Seamen will reunite to recall Stranger days
Deepa Bharath
It was a voyage that changed many lives.
Sixty-five years ago, Allan Fainbarg was a wide-eyed Sea Scout. He
was offered food, board and $10 a month to sail aboard the motor ship
Stranger for a year to collect exotic animals for the San Diego Zoo.
“I begged to get on the ship,” said Fainbarg, 84, a longtime Lido
Isle resident.
Today, 30 of the old-timers will meet at Fainbarg’s home and
reminisce about their days aboard the 221-foot yacht that was a
Newport Beach landmark for many years. They will probably talk about
how they roped iguanas or held little sea turtles in their hand
during their Galapagos Islands adventure.
But they will all agree that the months they spent aboard the
Stranger provided a voyage of discovery and education, and an episode
forever gilded in their collective memory.
Each Sea Scout on the Stranger became a seaman for life, Fainbarg
said.
“We all stayed close to the water or had something to do with
boats,” he said.
Among the men lucky enough to be part of the group’s 65th reunion
today are Lloyd “Swede” Johnson and Vic Alleman, both of Costa Mesa.
Alleman hosted the group’s 50th reunion.
Alleman was 16 and had just received his Eagle Scout badge when he
traveled on the Stranger to the Cook Islands, Samoa and Tahiti.
“It was all one big highlight,” he said. “That trip changed the
way I looked at my life. I had goals after that. I really started to
love the outdoors and have had boats all my life since then.”
Johnson is a retired sailmaker from the loft of Baxter and Cicero,
a member of the Balboa Yacht Club and has been active in setting
marks for Olympic yachting and other major regattas. In 1985, Johnson
was named Newport Beach Yachtsman of the Year and received the Edward
Kennedy Award from the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club.
The group will sorely miss one man: Corona del Mar’s nautical
legend John Blaich died of cancer in March at age 84. Blaich’s
friends say it was his time aboard the Stranger that made him the
seaman that he was. Blaich was a renowned sailing instructor and
boating historian.
The Stranger was owned by Fred E. Lewis, also the ship’s captain.
He brought the ship to Balboa in 1935. The Stranger was built in
Sweden in 1916 as a four-hatch cargo ship with two well-decks. In
1929, it was purchased by the president of Armour meat packing
company, who converted it into a yacht. At that time, it was used for
scientific studies in the Caribbean for National Geographic.
Lewis brought it in 1935 from its New London, Conn., berth. Blaich
was one of the 13 Sea Scouts who accompanied Lewis to the East Coast
to bring the Stranger to Balboa. Lewis was a multimillionaire and
one-time owner of the Diamond Bar ranch. He built the well-known
brick mansion on the peninsula bay front that later came to be known
as the Bartholomae home.
Fainbarg also accompanied Lewis on a three-month voyage to Alaska.
“It was an adventure, no doubt,” he recalled, glancing fondly at
the walrus tusks and other ivory items he had placed on his home bar
counter.
“We traded the tusks and ivory with the Eskimos for things like
combs, hair oil and wristwatches.”
Fainbarg said this is probably going to be the group’s last
reunion.
“It was a special year for us,” he said. “I’ve enjoyed talking
about it. If I live long enough, I’m going to miss the reunions.”
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