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Captain Guy Earle
North America's Youngest known
registered Sea Captain
Last Owner /
Captain of the SS Kyle
A Legend in Himself. A Veteran
skipper

1965 Owner / Captain SS Kyle Carbonear Newfoundland Photo
courtesy of Dick Meyers, Holland

The SS KYLE website was
constructed In
Loving Memory of
Captain Guy Earle
Dedicated by Daughter Elizabeth P. Earle DePiero..

"Our

Captain as a Teenager,
Shown Left here on his 3-masted stern schooner "Betoine" in 1938, Carbonear
"Guy" Earle is the YOUNGEST North American to ever receive a
Captains Ticket.
Show Right on his personal Yacht Miss Newfoundland Carbonear 1966.
He Never lost a man at Sea
Captain Guy Record Holding
Trip with the Betoine- 21 days to the West Indies and back from
Newfoundland
Captain
Guy Earle was a Veteran Fishing Captain of the
SS Kyle of Carbonear Newfoundland and was manned by 100 men at times. At
the age of 8 years old he began accompanying his Father Arthur
Earle on his Voyages North to Labrador. Starting as a cabin boy
and
learned his labor's well and sank his energies into the
Labor's of life at sea, eventually becoming one of the great
skippers of his time,
rightfully taking his place among the
great seamen, Captain
James Pike, Captain Cyril Taylor and
Captain Ned Rorke of Carbonear - all of
whom gave the town a
reputation as maker of great seamen.
8
years after his first voyages with his Father Guy surviving a
rare disease, Scarlet Fever and beating the odds he became
skipper of his
Fathers Schooner trading back and forth to Labrador. Captain Guy a
Master
mariner at the age of 19
commanded his first 3-masted stern
schooner Betoine in 1938, this was his first Atlantic voyage
with a load of salt fish for Portugal. Obtaining his Captains
ticket at the Age of
16 with everyone believing he was 18,
becoming the youngest known
North American Sea Captain ever to
date and for many more years
Guy continued a coastal service around
Newfoundland, with
occasional trips to the Hudson Bay, the mainland of Canada and
Labrador,
during the winters extending his trade overseas to
Spain, Portugal and the Caribbean. In all 34 years as a
Captain, Guys has never once
lost a single life at sea.
In
1936 at the
age of 19 he had to deliver a schooner full of Salt Cod to the
west Indies and in trade bring back Molasses
in record time of,
21
Days.
Captain Guy Earle and his Father Captain Arthur Earle formed the
first fully integrated fish business in Newfoundland, Earle
Freighting Services of Carbonear, which dealt in salt as well
as fresh fish and seals. Earle Freighting Services
employed
2,500 fisherman
and 190 Permanent employees at Carbonear.
Other known (Schooners, Motor Vessels and Yachts owned by The
Guy Earle
Thomas S. Gorton,
M.V. Salucan
and
the
Earle
Trader,
Gertrude
L. Thebaud.
The Lila B. Boutillia
also located on the Back of the older Canadian 100 Dollar Bill. The Lilla B. Boutilier is the
twin sister ship to the Theresa E.
Conner the Lunenburg NS museums
Owned, The M.V.Alcala, S.S Arctic Eagle renamed the
SS Kyle,
Maneco,
Lady Anderson and the
Miss Newfoundland.
"Left
to Right" (1939) Lilla B. Boutilier, E.P. Theriault & Thersea E.
Connor. Guy
Chartered the John.A.Crosbie for sealing the last
year before he passed.
Captain Guy Earle was Born in Carbonear NF on November 24
1917 and Died on February 19, 1968 and was Buried at St James
Cemetery

Captain
Guy was a man of courage, but courage is not something
one sums up in a single act. Guy was the exemplification of this
virtue in
all his endeavors and many occasions received
widespread acclaim for his feats. Carbonear will never forget
the spring of 1965 seeing
Captain Earle bring the Kyle -
Limping, listing and laden with seals, into his home town. We
watched and waited, knowing the near disaster
on the Ice fields
was only averted by his persistence in effecting such repairs as
could be done to continue the voyage. Men of lesser
courage and
ability might in such a situation have abandoned the ship. When
pressure of business forced him ashore, he still kept a yacht,
aboard
which he spent his leisure hours.
Business was not his only occupation, his trade was with people
and his warmth spread as widely
as the countless business negotiations he engaged upon. These negotiations, although not
always crystal clear to Guy, were relentlessly
pursued until he
was satisfied the purpose had been achieved. The devotions he
put into his work and his sense of frank purpose, helped
him
expand his Business from a single small structure to a building
complex housing a fresh frozen food industry and the largest Cod
fishing
industry in Eastern Canada.

