
The MV
George Prince about 20
hours after the accident at the Luling Ferry landing
The
MV George Prince ferry disaster was a
nautical disaster that occurred in the Mississippi River in Louisiana
, United
States
, on the morning of October
20, 1976. The ferry George Prince was struck by the
Norwegian
tanker SS Frosta,
which was traveling upriver. The collision occurred at mile post 120.8
above Head of Passes, less than
three-quarters of a mile from the construction site of the bridge
which would replace the ferry seven years
later. The ferry was crossing from Destrehan
, Louisiana
on the East Bank to Luling
, Louisiana
on the West Bank. Ninety-six passengers and
crew were aboard the ferry when it was struck, and seventy-eight
perished. The accident occurred less than three years after the
same ferry crossed the river in front of an upbound tow being
pushed upriver by the M/V
F. R. Bigelow
when a different ferry operator failed to see the tow. The accident
on February 4, 1974 resulted in no fatalities.
Vessels involved
Luling-Destrehan ferry operations
The Luling-Destrehan ferry was one of three routes then operated by
the Louisiana Department of Highways, District 2.
The others were a
pedestrian ferry between Norco
and Taft
, and a
vehicle ferry between Edgard
and Reserve
. Only the Edgard-Reserve ferry operates
today.
The ferry operated with two boats, the
Ollie K.
Wilds and the
George Prince. The
George
Prince was the larger of the two, and operated around the
clock, while the smaller boat only worked at peak hours. During
peak hours, the ferries did not operate on a fixed schedule.
The ferry landings are pontoons connected to a shell road by a
small ramp, and are held in place by pilings in the river bottom.
The ferries made a "figure-8" transit, always running upriver when
departing, letting the current carry the boat downriver, then
turning upriver to land on the opposite bank.
The East Bank ferry landing was situated upriver of two busy
grain elevators, limiting the boats'
ability to maneuver and, when ships were present, obscuring the
boats'
radar. Visibility was often limited by
clouds of grain dust from transfer operations, although no transfer
was taking place the morning of the accident.
The motor vessel George Prince
The
George Prince was a ferry owned and
operated by the Louisiana Department of Highways, originally built
in 1937 at Slidell,
LA
, and converted for its final use at Avondale, LA
. In 1969, the US Coast Guard ceased inspection
and certification of the vessel at the request of the state of
Louisiana
. Since it was a free ferry, and was not
carrying passengers "for hire", the Coast Guard complied with the
request.
The
George Prince was in length, and in breadth, with a
gross weight of 259 tons, and powered by a 670
horsepower diesel
engine. She was equipped with two radar units (although only
one was turned on at the time of the accident). Her crew of five
consisted of a pilot, and engineer, and three deckhands.
The entire crew of the
George Prince had duties while
afloat; none of these duties were to serve as lookout. Had there
been a designated lookout, there was no way for the lookout to
communicate with the pilot except by hand signals.
The SS Frosta
History
The SS
Frosta was a tanker ship,
built in 1961 in Germany
and owned by
A/S Ludwig, of Bergen,
Norway
. The
Frosta was in length, in
breadth, with a gross weight of 22,850 tons, and powered by a
steam turbine engine, rated at .
Transatlantic voyage and up the river
The
Frosta departed empty from Rotterdam, Holland
, on October 4, bound for
Baton
Rouge
, Louisiana
. The voyage was uneventful. At the Southwest
Pass of the Mississippi River, on the night of
October 19, the
Frosta took aboard her
first of three pilots to guide her up the river. The pilot at the
time of the collision was Nicholas Colombo, a member of the New
Orleans-Baton Rouge Steamship Pilots Association, and the third
pilot aboard the ship for the journey upstream.Colombo directed the
ship take a speed equivalent to 12 miles per hour (19 km/h)
upstream, his preferred speed. The crew ordered a speed of "half
ahead", which gave them a forward momentum of , stemming a current
of .When the ship was about a mile below the Luling-Destrehan ferry
crossing, the pilot saw a ferry cross from the West Bank to the
East Bank of the river. This was the MV
Ollie K.
Wilds, which worked the route along with the
George
Prince. At this time, the ship was on the west side of the
channel, and was passing two ships moored to
grain elevators on the East Bank of the
river.
