Showing posts with label Gqeberha. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gqeberha. Show all posts

Friday, 20 December 2024

South Africa: Good Hope, Martha, Ambleside, Teuton, Andreas Riis, Burgomeester, C Boschetto, Drei Emmas, Lada, Rosebud & Ticino shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

August 30:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1819: Good Hope, this wooden-hulled brig wrecked at the Baakens River mouth in Port Elizabeth in the Eastern Cape in the same south-easterly gale that claimed the Thomas, Uitenhage Packet, and the Winifred & Maria the previous day.

1845: Martha, this wooden-hulled brig wrecked during a south-easterly gale in Mossel Bay in the Western Cape. It entered Mossel Bay because it had lost its boats and was running low on provisions. Its cargo of mail was saved.

1868: Ambleside, this wooden-hulled barque wrecked in a south easterly gale just north of the Mzimkhulu River mouth in Port Shepstone in KwaZulu-Natal. Her cargo of cotton and linseed littered the beach and was sold at auction for a considerable profit.

1881: Teuton, this iron-hulled steam-powered ship struck a chartered rock near Quoin Point in the Western Cape and foundered shortly afterwards near Danger Point in the Western Cape. It was en-route from Table Bay to Algoa Bay when it found itself about 1.6 km off course with the Cape Agulhas lighthouse in sight at 19:00, striking a chartered rock off Quoin Point. The captain inspected the damage and felt confident it would make the journey back to Simons Town for repairs. The crew and passengers manned the pumps and started throwing cargo overboard to lighten it. As a precaution, the lifeboats were also readied.

At about 22:00, off Danger Point, the pumps could no longer cope with the incoming water and its stern section raised with the propellor no longer in the water. The first boat was launched in an orderly fashion and filled with children and women and whilst the second boat and third boats were being launched, the Teuton suddenly flipped over, bow first, and sank within minutes. The first boat swamped as a result with only 27 people managing to reach the second and third boats. The two lifeboats made it into Simon's Town and a day later a third lifeboat with only nine souls on board arrived in Table Bay, having struggled to get into False Bay.

It was said at the time that a Miss Rose/Ross provided the clearest account of what had occurred from the perspective of the passengers. She was a teenager and the only woman to have survived the event and in the 2021 wrecking anniversary post, a user commented that she was her great grandmother and was adopted by a rescuer with her name changing to Elizabeth Maxwell. The other 236 souls that were on board the Teuton were lost and the event has gone down as one of the worst maritime disasters from a single ship sinking in South African waters.

1888: A south easterly gale blew into in Port Elizabeth in the Eastern Cape and created havoc in Algoa Bay. Between 8-10 vessels were wrecked or grounded (historical sources vary) but out of all of them only one life was lost during the wrecking and a second, shortly thereafter, possibly linked to a wrecking. 

• Andreas Riis, this Norwegian barque wrecked whilst discharging its cargo of coal.

• Burgomeester (possibly Burgomeester Schorer), this schooner ran aground after discharging its cargo. It was possibly refloated.

• C Boschetto, this Italian barque was put in for repairs and was lost after its cables parted. A local photographer, Mr William Alcock, was called to assist the rocket brigade during its rescue as his ‘limelight apparatus’ was needed to illuminate the scene.

• Dorothea, this German brig was lost shortly after having discharged its general cargo and 4,000 cases of dynamite.

• Drei Emmas, this Belgian barque was lost whilst discharging its cargo of coal.

• Elizabeth Stevens, this British barque was lost and was carrying a cargo of wheat.

• Jane Harvey, this British Barque was lost whilst loading its cargo of mohair.

• Lada, this Austrian barque wrecked after discharging a cargo of rails, and although no lives were lost during the wrecking, the captain died from heart failure shortly thereafter and there is speculation that the loss of the Lada resulted in this.

• Natal, this Swedish schooner wrecked after its cables parted and its cargo had been discharged. 

• Wolseley, this British iron barque wrecked when its cables parted whilst discharging its cargo. One crew member perished.

1888: Rosebud, this wooden-hulled schooner wrecked during a south-easterly gale on Pansy Beach in Mossel Bay in the Western Cape. After its wrecking, the beach was renamed Rosebud Beach, but is sometimes still called Pansy Beach. During spring low tides, some of the wreck protrudes out of the sand.

1908: Ticino, this iron-hulled collier wrecked 8 km south of Port Nolloth in the Northern Cape in heavy seas after the bar in Port Nolloth became impassable and it lost two of its anchors. It broke up within an hour after wrecking.

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Monday, 16 December 2024

South Africa: Papineaux, Elizabeth Rowell, Charles Jackson, Manhegan, Modesta, Galera, Harvest Pluto, Peter S & Costa de Nigeria shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

Natal Coast wrecked in Namibia

August 26:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1840: Papineaux, this British wooden-hulled brig was anchored near the Salt River mouth in Table Bay in the Western Cape when its anchor cables parted, and it was driven into the mouth where it became a wreck.

