Showing posts with label Mzimvubu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mzimvubu. Show all posts

Wednesday, 23 October 2024

South Africa: Nossa Senhora da Belem, Nimrod, Constantia, Shantung & Bina Campbell shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

Suiderkus shipwreck in Namibia

July 24:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1635: Nossa Senhora da Belem, this wooden Portuguese East Indiaman wrecked near Port St. John's in the Eastern Cape just north of the Mzimvubu river mouth (or as the Portuguese called it, Rio da Praia). The vessel was in dire need of repairs and most of the sailors were suffering with scurvy. With its holds filling with water and the cargo bashing against the ship, the decision was made to run it ashore. This was done without a loss of life, and it has often been speculated that no lives were lost in the wrecking as it was not overloaded like other Portuguese vessels at the time. The captain refused to let anyone attempt to walk overland as he knew about the dangers of doing so from previous survivors from wrecks along the South African coastline. Instead, they manufactured two vessels out of the wreckage. The first, the Senhora da Natividade headed towards Algoa Bay where provisions were obtained, and then continued onwards to Angola. Thereafter, it crossed the Atlantic to Brazil where passage home to Portugal was later found. The other vessel, the Boa Viagem is believed to have foundered shortly after being launched.

1851: Nimrod, this wooden British ship was driven ashore and wrecked after its cables parted at night in a north-westerly gale, near the Salt River mouth in Table Bay in the Western Cape.

1868: A south-easterly gale in East London in the Eastern Cape claimed two vessels after their cables parted:

• Constantia, a wooden British barque, was driven onto Esplanade Rocks,

• Shantung, a wooden British barque, was lost just east of the Buffalo River.

1883: Bina Campbell, this British barque was abandoned at sea in a sinking condition in heavy weather near Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape. It is assumed to have foundered shortly after.

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Saturday, 28 September 2024

South Africa: Sarah, Dom Pedro, Alfredia, Juanita & Aurora shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

July 10:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1822: Sarah, this wooden-hulled British barque wrecked near the Salt River mouth in Table Bay in the Western Cape.

1840: Dom Pedro, this wooden Portuguese slaver was beached on this day in Port Elizabeth in the Eastern Cape. It was captured by the HMS Curlew in March 1840 along the East coast of Africa because it was outfitted for transporting enslaved people, although at the time it supposedly did not have any enslaved people on board. There are reports claiming that there were in fact enslaved people on board, but further research is needed to ascertain this. A prize crew from the Curlew attempted to sail the Dom Pedro to Cape Town for adjudication but a storm on the way dismasted it on the 11th of May and it was put into Algoa Bay on the 20th of May.

The Dom Pedro jetty before the harbour was constructed in the 1930s

It was considered unseaworthy and was beached on this day, where its remains lay for many years. Over sixty years later, a jetty was built where its timbers lay, which is why the jetty is known today as the Dom Pedro jetty. This later became part of the current breakwater.

1887: Alfredia, this steam-powered ship wrecked on the bar of the Mzimvubu River in Port St. Johns in the Eastern Cape. The captain apparently ignored signals from the shore and attempted to cross the bar, but struck it and wrecked.

1972: Juanita, this South African fishing vessel foundered off Port Elizabeth in the Eastern Cape with the loss of one life.

1975: Aurora, this fishing vessel capsized after being struck by a freak wave near Mtunzini in KwaZulu-Natal. Although the exact number is not known, it is believed that of its 14-strong crew, between six to ten lives were lost.

2018: A Rovos Air Convair CV-340 (registration no. ZS-BRV) had just been sold to new owners in the Netherlands and after undergoing a scenic flight following major maintenance and repainting, the left engine caught alight in 50 knot winds and the plane was crash landed at Derdepoort, an industrial area near Wonderboom Airport in Pretoria in Gauteng.

The wreckage of ZS-BRV during cleanup in 2018

The plane crashed into several trees, powerlines, commercial vehicles, and finally came to rest after breaking through a wall at a factory. One of the 17 passengers lost their life.

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Tuesday, 5 March 2024

South Africa: Gondolier, A H Stevens, Equator, Trent, Sarah Smith, Celt, Onni, Fascadale, Vilora H Hopkins, Star of the Isles, Sybil & Maritz shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

Unknown shipwreck in Namibia

February 7:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1836: Gondolier, this brig wrecked on Robben Island whilst entering Table Bay in the Western Cape.

