A sea story, sort of, about Watergate and January 6th

This weekend I’m thinking about Watergate, the scandal that began when some operatives burgled a Democratic office and got caught. That happened in the run-up to the 1972 election, which Nixon won hugely, in June I believe. I was fishing then, off New England, chasing offshore lobster in Lydonia Canyon out on the edge of the shelf, maybe 120 miles from Nantucket. My skipper, Sten, who passed away in 2000, was an avid reader of Doonesbury. He had a close friend, David Martin, also long gone, who had worked on Elliot Richardson’s staff back when Richardson was instrumental in establishing the Cape Cod National Seashore. Sten followed politics, sort of, which we learned in the coming two years as you will see.

I have a very vague and dim memory of reading about the break-in. The “Plumbers,” I think they were called.

We had a very tough summer, that summer, because we had switched from long lining for cod and haddock to the lobster fishery and we were making every mistake you could make, plus fighting for bottom with other lobster boats in the deep canyons off Massachusetts. However, by the fall we started to make some money, land some big trips. We had 600 traps, in 50 trap strings, out there and we would fish those traps for a week or ten days before coming in. We had a flooded lobster hold with refrigeration. In the late fall, November, we chased the lobsters up into shoal water, 30-50 fathoms, on the slope of Georges Bank, and on December 7th a Russian fleet of four boats came upon us and our gear and nearly wiped us out, towing through the traps such that we lost 500 of the 600 traps despite our best efforts to wave them away. A little 65 foot wooden longliner against 300-foot  Russian stern trawlers is no match at all.

That winter, 1972-1973, I was living in a drafty cottage in Dennis, Mass, with the remaining 100 traps stacked alongside the driveway, and while Sten chased funding for more traps I spent the winter with piles of five-eighths inch polypropylene line splicing and rigging the 50-trap “trawls” in the living room. This was a lot of splicing – splicing sections of groundline together with long splices, splicing into the line loops for the brummel hooks to attach the trawl to, splicing in the brummel hooks, and splicing the collars and loop[s and hooks for the 500 new 48 inch long lobster traps, made of plastic coated stiff wire. I’d sit in the living room with gear all over, a sharp knife, bent over, splicing.  It was a long winter, cold. This was the start of the Energy Crisis, embargoes, lines at gas stations, and pundits spoke of a coming ice age.

I watched a lot of TV, the one station I could see, a black and white flickering screen, long before cable TV let alone the web, and consequently I ended up watching all the televised Watergate hearings that winter, Sam Ervin, Butterfield, John Dean, Howard Baker, endless hours of testimony about the break in. I was watching when Butterfield (I think it was Butterfield) announced that all the meetings in the Oval Office were taped. It was a sensation, pandemonium.

That spring we went back out there with the new gear and tried to recoup our losses. The Watergate thing moved along, with stories about tapes and fights for tapes, and John Dean was accused of being a traitor to the Republican cause, and all the Republicans, to a man (they were nearly all men then) howled that the entire Watergate thing was a political witch hunt. Still, a special prosecutor was appointed in the early summer of 1973, Archibald Cox, and thus began a bitter fight over tapes and their release.

Meanwhile we fished, hard, barely hanging on. Lydionia Canyon became too crowded and we heard there were a lot of lobsters being caught up on Brown’s Bank, Canadian waters off Nova Scotia, at the same time as Sten arranged with his Nova Scotian friends (half our crew were boys from Clark’s Harbor, Nova Scotia) to rig out a longliner to harpoon swordfish, which we would take aboard at sea and bring back to the US for sale, splitting the money. Swordfish was illegal then due to a mercury scare. We ended up loading all our gear on the boat, three total round trips, and moved it to the southwest tail of Brown’s Bank. The tides were awful up there and we hid in the fog and sank the buoy lines, grappling them up to haul gear using the Loran A to find it.

Big mistake, all the way around. In the end we moved the gear back to a little unnamed canyon east of Lydonia and did OK, and through the fall made a year of it.
Labor Day weekend that summer, 1973, we were between trips to our gear (which was a 16 hour steam from the boat’s base in Hyannis, Mass) and Sten asked me and Gary, another member of the crew, if we’d help him because he had agreed that weekend to take his boat to Chatham to pick up some people and then go out to Monomoy Island to the outer beach – his friend, David Martin, the wife and grown kids of Francis Sargent, former governor of Massachusetts, and Elliot Richardson and his wife. Richardson, from Massachusetts, was the Attorney General of the United States at this time, and Gary and I knew he had been under intense pressure all summer concerning Archibald Cox, Watergate, and what to do.

