Showing posts with label Mouille Point. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mouille Point. Show all posts

Thursday, 26 December 2024

South Africa: Mulgrave Castle, Alert, Prince Rupert, Sparfel, Niagara & Abeona shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

Abandoned Ulan near Walvis Bay, Namibia

September 4:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1825: Mulgrave Castle, this wooden sailing vessel wrecked near the Green Point Lighthouse in Table Bay in the Western Cape. It entered the bay in hazy, but otherwise fine weather and attempts to refloat it were unsuccessful.

1840: Alert, this wooden sailing schooner wrecked after its cables parted in a south easterly gale in Port Elizabeth in the Eastern Cape.

1841: Prince Rupert, this wooden sailing barque wrecked after a sudden change in the current resulted in it swinging onto the rocks at Mouille Point in Table Bay in the Western Cape. Of the approximately 160 that were on board, only one life was lost, but four rescuers also lost their lives. The Bucephalus was anchored nearby and was one of the first to render assistance. On the fourth voyage between the vessels, to look for any more people that were on board, the boat that the rescuers were using was swamped by a wave. Five of the rescuers perished, one of whom was a passenger returning to the Prince Rupert.

1869: Sparfel, this wooden sailing schooner wrecked on Struispunt, just south of Arniston/Waenhuiskrans in the Western Cape. Immediately after striking the rocks, it broke apart. Although the exact number of those that were on board is not known, all hands were lost. For the next few weeks its cargo of hides washed ashore. 

1872: Niagara, this sailing vessel wrecked at the Slang River mouth, at Oyster Bay, in the Eastern Cape. 

1900: Abeona, this iron sailing vessel wrecked on Thunderbolt Reef, off Cape Recife in the Eastern Cape. After getting stuck on the reef in a sinking condition, its master and crew of 19 abandoned ship and landed at the North Jetty within three hours. The tug James Searle II found it the following day on its side and breaking up.

James Searle II tug, date unknown

Some salvage was carried out, but by the next day it had completely broken up. The wreck site was known for many years as the ‘Lead Wreck’ by local divers. This changed in 1978, when Mike Klee, David Allen and Gerry van Niekerk positively identified it. Amongst the wreckage they found a brass winch (or a capstan cover) which was inscribed with “Abeona Glasgow 1867”.

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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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Sunday, 1 December 2024

South Africa: Antelope, Frances, Seaforth, May, Esperanca, Cingalese & Godetia shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

Kolmanskop trawler wreck near Swakopmund, Namibia

August 18:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1837: Antelope, this wooden-hulled schooner wrecked on Woodstock Beach in Table Bay in the Western Cape. It had previously run aground in Table Bay in 1822 but was refloated. It most likely lies beneath reclaimed land today.

1840: Frances, this brig wrecked near Mouille Point in Table Bay in the Western Cape with the loss of one life. Very little is known about this vessel.

1844: Seaforth, this wooden-hulled schooner wrecked when the wind dropped, on the east bank of the Kowie River in the Eastern Cape.

1874: May, this vessel disappeared between Table Bay in the Western Cape and Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape. It is presumed to have foundered with the loss of all hands. Very little is known about it.

1902: Esperanca, this sailing barque wrecked near Port Shepstone in KwaZulu-Natal. Very little is known about this vessel.

1906: Cingalese, this vessel ran aground at the Hood Point lighthouse in East London in the Eastern Cape on this day. It was refloated and towed into the harbour, where it was broken up. The Hood Point lighthouse, at the time of the wrecking of the Cingalese, had a more red and white checkerboard appearance, with its more familiar all white-colour only being painted in 1929.

1970: Godetia, this fishing trawler was scuttled about 3 km off the Macassar Beach Pavilion in False Bay in the Western Cape.

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Tuesday, 12 November 2024

South Africa: Anne Jane, Kent, Elise, Magdala, Pemba & Castillo de Bellver shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

Snowgoose wreck in Namibia

August 6:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1856: Anne Jane, this vessel wrecked on Woodstock Beach in Table Bay in the Western Cape. Very little is known about the vessel as well as the event. 

1856: Kent, this wooden-hulled sailing barque wrecked near the Salt River Mouth in Table Bay in the Western Cape after its cables parted and it was driven ashore. 

1863: Elise, the wooden-hulled brig wrecked near Mouille Point in Table Bay in the Western Cape.

