Ocean Ranger, 35 years later: 'I'm glad I took the pictures. Because without that, we'd have nothing' - Action News
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Ocean Ranger, 35 years later: 'I'm glad I took the pictures. Because without that, we'd have nothing'

A medic/radio operator from the Ocean Ranger is donating his personal collection of photos.

Medic/radio operator donates personal collection of rig photos to The Rooms

Lloyd Major, a medic/radio operator on the Ocean Ranger, is donating his personal collection of items and photos of the rig to the provincial archives at The Rooms. (Gary Quigley/CBC)

Four days after Lloyd Major left the Ocean Ranger, it sank beneath the stormy waters of the Grand Banks in the early hours of Feb. 15, 1982.

The medic/radio operator left the rig, 267 kilometres east of St. John's, and flewback to the island after the last shift ofhis usual three-week rotation.

All 84 men on board died

I got them all marked off in black, the ones they found.- Lloyd Major

He didn't know then that the next time he'd see the men on board was when he'd help to identify their bodies. All 84 aboard the Ocean Ranger died.

He still has the list of names of the men on board the rig that night, which he used to check them off as their bodies were brought back to shore.

Lloyd Major helped identify the bodies of the men who died in the Ocean Ranger disaster. He still has a copy of the list he used, marking in black the names of the men as they were brought back to shore. (Submitted/Lloyd Major)

"I got them all marked off in black, the ones they found," he said.

A short time after the Ocean Ranger disaster, a Soviet ship in the area, the Mekhanik Tarasov, sank, and the bodies of those men needed to be separated from the Ocean Ranger crew a relatively easy task, said Major, for a simple reason.

"Most of those guys had beards, and on the Ocean Ranger, you had to be clean-shaven in order to use the masks for gases and that on the rig," he said.

Most crew not allowed cameras

Now, Major has donated his personal collection of photos to the provincial archives at The Rooms pictures he was in a unique position to capture.

"Part of my job on the rig was liaison between the Newfoundlanders and Americans," he told CBC News."And as a medic/radio operator, they didn't mind me taking the camera on board."

"So I took all those pictures. But any other employees that carried a camera on board would have been fired on the spot if he had a camera at that time. Everything was confidential with the oil field in Newfoundland."

Each picture in Major's collection is a memorial to a person or a place,includingKen Blackmore, who drowned that night.

Ken Blackmore, left, and Warren Haverty. Blackmore was on board the Ocean Ranger when it sank. (Submitted/Lloyd Major)

"[Blackmore] was my relief," said Major. "He drowned on the rig. He was the first body found. This fella here is Warren Haverty. He was a safety guy on the rig. This was our room there."

"I'm glad I took the pictures. Because without that, we'd have nothing, just the people drowned, and that would be it. But the pictures show us a great deal about the rig."

'Now they can come to The Rooms and see what we actually done out there. And I'm proud to give it to The Rooms. Very proud.- Lloyd Major

Majorsaid he wanted to donate the material to The Rooms to ensure it would be looked after when he and his descendents are gone.

"What's going to happen to this when I pass on, my daughters pass on, my grandchildren?" he said. "Well, they know he worked on the Ocean Ranger. But today, now, they can come to The Rooms and see what we actually done out there. And I'm proud to give it to The Rooms. Very proud."

Lloyd Major is donating his personal collection of Ocean Ranger photos to the provincial archives so that the crew will be remembered. (Submitted/Lloyd Major)