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Mementos From Shipwreck Of Mass. Boat Found In Pennsylvania

BOSTON (AP) — A toolshed at a western Pennsylvania campground was an unlikely place to dig up remembrances of a decades-old shipwreck that killed seven New England fishermen.

But there they were, two black ship lamps, forgotten among the rusted tools Den Hickey was sifting through this spring, deciding what to throw out.

Gold-lettered writing covered the back of both lamps, but only one inscription was legible: "INCA. ... Lost at Sea January 13, 1944," with the names of the men who died on board.

It's unknown whether these lamps are originally from the Gloucester-based Inca, a 72-foot dragger that sank without a trace off Virginia after being rammed by a steamer. And perhaps it's unlikely they were.

To Hickey, though, the lamps were at the least a tribute to the fallen fishermen, and he believes they belong to the surviving family members, if they want them.

Nancy Kinghorn, whose father, Vincent Orlando, was lost on the Inca when she was 9, said she has no idea whether the lamps are somehow from the ship or who wrote on them, but she wants to know more about them.

Nearly 70 years later, Kinghorn's memories of the wreck and her father are vivid, especially when the weather darkens over Gloucester Harbor, not far from where she lives. It took a long time, she said, to accept he wasn't coming back.

"For years, I used to just say, 'Oh, he's going to come up the hill now, with a fish wrapped (in) a piece of newspaper. ... He's going to come home," Kinghorn said.

The Inca left Gloucester for its final trip in December 1943, heading to winter fishing grounds off the mid-Atlantic. After seven days of fishing, its hold was full and the vessel headed to port in Phoebus, Va. But before it got there, it was gone, plowed under the bow of a steamer.

"The steamer had swooped down upon the smaller craft in the dark hours before dawn, and apparently sent her to the bottom, leaving no immediate trace of wreckage or bodies," the Gloucester Daily Times reported at the time.

Kinghorn, the youngest of 12 children, heard "ungodly screams" one day from her house. She rushed inside to see her mother screaming, pulling her own hair and scratching at her face. She'd just learned the bodies of two crewmen from the missing Inca had been found in another vessel's nets, confirming the Inca's fate.

The lamps that commemorate the Inca are painted black, about a foot tall, and marked with scrapes and rust, but otherwise in good shape. Their history can be traced back only as far as a day in the late 1980s when Hickey's brother-in-law, Don Britton, left $30 at an untended yard sale in coastal New England and took the lamps, intrigued by their looks and lettering.

The lamps eventually traveled with Britton to a family summer camp in Slippery Rock, Pa., where Britton meant to install them but never did. Last year, Britton sold the camp, complete with the lamps, to Hickey and moved to Florida.

Hickey pulled the lamps out during a spring shed cleaning this year, and after seeing the lettering, had to know more about the Inca, including how a memento of the sinking of a Massachusetts boat off Virginia ended up in his toolshed. After some online research, he contacted the city of Gloucester through its website, thinking someone could put him in touch with the victim's families.

"I put myself in the position of one of the surviving family member, and I thought, if there is any significance to these and there is any relationship to the vessel and the crew, maybe they would be interested in having it," he said.

Peter Asaro, for one, isn't interested in the lamps. His father, Vito, died on the boat, and he believes the lamps were almost certainly not on the Inca since nothing from the ship was ever reported to be found. They'd also present an unwelcome reminder.

"I remember my father being alive, I don't want to remember him, looking at that, that he died," he said.

Asaro was 10 when the Inca sank. He was his father's oldest son and remembers the pride his father took in him, and the uncommon strength he had from his work, which enabled him to survive two previous shipwrecks. Such memories are enough, even if other people's memories of the Inca fade and mementos such as these lamps get lost for another 70 years.

He added that his father's fate was not particularly unique. More than 5,300 Gloucester fishermen have been lost at sea.

"All the fishermen that have died in Gloucester, you can write a story about any one of them," he said.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

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