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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Brittany_Catanzaro
rdf:type
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rdfs:label
Brittany Catanzaro
rdfs:comment
Brittany Catanzaro is an American sailor. She was the youngest individual appointed captain of a New York Waterways ferry, and the first woman appointed captain. Catanzaro captained the ferry Governor Thomas H. Kean, one of the vessels that responded to the emergency landing of US Airways Flight 1549, on the Hudson River. Catanzaro and her crew are credited with rescuing two dozen survivors.
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Brittany Catanzaro
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Brittany Catanzaro
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n13:USCG_Petty_Officer,_Brittany_Catanzaro,_commanded_a_NYC_ferry_that_rescued_passengers_from_US_Airways_flight_1549.png
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dbc:1989_births dbc:American_sailors dbc:Year_of_birth_uncertain dbc:Living_people
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60987850
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
1055162243
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n13:USCG_Petty_Officer,_Brittany_Catanzaro,_commanded_a_NYC_ferry_that_rescued_passengers_from_US_Airways_flight_1549.png?width=300
dbp:alt
USCG Petty Officer, Brittany Catanzaro, commanded a NYC ferry that rescued passengers from US Airways flight 1549.
dbp:caption
USCG Petty Officer, Brittany Catanzaro, commanded a NYC ferry that rescued passengers from US Airways flight 1549.
dbp:knownFor
commanded a vessel that rescued two dozen people
dbp:nationality
American
dbp:occupation
sailor
dbo:abstract
Brittany Catanzaro is an American sailor. She was the youngest individual appointed captain of a New York Waterways ferry, and the first woman appointed captain. Catanzaro captained the ferry Governor Thomas H. Kean, one of the vessels that responded to the emergency landing of US Airways Flight 1549, on the Hudson River. Catanzaro and her crew are credited with rescuing two dozen survivors. Following the rescue the United States Coast Guard honored Coast Guard personnel who had distinguished themselves. Catanzaro is a member of the Coast Guard Reserve, and received a Meritorious Public Service Award. Catanzaro's cool and efficient response to the emergency landing has been offered as an example the value of training for emergencies. New York Waterways crews practice man overboard drills every two weeks, and Catanzaro said they were all so familiar with the process she did not have to issue any orders, as her subordinates all already knew what to do. Keeping pace with survivors drifting with the Hudson's relatively fast currents is a task that requires skill and practice, and Catanzaro had specifically practiced to master this skill, during their drills, by throwing life-rings into the water, practicing keeping pace with them. The New York Times profiled Catanzaro on December 4, 2008, when she was New York Waterways youngest ever captain, and its first female ferry captain. Catanzaro described virtually growing up on her family's boat, which was moored near the New York Waterways terminal. She described knowing she wanted to work on water, from an early age. She enlisted in the Coast Guard on September 11, 2007, where she worked as a machinery technician. When asked whether the older captains had given her "guff", she replied that, on the contrary, she didn't have to earn their trust, as they had seen her grow up on the river, and several of them had played a role in her training and qualification. Gerald Weissmann, editor in chief of The FASEB Journal, pointed to Catanzaro's coolness and competence as proof of the value of making sure competent women could hold any job. He quoted Margaret Fuller, an early feminist, who had called for women being allowed to command ships, in 1845. Fuller perished in the wreck of , a vessel under incompetent male command. Weissmann wrote "If only the Elizabeth had been tended to by a sea captain as professional as Brittany Catanzaro!"
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dbr:American_people
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1989-01-01
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wikipedia-en:Brittany_Catanzaro