Showing posts with label VOC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label VOC. Show all posts

Wednesday, 11 December 2024

Namibia: disappearance of The Vlissingen

 The Vlissingen

Some 180 km south of Walvis Bay in a hidden bay in an inaccessible beach area rests a Dutch shipwreck for nearly 300 years now. Only now and then a rare expedition disturbs it at Meob Bay.

Those lucky enough who were there, report of some antique coins, called “doits” washed up on the beach. These copper coins bear the letters “VOC” ("Verenigde Oostindische Compagnie" – Unified East-Indian Company). The Dutch VOC existed from 1602 until 1799 and traded with India and Asia.

In 1652 it started a storage station at the Cape of Good Hope, today’s Cape Town. One of the VOC’s ships called “Vlissingen” probably capsized in 1747 at Meob Bay, according to Bruno Werz.

He wrote an article about it in the Journal of Namibian Studies, 2008. Werz led an expedition to Meob Bay. About 900 copper “doits” engraved with VOC were found there, many of them bearing their manufacturing year of 1746. Research proved they were coined that year in Middelburg, Netherlands.

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Monday, 9 December 2024

Namibia: The unsolved mystery of the Vlissingen

The unsolved mystery of the Vlissingen

Ultimately, Europe is the Mecca for treasure hunters. Conversely, when it comes to finding lost treasures Namibia unfortunately does not provide the same opportunities. Consequently, if the opportunity does arise to find any kind of possible treasure then my interest is immediately sparked.  Such an opportunity arose on a visit to Meob Bay which was determined to be the last resting place of the Vlissingen.  The treasures to look out for were 1746 copper coins (Duiten) and 1743 Silver Pillar Dollars.

On 9 January 1747, the 130 feet long United Dutch East India Company (VOC) ship Vlissingen left the Netherlands, on its 5th journey. Unfortunately for the Company and the 227 crew aboard, the vessel was never to return. Bearing in mind that the Vlissingen reported that many of its crew were already sick when still in the North Atlantic, it is highly likely that illness and death played a role in the demise of the vessel, besides the structural damage she had incurred. Bad weather at the time of crossing the Atlantic could have been another contributing factor. To this day the circumstances of her vanishing remains a mystery.

As part of her cargo she carried thousands of copper coins (Doits / Duiten) and an unidentified amount of silver dollars.

The Duiten were specifically minted for the Zeeland Chamber of the Dutch East India Company. The coins were struck in 1746, in the town of Middelburg. It was common practice for outward-bound vessels to carry coins and bar metal that was used as currency to obtain Asiatic goods.  Homeward-bound ships mainly carried oriental products such as spices, textiles and porcelain, as well as large quantities of Dutch coins.  The coins found near Meob Bay dated 1746, indicated that they had probably not been in circulation and were on their way to the Dutch trading posts in the East.

Old diamond mining reports dating back to the early 20th century mention silver and copper coins being found scattered along a part of the Namibian coast near Meob Bay. The silver coins originated from Mexico when this was still a Spanish colony and were used by the VOC to trade in the East Indies, moreover also known as the romantic “piece of eight” and was the very first U.S. Dollar in the United States until 1857. These coins were actually “cut” into 8 pieces, for change.

A couple of years ago a tour guide made a spectacular discovery between the sand dunes at Conception Water, hundreds of copper Duiten lay scattered on the sand.  It is suspected that a miner, labourer or traveler collected them whilst walking along the beach. Obviously, the bag with its useless contents did not withstand the harsh elements resulting in it rupturing scattering the coins onto the ground. Indeed, a spectacular find.

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Wednesday, 24 July 2024

South Africa: La Maréchale, Meridian, La Souvenance & Basuto Coast shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

May 19:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1660: La Maréchale, this wooden French sailing sloop wrecked in Table Bay in the Western Cape. It arrived on the 9th of May, but by the 16th, a north-westerly picked up which turned to a gale by the 18th. Then, on this day, all three of its anchor cables parted and it ran aground near the Salt river mouth. Although attempts were made to launch its boats and rafts, these were carried away as soon as they hit the water. A cask floated ashore containing letters which begged the VOC for help. Van Riebeeck sent assistance and by the following day, all on board were brought to safety and its cargo salved, with its cannons being used at the Castle. Some of its timbers were salved and used for construction before the remainder of the remains were burned on the 5th of March 1662. All members of the crew joined the service of the VOC and some of the passengers spent an entire year at the Cape before finding passage back to Europe. As far as we are aware, this is the only 17th Century French wreck on our coastline.