1897: Magdala, the wooden-hulled sailing barque left Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape on this day, destined for Delagoa Bay (modern day Maputo) in Mozambique. However, the vessel and those that were on board were never seen or heard from again. 

1926: Pemba, the steel-hulled steam-powered ship foundered south-east of Port St Johns in the Eastern Cape after being swamped in heavy weather. Although the crew took to the boats and landed on the beach, one man lost his life.  

1983: Castillo de Bellver, the Spanish super tanker foundered about 70 km west of Dassen Island in the Western Cape, after a fire broke out onboard the vessel. Although the crew were saved, three members could not be accounted for and were presumed to have perished in the fire. The ship burnt intensely, and eventually bad weather broke its back, with the stern section sinking. The bow section remained afloat upturned, and divers were dropped on it by helicopter to secure a tow rope. The tug John Ross towed it further out to sea, and it was scuttled using explosives in deeper waters. It was carrying 252,000 tons of crude oil at the time and it is believed that approximately 60,000 tons were released into the ocean and/or burned during the event. The oil spill initially looked as if it was going to wash up on the coast which would have caused a massive marine disaster however the wind eventually blew it out to sea where it dispersed. It is believed that both its bow and stern sections are releasing oil to this day.

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Friday, 13 September 2024

South Africa: Eastern Province, Eastern Empire, Robert Morrow, Stanley & Jeannette shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

Truck wreck in Sperrgebiet, Namibia

June 26:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1865: Eastern Province, this British steam-powered cargo ship wrecked near the mouth of the Ratel River in the Western Cape.

1869: Eastern Empire, this British ship foundered near Struispunt in the Western Cape. Very little is known about it.

1903: Robert Morrow, this wooden British barque ran aground at Mouille Point in Table Bay in the Western Cape and after being refloated it was condemned and its remains were used as a jetty and a crayfish station in Hout Bay.

1904: Stanley, this Norwegian fishing trawler wrecked in the early hours of the morning near the Umkomazi River mouth in KwaZulu-Natal.

1966: Jeannette, this South African fishing vessel struck a submerged object and foundered off Quoin Point in the Western Cape.

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Sunday, 25 August 2024

South Africa: Fame, Ellen Rawson, Isabella & James Searle 3 shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

June 14:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1822: Fame, this British East Indiaman wrecked just off Sea Point in the Western Cape after it lost its anchor in a strong northerly gale.

1857: A north-westerly gale in Table Bay in the Western Cape claimed two British vessels on this day:

• Ellen Rawson, a wooden barque wrecked at Mouille Point; and

• Isabella, a wooden brigantine is reported to have wrecked in front of a battery – which could mean either the Amsterdam Battery or the Imhoff Battery.

1955: James Searle 3, this South African tug was beached at Secrets beach just west of Cape Recife in the Eastern Cape. The remains of its boiler are often visible in the surf. If you have a photo of it, why not share it in the comments and it may be featured on our post next year!

James Searle 3 keel on the beach at Secrets

James Searle 3 boiler at Secrets

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Monday, 5 August 2024

South Africa: Burnham, Helen, Nossa Senhora da Conceicas, Louisa Dorothea, Seafield, Lucania, Storaas & Perina shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

May 29:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1840: Burnham, this wooden British schooner wrecked in a north westerly gale off Durban in KwaZulu-Natal.

1842: Helen, this wooden British barque wrecked at Mouille Point at 22:00 while attempting to enter Table Bay in the Western Cape.

1869: Nossa Senhora da Conceicas, this Portuguese East Indiaman was lost somewhere between Durban and Delagoa Bay off the KwaZulu-Natal coast.

1882: Louisa Dorothea, this German sailing schooner was lost during a gale in Mossel Bay in the Western Cape.

1882: Seafield, this wooden British barque collided with the Roxburgh Castle after its anchor cable broke in East London in the Eastern Cape. Its crew was transported to the Roxburgh Castle and the barque drifted onto Nahoon Point, near Bats Cave, where it was smashed to pieces.

1893: Lucania, this three-masted wooden British brig was beached, after a fire broke out on board, in False Bay in the Western Cape.

1943: U-177, whilst on patrol off Cape Agulhas in the Western Cape attacked convoy CD-20, sinking two ships. On the 28th, just before midnight it fired upon the convoy, striking the Agwimonte, an American steam-powered merchant ship, and the Storaas, a Norwegian steam-powered tanker. In the early hours of the 29th, each ship was sunk by a coup de grâce.

