Wednesday, March 18, 2015



There is much to be said about being at the right place at the right time or is it the wrong place at the wrong time. This is a time when we discover what were made of.   Some of us crater at a time of crisis and others put on our boots and start walking and just take care of business.  Addley Baker was no different    He was 27 years old, newly married, and working on the SS Tarpon, which hauled supplies up and down the Florida coastline under the command of Captain W G Barrow.    The year was 1937 and he was working to support his new wife and build a family and a home.   His job on the SS Tarpon was oiler.

While at sea 20 miles out, the weather turned bad and a storm was brewing.  Speculation was that the cargo shifted in the storm, causing the vessel to become unstable and sink.

Addley Baker swam to shore into Panama City, Florida, exhausted after 25 miles and attributed his survival to "God, apples, and porpoises".   When faced with going down with the ship versus taking his chances in the Gulf of Mexico, he choose the water, even in the midst of a storm.   Others around him chose to stay with the ship and hope for help and rescue.

Addley Baker was the son, and eldest child, born to Caron Bailey and Abrent G Baker of Sneads, Florida, in 1910.  He had two younger sisters, Cloy Mae and Willie Maud.   Both parents died while children were young, and Addley was raised by his Aunt Rose in Apalachicola, Florida.    Growing up by the Gulf of Mexico, it was natural for him to seek work on boats and later as a shrimper and seaman.

When shrimping in Florida became less profitable in the late 1940's and early 1950's, he left Florida for Texas, and settled in the Galveston/Freeport area, and in Aransas Pass, Texas,  for a short while.  He did return to Apalachicola, FL, for brief periods, but Galveston and Freeport became his home.

Addley Baker on Shrimp Boat in Texas