Fabula
S1E7 · The State Dinner

Hickory: Bartlet's Call to Harold Lewis

When the fleet's radios fail and only the little maintenance cutter Hickory can be reached, President Bartlet personally takes a crackling patch-phone call from Signalman Harold Lewis. Harold, injured and terrified, describes 80-foot seas, 120-knot winds, a raging engine-room fire and lost lights; Bartlet kneels, comforts him, and promises to stay on the line as long as the radio holds. The moment converts an operational catastrophe into an intimate moral crisis, underscoring presidential limits, the human cost of command, and the administration's fragility.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

3

Bartlet establishes contact with Harold, who is injured and struggling to manage the crisis alone.

determination to empathy

Harold describes the catastrophic conditions aboard the Hickory, including 80-foot seas and a fire in the engine room.

empathy to dread

Bartlet kneels, offering comfort and unwavering support to Harold, promising to stay on the line as long as possible.

dread to resolve

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

5

Taut and watchful: worried about optics and logistics, trying to triage political fallout even as a life‑and‑death situation unfolds.

Joshua Lyman supplies a quick situational note — that the intercom is down and they're searching for the captain — framing the communication limitations and political exposure for the President and staff.

Goals in this moment
  • To understand operational constraints quickly so political consequences can be managed.
  • To ensure nobody in the room underestimates the communications and optics problem.
Active beliefs
  • Information gaps create political vulnerability; the administration must control what it can.
  • Even in emergencies, political and operational considerations are interwoven and must be addressed simultaneously.
Character traits
sharp politically minded alert impatient
Follow Joshua Lyman's journey

Terrified and disoriented; clutching to duty and to the thin tether of voice the radio offers — oscillates between resignation and desperate hope.

Signalman Third Class Harold Lewis speaks through crackle and pain from the Hickory's radio shack: he reports injuries, extreme seas, engine‑room fire, and lost running lights; he struggles to reach medical supplies and to be heard through static.

Goals in this moment
  • To communicate the cutter's dire condition clearly so help can be prioritized.
  • To receive reassurance and instructions that might keep him and his shipmates alive until rescue.
Active beliefs
  • Clear communication, even imperfect, can make the difference between life and death at sea.
  • If the President is on the line, it increases the chances that resources and attention will follow.
Character traits
vulnerable duty‑bound frightened but practical tenacious
Follow Harold Lewis …'s journey

Measured and paternal at the surface; privately unsettled and morally responsible, attempting to translate institutional authority into human reassurance.

President Jed Bartlet moves from formal host to intimate listener: he kneels by the speakerphone, asks calm, practical questions, offers comfort, and vocally pledges to stay on the line as long as the radio holds.

Goals in this moment
  • To provide immediate emotional support and procedural reassurance to the injured signalman.
  • To keep lines of communication open and extract actionable information about the Hickory's condition.
Active beliefs
  • The President must not abdicate the human responsibility of command even when solutions are procedural.
  • A calm, personal presence can steady terrified subordinates and buy time for operational fixes.
Character traits
compassionate decisive under pressure informal warmth frustration edged with gallows humor
Follow Josiah Edward …'s journey

Controlled, focused on procedure; slightly constrained by the limits of what he can report in a chaotic situation.

The Skipper/Captain is physically present in the briefing room and initiates the connection by pushing the speaker‑phone button; he reports that the skipper (likely himself or a counterpart) is being brought in and provides terse confirmations.

Goals in this moment
  • To establish and maintain a reliable communications patch between the Hickory and the White House.
  • To ensure the President and staff have the immediate facts necessary for decision‑making.
Active beliefs
  • Clear lines of command and prompt contact are essential in maritime emergencies.
  • Operational truth matters more than spin when lives are at stake.
Character traits
professional straightforward practical disciplined
Follow Skipper (USS …'s journey

Businesslike urgency masking concern; focused on triage and the administration's exposure, while also personally unsettled by live human peril.

Leo McGarry arrives hurriedly, sets the operational frame (identifying the communications outage) and provides concise situational context; he stands as procedural anchor while Bartlet handles the human contact.

Goals in this moment
  • To assemble accurate information and escalate operational options for rescue or coordination.
  • To preserve presidential focus and shield the President from avoidable tactical distractions.
Active beliefs
  • Clear, factual briefing is necessary to convert panic into action.
  • The Chief of Staff must be the steady procedural presence when crises risk emotional derailment.
Character traits
procedural gravitas protective unflappable
Follow Leo Thomas …'s journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

4
West Wing Public-Address Intercom

The West Wing intercom is cited as knocked out, explaining why the Captain must be sought on foot and why the President must use a speaker connection — its failure creates logistical friction and forces personnel to improvise communication channels.