The Storaas (1943), date and location unknown

All those that were on board the Agwimonte survived, but three of the crew of the Storaas lost their lives as they were trapped below deck. The HMSAS Vereeniging picked up most of the survivors except for those that were on board two of the Agwimonte’s boats, which were picked up later by a crash boat after being spotted by an aircraft.

The Agwimonte (1943), date and location unknown

1978: Perina, this motor-powered South African fishing vessel (lobster trawler) foundered off Cape Agulhas in the Western Cape.

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Saturday, 27 July 2024

South Africa: Sterrenschans, Zeeland, Badger, Alice, Sea Service, An-Hung 1, P1551 & Majimoto shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

Karimona shipwreck in Namibia in 1978

May 22:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1793: A north-westerly gale struck Table Bay in the Western Cape and claimed two Dutch vessels on this day, leading both to wrecking on the shore:

• Sterrenschans, a brigantine (probably a ‘hoeker’);

• Zeeland, an East Indiaman

1833: Badger, this vessel wrecked in Simon's Bay in False Bay in the Western Cape. Very little is known about it.

1964: Alice, this motor-powered vessel was lost near Arniston in the Western Cape.

1988: Sea Service, this motor-powered launch foundered off Mouille Point in Table Bay in the Western Cape.

1990: An-Hung 1, this motor-powered Taiwanese trawler ran aground and wrecked after its engines failed at Gruis Beach, near Pearly Beach in the Western Cape.

2002: P1551, this motor-powered rescue launch encountered engine failure and drifted ashore, to become a wreck, near Scarborough off the Cape Peninsula in the Western Cape.

2021: Majimoto, this South African yacht lost its rudder and wrecked just north of the Great Kei River Mouth in the Eastern Cape.

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Wednesday, 10 July 2024

South Africa: Arabia, Rubens, Davina, Craigellachie, William Holland, Silver Castle & Uni 9 shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

May 10:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

Karimona wreck in Namibia

1858: Arabia/Arabic, this American sailing barque mistook the lights at Mouille Point for harbour lights and wrecked on the rocks at Green Point in Table Bay in the Western Cape.

1865: Rubens, this wooden British sailing vessel missed its stays and wrecked north of Sunset Beach in Table Bay in the Western Cape at night. It was suspected that it had struck the wreck of the Sappho (1864) which had wrecked a few months earlier.

1881: Davina, this barque was abandoned and is presumed to have foundered, south of Cape St. Francis in the Eastern Cape. Very little is known about this vessel and the event.

1900: Craigellachie, this steel British steam-powered cargo ship wrecked at Riet Point, possibly on Three Sisters Rocks, near Port Alfred in the Eastern Cape.

1953: William Holland, this motor-powered South African fishing trawler wrecked in thick fog near Quoin Point in the Western Cape. It was originally a coaster but was converted for trawling by the time it was lost.

1972: Silver Castle, this motor-powered Liberian oil tanker collided with the S.A. Pioneer on the 20th of April and caught alight offshore, off the Eastern Cape. It is believed that 20 lives were lost during the collision. Once the fire was brought under control by the passing HMS Lowestoft, attempts were made to tow the Silver Castle to Mossel Bay, but due to it leaking oil, it was denied entry. Because of this, on this day, the Silver Castle was towed out to sea and scuttled. As for the S.A. Pioneer, it was towed to Taiwan, where it was also determined that it was beyond repair and was therefore scrapped.

1975: Uni 9, this South African whaler was scuttled by the South African Navy, south of Durban off KwaZulu-Natal.

1997: A South African Police Beechcraft 200C Super King Air (registration no. ZS-LNV), failed to take-off from a runway at Steynsburg in the Eastern Cape, ploughing into a field and being damaged beyond repair. The aircraft had transported five forensic experts to investigate a case of suspected arson at the Grand Hotel. During take off on the return journey, the one propeller sliced into a sandbank and the aircraft lost power with it veering off the runway, destroying three fences, crossing a dirt road, and eventually crashing into a field.

