Burin marks a tragedy that might have been forgotten - Action News
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Burin marks a tragedy that might have been forgotten

The fishing schooner Mina Swim left Burin on Feb. 7, 1917, with a crew of 21. They were never seen again.

Crew of 21 never seen again after leaving port a century ago

The Mina Swim, a 10-dory banking schooner, left Burin in the afternoon of Feb. 7, 1917. (Mina Swim Memorial Website)

It was a tragedy that left families devastated, and changed Burin forever, but the sinking of the Mina Swim might havebeen forgotten if not for the work of localresidents determined to keep the memory alive.

On Tuesday, Burin will mark the100th anniversary of that tragedy.

Without the memorial, I'm certain that withina number of years it would have been forgotten.- Howard Lundrigan

The fishing schooner Mina Swim left Burin on the afternoonof Feb.7, 1917, with a crew of 21on board. It was bound for fishing grounds on the southwest coast of Newfoundland.

It was never seen or heard from again.

"Back in 1917, the community wouldn't have been that big, then you have21of your men taken away in one tragedy," said Howard Lundrigan,who lost a cousin in the sinking.

Eighteen widows and 57 children were left without husbands and fathers.

"It was almost like a whole community was devastated withthe loss of these men," he told CBC Radio's The Broadcast.

Without a trace

Despite the magnitude of the tragedy, it was rarely spokenof when HowardLundriganwas a boy.

A Daily News article dated March 21, 1917 reports no sign of the Mina Swim. (Mina Swim Memorial Website)

Because it disappeared without a trace, the Mina Swim left behind few of the details we expect from shipwreckstories.

There was no rescue attempt, no bodies recovered, no tale ofwhere and how the schooner went down.

"There was really not much of a story," said Lundrigan, adding that relatives of the crew members tended to stay quiet about it. "Whenthey were asked, they would just say, 'Oh, they were lost on the boat.'"

In 2011, residents formed a committee to revive andpreserve the memory of the Mina Swim.

"A lot of people on the committee were descendants (of crew members)and so we decided to put up a memorial."

Familiar names on monument

The Memorial Monument was unveiled in 2013, overlooking Burin BayArm. It bears the names of all 21crew members.

"Burin names like Lundrigans, Brushetts, Planks, Mitchells there are stillpeople here with those last names," Lundrigan said.

With the memorial in place, and the marking of the 100thanniversary, Howard Lundrigan hopes an important piece of local history is now secure for future generations.

"I think we would have been the last generation to talk about it in any great detail, andeven we don't have a lot of detail. But without the memorial, I'm certain that withina number of years it would have been forgotten."

The anniversary will begin with an ecumenical service at St. Patrick's Church, beginning at 3p.m., the same time the Mina Swim set sail 100 years ago.

The service will be followed by a wreath laying at the Mina Swim Memorial, weather permitting.