The
First Newfoundland sealing ship to return from the front this
1965 spring turned up with almost $100,000 damage after a tough
year.
However it was a paying voyage" with some 12,000 seals
taken and men brought home a burning desire to keep dwindling
seal fishery
kindled dangerous odds. The Kyle steamed in to Carbonear under command of Captain Guy Earle. The former CNR
coastal coal burner was
manned by 100 men who made it safely to
and from the ice
fields. Immediately, Flippers went on sale in
the Conception Bay Community.
Creating a Telegram reporter-photographer team, Captain Earle
invited them to his cabin where he unfolded the ship's Log (Photo shown
below) and revealing story of the 1965 seal
fishery. It was a tough one he declared going through the pages of his book. "Any trouble" he
was asked.? Yes he said, it was a
real tough spring. Then he told of how he almost lost his ship
March 27th.

It
was 12:10 am, and the Kyle was in the strait of Belle Island not
far from Belle Island itself and trying desperately to combat
severe snow
storm conditions and eventually reach a major patch
of seals in the vicinity of South Wolf Island, Labrador. The
Kyle drifted fast in heavy ice
until the 50 year old vessel came
to rest against towering iceberg about 150
high. The 47 year old
captain said you could hardly see the top
of the snow drifts. He
thought winds at the time to be gale force at 85 miles per hour.
He said he feared the giant iceberg would turn over
and crush
the 225 ft ship The 75 sealers
were also fearfull of their
precautious position and abandoned ship. The Federal Ice Breaker
D'Iberville was about 6 miles away from the Kyle and was alerted
the situation. However, things took a lucky turn for the better
and the men
were only on the ice for 25 minutes. Captain Earle
said 25 crew members did not leave the ship. Fortunately the
Kyle shifted position in the
vicious wind but not without being
nudged by the mountain of ice which was ground in about 35
fathoms of water.
Captain Earle said the
deck was filled with Heavy Ice. Outside
the boat was bulged in from mid ship to its bow on one side. Captain Earle pointed out the damage
on the ship showed where
wooden and rubber plugs were used by the men to make temporary
repairs. Captain said its a good thing the
damage was done above
the water line. He recalled that in one area of the ship you
could see broad day light looking a the damage done
from the
inside. Asked for an estimate Guy replied I would say almost
$100,000.00. As soon as the Kyle moved from its precautious
position, the sealers returned on board to start making repairs.
Captain Earle who just completed his 4th year at the
Newfoundland seal
fishery describe the voyage
from the log this
way. Weather was stormy and bad all around, sort of rare ice
conditions, Ice was nipped on the
Labrador coast, tight on
shore. There wasn't much ice but we couldn't get through it to
the seals. Captain Earle left St. John's on
March 9th.
Navigating around the ice he made it as far as Round Hills March
12th. There were 8 Norwegian sealers
spotted in the vicinity of
the Round
hills. Off cape Bluff on March 19th 15000 seals were
harvested by all Canadian boats, the Kyle took 3000. Once the
patch was exhausted
efforts were made in vain against storms and
heavy packed ice set in as the vessel attempted to reach further
north and to herd located
seals between North Wolf and South
Wolf Islands. Despite drifting and serous accident which took 2 days to
repair, The Kyle fought the
element from March 19th to April 7th
when seals were stuck again. It was a monotonous interval as
indicated by the log. Turning page after
page Captain Earle read
nothing but snow storms and heavy ice. On March 4th sealers
walked 4 miles between South Wolf and North Wolf
Islands. On
March 5th they were over board in poor weather again. Doing
quite a good job but no seals, Captain Earle said the moral of his
men
were down. How ever a break in the sealers came on April 7th
although it was a little bit late in the season. At Last the
had reached a
major herd of an estimate of 70,000 seals but
young ones were leaving the ice and taking to water. This
scattered the patch and made it
more difficult for the kill.
Nevertheless the Kyle harvested 9,000 seals sharing the patch
with other Canadian sealers. Captain Earle reported
about 20
Norwegian on the Front this spring and suggested were they
didn't do to good. Captain Earle felt his operations were
hampered in
some respect by the new sealing regulations
a
federal fisheries officer on board to see the law was being
enforced. Stopped the Kyle's kill
until the boat had taken more
of the pelts on board. Captain Earle noted the officer "of
course" was just doing his duty. However short of
his panning
regulations he thought he would have taken many more seals.
Another regulations he was not in favor of was one preventing old
seals from being hunted in a breeding patch.
Because of this the Kyle on has 200 old seals on board. He said
old skins are valuable in the
making of boots and similar
manufactured products Captain Earle attacked regulations not
permitting the use of helicopters on seals. He
argued that
helicopters are essential to have on board in case of rescue work and spotting seals..
Our Greatest navigator
Email
us at:
info@sskyle.com

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