Showing posts with label Blaauwbergstrand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blaauwbergstrand. Show all posts

Tuesday, 7 January 2025

South Africa: Bengal & South American shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

September 17:

“This day in our shipwreck History”

1840: Bengal, this British wooden sailing barque wrecked on Blaauwbergstrand in Table Bay in the Western Cape after missing its stays while entering the bay at night.

1889: South American, this sailing vessel was an American ship of 1694 tons built in 1876 in Boston. The ship was wrecked on 17 September 1889 in Struisbaai in thick fog with the loss of one life. The vessel was travelling from Manilla to Boston with a cargo of sugar which was reportedly strewn along the beach after the wrecking.

In 2020 SAHRA was called to the beach at De Mond, Struisbaai after a large piece of wreckage was exposed lying in the vicinity of the known wreck of the Mackay. During the site visit the wreckage was surveyed, the visible structure was at least 45 m in length and 5.7 m wide but it was difficult to determine the exact dimensions as it was buried under the sand.

The pieces of timber had large iron nails protruding from them, the size of the nails together with the wood indicates that this would have been a large vessel. During a previous survey of the area undertaken as part of a master’s degree project in 2006 by Jaco Boshoff, a large keelson was partially excavated at the same location as the above wreckage, due to its size and location the wreck was tentatively identified as that of the South American as it is the only one of its size that wrecked in the area.

The wreckage continues to be exposed during strong tides and spring lows, the most recent images were taken at the beginning of September 2024.

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Thursday, 7 November 2024

South Africa: Juno & Tijgerberg shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

City of Baroda, wrecked in Namibia

August 2:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1874: Juno, this wooden barque wrecked at Blaauwbergstrand (modern day Bloubergstrand beach) in Table Bay in the Western Cape. Very little is known about this vessel.

1937: Tijgerberg, this British/South African whaler wrecked after running aground at full speed in dense fog at night in Saldanha Bay in the Western Cape.

1995: An Aero Air Antonov An-2 (registration no. RA-05708) crashed during its initial climb just after taking off from the Rand Airport in Germiston in Gauteng. All three lives on board were lost and the cause of the accident was determined to be a result of the cargo shifting after take-off, pushing the plane into nearby power lines.

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Wednesday, 17 April 2024

South Africa: La Cybelle, Princeport, Astrida & Otori Maru 8 shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

March 19:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1756: La Cybelle, this 12-gun wooden sailing slaver wrecked north of Blaauwbergstrand in Table Bay in the Western Cape. It entered the bay in search of fresh water when it ran aground and wrecked.

1885: Princeport, this wooden sailing vessel wrecked on a reef near Dyer Island in the Western Cape.

1945: Astrida, this steam-powered passenger/cargo ship foundered, about 120 km south east of Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape.

The Astrida (1945), date and location unknown

It capsized and foundered in a storm and a distress signal was radioed out before it went down. The frigate Nadder and the tug John Dock rescued 29 people within 10 hours of the sinking, however, 88 people were never found.

1984: Otori Maru 8, this motor-powered fishing vessel ran aground at Shell Point, just west of Quoin Point in the Western Cape.

The Otori Maru 8 (1984) in 1990

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Wednesday, 10 April 2024

South Africa: St Clair, Conservative, Sappho, Portsmouth & Cape Point shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

Benguela Eagle shipwreck in Namibia

March 14:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1838: St Clair, this British wooden sailing vessel wrecked in a south easterly gale off Saldanha Bay in the Western Cape with the loss of several lives (the exact number being unknown).

1843: Conservative, this British wooden sailing vessel is presumed to have wrecked or foundered somewhere north of Yzerfontein, possibly near Vondeling Island in the Western Cape. Its wrecking was under mysterious circumstances as there was no indication of it having wrecked with the only evidence being six bodies that washed ashore.

1864: Sappho, this British wooden sailing barque wrecked in a south easterly gale at Blaauwbergstrand in Table Bay in the Western Cape.

1866: Portsmouth, this American sailing brig wrecked after its cables parted in a north westerly gale just east of the Coega River Mouth in Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape. The cook drowned whilst trying to swim to shore.

1982: Cape Point, this South African steel-hulled motor-powered fishing trawler wrecked after running onto rocks south of the Gourits River mouth in the Western Cape.

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Saturday, 6 April 2024

South Africa: Cerberus, Stoic, Pickle & René Sethren shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

March 10:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1821: Cerberus, this wooden sailing vessel ran aground on Blaauwbergstrand in Table Bay in the Western Cape. Although attempts were made to get it off, by the 22nd it was decided that the vessel would be lost and it remained there, becoming a wreck.

1858: Stoic, this wooden sailing cutter wrecked north of the M’bashe Lighthouse, halfway between East London and Port St Johns in the Eastern Cape. It is believed that this was the first vessel built in East London.

1939: Pickle, this South African fishing vessel sank in the then Port Elizabeth harbour in Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape. It was later raised and scuttled in Algoa Bay.

2010: René Sethren, this South African Navy strike craft (P1566) was intentionally scuttled by a missile during a military exercise off Cape Point in the Western Cape. 

P1566 strike craft at an unknown date and location

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Tuesday, 19 March 2024

South Africa: Venerable, Henrequetta, Rover, Eagle Wing & Qu-Importe IV shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

Ulan shipwreck in Walvis Bay, Namibia

February 22:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”
1840: Venerable, this wooden brig wrecked near Struisbaai in the Western Cape at night.
1844: Henrequetta, this schooner (outfitted for slaving) was taken as a prize by the HMS Thunderbolt and was subsequently condemned and broken up in Table Bay in the Western Cape. It arrived in Table Bay on the 2nd of February, with 30 enslaved people having lost their lives at sea. The vessel was sold on this day and broken up.
1863: Rover, this sailing vessel, wrecked in thick fog at Blaauwbergstrand in Table Bay in the Western Cape.
1879: Eagle Wing, this wooden a schooner wrecked in gale on Quoin Point in the Western Cape with only three of its crew of seven surviving.
1998: Qu-Importe IV, this yacht foundered off Yzerfontein in the Western Cape after the captain was washed overboard.
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Tuesday, 16 January 2024

South Africa: Elizabeth Brown, North East, Lancastria, Adelfotis & Smit-Lloyd 102 shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

December 31:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1872: Elizabeth Brown, this wooden sailing snow/brig wrecked in a south-easterly gale at Port Elizabeth in the Eastern Cape.

1872: North East, this iron sailing barque wrecked in a south-easterly gale between the Ratel River mouth and Rietfontein Farm in the Western Cape.

1880: Lancastria, this wooden sailing barque was anchored in an exposed position in Table Bay between Robben Island and Blaauwbergstrand in the Western Cape when a south easterly gale parted its anchor cables and they were forced to drive the barque ashore, wrecking near Blaauwbergstrand. The archival records initially reported the wrecking at Robben Island, but further research revealed that it had wrecked on the mainland. 

1956: Adelfotis, this Costa-Rican steam-powered cargo ship wrecked in a heavy fog, heavy swell, and a moderate south easterly wind on a reef just off Quoin Point in the Western Cape.

The Adelfotis (1956) under its previous name of Tovelil at an unknown location

1970: Smit-Lloyd 102, this oil-rig supply vessel capsized in a storm after an explosion and sank southeast of the Storms River Mouth in the Eastern Cape.

The Smit-Lloyd 102 (1970), date and location unknown

Two of the crew of seven made it onto the lifeboat and reached the shore with the remaining five perishing with the vessel.

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