Latest news with #IsleauHaut


CTV News
a day ago
- General
- CTV News
N.S. man dies after sailboat runs aground in Maine
Kettle Cove State Park is pictured on May 22, 2025, in Cape Elizabeth, Maine. (AP Photo/Patrick Whittle) A Nova Scotia man has died after the sailboat he was on ran aground in Maine earlier this week. The state's Department of Marine Patrol says Thomas Kent Smith, 72, was sailing with a couple from New Hampshire early Monday morning. The couple called 911 around 3 a.m. to report they were stranded on shore near Cape Ann Ledge on the southern end of Isle au Haut after the 40-foot sailboat they were on started to break apart on the rocks. Marine Patrol responded and found the couple and Smith's body on shore around 5 a.m. The couple reported they found Smith's body in the water after the boat broke apart and they were able to pull him to shore. Marine Patrol says the couple reported they had all been in the water for more than an hour. They were also all wearing life jackets. Smith's body will be examined at a funeral home in Ellsworth, about 33 kilometres outside Bar Harbour, by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner. The couple were taken to Stonington where they were examined and released by emergency medical crews. For more Nova Scotia news, visit our dedicated provincial page


CBC
3 days ago
- CBC
72-year-old Nova Scotia man dead after sailboat runs aground in Maine
The body of a 72-year-old Nova Scotian was found Monday on the shore of a Maine town after the sailboat he was on ran aground. In a news release from the state's Department of Marine Resources, it said the man was sailing with a couple from New Hampshire. The couple called 911 around 3 a.m. ET Monday to report they were stranded at the southern end of Isle au Haut after their 12-metre sailboat began to break apart on the rocks. The sparsely populated island is southwest of Bar Harbor, Maine. After the boat broke apart, the three people were all in the water for over an hour. All were wearing life-jackets. The couple were able to pull the Nova Scotia man to shore. Maine Marine Patrol then took possession of the man's body around 5 a.m. The Office of Chief Medical Examiner, which investigates sudden, unexpected and violent deaths, will examine the man's body at an Ellsworth, Maine, funeral home. The two survivors were taken to Stonington, Maine, where they were examined and released by medical personnel.