7:15 AM | *The role of the weather in the shipwrecking of the S.S. Minnow…new evidence has come to light which exonerates the Skipper once and for all*
2 years ago 189
We all know the words…
“the weather started getting rough, the tiny shipped was tossed…”
Indeed, stormy weather played a critical role in the shipwrecking of the
S.S. Minnow on that fateful day in late September 1964 onto an uncharted
“desert” island somewhere in the Pacific Ocean. The ship set sail that day
on a three-hour tour with five passengers, the captain of the S.S. Minnow,
Jonas Grumby (aka Skipper), and his first mate named Gilligan. A sudden
storm interrupted the tour, damaged the tiny ship, and the two-man crew
somehow managed to steer the boat to safety onto an uninhabited island not
far from the Hawaiian Islands.
For years, there has been a cloud hanging over the head of the Skipper as
the result of conjecture that he was somehow at fault on that day in
putting the passengers at risk. However, new evidence has come to light
that should exonerate the Skipper once and for all from any wrongdoing.
7:15 AM | *The role of the weather in the shipwrecking of the S.S. Minnow…new evidence has come to light which exonerates the Skipper once and for all*