1843: Elizabeth Rowell, this wooden-hulled snow was the last of four vessels to have wrecked during the south-easterly gale in Port Elizabeth in the Eastern Cape.

1884: Charles Jackson, this wooden-hulled barque wrecked in a north-easterly gale on Back Beach in Durban in KwaZulu-Natal.

1887: Manhegan, this wooden-hulled barque wrecked about 32 km south of Hondeklip Bay in the Northern Cape.

1892: Modesta, this wooden-hulled schooner wrecked in Port Elizabeth in the Eastern Cape.

1892: Galera, this wooden-hulled barque wrecked after its cables parted during a south-easterly gale in Mossel Bay in the Western Cape. There are some reports of the wreck being dived on in 1983, with very little of the wreck being visible.

1974: Harvest Pluto, this fishing vessel foundered with the loss of all 14 lives on board after colliding with the Pearl Merchant about 80 km west of Dassen Island in the Western Cape.

1986: Peter S, this steel-hulled fishing trawler wrecked on rocks about 6 km west of the Gouritz River mouth in the Western Cape.

1992: Costa de Nigeria, this Spanish fishing vessel foundered in heavy weather east of Richards Bay in KwaZulu-Natal.

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Friday, 13 December 2024

South Africa: Zoetendal, Maria, Commandant, Jessie Smith, Alma, Countess of Dudley, Southport & Caprera shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

Remains of the Shir Yib wreck

August 23:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1673: Zoetendal, this wooden-hulled Dutch flute wrecked between Struisbaai and De Mond in the Western Cape with a cargo of rice. In total, 46 survivors reached Cape Town, with four lives being lost, but not all as a direct result of the wrecking. Whilst enduring hardships in attempting to reach Cape Town overland, one man was killed by an elephant. One man who strayed from the group reached Cape Town on the 3rd of October and assistance was dispatched almost immediately. It is believed that the Soetendalsvlei lagoon is named after the wreck.

1788: Maria, this wooden-hulled Dutch flute was found by the Meermin with 21 of its 40 strong crew having died and only 5 men being able to walk because of a scurvy outbreak on board. With the assistance of the Meermin’s crew, it was brought to Plettenberg Bay in the Western Cape and anchored there, but a south-easterly gale sprung up and it was driven ashore to become a wreck on this day.

1843: Commandant, this wooden-hulled vessel was lost in Table Bay in the Western Cape. Very little is known about it.

1853: Jessie Smith, this wooden-hulled brig wrecked after its cables parted in Alexander Bay at the Orange River mouth in the Northern Cape. Four men died during the wrecking.

1877: A south easterly gale in the Eastern Cape resulted in the collision of four vessels and the wrecking of two. The Universe and the Hydra struck one another in Port Elizabeth but there is no record of either wrecking.

• Alma, a sailing schooner wrecked in Port Elizabeth.

• Countess of Dudley, a wooden-hulled brig collided with the Synriote after its cables parted and it was wrecked on Orient Beach in East London, about 400 m from the lighthouse, whilst the Synriote’s cables held fast.

1878: Southport, this wooden-hulled barque wrecked during an east-north-easterly gale on Back Beach in Durban in KwaZulu-Natal.

1884: Caprera, this sailing barque wrecked in south-easterly gale after its cables parted in Port Elizabeth in the Eastern Cape.

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Monday, 2 December 2024

South Africa: La Rozette, Feejee, Palmer, Hawthorn, Roma, Espero & Stormgans shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

Montrose wreck in Namibia

August 19:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1786: La Rozette, this wooden-hulled sailing brig was found wrecked and abandoned near Platboom beach close to Cape Point in the Western Cape. A few days later, six suspicious seamen were found in Cape Town and arrested. As it turned out, six members of the crew mutinied and murdered everyone else on board. They had left the vessel in a slowly foundering condition and expected it to sink, but instead it was driven ashore. A few days after the vessel was found, and after some enquiries six suspicious men were arrested and the Court of Justice found them guilty. Narratives seem to indicate that they were all executed in brutal ways.

1837: Feejee, this wooden-hulled schooner wrecked during a south-easterly gale in Port Elizabeth in the Eastern Cape. The wreck was purchased by a Mr John Thornhill who erected piles around the hulk and by 1840 had used it to construct Port Elizabeth’s first jetty. Unfortunately, three years later, in 1843 in a gale on the 25th of August the vessel Seagull struck the jetty. All 11 on board jumped onto the jetty but shortly thereafter the Laura struck the jetty and it collapsed, killing the 11 who had jumped onto it.

