Showing posts with label SAAF Douglas C-47B. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SAAF Douglas C-47B. Show all posts

Thursday, 12 September 2024

South Africa: Royal Albert, Rosebud, Ellen Maria & Rosalind shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

June 25:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1662: An unknown wooden sailing vessel supposedly wrecked on this day on Robben Island in Table Bay in the Western Cape. This is according to Zacharias Wagenaer’s journal, who was the only German Governor of the Dutch Cape Colony from 1662-1666.

1850: Royal Albert, this wooden British barque wrecked near the Military Hospital in Table Bay in the Western Cape. Its cables parted during a north-westerly gale on the night of the 24th and it wrecked in the early hours of the morning.

An illustration of the wrecking of the Royal Albert (1850) from the Cape Archives

1859: Rosebud, this wooden schooner wrecked near Lamberts Bay in the Western Cape.

1868: Ellen Maria, this wooden British cutter wrecked on the rocks at Green Point in Table Bay in the Western Cape.

1869: Rosalind, this wooden British brigantine wrecked at night near Port Nolloth in the Northern Cape.

1943: An RAF Consolidated Catalina (registration no. FP265) crashed into Lake St. Lucia near Charters Creek Camp in KwaZulu-Natal with the loss of eight of the nine lives that were on board. Only the flight engineer survived with the rest of the crew having been buried at the Stellawood Cemetery in Durban. It is currently believed that the wreck lies buried underneath the silt.

1946: A SAAF Douglas C-47B crashed at the Swartkop Air Base in Gauteng. Very little is known about it.

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Friday, 8 March 2024

South Africa: Lieutenant Maury, Queen Anne & Glen Mist shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

February 10:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1892: Lieutenant Maury, this wooden barque caught fire while at anchor in Port Nolloth in the Northern Cape and eventually foundered. It caught alight at 01:00 and sank by 15:00. The cause of the blaze was not established. Only one lifeboat and two charred and burned sail booms were saved. 

1943: Queen Anne, this British motor-powered steel cargo ship was en route to Beirut carrying a cargo of government stores, including explosives, when it was sunk by U-509, about 24 km south-southwest of Cape Agulhas/L'Agulhas in the Western Cape.

The Queen Anne (1943) date and location unknown

A single torpedo sunk the ship with the loss of the master and four crew members. The remaining survivors were split into two groups, with the one group of 17 survivors being picked up by the HMS St. Zeno and landed at Cape Town, and the other group of 22 making landfall somewhere along the coastline near Bredasdorp in a lifeboat.

1961: SAAF Douglas C-47B (registration no. 6856), this military transport aircraft crashed near Bizana in the Eastern Cape with the loss of its crew of five.

SAAF 685 (GZCL), taken around the end of WWII, location unknown

2017: Glen Mist, this South African fishing vessel foundered at the Saldanha Bay wharf in the Western Cape, presumably due to many years of neglect.

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