continuing voyage. When the faces again
appeared in the water, Captain Tracy took six photos, then locked
the camera and film in the ship's safe. When the film was processed
by a commercial developer in New York, five of the exposures showed
nothing but sea foam. But the sixth showed the ghostly faces of the
doomed seamen. The negative was checked for fakery by the Burns
Detective Agency. After the ship's crew had been changed, there were
no more reports of sightings.
Back