We picked everyone up at Stage Harbor, Chatham – I brought the boat with Gary up from Hyannis and we met Sten there –  and motored about fifteen miles out to the end of Monomoy Island, where we anchored just offshore and rowed everyone in to the beach. It was more than a little intimidating to be right next to the Attorney General, and a former governor’s family, especially because Gary and I looked like long haired hippies, especially after the summer we’d had, and when we got to the beach everyone ate from the picnic basket and then Gary and I took off over the dunes because we both felt out of place and awkward. Elliot Richardson had brought fishing gear and he was setting up to surf cast. He’d be standing at the most eastern end of the Cape Cod mainland, miles from any houses or people, facing the Atlantic, Washington and the political fever far to the south.

Gary and I, over the dune and across the point that ended the island, hung around and then, because it was a hot sunny day and what the hell, went swimming, bare ass naked. The water was nice, even warm, and we were in the water a while. When we came out, though, a current had carried us one way and Elliot had come the other way, casting, and when we emerged there we were, streaming water and without clothes, ten feet from the Attorney General. Elliot was totally unfazed by us, polite. In fact I think he was delighted to be in such a contrast to the fevers back in DC.

“How was the swimming?” he asked us.
“Nice. How was the fishing? Catch anything?”
“That isn’t the point.” He smiled at us. We smiled back.
That fall the Watergate events heated up. Sten would, while hauling gear way offshore, tune in an AM radio so he could hear the headlines. He ran the boat out on deck on the starboard side and he could hear the radio through an open pilothouse window. I was working aft of him, emptying traps as they came from the water. Sten would yell aft to the rest of us when things happened.

“Nixon’s trying to fire Cox!”
“Richardson resigned! Ruckelshous resigned!”
“They’re calling it the Saturday night massacre!”
The following spring and summer, now two years since that 1972 break in, evidence mounted as some tapes were released, yet still the Republicans stood as a bloc against anything changing, stood as a bloc claiming this must be a witch hunt. However, once Alexander Butterfield said there were tapes, the witch hunt argument weakened.

That summer Nixon resigned, and he resigned because, eventually, the Republican Senators came to see the battle must be lost, the evidence was too overwhelming, and once the Senators turned, it was over, and Nixon was gone.

I am thinking of Watergate these days because, while the Watergate scandal was very different than the issues surrounding the January 6th attack on the Capitol, there has been one great similarity – months and months of solid Republican unity, unity in favor of their President or former President.
But, when Butterfield made the announcement there are tapes, and I sensed then that the character of the situation had changed materially, so now with the release of phone records and text messages, speculation must now shift to awareness and reality. It is hard to claim a political witch hunt in the face of evidence, visible to all.

It feels, right now, very much the way it felt at the end of July, 1974, when evidence became a torrent and it was abundantly clear laws had been broken. I have said to myself throughout this latest January 6th event that unless and until members of the former Presidents party accept evidence as true and significant, little can and will change. This has been especially the case even though Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger have shown great courage to pursue the truth, but them alone.
It feels, right now, based on Mitch McConnell’s statements about seeing where the investigation leads, something might be shifting.

Back in the late summer of 1974 I had no idea, standing embarrassed and naked before the U.S. Attorney General, surely facing the decision of his lifetime, that I was standing before a true and real American hero. But I was. I am lucky for that. We are all lucky for that. Now, a half century later, will more heroes emerge?

 

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11 Comments

  1. Once again, I am introduced to a man I wish I had known when we were undergraduates in New Haven. Here’s to you, Charlie, and a life well lived. The image of a naked human sea creature rising up from the foam is precious and primeval. What style. Thank you.