1862: A H Stevens, this iron barque wrecked on the north-western tip of Robben Island in Table Bay in the Western Cape. It had departed Moulmein on the 11th of December 1861, bound for Falmouth via Cape Town. En route it experienced heavy weather and sprang a leak off Mauritius in a cyclone. The crew worked for two weeks straight, but were unable to pump the barque dry. On the 7th of February 1862, the captain tried to enter Cape Town harbour but missed the entrance to Table Bay due to heavy fog. The barque got too close to the north-western coast of Robben Island, where a lack of wind and a strong current pushed it towards the shore. An attempt to anchor the barque failed, and it continued to drift, finally striking the island. The steamer Albatross was sent to assist the barque but was unable to move it, so it was condemned and sold off.

1865: Equator, this brig wrecked near Struisbaai in the Western Cape.

1871: Trent, this American vessel was damaged in a storm and was then condemned in Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape. Whilst at anchor awaiting its fate, it dragged its anchors and wrecked.

1874: Sarah Smith, this vessel was leaving Durban Harbour in KwaZulu-Natal when it drifted onto Anabella Bank and ran aground. Although it was refloated, after an inspection it was condemned and then sold at auction.

1875: Celt, this iron steam-powered mail ship wrecked in the eponymous Celt Bay, between Pearly Beach and Quoin Point in the Western Cape. All 98 passengers and crew survived. It was the last Union Line ship to be built on the Thames and was one of a series of six mail ships built for the Cape mail service.

1890: Onni, this Russian sailing barque missed its stays, resulting in it wrecking near Bloubergstrand in Table Bay in the Western Cape at night in calm weather. It was carrying coal for the Gas Light Company and was sold off after wrecking.

1895: Fascadale, this steel 4-masted sailing barque wrecked on the rocks south of the Mbizane river in Ramsgate in KwaZulu-Natal. It was bound from Java to Lisbon with a cargo of sugar when at 02:30, with most of the crew of 28 being asleep, and in persistent hazy and rainy weather, it ran straight onto the rocks about 100 meters from the shore. It started breaking up immediately and by daybreak wreckage was strewn along the coast. Three men attempted swimming to the shore, with two of them drowning and the third making it. Supposedly, a further five made it by swimming to shore. Eventually the Nordham Castle arrived with the Chief Officer, Frank Whitehead managing to swim a line from one of its boats to the wreck. This line allowed the rest of the crew to be saved. Reports vary on the number of survivors, with some claiming only one life was lost and others as many as ten.

1897: Vilora H Hopkins, this wooden sailing barque’s cables parted during a south-easterly gale and it was driven ashore where it wrecked on New Brighton beach in Port Elizabeth in Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape.

1908: Star of the Isles, this steel steam-powered fishing vessel struck a submerged rock about 2.4 km off Quoin Point in the Western Cape at 06:40 in dense fog and then floated for just under three hours before foundering nearby. The crew were safely landed in the lifeboat and walked to the Ratel River farm about 8km inland, where they were taken by wagon to Caledon, and then by train to Cape Town.

1913: Sybil, this British steam-powered vessel wrecked on Porpoise Point at the mouth of the Mzimvubu River in Port St Johns in the Eastern Cape.

1980: Maritz, this South African fishing vessel foundered off Cape Columbine off the west coast in the Western Cape.

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Sunday, 3 December 2023

South Africa: Edith Smith, Adonis, Il Nazerino Savona, Watussi & John Bull shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

December 2:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1871: Edith Smith, this wooden sailing brig wrecked on Bird Island in Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape.

1882: Adonis, this sailing schooner (which also had minor steam capacity) wrecked on the northern bank of the Mzimvubu River in Port St. Johns in the Eastern Cape. Attempts to refloat it were futile and by the 7th December it was declared a loss. 

1885: Il Nazerino Savona, this Italian sailing barque wrecked on a reef off Shell Bay on Robben Island in Table Bay in the Western Cape.

1939: Watussi, this steam-powered German passenger ship was scuttled about 130 km south of Cape Point in the Western Cape. It was in port in Mozambique when World War II broke out and the decision was made to try and round the Cape to an unknown destination in attempts to get home to Germany whilst flying the Union-Castle Line colours.

The Watussi (1939), date and location unknown

It was intercepted by the South African Air Force who dropped bombs to divert the ship to Simon's Town for capture. The crew instead set the ship alight. The British aircraft carrier Ark Royal and cruiser Renown got all those that were on board off and then the Renown sunk the ship by gunfire.

The Watussi (1939) listing after having been set alight, shortly before it was sunk by gunfire from the HMS Renown

1948: John Bull, this fishing vessel foundered with the loss of all four lives that were on board after a 9m wave crashed over the vessel just off Isipingo in KwaZulu-Natal.

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