The collision
George Prince
At about 6:00 on the morning in question, the
George
Prince was berthed at the East Bank landing, taking on
vehicles. Her crew had been on duty all night, and was due to get
off duty at 7:00. She was facing upriver, and took on a full load
of vehicles, consisting of 20 cars, 8 trucks, 6 motorcycles, and an
unknown number of pedestrians. Of the passengers aboard, there is
no accounting of people in vehicles versus pedestrians. About 20
people were crowded in a waiting room to avoid the pre-dawn
chill.
Once loaded, the
George Prince departed and made a short
run upriver before turning to cross the river. She did not give any
indication of her departure by radio or horn. When operating in
tandem, the ferries operated by sight with each other.
The
George Prince proceeded across the river, never
changing course nor acknowledging radio traffic.
According to the survivors, some of the passengers were aware of
the
Frosta as it traveled upriver, and there was a growing
anxiety over what appeared to be a collision course, although this
anxiety was somewhat tempered by their belief that the ferry would
maneuver to avoid the ship, especially since there was no
indication of danger from the
George Prince. When the
Frosta sounded the danger signal, there was an immediate
panic from those who could see the ship, and their flight from
danger alerted others. To what point the passengers on the side
opposite the ship were aware of the danger can never be known, as
all the survivors were on the side of the impact.
When the ferry had nearly finished its voyage across the river, she
was struck near the middle of the port side by the bow of the
Frosta. The force of the collision drove the stem of the
Frosta into the side. Impaled on the port side and being
pushed sideways up the river, the starboard side of the
George
Prince was quickly submerged and the vessel capsized almost
immediately. After capsizing, the ferry was driven under the ship,
where the bottoms of the vessels collided.
All the vehicles were thrown off of the deck, except for a
motorcycle, which was entangled in the railing. One vehicle floated
briefly before filling with water and sinking; the rest sank
immediately.
Less than two minutes had elapsed since departing the dock.
The circumstances of the collision in 1974 resembled those of the
1976 tragedy except that in the earlier accident there were no
fatalities. The accident occurred just before dawn in good
visibility; the ferry operator failed to see the upbound vessels
though they were seen by the passengers on the deck; and the ferry
operator failed to make good use of his radios to check for river
traffic. Following the investigation by the Coast Guard into the
accident, an Administrative Law Judge suspended the ferry
operator’s license for three months. That decision was affirmed by
the Coast Guard Commandant and by the National Transportation
Safety Board in a decision adopted six days after the 1976
tragedy.
SS Frosta
With the East Bank ferry landing obstructed by ships, the
Frosta could not see any activity at the landing until a
quarter-mile away. At the point of collision, though, the river is
more than half-a-mile wide. Having spotted the
Ollie K.
Wilds crossing, the pilot was aware of the ferry
operation.
The pilot observed a ferry depart the East Bank landing, heading
upriver. He called twice on his hand-held transceiver, waiting
ample time between transmissions for a reply, but receiving none.
He blew the ship's horn twice, indicating his desire to pass in
front of the ferry. While the two-blast signal had no standing or
meaning according to the "Western River Rules of the Road", it was
commonly understood at the time for the ferry to give way and allow
the ship to pass. At the time of the horn signal, the ferry had
already turned to port, beginning to cross the river, and was less
than a quarter-mile away.
The ferry did not respond, and the pilot again called on the radio,
and repeated the two-blast signal on the ship's horn. The ferry
still did not respond, and proceeded directly in the path of the
Frosta.
At this point, the pilot began continuous radio calls and horn
blasts. He also ordered the
Frosta full astern. The pilot
made no attempt to turn the ship, though. He was traveling on the
west side of the channel; this gave him no choice but to turn the
ship to the starboard, which, had the ferry turned, would have
meant that the ship turned toward the ferry. The pilot also feared
striking a bridge pier construction site just upriver, or running
aground or into one of the ships docked at the grain
elevator.
The ferry was on a constant bearing, less than away, when it passed
out of sight of the
Frosta's bridge crew. The crew felt a
slight bump as the ship collided with the ferry. The ferry rolled
off the bow of the ship to the starboard side, then rolled under,
emerging on the ship's port side, from the bank. As the ferry came
into view, it was nearly totally capsized. A vehicle was seen
floating down the river, with its headlights still on, before
filling with water and sinking.
The pilot ordered "all stop" on the engines to avoid hazarding any
survivors with a churning propeller. The captain of the ship and
the pilot both called for assistance from any vessel in the area,
and notified the Coast Guard. The ship maneuvered through the
construction area and anchored midstream over a mile upriver,
carried most of this way by forward momentum. Once anchored,
Frosta launched two of her life boats in a futile attempt
to rescue survivors. None of the crew of the ship ever saw any
survivors in the water.
