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It was a calm, bright morning at
Musgrave Harbour, Newfoundland on June 1, 1940. The sounds of
people moving around could be heard everywhere, mixed with the
loud echoes made by the dominant roosters, letting everyone know
that they were kings of this slumbering town. If you listened
carefully you could hear the odd cockle made by the families’
hens. So it was as the young twenty-four-year-old Frank Sheppard
strutted briskly along the dusty road, whistling as he went,
with a few things on his mind but carefree nonetheless. Frank
was spending a few days with his girlfriend Ella Hicks. He was
so much in love with her that she was on his mind night and day,
and for this reason he just had to come and spend a week with
her.
Frank was from Indian Islands,
another small town in Notre Dame Bay, a few miles north of
Musgrave Harbour, and after being home for awhile following a
stint at the seal hunt, he had decided to visit his girlfriend.
Before he left Indian Islands, Frank had instructed the local
postmistress to address his mail to Musgrave Harbour. Now he was
headed down the dusty road to the post office, as he had been
doing every morning for the past week.
A small man, Frank Sheppard was
born on the south side of Indian Islands in the year 1916. He
had spent his younger years fishing with his father, and at the
age of nine he had been fishing onboard a schooner anchored
under the towering cliffs of Belle Isle at the mouth of the
Strait of Belle Isle. At the age of eighteen, Frank decided to
leave home. In March of that year, Frank Sheppard had sailed out
of St. John’s harbour, heading for the icefields and the great
seal hunt on board the SS Beothic with the renowned
sealing captain Sid Hill, all flags and banners flying and horns
blowing.
Excitement was at its height for
this young sailor. Today, sitting comfortably in his home at
Deer Lake, Newfoundland, he tells it this way. “I was young and
hardy and carefree. I didn’t even care if I had only half enough
clothes on then. It seemed like I didn’t even feel the cold. I
suppose when you’re young, you’re tough. We would jump out on
the running ice, most of the time just slob, so if you fell in,
someone would pull you out and then you would go on again. The
ship would go for miles before you caught up with her. To think
about it now, it was awful. It’s amazing that there weren’t more
men drowned or squat to death between the ice and the ship.”
When the hunt was over Frank would
come home for a few days and go on the freighting boats or go
into the lumberwoods. He didn’t care very much about fishing and
stayed away from it.
Frank arrived at the post office
and walked up to the serving wicket, noticing that the postal
worker was busy sending or receiving a wireless message. This
man also served the incoming mail and sent the outgoing mail by
whatever means it was going. He held up his hand to Frank,
indicating that he knew he was there, and Frank waited patiently
until the gentleman finished his telegraph work. In about ten
minutes the postman took off the headphones and came over to
where Frank was standing.
“Good morning, Frank,” he said
with a grin. “This morning I got the letter you’ve been waiting
for.”
Frank’s heart jumped. Maybe,
just maybe, he thought.
Frank had filled in all the
necessary papers to go into the navy while in St. John’s. He had
passed his medical and was told to go on about his normal
working day. If he went home he was to make sure that he let the
naval authorities know where he could be contacted. Every
morning, without fail, he checked the mail.
The postman handed him the letter.
It was addressed to Frank Sheppard in care of Miss Ella Hicks,
Musgrave Harbour, Newfoundland. Across it was written important.
Frank didn’t look at anything else on the envelope; he saw his
name and the word
important and that was it. The postman looked at Frank as
much as to say “Well, open it, Frank. I want to see what’s in
it, too.”
The job of opening the letter
would go to Ella, because Frank had promised her that when he
got his letter from the navy she would be the first one to know
about it. “I’m not going to open the letter until I get to where
Ella is,” he told the postmaster.
The gentleman understood and with
a grin said, “Okay.” He was thinking that if he were lucky
enough to have a girl as good-looking as Ella, he would make
sure that she was the first one to know everything about him,
also.