Before: Presumed normally operational as the building's corridor PA.
After: Nonfunctional or unreliable during the event, representing a …
Before: Presumed normally operational as the building's corridor PA.
After: Nonfunctional or unreliable during the event, representing a persistent communication gap.
Roosevelt Room Oval Conference Table

The large oval briefing table anchors the scene: staff gather around it, the President kneels at its edge to better hear and be heard, and papers and microphones serve as tactile reminders that an institutional meeting has become a human moment.

Before: Set in the Elegant Briefing Room with papers, …
After: Remains the focal point of the room; evidence …
Before: Set in the Elegant Briefing Room with papers, chairs occupied, and built-in microphones visible.
After: Remains the focal point of the room; evidence of the exchange (papers, disturbed chairs) persists as staff disperse after the call.
Josh's Office AM Radio (Desk-Top News Receiver)

A tabletop radio/speaker (represented in the briefing as the speaker-phone line) transmits Harold's frail voice; the crackle and dropouts give the conversation texture and urgency, dramatizing the fragility of contact between the White House and the cutter.

Before: Sits on or near the briefing table, powered …
After: Remains the tenuous lifeline as the President promises …
Before: Sits on or near the briefing table, powered and patched into the Hickory's radio feed.
After: Remains the tenuous lifeline as the President promises to stay on the line; its continued functioning is precarious and central to the scene's suspense.
USS Hickory Running Lights

The USS Hickory's running lights are referenced as lost — a concrete nautical detail that raises the stakes (risk of being run down by large carriers) and translates technical failure into imminent mortal danger.

Before: Normally illuminated to signal the cutter's position at …
After: Extinguished or unreliable, increasing collision risk and contributing …
Before: Normally illuminated to signal the cutter's position at night.
After: Extinguished or unreliable, increasing collision risk and contributing to Harold's alarmed report.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

2
Radio Shack on U.S.S. Hickory

The Hickory's radio shack is the immediate physical origin of Harold's transmission: cramped, salt-scorched and claustrophobic, it frames his voice as intimate and strained, concentrating the fleet-wide catastrophe into one injured operator's perspective.

Atmosphere Claustrophobic, noisy with static, tense and febrile.
Function The communication hub on the distressed ship — the literal point of contact with shore …
Symbolism Represents the fragile human node that connects institutional power to frontline reality.
Access Restricted to ship's crew and essential personnel only.
Crackling static and intermittent signal Salt-and-diesel smell, frayed wiring and a single glaring lamp
U.S.S. Hickory — Engine Room

The engine room is cited as the site of a raging fire — the mechanical heart of the cutter under threat — converting a communications problem into a life‑threatening technical emergency that demands damage control and immediate skilled action.

Atmosphere Hot, smoky, dangerous; an enclosed source of threat audible in Harold's report.
Function Source of immediate physical danger that escalates the call from informational to urgent rescue.
Symbolism Embodies the internal breakdown within the fleet: when the machine that powers the ship fails, …
Access Restricted to engineering crew; hazardous to enter without protective gear.
Acrid smoke and intermittent coughing over the radio Sputtering machinery and the implied smell of burning diesel

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 4
Escalation

"Early naval concerns in Act 3 escalate to Bartlet's intensely personal connection with Signalman Lewis in Act 5, showing crisis progression."

Vermeil Protest and Siguto's Cold Courtesy
S1E7 · The State Dinner
Escalation

"Early naval concerns in Act 3 escalate to Bartlet's intensely personal connection with Signalman Lewis in Act 5, showing crisis progression."

Curt Diplomacy and a Quiet Naval Redeployment
S1E7 · The State Dinner
Symbolic Parallel

"Bartlet's 'What do I do now?' helplessness transforms into his sustained human connection with Harold—showcasing leadership's limits and power."

Between Storm and Ceremony — 'What Do I Do Now?'
S1E7 · The State Dinner
Symbolic Parallel

"Bartlet's 'What do I do now?' helplessness transforms into his sustained human connection with Harold—showcasing leadership's limits and power."

Demanding a Line to the Fleet
S1E7 · The State Dinner

Key Dialogue

"BARTLET: Hickory, this is the White House. Who am I speaking to?"
"HAROLD LEWIS: This is Signalman Third Class Harold Lewis."
"HAROLD LEWIS: Well, we're looking at I guess 80 foot seas with winds up to 120 knots. We're shipping solid green water over the bow. And we've got a fire in the engine room. We lost our running lights and may get run over by an aircraft carrier that can't see in the dark."