Rescue and recovery
Rescue
A total of 18 passengers survived the collision. Passengers who
were able to see downstream became aware of the rapidly closing
motions of the vessels, and rightly concluded that the collision
was imminent. Fourteen of the survivors were thrown clear and
surfaced without difficulty. Three others were briefly trapped
under the
George Prince. The last survivor had run back to
his vehicle, thinking he would be safer in his truck. After the
collision, he managed to escape his sinking vehicle through a
window. Only one survivor had a life jacket before going into the
water, but had not had time to put it on. Two others found life
jackets floating in the river, which they used for a short time,
but neither man had time to properly don the life jackets.
Aboard the
Ollie K. Wilds, the crew in the pilot
house did not see the collision. As they were preparing to offload
vehicles, an engineer burst through the door, saying a passenger
saw a ship run over the ferry. The captain of the ferry immediately
ordered his vessel to cast off, having offloaded just one of his 15
vehicle load. He contacted the pilot of the
Frosta, and
asked him if the ferry had sunk. "He went in front of me, and I ran
him over," was the pilot's reply.
A
St. Charles
Parish
sheriff's deputy, who had been riding aboard the
Ollie K. Wilds, used a radio aboard to
report the collision to his dispatcher in Hahnville
, and requested assistance.
The
Ollie K. Wilds proceeded across the river
cautiously, so as to not run over any survivors. As the ferries
touched, passengers bridged the gap with benches from the waiting
room, and sixteen survivors, perched on the overturned hull, came
across to safety.
As the
Ollie K. Wilds was crossing the river, a
deck hand and the deputy had launched the small rescue boat. They
pulled one survivor from the water.
The tugboat MV
Alma S. was preparing to help turn one of
the ships at the grain elevator. He heard the
Frosta's
pilot making the emergency calls, and heard the horn sounding. The
crew cast off from the ship and proceeded slowly across the river
toward the overturned ferry, with the survivors standing on the
hull. Fifteen yards (14 m) from the
George Prince, the
crew heard a man call for help. The crew threw a life ring to him,
and pulled him aboard.
All the survivors were taken to the West Bank ferry landing for the
expected arrival of aid. All the passengers were taken to
hospitals, and stayed there for at least 72 hours.
Recovery
The Coast Guard, immediately notified of the collision from the
frantic radio calls, dispatched helicopters to the scene.
One
helicopter stopped at Lakefront Airport
to pick up a diving team. The divers were
airborne at 7:14, and arrived at 7:25. They were on the vessel at
7:34. They checked for survivors by tapping on the hull, with no
response. At 8:33, they reported that there were no signs of life,
and that other divers were needed to search inside the hull for
bodies.
Having heard news media reports of the tragedy, a professional dive
team drove themselves to the site and offered assistance. Being
commercial divers, they were equipped with air line masks instead
of tanks, and were much less restricted in their movements. They
were also accustomed to working in the "blackout" conditions of the
river. Large amounts of sediment obscure any vision in the
river.
The dive team recovered nine bodies from the passenger compartment
of the
George Prince. Two more were recovered from the
pilot house. The engine room held five bodies. One was found in a
bathroom doorway, and another was found in a storeroom.
Fifty-seven bodies, and a portion of another, were found in
submerged vehicles, as they were recovered from the river bottom
between
October 23 and
October 27 1976. One body was
found in the river on
May 22 1977.
Salvage and investigation
Salvage
Coordination and responsibility for salvage of the
George
Prince and her vehicles was assumed by the state's Director of
Administration, Charles Roemer II, father of future
governor Buddy
Roemer.
That afternoon, a crane barge arrived on scene, and prepared to
right and raise the ferry, which by now rested on the river bottom
near the West Bank, with the hull barely protruding from the water.
Overnight, the ferry was turned over by the salvage crew. The next
morning, lifting operations began, and continued late into the
night. At 10:00 p.m., the ferry was raised enough to permit
dewatering operations, and the river reopened to limited marine
traffic.
The ferry was towed to the Louisiana
Department of Highways yard in Plaquemine, LA
, for further investigation. The damage was
deemed irreparable, and the
George Prince never sailed
again.
Investigation
Investigators used the weather conditions
from Moisant International Airport (now Louis Armstrong New Orleans International
Airport
), less than seven miles (11 km) away.
