HMS Orpheus (1861)

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Richard Brydges Beechey's 1863 painting of the disaster.
Career (United Kingdom) Royal Navy Ensign
Name: Orpheus
Namesake: Orpheus, a figure from Greek mythology, king of the Thracian tribe Cicones.
Builder: Sir Baldwin Walker
Commissioned: Portsmouth, 1861
Out of service: Wrecked, Saturday, 7 February 1863
Fate: Wrecked
General characteristics
Class and type: Jason class corvette
Length: 254 ft (77 m)
Draught: 19 ft (5.8 m)
Propulsion: 2-cylinder, horizontal engines / 4 boilers with four furnaces.
Speed: 12 knots
Complement: 258
Armament: 20 8-inch (200 mm) broadside guns / and two pivot Armstrong 110-pounders

HMS Orpheus was a corvette of the Royal Navy (and also the flagship of the Australian squadron of the Royal Navy) that sank off the west coast of Auckland, New Zealand on February 7, 1863: 189 crew out of the ship's complement of 259 died in the disaster, making it New Zealand's worst maritime tragedy.[1]

Contents

[edit] The Ship

HMS Orpheus (named after the Greek hero Orpheus) was a Jason class corvette, a screw-driven vessel built in the Chatham Dockyard in Kent, the United Kingdom, in 1861. She was owned by the Royal Navy, and was 69 metres long with a crew of 259.

Orpheus was commanded by Captain Robert Heron Burton. She displayed a broad pennant to indicate that Commodore William Farquharson Burnett, Senior Officer of H M Ships and Vessels on the Australian and New Zealand Stations, was also on board.

She was wrecked when delivering naval supplies and troop reinforcements to Auckland for the New Zealand land wars. [2]

[edit] Background

Orpheus's first journey was in December 1861 under Commodore W.F Burnett, CB's pennant. She sailed from Plymouth Sound but was under orders not to sail to Sydney. Initially she was sent on convoy duty off Canada - which delayed her voyage to Sydney. On 31 January 1863, Burnett set out on a mission to New Zealand. The mission was not to reinforce the British ships already taking part in the New Zealand Wars, but to arrange for the withdrawal of two Her Majesty's ships - the Miranda, a sloop weighing 747 tonnes stationed in the Manukau harbour, and the Harrier, a corvette weighing 1039 tonnes. They were to rendezvous in the Waitemata Harbour. Orpheus was behind schedule, and Burnett decided to save some time by cutting through Manukau Harbour rather than going by the intended course of rounding North Cape and sailing down the East Coast of Northland.[3]

[edit] The wreck

Whatipu beach: area of the wreck.
Whatipu beach: area of the wreck.

Orpheus left Sydney, Australia, on 31 January 1863. Her approach to Manukau Harbour on February 7 ran near Whatipu beach, through a series of dangerous sand bars. The weather was clear and sunny. Although the bars had been charted twice, in 1836 and 1856, a revised pilotage guide from 1861 was available that indicated that the middle sand bar had moved northwards and grown considerably in the intervening time. While Orpheus carried both the out-of-date chart and the updated guide, and the Sailing Master William Strong originally used the updated instructions for entering the harbour, he was overruled by the Commodore and the ship proceeded according to the 1856 chart.

As the ship approached the submerged bar, a navigational signal from nearby Paratutai Island was received instructing her to turn north to avoid a collision. Soon after, Quartermaster Frederick Butler (a convicted deserter, and one of only two men on board to have previously entered Manukau Harbour) alerted the senior officers to the improper course they were taking. Despite finally attempting to correct their course, a few minutes later, at approximately 1:30 in the afternoon, Orpheus hit the bar. [4]

The force of the surf soon caused Orpheus to swing around, exposing its port side to the waves. Considerable damage was sustained: the hatches burst open, cabin windows were shattered, and Orpheus began to take on water. The crew attempted to abandon ship, however the power of the sea's surge made escape extremely difficult, and many sailors were swept away.

[edit] The Wonga Wonga

Meanwhile, the harbour pilot / signalman of Manukau Harbour on duty was Edward Wing (son of Captain Thomas Wing, pilot and harbourmaster of the Port of Manukau who also created the original 1836 chart) who was, at that time guiding the steamship Wonga Wonga out of the harbour. When it became apparent that the Orpheus was in trouble, the Wonga Wonga approached the beached ship and attempted to pick up survivors, many of whom had climbed into the rigging as the deck became submerged. At approximately 8:00pm, the masts began to break, killing most of the crew who remained on board. The Wonga Wonga remained in the area overnight looking for survivors, and then buried what dead could be recovered in the sand-dunes on shore. An information board located on the Waitakere Ranges, near Titirangi to the west of Auckland, indicates the approximate area, now heavily overgrown, where the victims were buried.

[edit] Aftermath

Three inquiries were held after the shipwreck, but due to the unwillingness of the Royal Navy to admit an officer's culpability much of the blame was laid on Edward Wing for not guiding the ship into the harbour and for failing to maintain the signalling station on Paratutai Island. In all, 189 people died in the wreck of HMS Orpheus, including Commodore Burnett and Captain Burton, giving it the highest casualty rate ever for a New Zealand shipwreck.

Later, the survivors (8 officers and 62 men) were taken to HMS Miranda (1851) and split into three groups. All the officers and 10 hands were sent to Portsmouth to appear before a Court Martial (in this case not a criminal trial but a formal inquiry); 25 sailors were drafted to HMS Harrier; and the remaining 27 sailors stayed with Miranda.

Most of the sailors who drowned were very young, some being boys aged 12 to 18 who were still "learning the ropes" to become able seamen. The average age of the crew (including marines) was only 25.

The cause of this disaster is disputed, even after the Admiralty laid the blame on Thomas Wing. The local Maori believe otherwise. In Manukau Harbour not far from the scene of the disaster is an island known as Puketutu Island. On the extremely western point of the island there grew a puriri tree, the tree was considered sacred and "tapu" to the Maori people. In 1863 one day before Orpheus was wrecked a pakeha settler felled the tree and used the wood for fence posts. Hence, the disaster was caused by a violation of tapu, according to Maori traditions.

Orpheus Island off the coast of Queensland was named after the corvette by Lieutenant G. E. Richards in 1887 in memory of the loss of life.[5]

[edit] Protection

The wreck of the Orpheus is scheduled for preservation in the Auckland Regional Plan: Coastal and is also protected under the archaeological provisions of the Historic Places Act 1993.[6]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ * Otago Witness (March 7, 1863). p. 7.
  2. ^ * The Daily Southern Cross (February 9, 1863).
  3. ^ * Logan Campell's Auckland - Tales from Early Years (book) ISBN 978-1-86940-393-5
  4. ^ * Logan Campell's Auckland - Tales from Early Years (book) Page 152–164. ISBN 978-1-86940-393-5
  5. ^ * Hetherington, Roy M (1975) The Wreck of HMS Orpheus. Cassell Auckland. ISBN 978-0-7269-3703-3 (First edition published 1968 under title: New Zealand's worst sea disaster).
  6. ^ * Callan, Louise. (2000). Shipwreck: Tales of Survival, Courage & Calamity at Sea. Auckland: Hodder Moa Beckett. ISBN 1-86958-784-7

[edit] External links