Showing posts with label San Antonio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Antonio. Show all posts

Saturday, 9 November 2024

South Africa: Grosvenor, San Antonio, Perimede, Charlotte A Morrison, H D Storer, Eliza, Douglas Dodib & Oceanos shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

Cawdor Castle, wrecked in Namibia

August 4:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1782: Grosvenor, this wooden-hulled British East Indiaman wrecked in a gully near the Tezana River mouth, in Lambazi Bay in the Eastern Cape. Of the approximately 150 people on board, about 130 made it to shore. However, over the coming weeks, starvation, struggle, and survivors finding greener pastures with the local people would lead to only 18 survivors making it back to Cape Town. Subsequent searches for survivors, and often searches for survivors of other wrecks, resulted in finding European men and women living happily amongst the Mpondo, of which at least four families were confirmed to have come from the wreck of the Grosvenor. The Grosvenor has been the subject of many artworks and popular books, and the wreck site has been subjected to many salvage attempts over the years. The most prominent, by Captain Sidney Turner, who in 1880 blasted the nearby rocks and wreck site, where they uncovered a variety of items. Some of these ended up in museums, such as the Durban Local History Museum, where Sidney Turner’s famous goblet, smelted from silver rupees, is housed, as well as two of the Grosvenor’s cannons. However, most of the items were sold by Sidney Turner which, allowed him to start his own company. As a result of this, his relationship with Chief Mqikela of Eastern Pondoland improved over the years and he was chosen to start a new harbour so that Chief Mqikela could compete with Port St Johns, which his brother, Nqiliso, chief of Western Pondoland, had ceded to the British government. Port Grosvenor was therefore founded and became a thriving port under its Port Captain Sidney Turner. However, within a year the Cape government claimed his deal with Chief Mqikela to be illegal and although Port Grosvenor had just started to thrive, it faded into obscurity. The wreck site was most recently dived on by archaeologists in 1999.

1824: San Antonio, this wooden-hulled British East Indiaman became stranded after a strong gale on Woodstock Beach in Table Bay in the Western Cape. It was later condemned.

1860: Perimede, this wooden-hulled brig was run ashore in a leaky condition and wrecked near Dwarskerbos, just north of the Berg River mouth in the Western Cape.

1862: Charlotte  A Morrison, this sailing barque was put in for repairs in Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape when its cargo caught alight. As the efforts to extinguish the blaze seemed futile, it was run ashore. It burned over the next two days until all that remained of it was below the waterline. 

1878: H D Storer/H D Stower, the sailing barque wrecked after its cables parted in an east-north-easterly gale on Back Beach in Durban in KwaZulu-Natal.

1880: Eliza, this sailing brig caught alight whilst its cargo of coal was being unloaded in East London in the Eastern Cape. Very little is known about this incident, but it is believed that it burned out to become a wreck.

1914: Douglas Dodib, this vessel wrecked in Port St. Johns in the Eastern Cape. Very little is known about this vessel.

1972: A SAAF Douglas DC-3 (registration no. 6850) crashed near the Swartkop Airbase in Gauteng. Very little is known about this incident.

1991: Oceanos, this Greek passenger liner foundered off Mpame Point near Coffee Bay in the Eastern Cape. It set out from East London for Durban in a storm, encountering 10 m tall waves. After an explosion on the 3rd of August, believed to be the result of a faulty ventilation pipe becoming flooded with seawater, it lost power and its engine room started flooding. The captain and crew abandoned ship without informing the passengers, in an apparent effort to get help. The heroes of the event turned out to be the entertainment staff who started a proper evacuation procedure. In all, the 571 people that were on board were saved by a combination of 16 rescue helicopters and the ships lifeboats. The captain and crew were reprimanded for their negligent behaviour. The wreck now lies at a depth just shy of 100 m whilst being battered by a strong current, although it has been visited by a select few brave and highly skilled technical divers.

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Saturday, 18 May 2024

South Africa: Zeepaard, San Antonio, Namaqua I, Shin Yuo Mou 61 & Ocean Surf shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

March 29:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1823: Zeepaard, this 20-gun wooden Dutch corvette was run aground off Cape Recife in Sardinia Bay in the Eastern Cape during the night in a thick fog. It became a total wreck, and eight lives were lost with many survivors being severely injured.

A model of what the Zeepaard (1823) looked like in 1819

Many of its guns were salvaged before the wreck was formally protected and can be found at places in Port Elizabeth, such as Bayworld Museum.

