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Dock Worker Brings Stranded Ferry Passengers Home: 'You're All Staying at My House Tonight'

Dock Worker Brings Stranded Ferry Passengers Home: 'You're All Staying at My House Tonight'
"I said, 'We have enough space for two, no big deal,'" Arianna said. "Then he called back and said, 'We have eight or nine other people.'"

When vacationers were trapped in a historic Washington town after ferries were canceled due to weather concerns, they feared they might have to sleep on the streets.

That's when ferry terminal worker William Patterson invited all ten of them to stay at his house for the night.

It was in the early evening that 79-year-old Kip Goodwin and his wife from Hawaii had finished calling every hotel and Airbnb in the Olympic Peninsula's Port Townsend-they were all fully booked for the summer holiday season.

Neither had they luck at the YMCA or Red Cross-even the campgrounds were unavailable. Fearfully looking at each other amid the sound of howling wind, Patterson interrupted their worrying to tell them they would all be staying with him and his wife Arianna.

Nestled among the pines on the Admiralty Inlet, Port Townsend is serviced by the United States' largest ferry network, but the Port Townsend-to-Coupeville route, which Goodwin and the others were hoping to take after a day trip to Port Townsend and Whidbey Island, was canceled after winds picked up and the ferries had to remain tied to their moorings.

All three round trips were canceled, starting at 6:45 pm and on to 9:00 pm.

Arianna Patterson joked with the Seattle Times that her husband always threatened he'd bring a "straggler" home one day. William called and asked if they could make space for the Goodwins.

"I said, 'We have enough space for two, no big deal,'" Arianna said. "Then he called back and said, 'We have eight or nine other people.' I said, oh."

Like the Goodwins, most of the passengers were over 60 years of age, so the Pattersons were just happy they could get the visitors out of the weather. At the home, there was space on the couch and an extra bed, but pretty quickly people were on the floor, borrowing blankets that their hosts had from their time welcoming foster kids.

Early the next morning, William went out to the cafe he runs along with his work at the ferry terminal to make pastries and coffee for them all.

"It was unbelievable," said Fred Dente, 79, who lives in Langley and was visiting with his wife and their two friends from Hawaii. "It was the way humans should treat humans. In this day and age, it was exceptional."

That morning was crisp and clear, and at 7:00 am the ferries set sail.

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