The Sinking of the Andrea Doria A Photographer's High Drama By Bob Wendlinger |
Photo by Bob Wendlinger/Daily Mirror Collision at Sea: The luxury Italian liner Andrea Doria, listing heavily starboard in the final moments of
her death throes, 1956. Photo by Bob Wendlinger/Daily Mirror The crippled S.S. Stockholm limps toward By Bob Wendlinger The date, July 25, 1956; the time: about
12:20 a.m. and I had just parked the Daily Mirror radio car and went into the
City Room for a goodnight, looking forward to the cool ride thru a hot night
to my home in Jersey. Instead, a few moments later Fred Klein
and I were racing to Klein and I arrived at the Hearst Record-American
office about The flight was uneventful as we crossed
over About We followed her wake as we endeavored to
locate the Andrea Doria. Shortly after, we came
upon the battered While the plane was being refueled, I
put my film holders on a Northeast flight to Meanwhile, our competition, Miss Daily
News with Gordon Rynders and Ed Clarity aboard,
also came back to refuel. We were both poised on the flight line for takeoff,
when the tower radioed us that a helicopter was arriving momentarily with an
injured 7 year old girl, and other passengers who had been lifted from one of
the rescue ships because of immediate need for medical attention. We ran over to a waiting ambulance and a
few minutes later had pictures of this child, and others being unloaded from
the chopper We then headed back to the plane and the return trip to the wreck
scene. In the plane we plugged in our headsets
and started monitoring the chatter of Coast Guard vessels at the scene, and
heard a terse order for all ships to stay away from the doomed ship. Her list
had become so pronounced that she would sink momentarily. My heart sank -- my
competition in a much faster plane was going to get there in time to make the
actual sinking -- actually they were about 5 minutes ahead of us and missed
it too. Suddenly, over the earphones came a
voice filled with emotion shouting "There she goes!" and we missed
the picture of the ship keeling over and slipping beneath the waves. When we
flew over the scene a few minutes later, all we spotted was a churning sea
were she went down, several empty lifeboats and hundreds of orange covered
life preservers floating around. They looked like oranges in the water from
our height. It was over, and we missed it!!! Note: It was a gloomy trip
back to
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