1842: San Antonio, this Portuguese wooden sailing brig (a slaver) wrecked near Hout Bay in the Western Cape.

1876: Namaqua I, this British iron-hulled steam powered coaster wrecked at Island Point, just south of Hondeklipbaai in the Northern Cape. Scattered bits of wreckage are visible today, lying high-and-dry.

What was still visible of the Namaqua I (1876) a few years ago

1976: Shin Yuo Mou 61, this Chinese motor-powered fishing vessel foundered, after an explosion, near Port Nolloth in the Northern Cape.

1979: Ocean Surf, this South African motor-powered fishing trawler’s engine failed, and the anchor could not hold it.

The Ocean Surf (1979) after having run aground

It lead to fast wrecking after being beached on Casuarina Beach near Tongaat in KwaZulu-Natal. Reportedly, one person drowned because of the accident.

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Tuesday, 21 November 2023

South Africa: Sea Eagle, Puntado, Idomene, County of Pembroke & other shipwrecks

SAHRA Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage

November 14:

“This day in our shipwreck and aeronautical wreck history”

1856: Sea Eagle, this sailing barque missed it stays in a south-easterly gale between Robben Island and Blouberg and wrecked in Murray’s Bay on Robben Island in Table Bay in the Western Cape.

1857: Puntado, this vessel wrecked on the west bank of the Buffalo River in East London in the Eastern Cape. Very little is known about it.  

1887: Idomene, this iron sailing schooner wrecked on a reef during bad weather, north-east of the Xora River Mouth in the Eastern Cape. The ship broke up too rapidly to launch the boats and of the 24 lives that were on board, only 11 managed to make it to land. The dead were buried nearby, and the survivors were picked up by the Courland. 

1903: On this day a powerful south-easterly gale struck the south coast of South Africa, wrecking at least five vessels in Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape and a further two in Mossel Bay in the Western Cape:

Brave rescuers on the line in Algoa Bay during the gale of 1903

• County of Pembroke, this British iron sailing barque dragged its anchors and collided with the Lütto (which was only damaged as its anchor chain held fast) and it was then driven ashore at North End Beach. In March the following year, it was refloated and then scuttled at the Coega River mouth.

Bayworld Museum in Port Elizabeth has selected artefacts on display from the rescue excavation of the County of Pembroke (1903)

The wreck was encountered during the construction of the new harbour and rescue archaeology operations ensued co-ordinated by maritime archaeologist Vanessa Maitland. Selected artefacts are now housed and displayed at the Bayworld Museum.

The Aranmore, which was severely damaged during the gale of 1903 in Algoa Bay and was run aground, was refloated 5 months later and towed back to the river Clyde in Scotland where it was repaired and went on to serve in various, such as when it was renamed the 'Walraute' serving as a Seaman's hotel ship, a WWI Submarine Depot ship, and then as the 'Vindicatrix' where it was a training ship at Gravesend and Sharpness, only finally being broken up in 1967

• Elda, this Norwegian iron sailing barque wrecked on North End Beach.

• King Cenric, this wooden sailing vessel wrecked on Dias Beach in Mossel Bay. There is some debate about whether a wreck in the surf zone that sometimes opens up is that of the King Cenric or that of the Rosebud (1888). The consensus seems to be that the King Cenric lies further south. 

• San Antonio, this Italian iron sailing barque wrecked on North End Beach.

• The Two Brothers, this Norwegian wooden sailing barque was driven against the wreck of the Sayre (1902) and the Wayfarer (1903), causing it to also wreck in Algoa Bay in the Eastern Cape.

The Two Brothers (1903) on the left, the Wayfarer (1903) in the middle, and the hulk of the Sayre (which wrecked in the 1902 gale) in Algoa Bay

• Thresher/Thrasher, this vessel (possibly a schooner) wrecked in Mossel Bay. 

• Wayfarer, this Norwegian wooden sailing barque was driven onto and wrecked against the older wreck of the Sayre (1902).

1943: Gilia, this motor-powered vessel wrecked east of Cape Padrone in the Eastern Cape.

The fire on board the Griqualand (1970) raged on because of its highly flammable cargo and could not be contained

1970: Griqualand, this motor-powered coaster caught alight shortly after leaving Durban harbour in KwaZulu-Natal and had to be abandoned. The floating hulk was then sunk about 8 km offshore from Amanzimtoti, by gunfire from the HMS Dido as it posed a danger to navigation.

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