<p>I wonder if you remember me. About 50 years ago, I worked at your boatyard in Edgartown.</p>
To: Capt. Philip Norton and Capt. Leon Easterbooks
Dear Phil and Leon:
I wonder if you remember me. About 50 years ago, I worked at your boatyard in Edgartown. You were intimidating figures to a college kid, dressed in your khaki work clothes and heavy boots — always on the move, working as hard as any of your men.
Norton & Easterbrooks Boatyard was a busy place in mid-June 1967, when I showed up at eight one morning to begin my summer as a dock boy. “We start at seven,” a man told me as I glanced around the yard, wondering if I should just go home.
“Report in to Leon,” the man said, “when he comes down.”
Leon, you were up in a bosun’s chair that morning, repairing some rigging at the top of a sailboat’s mast. Thirty feet below you, several men were pulling a powerboat into position to be launched.
I grabbed a line, attempting to be useful.
The boat was heavy. “Pull like you mean it, Harmon!” a voice behind me barked. It was you, Phil. You were everywhere. How did you already know my name? Red-faced, I pulled like I’d never pulled before.
My summer on the dock had begun. I didn’t realize it at the time, but working at Norton & Easterbrooks was going to teach me some enduring life lessons.
Lesson one: “Pull like you mean it!” How many times have those words come back to me, Phil, as I’ve caught myself being hesitant or inattentive over the years?
The boatyard’s long dock, it turned out, was actually a bridge — from boyhood to manhood.
I tried to be a fast learner. I bought an alarm clock, and got to the yard at seven the next morning. Most of the men brought big lunch boxes to work, but I was down to half a package of Oreos. The alarm clock had wiped out my savings.
Somehow, I thought we would be paid every day. That’s how it had worked in my previous summer job, mowing lawns in my family’s suburban New York neighborhood. Waiting until Friday was going to be hard. “A week from Friday,” a man told me. “We get paid every two weeks.”
Lesson two: Sometimes, you just have to swallow your pride and ask for help. I phoned home, praying it would be my mother who answered. This was decades before electronic transfers, but she quickly mailed a check to the rooming house where I was staying.
Over the years, lesson two has come to my rescue more times than I like to admit. It’s not just 20-year-olds, I’ve discovered, who can find themselves in embarrassing situations. When I’ve ended up in the boss’s office, or in one of life’s other tight spots, I’ve tried to remember to swallow, take a breath, and let the truth spill out.
But it was you, Leon, who taught me the summer’s most profound lesson. You were the yard foreman, supervising a dozen men and in charge of the elevator dock, where we launched and hauled boats.
The elevator was powered by an old car engine. Whenever a boat was pulled onto the elevator dock for launching, you’d start that engine. Long steel cables would slowly lower the dock and the boat into the harbor.
The engine was loud, and you would lean out the door of the engine shed like the engineer on an old steam locomotive, watching a freshly-painted boat wet her bottom as she went down, or a tired-looking boat settle into her cradle as she came up.
By good luck, I was assigned to the late shift at the yard, which meant I was on the dock each evening when you came back from supper to lock up.
Do you remember our conversations? They were kind of brief.
You would park your green and white ’55 Chevrolet at the office, where Phil managed the yard’s business, and walk over to the engine shed. At 7:30 p.m. the yard was quiet. You’d pull the brim of your khaki cap down against the set ting sun, light a cigarette and survey the scene.
If I walked past you — to chop a block of ice for a cruising sailboat, perhaps — you would nod. I wouldn’t say a word, nervous that I had probably cut the ice too big and cost the yard money. Phil had warned me about that.
Sometime in July, you started to say, “Hi, Bub.”
“Hi,” I would say.
In August, I got up my nerve to say, “Hi, Leon.” We even talked a bit as we closed up.
Something was happening to me that summer. I was gaining confidence in myself, and it was largely thanks to you.
Each day on the dock, I had to struggle to hold my own with the other two dock boys. One was a varsity football player, and the other a wild young Norwegian. On sunny days we worked with our shirts off, and girls always came by in their whalers just to see these guys.
I was a different story. I was the skinny fellow worried that my glasses might get knocked into the water as my dockmates rough-housed — worried that I might get knocked in.
But one evening in August, as I came down the dock carrying two 50-pound blocks of ice, you saw something that had been invisible to me, Leon.
“You’re gettin’ some strong, Bub,” you said.
The words touch me, even today. I’ve taken them with me through the years, like a father’s blessing.
And so, lesson three: Affirm those around you. They may need it more than you know.
What I felt on those evenings on the dock with you, Leon, was an approving presence. Words didn’t matter. The older I get, the more I simply try to be an approving presence for people.
This fall I returned to the Vineyard for a visit, and I walked down to the boatyard one evening. It’s now called Edgartown Marine, but it hasn‘t changed too much. I could almost see your black, ‘49 Cadillac parked at the foot of Morse street, Phil.
