Virginia

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Interviewee Sort descending Collection Description Interviewer Date of Interview Location of Interview Affiliation
Albert "Skip" Theberge, Jr. NOAA Heritage Oral History Project

Captain Albert “Skip” Theberge, Jr. was born in 1946 in Coquille, Oregon.  When Skip was three years old, his family moved to Santa Cruz, where he learned to surf and because fascinated with the ocean.  He graduated from the Colorado School of Mines with a professional degree in geological engineering. Skip also has a master’s degree in management from the Naval Postgraduate School.  In 1969, Theberge was commissioned as an ensign in the ESSA Corps, which soon became NOAA Corps. He retired with the rank of captain in 1995, after nearly 27 years of commissioned service.

Molly Graham , , Gainesville, VA NOAA Heritage Program, National Weather Service
Anthony J. Calio National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Oral Histories

Anthony John Calio is a distinguished figure in the field of science and engineering, with a career spanning multiple decades and various prestigious institutions. He pursued his education at the University of Pennsylvania, where he earned a B.A. in Physics in 1953 , and continued his postgraduate studies at the same university and later at the Carnegie Institute of Technology in Oakland, California, in 1959. He also attended Stanford University as a Sloan Fellow in 1974. Before joining NASA, Calio served in the United States Army Chemical Corps from 1954 to 1956.

Carol Butler McLean, VA NASA Johnson Space Center Oral History Project
Athelstan Spilhaus American Meteorological Society Oral History Project

On June 28, 1991, George P. Cressman interviewed Athelstan Spilhaus at Spilhaus' home in Virginia for the American Meteorological Society and the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research's Tape Recorded Interview Project. The interview explores Spilhaus' diverse career as a meteorologist, oceanographer, educator, and inventor. Spilhaus recounts his early academic influences, including his studies at the University of Cape Town and MIT, and his transition from aeronautics to meteorology under the mentorship of Carl-Gustaf Rossby.

George P. Cressman Middleburg, VA American Meteorological Society, University Corporation for Atmospheric Research
Captain Arthur C. “Bill” Johnson Steamboat Era Museum Oral History Project

Captain Arthur C. “Bill” Johnson (1927-2016) piloted international ships through the Chesapeake waters. He easily named the lighthouses he passed regularly along the Potomac River. Johnson spoke with great respect for the pilots of the passenger steamers with whom he exchanged light and whistle signals passing in narrow stretches of water. He outlined the terminology of steamships and spoke with high regard for the statuesque passenger boats around which local economies were based.

Carrie Kline, Michael Kline Irvington, VA Talking Across the Lines, Berea College Special Collections & Archives
Carl Fisher

Captain Carl William Fisher, NOAA (retired) was born in Canandaigua, New York on April 12, 1942.  He graduated from Canandaigua Academy in 1960 and was honored as a Graduate of Distinction in 2019.  He graduated from the State University of New York Maritime College in 1965 with a U. S. Merchant Marine License and a B.S. degree in Meteorology and Oceanography.  He was Commissioned as an Officer in the U.S.

Taylor Krabiel Virginia Beach, VA NOAA Corps
Carl Fisher NOAA Heritage Oral History Project

On April 9, 2024, Molly Graham interviewed Captain Carl Fisher for the NOAA Heritage Oral History Project. The interview was conducted remotely, with Fisher participating from Norfolk, Virginia, and Graham from Scarborough, Maine. Carl Fisher, originally from Canandaigua, New York, reflects on his upbringing in the Finger Lakes region and his education at Canandaigua Academy. Fisher pursued a career in maritime studies, attending the State University of New York Maritime College, where he earned a degree in meteorology and oceanography.

Molly Graham Virginia Beach, VA NOAA Heritage Program, National Weather Service
Charles J. "Chuck" Harney Steamboat Era Museum Oral History Project

Charles J. "Chuck" Harney (1922-2004). At the time of the interview he had been retired to Lancaster County fifteen years. He said he had videotaped over 150 interviews with local people on boats, in homes and shops, in fields and marshes throughout the region.

Carrie Kline, Michael Kline Merry Point, VA Talking Across the Lines, Berea College Special Collections & Archives
Charles R. Winstead Steamboat Era Museum Oral History Project

Charles R. Winstead, Age 88 (1915-2008). Captain Winstead spent most of his working life aboard a menhaden (type of fish) fishing boat. A powerful and articulate seaman, Winstead elucidates the inner workings of a steam-powered fishing vessel, including singing an example of the chanteys he led as a crew member to draw in the nets. Winstead, the first African-American in the region to acquire a pilot and captain’s license, rode passenger steamboats on several occasions during his younger days.

Carrie Kline, Michael Kline Reedville, VA Talking Across the Lines, Berea College Special Collections & Archives
Chuck Crabtree Grundy Virginia Flood Control Project

Chuck Crabtree was born in 1952, in Buchanan County, where he was also raised. His family, originally from West Virginia, moved to Grundy in the late 1920s, following the coal mining industry. His grandfather was one of the first contractors for Harman Mining Corporation in Harman, Virginia, where he mined coal using ponies to pull the coal out of the mountains. Crabtree's family lived in a small camp, in houses owned by the Harman Mining Corporation, known as company houses.

Michael Kline Grundy, VA Talking Across the Lines, Berea College Special Collections & Archives
Clarence Benjamin "Buck" Rowe Steamboat Era Museum Oral History Project

Clarence Benjamin "Buck" Rowe (1921-2005). Interviewed by Carrie & Michael Kline with Dianne Jordan for the Steamboat Era Museum; 11/3/03. At the time of the interview Mr. Rowe was keeping a store at Bena in the Guinea community of lower Gloucester County. The store was established by his father in 1920, at the height of the steamboat era. His vivid memories brought to life details of nearby wharves where he went twice weekly as a young boy with a wagon and team to pick up deliveries for the store. 

Carrie Kline, Michael Kline, Dianne Jordan Guinea, VA Talking Across the Lines, Berea College Special Collections & Archives