Conditions there were recorded as a "clear, crisp, pre-dawn
darkness, without fog, haze, or other local environmental
impairment to visibility." Winds were from the north-northeast at
13
knots, with gusts to .
The river conditions were measured at the Carrollton Gauge,
eighteen miles (29 km) downriver. Maximum velocity was , with
average velocity of , and the river was above
sea level.
Once it was raised, Coast Guard officials from the Marine
Investigation Office boarded the ferry and examined the pilot
house. One of the
radar sets was off, another
was on. The radio was turned on, and tuned to channel 13, the same
channel used by the river pilot.
A
plywood box was found in the pilot house,
containing various logbooks and other documents, along with a
half-pint bottle of Seagrams V. O.
whiskey,
with about an inch of whiskey remaining.
No fingerprints could
be recovered from the bottle, despite the efforts of the FBI
laboratory
in Washington,
DC
.
The body
of the ferry pilot was autopsied by Orleans Parish
coroner Dr. Frank Minyard. The blood
alcohol level was determined to be 0.09%, just shy of the legal
definition of
intoxication of 0.10%. No
other drugs were present. Minyard's report stated that the pilot,
Egidio Auletta, had been drinking and was experiencing some degree
of impairment at the time of his death at the helm.
Conclusions of the investigation
Findings regarding the ferry
From the Coast Guard investigation report:
- The George Prince, under the control of Egidio
Auletta, departed and turned almost immediately to cross the river,
because the current was slow and the volume of automobile traffic
made it attractive to cross as quickly as possible.
- The departure into stream traffic created a situation where
risk of collision could exist, but did not signal his intent to
cross the river by radio or horn. Had he announced his departure
with the proper signal, and signaled his intent to cross in front
of the Frosta, he would have made a rude but acceptable
crossing of the river.
- Due to complacency, fatigue, and/or the effects of
alcohol, Auletta failed to detect the approaching ship until the
final seconds before collision, when she disappeared from
the view of the Frosta's pilot, by which time the
collision was inevitable. The investigators concluded that he had
time to maneuver to lessen the collision by making it a glancing
blow, but the forward momentum and downstream current made the
collision "beyond human remedy".
- The primary cause of the tragedy was the navigation of
George Prince into the channel without due regard to, or
awareness of, river traffic and the risk of collision. The
investigators stated that they "could not imagine a more vivid
example to prove that keeping a proper lookout is the first rule of
seamanship".
- There was evidence of numerous violations on the part of Egidio
Auletta. They are:
- failure to sound a horn upon departing a
dock
- failure to keep a proper lookout
- failure to slacken speed, or, if necessary, stop and
reverse when approaching another vessel so as to avoid risk of
collision
- failure to signal intentions when
crossing
- failure to navigate with caution until danger of
collision is over
- use of a vessel in a negligent manner so as to endanger
life, limb, and property
Findings regarding the pilot
Again, from the Coast Guard report:
- Frosta's pilot, Nicholas Colombo, correctly assessed
the risk of collision and sought agreement on a safe passage for
both vessels. Local custom was for small vessels to give way to
large vessels in stream traffic, due to the relative difficulty in
maneuvering ships in the channel, but could not absolve him of the
legal requirement to yield to traffic approaching from his
starboard. According to the investigators, "This casualty is a
classic example of the tragic consequences which can result from
conflict between established custom and the law when each mandates
a different response by the persons involved."
- After sighting the Ollie K Wilds cross, Colombo, the
Frosta's pilot made numerous attempts to contact the
ferry, and saw the George Prince turn into his path
immediately after departure. As the ferry continued into harm's
way, failing to respond to the attempts to make contact,
Colombo did not order a reduction in speed or reversal of
engine until less than a minute before collision, and the
ship finally responded to the "full astern" order with barely 15
seconds before striking the ferry.
- Having chosen first to follow custom and then failing to make
contact, Colombo should have considered the George Prince
unresponsive and acted quickly and decisively to avert a
collision.
- Altering course:
- Colombo did not consider any turn to starboard practical. If he
made a slight turn to starboard, and the ferry responded according
to practice (to yield to the larger vessel), then he would have
turned toward the ferry and a collision. If he made a radical turn
to starboard, he would have been in jeopardy of collision with the
ship moored at the grain elevator.
- He also did not consider a turn to port; since the ship was
already favoring that side of the channel, there was little room to
turn.
