Local paper reported:
“On Saturday, the [Maine Maritime] museum wrote on its Facebook page: ‘Yesterday was a difficult day for the Maine Maritime Museum family. The schooner Mary E suffered a knockdown off Doubling Point Light on the Kennebec River, just downriver from the museum.’ A knock down is a colloquial term to describe when a boat is tipped on its side, either by wind or a wave, about 90 degrees to the point where its sails or masts are in the water. Winds in the area at the time were 10-15 knots — about 11-17 mph — with some higher gusts.”
Seems remarkable to me that a boat that size would have suffered a “knock down” on the river at those wind speeds?