Tuesday, October 23, 2018

SEA WITCH & DE BRAAK WRECK



THE SEA WITCH AND DE BRAAK WRECK


A 1935 expedition to find the HMS DeBraak wreckage and
the treasure it was said to have as cargo,    was shaken by the appearance
of the Sea Witch, aka Weather Witch, the first week in November,   a 
week of unusually harsh weather which was obvious to the superstitious
sailors in the crew aboard the refitted New England pilot schooner, The
Liberty, now working as the salvage ship of Charles Colstad out of
Attleboro, Massachusetts.

Yes, it was said, the DeBraak was being protected by The Sea
Witch.

The sailors aboard the old schooner Liberty made up an effigy
of the old hag, long gray hair streaming from her tall peaked black hat,
with a flowing black cape, on a broomstick.

To exorcise the demon, the effigy, was given a position of honor
in the ships cabin, offered food and drink, then burned in the galley cook
stove, the ashes gathered and cast to the sea in hope of calming the waves.

Failing to do so, the hunt for the DeBraak was shut down for the
winter.

The following summer Colstad's Liberty and crew returned to
the Cape Henlopen waters and after a month of searching, The Sea Witch
returned as a full fledged hurricane that drove the salvage vessels onto
the beach, forcing Colstad to abandon the search.

Sea Witch had earned a permanent place in the Cape Henlopen
Delaware coastal sea lore, yet  to return year to year to an annual Halloween
Festival.

Abstract: Harrison H, 10/23/18 from Michael Morgans, Sussex
Journal October 24 2018, source September 19, 1932, New York Times.

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