1840: Palmer, this wooden-hulled brig wrecked near Mouille Point whilst entering Table Bay in the Western Cape at night.

1889: Hawthorn, this wooden-hulled barquentine wrecked during a strong north-easterly wind on Back Beach in Durban in KwaZulu-Natal.

1892: Roma,  this iron-hulled sailing barque wrecked late at night on Groot Vlei Beach at Cape Padrone in the Eastern Cape. All lives on board were lost with much of the wreckage, its cargo of ground nuts, and seven bodies washing ashore over the coming days.

1902: Espero, this wooden-hulled barque wrecked near the Mzumbe River Mouth in KwaZulu-Natal. The seas around the wreck were so littered with floating railway sleepers that the general area had to be declared a danger to navigation.

1987: Stormgans, this fishing trawler wrecked at Laaiplek in St. Helena Bay in the Western Cape.

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Thursday, 21 November 2024

South Africa: Schapenjacht & Amwell shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

Henrietta Spasheti wreck in Namibia

August 15:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1660: Schapenjacht, this wooden Dutch sailing vessel (which was built at the Cape), wrecked in a north-westerly gale on Robben Island in Table Bay in the Western Cape.

1852: Amwell, this British sailing brigantine wrecked in a south-easterly gale in Port Elizabeth in the Eastern Cape.

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Wednesday, 2 October 2024

South Africa: Dorothys, Perekop & Mossel shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

Maridal shipwreck in Namibia

July 14:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1836: Dorothys, this wooden-hulled brig wrecked near Central Beach in Plettenberg Bay in the Western Cape due to heavy swell driving it ashore.

1862: Perekop, this sailing barque wrecked on a reef off Struisbaai in the Western Cape.

1960: Mossel, this fishing vessel was scuttled near the South Jetty in Port Elizabeth in the Eastern Cape. As its remains posed a danger at the jetty, it was raised by the SAS Somerset and then scuttled in deeper waters on the 19th of February 1961.

1982: On this day a mid-air collision occurred between a SAAF Swearingen Merlin IV (registration no. ZS-JLZ) and a Bon Air Piper Navajo Chieftain (registration no. ZS-KTX) that resulted in both aircrafts tumbling to the ground and being destroyed, near the Zwartkops raceway, in Pretoria in Gauteng. All eight people on board ZS-JLZ and all five people on board ZS-KTX lost their lives.

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Monday, 8 July 2024

South Africa: Clyde, Peacock, Gerhardine, Hasselnödder & Lindsay shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

May 8:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1842: Clyde, this ship entered Table Bay in the Western Cape on the 4th, caught fire, burned for four days, and was then scuttled on this day.

1857: Peacock, this sailing cutter foundered between Dyer Island and Danger Point in the Western Cape.

1888: Gerhardine, this wooden German sailing barque ran aground when its cables parted in a south-easterly breeze in Port Elizabeth in Algoa Bay the Eastern Cape. The captain was killed by falling debris and the cook and carpenter jumped overboard and were swept away, never to be seen again.

1901: Hasselnödder, this wooden Norwegian sailing barque was abandoned (and presumably foundered) about 100 km off Port Elizabeth in Algoa Bay the Eastern Cape once it became apparent that it was sinking. The crew were picked up by the Bergonia and landed in Cape Town.

Hasselnödder (1901), anchored in Grimstad, Norway, 1880

2005: Lindsay, this South African fishing vessel (chokka boat) dropped its anchor and was struck by the refrigerator ship, the Ouro da Brazil, off Sardinia Bay in the Eastern Cape. Tragically, only two of its crew of 16 survived.

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Tuesday, 2 July 2024

South Africa: Lyna, Talana, Sir John Robinson, Phyllisia, P87 & Alkar II shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

Skeleton Coast (Namibia) shipwreck

May 3:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history” 

1786: An unknown French schooner was lost near the Palmiet River mouth near Kleinmond in the Western Cape.  

1914: Lyna, this Norwegian wooden barque was damaged by heavy seas and was condemned in Port Elizabeth in Algoa Bay the Eastern Cape. 

1934: Talana, this steam-powered South African fishing vessel (a tug tender) was badly holed under the engine room after striking rocks off Sandy Point near Cape Morgan in the Eastern Cape. It filled rapidly with water and remained fast on the reef, believed to have become a wreck. 

1938: Sir John Robinson, this steam-powered steel and iron British tug was delisted as it had been scrapped in Durban in KwaZulu-Natal. 

1968: Phyllisia, this steam-powered South African fishing trawler sank south of Olifantsbos off the Cape Peninsula in the Western Cape. 

1977: P87, this motor-powered, wooden South African Navy patrol boat was scuttled in False Bay in the Western Cape during a naval exercise. 

1993: Alkar II, this fishing vessel was scuttled by the South African Navy off Cape Point in the Western Cape during a naval exercise.