- Therefore, Colombo was forced to continue
ahead.
- Altering speed:
- Given the bulk of the ship and the time it would take to make
an appreciable change in speed, the option to accelerate from the
setting of "half ahead" to "full ahead" would have been
futile.
- Colombo was obliged to slow Frosta. Given the close
quarters, for any reduction in speed to be effective, it would have
to be applied quickly. If he had decisively slowed the
Frosta after not receiving a response to his first call,
the collision could have been avoided or lessened, and the
panel deemed this the prudent response.
The panel concluded that
Colombo navigated the SS
Frosta in a negligent manner.
Findings regarding the SS Frosta's Captain
- The captain of the Frosta, Kjell Sletten, was
supervising his vessel's journey upriver via periodic visits to the
pilothouse, observations he made by looking out his cabin window,
and by the presence of his Mate, Peder Gasvaer, who was on the
bridge. The mate was responsible to call the captain to the bridge
in a situation that required his presence, although such situations
were not defined. The mate did not notify Sletten until the
sounding of the danger signal and the order for "full
astern", seconds before the collision. The panel concluded
that, although the bridge watch was not deficient, had the mate
called for the captain earlier, that the captain may have had a
lower threshold for the ferry's actions and might have acted
sooner.
- A master of the ship can delegate, but does not abdicate,
responsibility for safe navigation to the mate. Therefore,
as captain, Sletten is ultimately responsible for the safe
navigation of the Frosta.
- The panel concluded that Sletten allowed the
Frosta to be used in a negligent manner.
Miscellaneous findings
- The 18 persons who never escaped from the interior of the
George Prince drowned almost immediately as the interior
flooded through numerous openings in the hull including doors and
windows. There was not sufficient air trapped in the hull to
sustain life.
- Most of the people who died were trapped under the overturned
hull or in their vehicles, and could not find a clear path to the
surface. An unknown number may have reached the surface but,
because of injuries or inability to swim, did not survive.
- There is no evidence of equipment or material failure of either
vessel which caused or contributed to the tragedy.
- Life saving equipment provided aboard the George
Prince was of little use in this accident. Life jackets are
designed to aid in escaping a vessel which is slowly sinking, not
the sudden collision and immediate capsizing which occurred, which
was beyond the scope of the life-saving equipment available.
- Life jackets floating free in the river did aid two people
remain afloat and reaching the safety of the overturned ferry.
- The rescue boat of the Ollie K. Wilds served
its designed purpose; that is, rescue of a few individuals from the
river. It could not have coped with a large number of survivors in
the water, if, for instance, the overturned ferry did not remain
afloat.
- The response of the Ollie K. Wilds,
commercial towboats, and the local Coast Guard units was
commendable. Had the ferry not overturned so rapidly, their
immediate response would have been instrumental in saving a number
of lives. Unfortunately, the first rescuers were only able to find
and rescue two survivors from the river; other survivors made their
way onto the overturned hull.
Coast Guard Commandant's remarks
- Circumstances of the collision prevent the usual application of
the "Western Rivers Rules of the Road", which state that a vessel
to the starboard has right-of-way (which is why all powered vessels
have a red light facing to port, and a green light facing to
starboard). George Prince was expected to do one of three
things: head down river to pass behind the Frosta, slow
and/or stop midstream and wait for the Frosta to pass, or
proceed directly across to the West Bank. Only two minutes elapsed
between the departure of the ferry and the collision. Since there
was doubt as to the intention of the George Prince, and
there was no response to attempts to determine the ferry's
intentions, the duty of the pilot of the Frosta was to
immediately reverse engine and sound the danger signal.
- The George Prince proceeded across the busy waterway
apparently oblivious to the imminent danger. Auletta apparently
never sighted the Frosta, nor did he hear the radio calls
or horn signals. A reasonably alert pilot would have seen the ship
coming upriver. Even though a strict application of the "Rules of
the Road" gave the George Prince the right-of-way, this of
course does not give the right to proceed into harm's way without
taking any evasive maneuvers.
- Neither vessel took any early or substantial action to avoid
the collision.
