11-Year-Old Sole Survivor of Family's Murder at Sea

Imagine being stranded alone on a tiny raft in the middle of the ocean as a child, with no water, food, or hope in sight. This is the harrowing tale of Terry Jo Duperrault, an 11-year-old girl who became the sole survivor of a family tragedy at sea.
The Dream Voyage Turns Deadly
In 1961, the Duperrault family embarked on what was supposed to be a dream vacation aboard the Bluebelle, sailing the azure waters of the Bahamas on a two-masted sailboat. Arthur Duperrault, a Wisconsin optometrist, had longed to take his family on a sea adventure. They hired Julian Harvey, a former Air Force fighter pilot, to captain the ship. But Duperrault's dream turned into a horrifying nightmare.
Tragedy Strikes in the Dead of Night
Just days into their journey, the trip took a devastating turn. Terry Jo Duperrault woke to the sounds of chaos and discovered a gruesome scene — her family brutally murdered. Captain Harvey lunged at her and shoved her down the stairs into the cabin, growling, "Get back down there!"
Then, the ship began to sink. In a desperate bid for survival, she climbed onto the cork life float, using it as makeshift raft in the vast, unforgiving ocean.
A Fight for Life on the Open Sea
Terry Jo's survival instincts kicked in as she floated adrift, battling exposure, dehydration, and despair. She clung to life on a small cork float for four days and nights, with only the stars and the distant horizon for company.
The Light of Hope and Rescue
Salvation came just in time as a Greek freighter, Captain Theo, spotted the tiny raft in the vast expanse of the ocean. Terry Jo was rescued, barely clinging to life, but her spirit unbroken. She spent 11 days in a Miami hospital and miraculously had no permanent physical injuries. Her ordeal at sea and subsequent rescue is a testament to the human will to survive against all odds.
In a twisted turn, Captain Julian Harvey survived the ship's sinking and told the Coast Guard in Miami that he was the sole survivor of a grave accident. When he heard that Terry Jo had been found, he committed suicide.
Through investigation and Terry Jo's testimony, experts predicted Harvey killed his wife Dene Harvey, who was also aboard the Bluebell, potentially over insurance money, and the Duperrault family unfortunately got caught up in the violence.
After the tragedy, Terry Jo moved back to Green Bay to stay with her aunt and three cousins. At the age of 12, she changed her name and put her past behind her. It wasn't until nearly five decades later, in 2010, that she decided to share her harrowing experience of survival and loss in her book, "Alone: Orphaned on the Ocean."
In an interview with CBS News, Terry Jo shared, "I always believed I was saved for a reason," as reported by Reader's Digest. "If one person heals from a life tragedy [after reading my story], my journey will have been worth it."
Reference: Orphaned on the Ocean: The Unbelievable Story of Terry Jo Duperrault