1828: Meridian, this wooden British sailing brig was lost on the East side of Silversand Bay, in Betty’s Bay in the Western Cape. It had come into Simon’s Bay for repairs and when it left for Table Bay, it somehow managed to wreck on the other side of False Bay.

1871: La Souvenance, this wooden French sailing barque wrecked on a reef near the Ratel River mouth in the Western Cape. After searching for several days for the wreck, it was eventually found after bodies had started to wash up on the nearby beaches. Not one survivor of the 420 people that were on board was found.

1954: Basuto Coast, this motor-powered South African coaster ran aground and wrecked during a storm at the swimming pool pavilion in Sea Point in the Western Cape.

The Basuto Coast (1954) after it ran aground

The vessel was cut up and removed within a few weeks. The wrecking resulted in the loss of one life, a fireman who fell off a ladder and drowned whilst trying to rescue those on board.

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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, 3 April 2024

South Africa: Meermin, Sophia, Palatinia, Ben Holden & Sabor shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

March 7:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1766: Meermin, this wooden vessel wrecked near Struisbaai in the Western Cape. In 1765 the VOC sent this vessel to Madagascar to procure enslaved people for the growing Cape colony. The Meermin took 140 enslaved people on board. During the return passage to the Cape, its skipper, Gerrit Mulder removed their iron shackles, and on the 18th of February 1766 the supercargo forced the enslaved people to work. The enslaved people used this opportunity for mutiny, killing the supercargo and the rest of the deck watch, in total 24 men. The remaining 29 members of the crew were shut below decks. After two days, through the mediation of one of the enslaved woman, it was agreed that the crew would not be harmed if they returned those on board to Madagascar. The crew were allowed back on deck, but instead of setting course for the island, they made for Cape Agulhas. Four days later land was sighted, and while still some kilometres from the shore the enslaved people ordered the anchors to be dropped and some went ashore in the longboat and pinnace, promising to light fires ashore should everything be safe.
On landing they saw the nearby house of Matthys Rostock and realised that they had been deceived. The local farmers banded together and when the enslaved people refused to surrender, they were attacked, resulting in the killing 14 of enslaved people and the capture of the rest. Meanwhile, those aboard the Meermin were getting impatient when the boats failed to return. Members of the crew wrote messages describing the situation, placed them in bottles and dropped them overboard.

Season 10, Episode 2 of the PBS documentary Secrets of the Dead, "Slave Ship Mutiny", tracks the archaeological research efforts in trying to locate the wreck of the Meermin (1766). The documentary even includes an interview with Archbishop Desmond Tutu

Two of these messages washed ashore and were picked up. They asked that three fires be lit on the shore. When the enslaved people still on board saw the fires, they cut the cables and took the Meermin close inshore. Six enslaved people then went ashore in a canoe but were surrounded immediately as they landed, with one man being shot, and the rest captured. Seeing what had happened, the enslaved people still aboard the vessel set upon the crew, and a skirmish raged on until the vessel ran aground. Eventually the enslaved people surrendered. In the end, the Meermin could not be re-floated and went to pieces where it struck, and the surviving 112 enslaved people made it to the Cape where they were sold off. The VOC salvaged most of the cargo at the time and there has been ongoing research by maritime archaeologist Jaco Boshoff of Iziko Museums for the past 20 years attempting to locate the wreck. There is an episode of a PBS documentary, Secrets of the Dead, that follows these research efforts.

1853: Sophia, this wooden sailing schooner wrecked near Witsand beach on the Cape Peninsula in the Western Cape.

1911: Palatinia, this four-masted steel (sail and steam powered) freighter wrecked at the Inkyanza/Blind River Mouth on Eastern Beach in East London in the Eastern Cape.