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Friday, 21 June 2024

South Africa: Hotbank, Fairholme, Doryssa & Rooijantjies Fontein shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

April 25:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1873: Hotbank, this British wooden snow sprang a leak after striking an object and was subsequently run ashore, where it wrecked, at Cape Recife in Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape.

1888: Fairholme, this iron British sailing vessel was abandoned after catching fire off Cape Agulhas. The crew had been taken off by the German barque Olga and it eventually sank approximately 1.5 km west of Knysna Heads in the Western Cape. The wreck site can be dived and is around 10m in depth but requires a very calm ocean due to the strong currents.

1943: Doryssa, this British motor-powered petroleum tanker was sunk by the Italian submarine Leonardo da Vinci about 450 km South-south-west of Port Elizabeth in the Eastern Cape. A total of 53 people died during the event and 9 were rescued by the whaler Southern Breeze and landed in Cape Town. This would be the final vessel claimed by the Leonardo da Vinci. It was sunk by the HMS Active and HMS Ness with a depth charge, almost 500 km out at sea, on the 23rd May on its way to Bordeaux.

Doryssa (1943), anchored in Table Bay, date unknown

1989: Rooijantjies Fontein, this South African fishing vessel capsized and sank off Saldanha Bay in the Western Cape with the loss of one life.

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Monday, 3 June 2024

South Africa: Cottager, Catherine Scott, Western Knight, Zulu Coast I, Fong Shong 22 & Fame shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

April 8:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

Top 5 shipwrecks in Namibia YouTube video:

1845: Cottager, this wooden sailing vessel wrecked southwest of the entrance to Saldanha Bay off the west coast in the Western Cape. Two men died during the wrecking.

1878: Catherine Scott, this wooden sailing barque wrecked after its cables parted in Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape.

1929: Western Knight, this steel steam-powered freighter ran aground in thick fog and abnormal currents between Willows and Schoenmakerskop in Port Elizabeth in Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape.

A Ford Model A being salvaged from the Western Knight (1929)

After striking the rocks, the No. 3 hold, engine, and boiler flooded. The cargo was salvaged by the famous Captain H. F. van Delden, and included items like refrigerators, motor vehicles, tyres, and agricultural machinery.

The Western Knight's (1929) back broke shortly after wrecking

Frank Neave, a local photographer, spent several days photographing the wreck and the salvage operations.

The Western Knight (1929) being battered and broken by the surf

1953: Zulu Coast I, this motor-powered coaster wrecked in fog near the Groen River Mouth in Namaqualand on the west coast in the Northern Cape.

1976: Fong Shong 22, this steel motor-powered fishing vessel (tunny boat) wrecked in thick fog on the northwest point of Dassen Island off the west coast in the Western Cape.

2000: Fame, this South African fishing vessel foundered off Ballito in KwaZulu-Natal.

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Friday, 29 March 2024

South Africa: Legionier & Juno shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

Natal Coast shipwreck in Namibia

March 2:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1842: Legionier, this wooden sailing vessel wrecked after its cables parted in a south-easterly gale at the Baakens River Mouth in Port Elizabeth in Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape.

1852: Juno, this Dutch sailing barque wrecked in dense fog directly below the lighthouse at Agulhas Point in the Western Cape with the loss of five passengers.

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Tuesday, 12 March 2024

South Africa: L’Aigle & Johanna shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

Suiderkus shipwreck in Namibia in 1978

February 15:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1834: L’Aigle, this wooden French whaler ran aground at Slangkop Beach near Kommetjie on the Cape Peninsula in the Western Cape and wrecked. Three lives were lost because of the wrecking. There is speculation that some packed stones on the hills just south of the lighthouse is actually an unmarked grave of one of those lost and that the campsite name of ‘De Anker’ at the Soetwater Resort comes from this vessel’s anchor that lies near the tidal pool. 

1881: Johanna, this schooner lost its cables in a south-easterly gale and drifted onto the notorious bight of North End beach in Port Elizabeth in Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape and wrecked. All made it off safely, but the vessel went to pieces soon after in the heavy swell.

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Friday, 29 December 2023

South Africa: John N Gamewell & Rockeater shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

December 15:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1880: John N Gamewell, this 3-masted sailing schooner caught alight and burned down to the waterline and then drifted ashore at Port Elizabeth in Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape.

1972: Rockeater, this motor-powered mineral-sampling dredger was scuttled by the South African Navy to form an artifice reef, in Smitswinkel Bay on the Cape Peninsula in the Western Cape.

The Rockeater (1972), date and location unknown

It was the first of five wrecks to be scuttled in Smitswinkel Bay for this purpose.

A map of the Smitswinkel Bay wreck route

The wreck can be dived with the deepest section being about 36m on the sand.

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