    1. I agree with JP. I do remember you somewhat, Charlie, from our undergrad years, but we never really had a conversation, and I’m deeply moved by your account. Maybe you should condense and adapt it for a NY Times op ed, trimming the fishing a bit (although I love it), but pointing up the analogy that you’re drawing so rightly between Republican denial then and now. My only question: Isn’t it true that, once the Watergate congressional panel was meeting, even before we knew about the tapes — weren’t the Republicans on the panel, such as Connecticut’s Lowell Weicker, openly seeking the truth in a fair and thorough inquiry?

      1. Jim, I do remember you, as well, and you are entirely correct, there were Republicans who early on seemed to be seeing the truth. Howard Baker was another. They were few and far between. I would guess, now, they really believed so early on Nixon was in the clear, but then Butterfield’s tapes announcement raised things to a whole new level.

        1. That sounds right, Charlie. Thanks. I sure hope that the apparently damning evidence vs Trump that the current Congressional investigations committee is coming up with will embarrass at least some Republicans into breaking ranks along with Kinzinger and Cheney. I grew up in western MA with Republicans I respected — not least Eliot Richardson, who was Lt Governor of MA before Nixon tapped him for A.G. I’ll tell you a funny story, though, if you haven’t heard it before, about another MA Republican: Calvin Coolidge.
          The story is that he was at some fancy dinner in Northampton, seated next to one of the area’s grand dames, when she asked him what his profession was.
          “I’m the Lieutenant Governor of the Commonwealth,” Coolidge replied.
          “Oh, how marvelous!” his dinner partner exclaimed. That must be wonderfully fascinating. You must tell me all about it!”
          “I just did,” Silent Cal replied.

          1. Never heard that story before, Good story. My link with western Massachusetts politics, being from Amherst, was I had a couple dates with Rep Silvio Conte’s daughter in the fall of 1969. We behaved utterly properly.

  2. Thanks for sharing this, Charlie. Sorry we never got acquainted at Yale. All those Massachusetts lobsters headed north to Maine, and now they’re off to Canada. Whether it’s climate change or political derangement, all we can do is work hard to get the ship back on course, and hope for the best.

    1. Thomas, actually as I recall the Canadians really owned the lobster business, they held them in enormous pounds and then sold them into the US, which dropped the price a lot. We sold ours to a local company in Harwich Mass, Cape Lobster, they didn’t last too long. There was a red tide in Massacusetts Bay one year, which basically stopped all shellfishing, but of course had nothing to do with lobsters taken 120-150 miles from land out on the end of the shelf, but nevertheless our ex-vessel price dropped from, like $ 1.20 a pound to $ 0.30 a pound (this was 50 years ago) and that was killer. So as soon as we could we went swordfishing, lots of lobster boats did. A couple boats were harpooning swordfisah in 1973 despite the mercury ban, and in the winter of 1974 about a dozen New England boats went to the Gulf of Mexico to fish for swordfish there (they seemed to spend the winter in the Gulf then follow the Gulf Stream north and east through the summer and fall) and we were one of them. What an experience, living on the boats, a pier in Panama City Florida, we had a buyer whose truck missed all the weigh stations on the way to the Fulton market, everything done in cash….

      1. Great stuff, Charlie.
        Russians running roughshod over the little guys is an old story, replaying again right now.
        I had the great privilege of knowing Charlie well at Yale. He was quite the character then too.
        I agree Charlie’s account deserves wider publication.

  3. Hi Charlie, this comment does not do tribute to the moral of your fine and true story. I was just thinking back how wet and cold new England waters were, stage harbor Chatham all the way out and up. Guess you heard bout climate warming shutting down lostering off Portland and warm water pushing lobster to Canada? The image of you in a windy cold dennishouse splicing lobster nets with the TV keeping you company paints such a vivid picture. I can feel the nylon line cut into my fingers. Fondest regards, eliot

    1. Thanks Eliot. This is a tiny detail but the rope was not nylon, which was hideously expensive, and difficult to splice, too. It was polypropelene, another plastic product, the lines madde in New Bedford at Lambeth Rope factory, left over from the whaling days (ie an endlessly long one storey building) but in the 1970s making “rope” from poly. At one end a truck unloaded littler plastic beads about half the size of a marble which were colored then melted then spun into rope, with the other end producing coils of the rope which we then used for splicing. I am guessing Lambeth Rope went the way of all other manufacturing and went offshore decades ago….