The Palatinia (1911) aground off East London

It was beached there in a sinking condition after having struck an object at sea and then it became a wreck.

1934: Ben Holden, this South African steel steam-powered fishing trawler struck Madagascar Reef several times before slipping into deeper waters and then finally drifting ashore near the Birha River Mouth in the Eastern Cape where it became a wreck.

1943: Sabor, this British steam-powered merchant ship was torpedoed and sunk in the early morning hours by U-506 approximately 98 km southeast of Mossel Bay in the Western Cape.

The Sabor (1943), date and location unknown

It was on its way from Port Said (Egypt) to Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) with a cargo of salt ballast and bags of mail. Seven crew members lost their lives, and the remaining 51 survivors were rescued by SAAF crash launch R-8 and landed at Mossel Bay.

2008: An Invicta Bearings Beechcraft B200 (registration no. ZS-LFU) was damaged beyond repair at Cape Town International Airport when the left wing’s landing gear collapsed shortly after landing. The pilot managed to keep the landing straight, but the dipping left wing sustained much damage when the aircraft finally came to a halt.

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Thursday, 15 February 2024

South Africa: Dageraad, Otto & Florence Brierley shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

January 20:

Suiderkus wreck in Namibia

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1694: Dageraad, this VOC Cape packet ran aground in thick mist and wrecked on the west side of Robben Island in Table Bay in the Western Cape. It was returning from the west coast, where it had picked up survivors from the wreck of the Gouden Buys were it also assisted in its salvage. When the Dageraad wrecked, 16 men drowned. Daniël Silliman survived the wrecking of both ships and went on to write a book about these experiences when he returned to the Netherlands.  

1860: Otto, this Russian sailing barque wrecked in Otter Bay at Struispunt, just south of Arniston/Waenhuiskrans in the Western Cape. An anchor which was found on the beach nearby is presumed to have come from the wreck and was moved to the Bredasdorp Museum in 1995. 

1958: Florence Brierley, this South African steam-powered fishing trawler was scuttled by the SA Navy about 14 km west of Slangkop Lighthouse in the Western Cape.

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Friday, 2 February 2024

Namibia: The unsolved mystery of the Vlissingen vessel

The unsolved mystery of the Vlissingen shipwreck

Ultimately, Europe is the Mecca for treasure hunters. Conversely, when it comes to finding lost treasures Namibia unfortunately does not provide the same opportunities.

Consequently, if the opportunity does arise to find any kind of possible treasure then my interest is immediately sparked. Such an opportunity arose on a visit to Meob Bay which was determined to be the last resting place of the Vlissingen. The treasures to look out for were 1746 copper coins (Duiten) and 1743 Silver Pillar Dollars.

On 9 January 1747, the 130 feet long United Dutch East India Company (VOC) ship Vlissingen left the Netherlands, on its 5th journey. Unfortunately for the Company and the 227 crew aboard, the vessel was never to return. Bearing in mind that the Vlissingen reported that many of its crew were already sick when still in the North Atlantic, it is highly likely that illness and death played a role in the demise of the vessel, besides the structural damage she had incurred. Bad weather at the time of crossing the Atlantic could have been another contributing factor. To this day the circumstances of her vanishing remains a mystery.

As part of her cargo she carried thousands of copper coins (Doits / Duiten) and an unidentified amount of silver dollars.

The Duiten were specifically minted for the Zeeland Chamber of the Dutch East India Company.  The coins were struck in 1746, in the town of Middelburg. It was common practice for outward-bound vessels to carry coins and bar metal that was used as currency to obtain Asiatic goods.  Homeward-bound ships mainly carried oriental products such as spices, textiles and porcelain, as well as large quantities of Dutch coins. The coins found near Meob Bay dated 1746, indicated that they had probably not been in circulation and were on their way to the Dutch trading posts in the East.

Old diamond mining reports dating back to the early 20th century mention silver and copper coins being found scattered along a part of the Namibian coast near Meob Bay. The silver coins originated from Mexico when this was still a Spanish colony and were used by the VOC to trade in the East Indies, moreover also known as the romantic “piece of eight” and was the very first U.S. Dollar in the United States until 1857. These coins were actually “cut” into 8 pieces, for change.

