Thursday, October 23, 2025

Mission Yearbook: From boats to submarines to helicopters, the gospel finds a way

There are those who spread the word of God from a pulpit at the front of a sanctuary, and there are those who recite verses hundreds of feet below sea level — it just depends on what the community requires. The folks pictured in these Religious News Service photographs from the Presbyterian Historical Society’s collections did what they could to spread the gospel to the folks who needed it.

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RNS boat

This boat’s cargo is religion, 1947. Pearl ID: 413182

To wish someone “Godspeed” is to send them off with hopes for a safe and prosperous journey. The Rev. John Bentley, seen on the right, bestowed the boat he stands on with the title Godspeed, imbuing the vessel with luck and intention, as he will use it to “carry spiritual strength to thousands … who live along the waterways beyond the Arctic Circle.”

Bentley, who at the time of this photograph was serving as the Episcopal Bishop of Alaska and had spent almost three decades in the state, declared that he was “just like a country person, except that I cover my territory by boat, airplane or dogsled.” To the left of Bentley is the man who built the boat, Norman Blanchard Jr. He made sure the specially designed vessel could easily maneuver in shallow water, as Bentley’s travels through the territory would involve rivers and narrow waterways.

Service aboard a submarine, 1947. Pearl ID: 413308

Bentley’s tiny Alaskan boat was built for the journey. Its main duty was to zip around shallow riverbends and deliver him to small communities off the beaten path.

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RNS submarine

This U.S. Navy submarine was also built with the journey in mind, though a much longer one that kept its passengers from seeing much sunshine. The caption of this RNS image informs us that “Despite the absence of chaplains aboard submarines in the U.S. fleet, Sunday morning usually sees a member of the undersea crew lead the men in a religious service,” which includes a reading followed by the singing of hymns.

The end of the Second World War meant the demobilization of American military forces — including the chaplaincy, which accounts for the “absence” noted in the caption. In fact, “During the first five months of 1946, the number of separations averaged close to 200 per month,” with more than ¼ “of the peak strength of the Corps” returning to “civilian life” during the hot summer months of June and July.

By the end of September 1946, a little over a year since VJ Day was celebrated, “the demobilization of the Corps was practically complete, with the exception of nearly 200 Reserve chaplains who had indicated they were willing to remain on extended service.” A report issued at the end of January 1947 showed that there was a total of 493 Navy chaplains in the corps, with 146 being listed as stationed “Afloat” and the remaining 347 as “Ashore.”

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Quonset hut chapel

A chapel delivered by helicopter, 1948. Pearl ID: 416921

Eight miles below the rim of the Grand Canyon lives an Indigenous community that has called Supai, Arizona, home for over 1,000 years. The Havasupai Tribe consists of around 200 members; the tribe’s reservation, originally established in 1880 and enlarged in 1975, consists of more than 188,000 acres of canyon land. The village is so remote that if you hope to reach it, you must make the eight-mile trek either by foot or on horseback.

In this 1948 image, members of the Havasupai Tribe watch as the Rev. Arthur Kinsolving dedicates a Quonset hut chapel in the village. The villagers did not build it from scratch, and it was not dragged in by a team of horses.

Rather, it was a special delivery, made by helicopter. Sections of the hut were carried down from the lip of the Canyon between rugged cliffs to the floor of the valley below, where the Quonset hut pieces were then puzzled back together. Kinsolving headed the escapade, having come up with the idea in the first place. At the time, Kinsolving served as the Bishop of the Episcopal Missionary District of Arizona.

Want more? Check out the RNS Digital Collection to see what’s been recently digitized. 

McKenna Britton, Presbyterian Historical Society (Click here to read original PNS Story)

Let us join in prayer for:

Christopher Drane, IT Specialist, Information Technology, The Presbyterian Foundation
Angela Duffy, CFO, Trust Services, The Presbyterian Foundation

Let us pray:

Merciful God, we lift up our siblings as they bear witness to the gospel of your Son. Help us see your mission and the role you would have us play in making your love known to all people. Amen. 

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Mission Yearbook: From boats to submarines to helicopters, the gospel finds a way

There are those who spread the word of God from a pulpit at the front of a sanctuary, and there are those who recite verses hundreds of feet...