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WWII on Jekyll

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CHEF'S CHOICE

CHEF'S CHOICE

The war brought fear and change to the Golden Isles

BY BILL WARHOP

Sometimes, at low tide, beachcombers on Jekyllʼs northern end might stumble across a barnacle-encrusted wood-and-metal structure about sixteen feet long. This boat-like relic dates to World War II and was likely a “buoyant apparatus” that U.S. merchant sailors could cling to if their ship was destroyed. Such life-saving devices were standard issue on America’s wartime merchant vessels, including on Liberty ships built in Brunswick’s massive shipyard—which didn’t exist when Pearl Harbor was attacked in December 1941.

On April 8, 1942, a German U-boat, the U-123, torpedoed two U.S. merchant ships off the coast of St. Simons. The blasts blew out glass windows in predawn Brunswick and set off a near panic that continued the next day when the same U-boat sank the SS Esparta off Cumberland Island, sending the ship to the sea bottom and washing its cargo of oranges and foil-wrapped turkeys ashore. All told, twenty-three crewmen lost their lives.

The attacks mobilized the region for war and industry. Some 50,000 men and women flocked to Brunswick to build the Liberty ship plant and then the ships that transformed Brunswick from a struggling Depression city of 15,000 into a boomtown of bars, restaurants, and shops. The War Department opened Glynco Naval Air Station north of town, from which a fleet of blimps based in a gigantic wooden hangar patrolled the Atlantic for German subs. The military’s new presence often required requisition of civilian property; the government commandeered the King and Prince hotel on St. Simons for a bachelor officers’ quarters and a radar training center.

The exclusive Jekyll Island Club, its membership already in decline since the Depression, ended its 1942 season three days before the U-boat attacks. With war lapping at the island’s shores, it never reopened. “Many club employees left to serve in the armed forces or to work at the shipyards in Brunswick,” says Andrea Marroquin, the Jekyll Island Museum’s curator. “Without their services, the club could no longer function.” Army troops bivouacked on Jekyll to man watch towers and used some of the club grounds for communications and a dining mess.

The Coast Guard patrolled the island coast for U-boats for the war’s duration. Though the war struck the death knell of the Jekyll Island Club’s golden days, the state of Georgia bought the island in 1948 as a public land trust, giving it new life and eventually making it accessible to all.

Memorable cuisine, expertly prepared fish, inventive wine and cocktail list, and delightful staff. Formal dining room and extended bar seating.

Tramici means among friends and this describes our atmosphere perfectly. Inspired Italian cuisine with dining room, bar, and magical outdoor courtyard seating.

Serving homemade Mexican and Latin American foods with daily specialty margaritas. We set the clock for the best happy hour on the island.

Visit HalyardRestaurantGroup.com for lunch and dinner hours, directions, and contact information—and ask us about catering your next special event.

Resurrection Fern

The shape-shifter accents

Jekyll’s stately oaks

BY CANDICE DYER

The resurrection fern is a living metaphor for a kind of miracle. During dry periods, it will desiccate, shrivel, and turn brown. But just give it some rain and within twentyfour hours it becomes a lush green carpet. Look for the ferns cloaking the boughs of live oaks, especially the large ones in Jekyll’s historic district.

Resurrection ferns create their own microclimate along with the trees and Spanish moss. The mat of ferns is a haven for lizards and insects, which draw birds.

The fern does not harm the tree because it’s an epiphyte, meaning it derives its nutrients from the air.

For other plants, losing as much as 8 percent of their hydration proves catastrophic, but a resurrection fern can relinquish 97 percent of its water and still bounce back.

The Aztecs used resurrection ferns medicinally as a diuretic and a liver healer.

Astronauts on a Discovery shuttle mission took the fern into space to see if it would resurrect in zero gravity. Indeed, it did.

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