Frank left the post office and
headed quickly for the home of Hammond Hicks, who was Ella’s
father. It didn’t take Frank long to reach his girlfriend’s
house, his legs so light and full of energy. As he entered the
door, Ella was mixing bread, with her hands full of fresh dough.
She looked up as he entered, and her first glance told her that
Frank had news. She could see it in his face.
“Have you been to the post office
as quick as that, Frank?” she asked.
“Yes.”
“You must have run, then,” Ella
said
“No, I walked up,” he replied,
“but it didn’t take me long to come back.”
“I’d say that you got your letter
about the navy,” she said, cleaning the dough from her hands.
“Yes, Ella, I got the letter,” he
said, as he took it out of his pocket. It was a white envelope
with the address typed on it—very businesslike.
“I brought it over for you to
open, Ella. I thought that you should be the first one to know
about it.”
Frank now wore a concerned look,
and in fact, this was serious business. To enlist in the British
Navy in 1940, with World War II raging, was not a small decision
for a young man to make, especially with the news almost every
day of people dying as ships went t the bottom from enemy
torpedoes. Frank was expecting this letter to be his call. He
handed the letter to Ella. Sure enough, it was a letter from the
navy. She hardly knew what to say.
He said, “Ella, my dear, it
doesn’t matter what’s on that letter. I’ll still marry you.”
She knew he would. They were both
in love and had planned to get married in the winter. She turned
around and took a knife from the countertop and quickly cut the
letter open. She was uneasy, kind of scared to read it, but then
as she was about to unfold the letter her mother entered the
door, her hands dirty from working in the garden.
“What’s going on, Frank? You look
as white as a ghost,” she said.
“Frank got his letter at last.”
The older woman was very
interested. “What does it say?”
“We haven’t read it yet,” said
Ella.
Mrs. Hicks looked at them both,
then said to her daughter, “Maybe they want him to go in the
army. Last night the news said that they wanted five thousand
men right away to go in the army. I heard it myself.”
“I won’t be going in any army,”
said Frank. “I’m handy enough now to the army.”
Mrs. Hicks laughed. “You’ll go now
wherever they send you, my son. Open the letter, Ella.”
“Oh, yes,” said Ella as she
unfolded the typed letter. “Now listen,” she said. “To Mr. Frank
Sheppard, Indian Islands, Newfoundland. Dear Frank.”
Ella scanned the letter for a
moment, then she started to laugh. “Frank, this letter isn’t
from the war office. It’s from Bowring Brothers Ltd., the same
crowd that you go sealing with every spring.”
“You don’t mean it, Ella,” said
Frank, kind of relieved and starting to grin. “You almost had me
in the army, Mrs. Hicks,” he said, teasingly.
Mrs. Hicks was not amused. “You’ll
be going, Frank, my son. They got your number.”
“Listen to this,” said Ella.
“What does it say?” Frank asked
anxiously.
“It says for you to come to St.
John’s as soon as possible and join the Beothic. Captain
Penney will be in charge, and he will be sailing sometime in
June, 1940.”
Frank started to laugh. He put his
arms around her and said, “For a moment, Ella, I thought that I
was going to have to say goodbye and go in the navy.”
Mrs. Hicks said, “Yes, so did I,
Frank. I thought you were on your way, too.”
Frank looked at her and said,
“You’re right about one thing, Mrs. Hicks. I’m on my way.”
“Where to, Frank?” she asked.
“To St. John’s to join the navy.
The merchant navy!”
Mrs. Hicks could hardly talk. She
loved Frank almost as much as her daughter, but now she would
have to say goodbye. It would be hard to do, because Frank was
such a happy-go-lucky guy. “When will you be coming back again,
Frank?” she asked.
“I don’t know, but I’ll write
Ella.”
Mrs. Hicks said nothing and turned
and walked back to her vegetable garden.
From “Frank and the Beothic”
by Earl B. Pilgrim |