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Monday, 1 July 2024

South Africa: Nossa Senhora D'Guia, St. Austell, Tancred, Eugenie, Irene & Sibanya shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

Otavi shipwreck in Namibia

May 2:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1819: Nossa Senhora D'Guia, this wooden Portuguese brig was driven ashore by a north-westerly gale and subsequently wrecked on Woodstock Beach in Table Bay in the Western Cape. 

1870: St. Austell, this wooden British schooner wrecked in a gale near Port Alfred in the Eastern Cape. 

1879: Tancred, this wooden British barque, while in tow by the Somtseu, ran aground on Anabella Bank at the entrance to the Durban harbour in KwaZulu-Natal. Although the Somtseu and the Forerunner attempted to refloat the Tancred, they were unsuccessful, and when it came unstuck eventually, it was driven onto the beach where it became a total wreck. 

1893: Eugenie, this wooden British sailing barque ran aground near the Kieskamma River mouth in the Eastern Cape and was abandoned after being dismasted, becoming a wreck. 

1970: Irene, this motor-powered South African launch foundered in heavy seas and dense fog off Mouille Point in Cape Town in the Western Cape. 

2008: Sibanya, this South African lobster fishing vessel foundered after striking a reef just south of Dassen Island off the west coast in the Western Cape. One life was lost.

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Wednesday, 12 June 2024

South Africa: Nossa Senhora dos Milagros, Penelope, Apollo & Walsingham shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

Unknown shipwreck, Skeleton Coast, Namibia

April 16:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1686: Nossa Senhora dos Milagros, this Portuguese East Indiaman wrecked near Cape Agulhas in the Western Cape at night. The exact number of people that were on board is unknown, but it is believed that there were approximately 131 survivors that made it back to Cape Town. It is also believed that less than 10 people drowned during the wrecking, but several people died from exhaustion on the journey overland to Cape Town. The Portuguese realised the state of the loss and sold the wreck and its contents at a loss to the VOC. One person died during the salvage operations that ensued. It is because of the salvage of this wreck that Olof Bergh was imprisoned for three and a half years on Robben Island and thereafter sent to Ceylon in ‘semi-exile’ as he pleaded guilty to having sold off valuable cargo from the wreck for personal gain when it belonged to the VOC.

1809: Penelope, this wooden sailing schooner was caught smuggling, and the HMS Olympia forced it into Table Bay in the Western Cape, where it wrecked on Milnerton Beach.

1823: Apollo, this wooden sailing ship wrecked late at night, below the Mouille Point Battery in Table Bay in the Western Cape. A signal gun was fired when it ran aground which killed one man. Several boats were sent to render assistance and after discharging the cargo attempts were made to refloat it. At 4pm it was decided that the vessel would be lost, so the masts were cut, and the vessel was left to become a wreck.

1829: Walsingham, this wooden sailing barque wrecked near the Military Hospital on Woodstock Beach in Table Bay in the Western Cape. Some reports list the wrecking in 1828 and instead have the wrecking occurring in June.

2002: An Airquarius Aviation Hawker Siddeley HS-748 2B (registration no. SZ-OLE), suffered a complete hydraulic failure in the air and whilst landing at the Pilanesberg Airport, it veered off the runway and into ditch causing substantial damage to the airplane. The 47 occupants were however uninjured.

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Wednesday, 5 June 2024

South Africa: Dido, Mocha, Star of the East & Albatross shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

April 10:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

Kolmanskop shipwreck in Namibia

1853: Dido, this sailing barque wrecked on a reef off Mouille Point in Table Bay in the Western Cape.

1853: Mocha, this sailing barque caught alight and sank between Bird and St Croix Islands in Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape.

1861: Star of the East, this wooden sailing ship wrecked at one of three possible locations in the Western Cape, pending the report: Ryspunt north of Arniston, Port Beaufort near the Breede River mouth, or seemingly most likely at Ystervarkpunt west of the Gouritz River mouth.

1863: Albatross, this steam-powered tug foundered after striking the eponymous Albatross Rock near Olifantsbos on the Cape Peninsula in the Western Cape.

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Sunday, 2 June 2024

South Africa: Arion, Eliza, Catherine Marie, Fidela & Hamlet shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

April 7:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

Otavi shipwreck in Namibia

1854: Arion, this sailing brig wrecked on the east bank of the Breede River mouth in the Western Cape after its cables parted. 

1863: Eliza, this sailing brig wrecked at Mouille Point in Table Bay in the Western Cape. 