- Auletta's judgement and reaction were certainly impaired by the
0.09% blood alcohol content, although to what degree can not be
known, although three areas have been well established as effected
by alcohol levels under 0.10%:
- steadiness, orientation, and balance,
- attention, memory, and information processing,
- peripheral vision and visual field
- In this circumstance, the ability of the eyes to adjust to
darkness, to detect moving targets at low levels of illumination,
and mental attentiveness are all effected. The Commandant
states,"It is imperative that the deck watch of any vessel be
in complete control of his faculties", and the evidence shows
that Auletta was not in control of his faculties, as it is
inconceivable that such an experienced mariner could either ignore
or fail to see the Frosta unless his faculties were
impaired.
- The captain of the Ollie K Wilds stated that the
windows of his pilot house were closed, and that he did not hear
the Frosta's horn. A previous accident involving the
George Prince followed a similar scenario. On that
occasion, the captain of the ferry stated that he did not hear the
sounding of vehicle horns or the shouts of passengers. The morning
of the accident, the windows were likely closed, and this may have
prevented Auletta from hearing the Frosta's horn.
Therefore, it is imperative that a lookout be designated and posted
outside to listen for and relay signals from other vessels.
Closing of the ferry
With the
opening of the Destrehan-Luling Bridge
in October 1983 — barely a mile upstream from the
ferry landings — the ferry ceased operations. At the
dedication of the bridge, both
Governor
David C. Treen and
Bishop Stanley Ott
remembered those killed in the accident.
The
asphalt ramps to the tops of the
levees still exist, but have fallen into
disrepair.
Documentary is catalyst for long-awaited memorial

George Prince Ferry Memorial
The disaster was all but officially forgotten until 2006, when
historian and filmmaker
Royd Anderson
wrote and directed the documentary
The Luling Ferry
Disaster for his Master's thesis project in Communication at
the
University of
Louisiana at Lafayette.
The film was released on the 30th
anniversary of the disaster and sparked a movement to bring a
memorial for the victims and survivors to St. Charles
Parish, Louisiana
. Soon after the movie's release, on November
6, 2006, local government officials voted to have 2 memorials
constructed, but the issue lost traction after those elected
officials were not re-elected the following year. Anderson raised
the issue again to the newly elected parish president and
officials, bringing a score of relatives of the victims to a
council meeting on January 28, 2009. A memorial committee led by
St. Charles Parish
Councilman
Larry Cochran was formed soon afterwards, comprised of family
members and friends of the deceased, St. Charles Parish Council
members, and concerned citizens, including Anderson. The committee
met for several months, voting on where the monument should be
placed and what it should look like. St. Charles Parish Councilman
Paul J. Hogan, an architect, created the design for
the monument. Local suppliers, vendors, companies, and individuals
donated the equipment, labor, and materials to build it.
The
memorial was unveiled in a solemn ceremony at the East Bank Bridge
Park in Destrehan
on October 17, 2009, with over 300 people in
attendance. A bell rang as each name was called; a white
balloon rose in memory of the deceased, and a blue balloon rose in
memory of the survivors. By the end, 95 balloons were drifting
slowly over the Mississippi River near the spot where the accident
occurred.
Passengers and crew
Crew of George Prince
The entire crew of the ferry died.
Egidio
Auletta, pilot, Destrehan
, Louisiana
Nelson Eugene, Sr., deckhand, St.
Rose
, Louisiana
Douglas Ford, deckhand, Boutte
, Louisiana
Jerry Randle, engineer, New
Sarpy
, Louisiana
Ronald Wolfe, deckhand, St. Rose, Louisiana
Deceased passengers of the George Prince
Mark
Abadie, LaPlace
, Louisiana
Hurest Anderson, LaPlace, Louisiana
Glen
Barreca, Norco
, Louisiana
John Basso, Independence
, Louisiana
Thomas Beasley, Destrehan, Louisiana
Anthony Breaux, LaPlace, Louisiana
Jerry Brown, Jr., LaPlace, Louisiana
Martin Campbell, Destrehan, Louisiana
Jim
Carter, Sr., Ponchatoula
, Louisiana
Harry Clement, Tickfaw
, Louisiana
Richard Cobb, Hammond
, Louisiana
Oscar Dermody, Kenner
, Louisiana
Dwight Dobson, Hammond, Louisiana
Melvin Dright, Jr., Kenner, Louisiana
Herman
Eugene, Jr., Garyville
, Louisiana
Lenwood Fenroy, LaPlace, Louisiana
Al Fleming, Garyville, Louisiana
Charles
Frank, Jr., Metairie
, Louisiana
Benny Fuller, Metairie, Louisiana
Jimmy Gast, Destrehan, Louisiana
Ervin Gehegan, Hammond, Louisiana
Otis Gehegan, Hammond, Louisiana
John
Goldston, Jr., Baton Rouge
, Louisiana
Oscar Green, Ridgeland, Louisiana
(Possible typo in USCG report: there is no Ridgeland, LA,
however, there is a Ridgeland, Mississippi
Ronnie Hall, Destrehan, Louisiana
Joseph
Harris, Tallulah
, Louisiana
Paul Harris, LaPlace, Louisiana
Willie Harris, Tallulah, Louisiana
Joseph Hastings, Jr., Kenner, Louisiana
Henry Hills, Jr., Hammond, Louisiana
Larry Hills, Hammond, Louisiana (son of Henry Hills, Jr.)
