B5 THE ASTORIAN • SATuRdAy, MARcH 5, 2022 Vaslav: Captain Tokareff was never heard from again continued from Page B1 Columbia River Maritime Museum ABOVE: The front cover of a pocket-sized Russian Constitution taken from the shipwreck. LEFT: Photographer Lawrence Barber captures a crew member descending from the Vaslav. BELOW: Lifeboats arrive to Vaslav Vorovsky’s rescue. PAID ADVERTISMENT in between the Vaslav and his lifeboat. Just as the last crew mem- bers were rescued, Cap- tain Tokareff hauled up the Jacob’s ladder and refused to get off the ship. It’s believed that he was afraid of retribution from Russian dictator Joseph Stalin, who threatened ship captains with the worst should they let anything happen to ves- sels under their command. By daylight, the Vaslav began to turn sideways. She was hit repeatedly by waves that began to break the ves- sel into three pieces. A few tugboats waited on standby to help the ship afloat, but it soon became clear that she was lost. After another 24 hours onboard the sinking Vaslav, Captain Tokareff signaled that he wanted to be res- cued. Although every- one on board the ship was saved, it’s rumored that Vaslav Vorovsky had at least one casualty after all. Captain Tokareff and his crew returned to the Soviet Union after the inci- dent, and the captain was never heard from again. It’s believed he was killed on Stalin’s orders for the accident. Years after the ship- wreck, a woman walked into the Columbia River Maritime Museum and asked to speak with some- one about a Russian ship that had sunk on the Colum- bia River Bar. Her hus- band to be was one of the Coast Guardsmen who once responded to the Vaslav’s distress call. A crew mem- ber had gifted him with a handful of spoons from the sinking ship out of gratitude for his rescue. After keeping the spoons in her family for many years, the woman real- ized their importance to Columbia River history and donated them to the Mari- time Museum’s collection. Julia Triezenberg is an educator at the columbia River Maritime Museum.