James Galbraith Bennett III, 70

Camden, Maine

James Galbraith Bennett III, 70, of Camden, Maine, passed away at Maine Medical Center on April 14. He was the son of the late Barbara H. Bennett and James G. Bennett, Jr., originally of Wayzata, Minnesota, more recently of Woolwich, Maine.

Jim graduated from Darien High School in 1972 and went on to earn a BSE in Naval Architecture and Engineering and an MSE in Naval Architecture from the University of Michigan. A renowned naval architect and marine systems engineer, he worked at Bath Iron Works from 1980-2005 and Raytheon Integrated Defense Systems from 2005-2016. Over his notable career his design portfolio encompassed custom yachts for private owners; research vessels and cargo carriers for commercial and scientific clients; and combat vessels for the United States Navy, including innovative multi-hulled designs.

Jim was a lifelong man of the sea, involved in competitive offshore sailing aboard his J/46 Finisterre and his J/34C Astraea, as well as marine historical-structures preservation, and youth sail training and experiential learning. But perhaps nothing better expresses his strength of character and love of life than his final years. After surviving a near-fatal aortic dissection and stroke in 2016, he fought his way to almost full recovery.

Just achieving that much would have been enough for many, but Jim went on to challenge himself to his maximum capability. In 2018 he sailed from Tierra del Fuego to Antarctica aboard the 60’ foot sloop Spirit of Sydney, crossing the Drake Passage, some of the most challenging waters on the planet. Later the same year he sailed across the Southern Ocean from Argentina to South Africa in the 55-foot sloop Pelagic Australis, encountering massive storms that forced the vessel to heave-to, and earning his RYA Master certification. In 2020 he hiked the remote mountains of Columbia to the abandoned city Ciudad Perdida, an archaeological site that predates Machu Picchu by about 650 years. In between these adventures he continued sailing Finisterre on Penobscot Bay, winning or placing in single-handed races and treating his siblings, kids and granddaughter to overnight sails around the islands. He also made blue-water cruises from Camden to Nova Scotia, helped with the Seguin Lighthouse restoration, and bought himself a guitar to re-learn some of the blues and rock tunes he knew in his youth. His greatest pleasure, however, concerned his family; that of being a father and a grandfather, and an eldest brother to his siblings.