Hollis
Hodges, Cocoa
, Florida
(father of Kim and Barry Hodges)
Edgar Holmes, Ponchatoula, Louisiana
James
Hughes, Independence
, Louisiana
Timothy Hymel, Reserve
, Louisiana
Robert Jones, Jr., Metairie, Louisiana
Lindsay LeBlanc, Norco, Louisiana
Mary Lightsey, Destrehan, Louisiana
Lonie Marts, Kenner, Louisiana
Charles McKeithen, Kenner, Louisiana
Joseph Michelli, Hammond, Louisiana
Hubert Minor, Jr., Kenner, Louisiana
Roosevelt Mixon, Kenner, Louisiana
Anthony Monistere, Hammond, Louisiana
Barry Moore, Kenner, Louisiana
William Moore, New Sarpy, Louisiana
Robert
Newton, Sr., Van Cleave
, Mississippi
Joseph Nicolosi, Sr., Hammond, Louisiana
Terry Norton, Kenner, Louisiana
Benjamin Pape, Jr., Ponchatoula, Louisiana
Eddie Plaisance, Jr., Metairie, Louisiana
Larry Pontiff, Kenner, Louisiana
Kevin Pritchett, Destrehan, Louisiana
Jeffrey
Quarles, Pine
Bluff
, Arkansas
Darrel Rodriguez, Ponchatoula, Louisiana
Elmore Schexnayder, LaPlace, Louisiana
Ronald Schexnayder, Norco, Louisiana
Adolph Smith, Sr., Destrehan, Louisiana
Ivory Smith, Garyville, Louisiana
Arthur Snyder, LaPlace, Louisiana
Richard Songy, Sr., Norco, Louisiana
Michael Stewart, Metairie, Louisiana
Anita Stadler, St. Rose, Louisiana
Rafael Tolentino, Destrehan, Louisiana
Anestasia
Wanko, New
Orleans
, Louisiana
Michael Webre, Metairie, Louisiana
Jessie Wheat, Jr., Hammond, Louisiana
Johnny Williams, Jr., St. Rose, Louisiana
Leon Williams, Kenner, Louisiana
Steven Williamson, Kenner, Louisiana
Eastmon Willie, Ponchatoula, Louisiana
Survivors of the George Prince (all passengers)
Leroy Acosta, LaPlace, Louisiana
Charles Allen, Destrehan, Louisiana
Kenneth Becnel, Destrehan, Louisiana
Erwin Blue, New Sarpy, Louisiana
Brian
Broussard, Gonzales
, Louisiana
David Broussard, Prairieville
, Louisiana
Charles Chatelain, River
Ridge
, Louisiana
Blair Duhe, Norco, Louisiana
Allen Fisher, LaPlace, Louisiana
Milton
Lachney, Luling
, Louisiana
George Lingo, Hammond, Louisiana
Dan McLendon, Destrehan, Louisiana
Charles Maples, Destrehan, Louisiana
Charles Naquin, St. Rose, Louisiana
Barry Neyrey, Metairie, Louisiana
Vincent Pardo, Tickfaw, Louisiana
Richard Respess, River Ridge, Louisiana
Gene Woolverton, Destrehan, Louisiana
SS Frosta
None of the crew of the SS
Frosta were injured or killed
in the accident.
See also
References
USCG Report
US Coast Guard report of the incident
Aerial photos of the ferry landings today
West Bank ferry landing (the inverted Y shape
crossing the levee at LA 18 & Paul Maillard Road)
East Bank ferry landing (the Y shaped roadway
crossing the levee at LA 48/River Road)
Post-Katrina aerial photo (The East Bank
landing is at the upper left corner, and the West Bank landing is
in the middle of the right side.)