The old elevator dock has been replaced with a huge blue hoisting machine, but I thought I could hear an engine running, Leon. And I’m sure I caught a whiff of cigarette smoke.
I’m writing this letter at my home in New Mexico, where we are about to celebrate the Day of the Dead. You New Englanders call it All Souls’ Day. Either way, our remembrances on Nov. 2 will honor all the loved ones who have cast off for deeper waters, far beyond Georges Bank. In this spirit, I want to say:
Capt. Norton and Capt. Easterbrooks, you are both still very much alive for those of us whose lives you touched, and enriched.
Thank you.
Tom Harmon is a writer and editor living in New Mexico.

Comments
Great article Tom. It
Jeff Winter Haines City, FLGreat article Tom. It brought back great memories of my summers on the Vineyard when I was in elementary school. That was late 50s.
Beautiful essay. Thank you,
geraldine brooks west tisburyBeautiful essay. Thank you, I will be sharing it with my sons.
Nice read, Tom. We've all
Wayne Smith West TisburyNice read, Tom. We've all been dock boys somewhere. Good to pay it forward.
Beautifully written and
Bill Revill Meriden CTBeautifully written and brings back memories of my first jobs as a kid. I hope we all had a Capt. Norton and a Capt. Easterbrooks in our lives.
I was there too, I guess a
Jennifer Stix Vineyard HavenI was there too, I guess a couple of summers before you -- my mentor was Jeanne, Empress of the Office. Phil and Leon were gruff and kind. Phil had a wonderful smile and good sense of humor. As I recall Leon spent little time in the office. I loved my summer working on the waterfront -- I was to spend many more summers on the waterfront but didn't know it at the time -still, none has more memories and I join you in remembering two wonderful men.
Tom, my friend and former
John Robertson Placitas, New MexicoTom, my friend and former editor: So, I have to go to the Vineyard Gazette to read you? That's ok. Fine piece in a fine paper. See you at the next klatch in Corrales.
I'm weepy and happy. I was a
Carolina Yahne ALBUQUERQUEI'm weepy and happy. I was a waitress and learned some of the same lessons from very kind people.
Thank you for sharing these
Eve Waban, MAThank you for sharing these memories, Bub.
I can hear Leon's voice right
Thomas Harmon Albuquerque, NMI can hear Leon's voice right now, Eve, and I can see the twinkle in his blue eyes. You're getting' some clever, girl.
;-)
What a wonderful tribute!
Cecelia Rosales York, PAWhat a wonderful tribute! Some of the same lessons I learned there in Bernalillo at the El Charro Café my senior year of high school. Blessings to you, Tom!
Love this, Tom. Will pass on
Susan Loubet Cedar CrestLove this, Tom. Will pass on to others. Thank you.
Tom Harmon takes us places in
mary dudley albuquerqueTom Harmon takes us places in his writing and shows us his heart.
Amazing places where we gain
Nancy AlbuquerqueAmazing places where we gain life lessons. Thank you for a wonderful story, Tom.
Thank you for this article. I
BTE MAThank you for this article. I have a skinny 16 year old son about to apply to work for the harbor master next summer on this same dock. I will share this article with him and it will supply some extra confidence as he interviews for this coveted position. Many thanks!
Nice article Tom - almost
Helen Delahunty FRESNONice article Tom - almost always a shock to remember that you are an east coaster, so much do you embody the South Valley ethos (apart from watering the Back Forty!)
What at touching tribute!
Rosie Oakland, CAWhat at touching tribute! Thanks for sharing.
Thanks Tom, somehow this hits
Robert Broz Suchitoto, El SalvadorThanks Tom, somehow this hits home coming from you. Thought I knew you but had no idea you were a writter. In a way altyhough not 16 the praise I recieve from you keep me on track.
In Peace
Robert
What a great essay, Tom! It
Another Phil Pretoria, South AfricaWhat a great essay, Tom! It made me reflect on some of my own life lessons (acquired at college - in a mailroom and on a receiving dock rather than in a classroom). It equally made me feel sad to have missed the Vineyard this year. Please keep on writing!
Great essay brings back
j.gould albuquerque ,nmGreat essay brings back memories of summers in Maine haying and working for the vet thanks
What a lovely piece.
Ruth Warner AlbuquerqueWhat a lovely piece. Congratulations, Tom!
I just discovered your essay,
Bill Thomas Petoskey, MichiganI just discovered your essay, Tom. It is outstanding. It's been many years since we worked together in Albuquerque, but this brought back many wonderful memories of our chats about journalism and writing. It was great to read about an obviously special time in your life. Nice work.
Just found this article among
Linda Auke BayJust found this article among some friend's posts...warms my heart all kids starting out need a Leon in their life.
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