Please select your home edition
Edition
Allen Brothers

Keeping a candle lit for U.S. singlehanded sailor Captain Donald Lawson

by David Schmidt 1 Aug 2023 16:00 BST August 1, 2023
Captain Donald Lawson has conducted courses, speaking engagements, and on-water training for 20 years © Dark Seas Project

While the international sailing world has been focused on this year's rough-and-tumble Rolex Fastnet Race, my mind has been elsewhere. Back in the early spring of 2022, I caught wind of Captain Donald Lawson and his audacious plans to smash a laundry list of offshore passages and race records (35 in total, including plans for the fastest solo circumnavigation) as part of his Dark Seas project.

Lawson had a fast gun in Defiant (nee Mighty Merloe and Groupama 2), his ORMA 60 trimaran, and he had an infectious kind of motivation and energy. In addition to his offshore endeavors, Lawson also served as the chair of US Sailing's diversity, equity, and inclusion committee.

As a journalist, I bit on Lawson's story and worked with him on two interviews for Sail-World (see April 2022 and August 2022). I never had the pleasure of meeting Lawson in person, but he was professional to work with, and he was a gentleman in our correspondence.

While ORMA 60s and other offshore machines are truly amazing, they require copious volumes of two important things: skill and funding. Remove either, and things usually go pear-shaped quickly.

Over interviews, Lawson expressed confidence in his funding, but I'll admit to some skepticism when I'd see Lawson's social-media posts of the boat. He was clearly trying hard to get Defiant into fighting shape for his list of offshore endeavors, but the boat wasn't exactly looking Bristol. There were also some mishaps, as one can read about online, but I remained hopeful that these were just growing pains, even if their frequency started to suggest otherwise.

If Defiant was the family's J/105, I might have been concerned that he'd lose a halyard or maybe have an issue with a sail due to UV damage. But there's simply no comparing the power, speed, and inherent safety of a J/105 with a wicked-up ORMA 60.

Lawson, however, was confident that he had the skills and the mentoring, and off he went, alone, on July 5, from Acapulco, Mexico, en route to his hometown of Baltimore, Maryland, by way of the Panama Canal. His plan was to begin his solo circumnavigation, leaving from Baltimore, in October.

Tragically, this isn't how things unfurled.

To be clear, I've not been in touch with Lawson since last summer, so I'm simply following the news. But, as I understand the situation, and as it's been reported by The Baltimore Sun (which was a major source for this writing), Lawson's problems started accumulating not long after he left port. This began with the loss of auxiliary power, and compounded when problems arose with his hydraulic rigging (July 9).

Then, a storm on July 12 took out his generator, leaving Lawson without electricity.

More specifically, this left him without an autopilot.

(Just imagine trying a gybe a boat like Defiant, all alone, in a seaway, probably going fast, with that much rig towering above and no help from the yacht's DC- and hydraulic-powered systems.)

July 12 was also the last day that Lawson texted Jacqueline, and his last known position signal was transmitted on July 13, some 300 nautical miles from Acapulco.

The Mexican Coast Guard reportedly received reports of the missing sailor on Friday, July 21, and they initiated a search. By Sunday, July 23, the United States Coast Guard confirmed that Lawson was missing; sadly, this was the same day that a search plane spotted an upturned trimaran.

Jacqueline confirmed that the photos were of Defiant.

Hope initially burned that Lawson would be found in his upturned vessel, but, by Friday, July 28, the Mexican Coast Guard reportedly informed Jacqueline that they had conducted an inspection of the boat. Lawson, tragically, was not onboard.

While the situation looks grim, there's still some hope that Lawson might be alive aboard a liferaft (the vessel was reportedly sailing with two, plus a survival suit and electronic beacons). The water is warm in that part of the world, and history is rife with people who have survived long stretches adrift at sea, so I'm personally keeping a candle lit that this seemingly tragic situation somehow turns right.

Sail-World extends our thoughts and best wishes to Lawson, his wife, and to his family.

May the four winds blow you safely home,

David Schmidt
Sail-World.com North American Editor

Related Articles

So much more than records and statistics
The way the Vendée Globe record was demolished was astounding The way the Vendée Globe record was demolished was astounding. Armel Le Cléac'h's mark of 74 days, 3 hours, 36 minutes had stood for eight years, with the 2020-21 winner of the race, Yannick Bestaven, taking just over 6 days longer to complete the course. Posted on 22 Jan
XR 41 World Premiere at boot Düsseldorf 2025
X-Yachts CEO Kræn B. Nielsen presides over the big reveal The XR 41 is one of the most exciting race yachts for 2025, and we were at the World Premiere on Saturday 18th January at boot Düsseldorf. Posted on 18 Jan
Safety first (like DRRR)
Safety first was definitely the first rule of the sea, as explained to me when I was young Safety first was definitely the first rule of the sea, as explained to me when I was young. You know, one hand for you, one hand for the boat, and so forth. Nothing has changed, but what of the regulations surrounding it all? Posted on 12 Jan
Oldest videos from the London Boat Show
Now-classic craft and never-seen-again inventions from 1955 to 1979 Do you remember the early days of the London Boat Show, when it was at Olympia or Earl's Court each January? As that time of year rolls around again, we can take a look into our video archive and round-up the earliest newsreels that covered the event. Posted on 12 Jan
Flying start to 2025
An embarrassment of riches for sailing fans Happy New Year to you all! The beginning of 2025 is an embarrassment of riches for sailing fans, with a cornucopia of events to follow, ranging from offshore yachts around the world to traditional dinghies. Posted on 6 Jan
Olympic sailing videos part 2
Yachting footage from the 1970s to 1990s Games As 2024 draws to a close, we decided to look back on this Olympic year with a summary of all the oldest Olympic sailing videos we could find, from the analogue era before the year 2000. Here we cover the Seventies through to the Nineties. Posted on 1 Jan
Olympic sailing videos part 1
Yachting footage from the 1920s to 1960s Games As 2024 draws to a close, we decided to look back on this Olympic year with a summary of all the oldest Olympic sailing videos we could find, from the analogue era before the year 2000. We start with the Twenties and go through to the Sixties. Posted on 29 Dec 2024
Publicise your open event to thousands of readers
Get your class/club fixture list into the YachtsandYachting.com calendar As Winter draws to a close, the beauty sleep of event coordinators everywhere becomes more and more disturbed. For fixtures lists will soon be published on club and class websites up and down the country. Posted on 22 Dec 2024
Make me smile
Smiles and cash can always do amazing things. No cash, no splash, after all… Manly's pathway to progress looked at a way to attract and keep youth in sailing. Nice. Really nice. Now, what to do when you cannot replicate such a successful model? Posted on 15 Dec 2024
Firefly dinghy videos from the 1980s and 90s
It's time to dig into the archives again, one year after our first ever video feature It's time to dig into the video archives a second time, a year after our first ever video feature, which happened to be on 1950s Firefly sailing. But this time all we can find is from the 1980s and 90s! Posted on 15 Dec 2024