1873: Catherine Marie, this vessel struck Molteno Reef and subsequently wrecked at the west pier of the harbour at the Kowie River Mouth in Port Alfred in the Eastern Cape.

1873: Fidela, this iron steam and sail powered transport/mail vessel wrecked in fog approx. 1 mile north of the Cape Recife Lighthouse in the Eastern Cape. Practice concrete bombs were dropped on the site during WWII and are still visible. 

1927: Hamlet, this iron steam-powered coaster wrecked near the South Head lighthouse in Saldanha Bay off the west coast in the Western Cape in thick fog.

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Monday, 25 March 2024

South Africa: Lady Leith, Katherine Gwladys, Hero, Blythswood, Colombia, Dunkeld, Imp & Connect shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

February 27:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1848: Lady Leith, this wooden sailing brig wrecked in a south-easterly gale at Cape Recife in the Eastern Cape after having struck Thunderbolt reef.

1854: Katherine Gwladys, this wooden sailing schooner wrecked on Bird Island in Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape.

1861: Hero, this American whaling barque wrecked in a south easterly gale in Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape.

1890: Blythswood, this sailing barque wrecked at Green Point/Mouille Point in Table Bay in the Western Cape. There are differing reports for the date of the wrecking with another possible date being April 3rd.

1943: Colombia, this former passenger liner, which was converted into a submarine depot ship, was attacked and sunk by U-516 between Great Fish River point and East London in the Eastern Cape.

The Colombia (1943), at Herok, Iceland, date unknown

It was being escorted by the British corvette, HMS Genista, and several RAF aircraft when a torpedo struck at its No. 2 hold, just before the bridge. It was immediately abandoned but sank within 10 minutes. A headcount revealed that eight men were missing, and they are presumed to have gone down with the ship.

1952: Dunkeld, this South African motor-powered fishing vessel wrecked near Port Nolloth in the Northern Cape.

1960: Two steel steam-powered pilot tugs, the Koodoo and the Mary, were scuttled in front of the Hood Point Lighthouse in East London, in the Eastern Cape.

The Koodoo (1960) and the Mary (1960) being towed out to be scuttled

2001: Imp, this yacht was caught out in a storm and driven onto the rocks, to be wrecked, at Hout Bay in the Western Cape.

2014: Connect, this South African fishing vessel wrecked near Voelklip beach in Hermanus in the Western Cape with the loss of one life.

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Monday, 18 March 2024

South Africa: Mauritius Eiland, Trafalgar, Claudine, Abdul Medjid, Mendi & Cape Recife shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

February 21:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1644: Mauritius Eiland, this Dutch wooden sailing vessel sailed around the southern end of Robben Island in the Western Cape in the dark and then ran aground at what is today known as Mouille Point on the 7th of February. The vessel was dragged off the rocks to be repaired, but worsening weather resulted in it running aground again and becoming a wreck at the Salt River Mouth on this day, where the remaining crew of about 100, reduced from the original 340 had to wait for four months before being rescued by the Tijger. 

1839: Trafalgar, this British emigrant ship wrecked near Rocklands Bay (next to Three Anchor Bay) in Cape Town in the Western Cape after missing its stays and dragging its anchor in a heavy swell. The crew and passengers were saved, but a woman was killed by a falling mast.

1849: Claudine, this British wooden barque wrecked between Marthapunt and Ryspunt near Skipskop in the Overberg in the Western Cape. Its bell was reportedly salvaged and used in the Struisbaai church up until at least 1952. 

1871: Abdul Medjid, this iron sailing vessel was wrecked when its cables parted in a south easterly gale in Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape. 

1917: Mendi, this British steam-powered troopship was accidentally rammed on its starboard side by the royal mail steamer, the Darro, at about 05:00 in the morning in heavy fog, just off the Isle of Wight in the English Channel between England and France.

The Mendi Memorial on the 11th of February 2024 after the annual commemoration service

On board were 823 men, most of whom were part of the South African Native Labour Contingent.

Images depicting the last time that some of the men who boarded the SS Mendi (1917) would have spent on southern African soil. The top image shows them at the docks in Cape Town and the bottom image receiving training at the Rosebank Showgrounds, which today forms part of UCT's Lower Campus and is where the Mendi Memorial National Heritage Site is located

This vessel does not lie in South Africa’s territorial waters, but of the close to 650 people who perished in the event, 616 of them were southern African, and the bravery that these men showed at the time makes the sinking of the Mendi an integral part of southern African shipwreck history.

