Ship hits rocks, forcing evacuation
JUNEAU, Alaska – A riverboat-style cruise ship ran aground off the Alaska coast early Monday, forcing an evacuation of more than 200 passengers before it could move again with a Coast Guard escort.
All passengers were evacuated from the Empress of the North by 7 a.m. and returned to Juneau aboard a ferry. One person was taken to a hospital for observation, a city employee said.
Passengers said they were jolted awake when the ship hit the rocks in a remote part of a southeast Alaska archipelago in the middle of the night. They were ordered to don lifejackets and gather in the ballroom, where a singer and piano player entertained them with songs including “Take Me Out to the Ball Game” as they waited for rescue.
“The Coast Guard was amazing. The crew was amazing, and because of that everyone was extremely calm. No one got excited. No one panicked,” said Linda Starn, of Apple Valley, Calif.
Bernice and Walt Walter, of Portland, said they were transferred from the Empress of the North to a tugboat, then to a Coast Guard cutter, before they finally made it to the Alaska state ferry Columbia.
“It was really interesting,” she said.
Mary Zanis Crosby, 83, of Seattle, said that “the rumble was horrendous” when the ship ran aground, but that she was never frightened during the ordeal.
“I considered it an adventure although I’d have rather been doing something else,” she said with a laugh.
The Empress of the North had 206 passengers and 75 crew members aboard when it sent out an emergency radio message about 2 a.m., the Coast Guard said.
When Coast Guard helicopters reached the area, the vessel was listing at the southern end of Icy Strait, about 50 miles southwest of Juneau, and it began taking on water, said Petty Officer Christopher D. McLaughlin at the Coast Guard base in Kodiak.
As the ship’s pumps worked to remove the water, the passengers were transferred to other boats in the area and then to the ferry to be taken to Juneau.
The ship left under its own power and arrived in Juneau with a Coast Guard escort about 10 hours after the grounding, Lane said.
It wasn’t immediately clear why the ship ran around, McLaughlin said. It was drizzling in Juneau but the seas were calm.
The National Transportation Safety Board was to investigate.