A couple of years ago a tour guide made a spectacular discovery between the sand dunes at Conception Water, hundreds of copper Duiten lay scattered on the sand.  It is suspected that a miner, labourer or traveler collected them whilst walking along the beach. Obviously, the bag with its useless contents did not withstand the harsh elements resulting in it rupturing scattering the coins onto the ground. Indeed, a spectacular find.

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Tuesday, 3 March 2020

South Africa: newly found shipwreck at Bloubergstrand Beach, Cape Town

Newly found shipwreck at Bloubergstrand Beach, Cape Town, South Africa

Photos: Dronesberg


Special thanks: Clare Lindeque


Shipwrecks in Namibia: link

We were in Cape Town in January 2018. While walking around Bloubergstrand beach on 30.01.18 we saw a group of workers digging out some wooden pieces of shipwreck (?). Do you know what this ship was? I found your blog when searching for information about Athens wreck at Green Point.
Hi,

I am not familiar with that wreck - it looks as though it was buried very deep in the sand! The people doing the work were probably from SAHRA, The South African Heritage Resources Agency. There are many, many forgotten wrecks under the sand and in the shallows along that stretch of coastline, and it is great to see one of them getting some attention!

Hi,

I messaged SAHRA about the wreck you saw, along with one of your photos, and this is what they said:

There is currently a project being undertaken along the beach at Blouberg to locate the wreck of the Haarlem which wrecked somewhere along the bay in 1647. A geophysical survey was undertaken to try and pinpoint places to look more closely at and then small test excavations were undertaken to uncover what was picked up in the survey. A few pieces of wreckage were uncovered but as yet they have not been identified. The African Institute for Marine and Underwater Research (AIMURE) is the organisation that has been undertaking the project and have been doing it under permit from SAHRA. They will publish the results of the survey in the near future.

This is really cool - the Haarlem was a Dutch ship that wrecked at the Cape in 1647. The survivors of the wreck spent a little bit of time here before being rescued, and I think when they got back to Holland they reported that the Cape had water and fertile soil etc etc - and that it would be a good place for a settlement/refreshment station. Following that, Jan van Riebeeck was sent here and the rest is history. So it is a very significant wreck in the history of European settlement at the Cape, and finding it would be extremely exciting!
The shipwreck that changed South Africa forever

The "Haarlem" ("Nieuw Haarlem"), Dutch East India Company's (VOC) ship (one of numerous "Indiamen"), sank at the coast of Table Bay on Sunday, 25 March 1647 during the storm. "Haarlem" was constructed at the VOC Amsterdam shipyard with a length of about 45 metres and a width of 10 metres.
The route around the Cape was particularly treacherous and was officially known as the Cape of Good Hope or Cabo do Bona Esperana (Portuguese). It was soon renamed the Cape of Storms as many "Indiamen" ran aground or sank while negotiating the route around the Cape Peninsula.

58 crew members were repatriated by accompanying ships soon after the incident with 62 men left behind to salvage as much of the cargo as possible - spices, pepper, porcelain and textiles. They built in a makeshift camp, Fort "Zandenburch" (Dutch for Sandcastle), where they lived for about one year, bartering livestock and fresh meat from the indigenous Khoe Khoen people. They had a great success fishing in the nearby Salt River and ventured as far as Robben Island.
Crew men reported favourably on their experiences when they returned to Holland and, as a result, VOC management decided to establish a stopover for their ships. This restocking settlement, known as the "Tavern of the Seas", where ships stopped for replenishing of water and food supplies, later developed into the city of Cape Town. The wrecking of Haarlem can be regarded as the starting point that created the roots of the modern South African society.

The site is situated just off shore at a depth of about 3 to 4 m below the sea bed, close to the Dolphin Beach Hotel in Table View, Sunset Beach and parking area at Rietvlei, Cape Town. No shipping accident around the world had ever such an impact on the history of a whole nation, according to AIMURE. Table Bay is location of more than 350 recorded shipwrecks.
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