The SS Mendi (1917), date and location unknown

There are at least six known memorials in South Africa, one of which, at the University of Cape Town’s Lower Campus, is a declared National Heritage Site. 

1929: Cape Recife, this steel steam-powered freighter wrecked on rocks in dense fog west of Seal Point Lighthouse near Cape St Francis in the Eastern Cape.

The Cape Recife (1929), shortly after wrecking

The wreck can be dived, being on average about 10 m in depth, but with most of it having been salvaged, there is only scattered wreckage still visible.

The Annual Mendi Memorial Commemoration held on the 11th of February 2024 at UCT's Lower Campus at the Mendi Memorial National Heritage site

Image 3:



There are seventeen plaques on the Hollybrook Memorial in Southampton listing the names of those lost in the sinking of SS Mendi

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Sunday, 3 March 2024

South Africa: L’Eclair, Albert, Memento, Jack Stubbs & Miner shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

February 5:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1821: L’Eclair, this French wooden sailing vessel wrecked at Blaauwberg in Table Bay in the Western Cape whilst trying to enter the bay at night. Six lives were lost during the event.

1857: Albert, this South African wooden schooner struck Danger Point in the Western Cape on this day, with the crew managing to get it off and then running it aground on a beach near Struisbaai where it was condemned and sold off.

1857: Miner, this French schooner capsized in a heavy squall near Mouille Point in Cape Town in the Western Cape. Mr Granger managed to rescue all nine that were on board with his whale boat and his heroics were recognised with Granger Bay being named after him.

The provided image with the middle of the image showing Granger Bay and the Oceana Power Boat Club within it, as well as the DHL Cape Town stadium just to the right of it.

1876: Memento, this wooden barque parted its cables during a south-easterly gale and was wrecked at Cove Rock in East London in the Eastern Cape.

1992: Jack Stubbs, this South African crayfishing vessel wrecked on Dassen Island in the Western Cape after its radar failed.

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Wednesday, 14 February 2024

South Africa: Centaur, Juliana, Henry H Crape, Frigga, Araminta, Northern Isles, Oceana Point & Lezandi wrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

January 19:

Ulan wreck, Walvis Bay, Namibia

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1750: Le Centaure/Centaur, this French East Indiaman was on a return trip from Mauritius to France when it ran aground and wrecked between Cape Agulhas and the Ratel River mouth at Die Walle in the Western Cape. All 300 crew and 100 passengers survived the wrecking and managed to salvage some of the cargo and provisions. They made the journey to Cape Town on foot. In 1984 a salvage company found its remains and, under a National Monument’s Council permit, started excavating the wreck. Only a moderate number of artefacts were recovered including the ship’s bell. The ship was recorded as carrying a cargo solely consisting of peppercorns which was evident during the salvage operation as the peppercorns clogged machinery and were seen everywhere.

1839: Juliana, this wooden sailing barque wrecked near Mouille Point in Table Bay in the Western Cape. The barque was bound for Sydney, Australia, with UK immigrants on board. The cause of the wrecking was found to be due to negligence as it wrecked on a perfect-weather-day and the captain was found to have no knowledge of Table Bay’s bathymetry. The 50 or so odd passengers eventually found passage to Australia aboard the Morayshire and the Mary Hay.

1857: Henry H Crape/Crapo, this American sailing barque presumably foundered at sea off the KwaZulu-Natal coast with the captain and one other survivor being found floating in a raft. Very little is known about this vessel and the event.

1862: Frigga, this Danish sailing barque wrecked in a south-easterly gale north of the Salt River Mouth either at Milnerton Beach, Salt River Beach, or Blaauwberg Beach in Table Bay in the Western Cape.

1889: Araminta, this British sailing barque wrecked in a south-easterly gale on North End Beach in Port Elizabeth in Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape. 

1945: Northern Isles, this anti-submarine vessel (converted fishing trawler) ran aground and wrecked at the Bluff in Durban in KwaZulu-Natal.

1992: Oceana Point, this South African fishing vessel foundered off Lamberts Bay off the west coast in the Western Cape. 

2016: Lezandi, this South African fishing vessel foundered about 20 km south-west of Cape Point in the Western Cape.

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