Bark Marques

History
Spain
Name: Marques
Completed: 1917
In service: 1917-?, 1947-1971
Reclassified: Barquentine
Fate: Sold to Robin Cecil-Wright in 1971
Civilian, United Kingdom
Acquired: By Robin Cecil-Wright in 1971
Renamed: Bark Marques
Fate: Lost during Tall Ship Races on 3 June 1984 with 19 of 28 crew members
General characteristics
Class and type: Built as a polacca-rigged brig, re-rigged as a barque in 1977
Displacement: 300 Tons
Length: 120 ft (37 m)
Beam: 24.7 ft (7.5 m)
Complement: 28

The Marques was a British-registered barque that sank during the Tall Ships' Races in 1984.

The Marques was built in Valencia, Spain, in 1917, as a polacca-rigged brig. She was used to carry fruit from the Canary Islands to northern Europe. Damaged during World War II, she was repaired in 1947 and subsequently used in the Mediterranean. She was badly maintained and by 1971 she was in poor condition.

In 1971 Englishman Robin Cecil-Wright bought the Marques and had her extensively repaired and re-rigged in Southampton, England. She saw use in movies, most notably Dracula, and in television shows such as The Onedin Line and Poldark. In 1977 Mark Litchfield (who would later also own the Maria Asumpta and be convicted after he steered her on her fateful last journey) bought a one-half share in the ship. She was again re-rigged, this time as a barque, largely for her part in the BBC series The Voyage of Charles Darwin as his ship HMS Beagle. At this time she was renamed the Bark Marques.

Last voyage

In 1983 the Marques sailed from Plymouth, England, to Antigua in the Caribbean for use in charter tours during the northern winter. In the summer of 1984 she sailed to San Juan, Puerto Rico, to compete in the Cutty Sark Tall Ships' Races.

The Marques won the first tall ships' race, from Puerto Rico to Bermuda. The ship left Hamilton on the second race, bound for Halifax, Nova Scotia, on 2 June 1984. On the night of 2 June the ship ran into a gale. In the early hours of 3 June she was hit by a sudden squall and a large wave, possibly a rogue wave, and was knocked down onto her starboard side. Although the ship had been converted to a sail training and charter cruise ship, she had retained the main cargo hatch from her days as a commercial vessel. When she was knocked down the main hatch was breached and water flooded into the interior of the ship. She sank in less than a minute, with the loss of 19 of her 28 crew members.

Based on documentation of the ship, tallship sailor Daniel Parrott suggested that insufficient stability (resistance of a ship to capsizing) could have added to or caused the knock-down. The rigging of the Marques had been changed and the sail surface likely increased over the years, which naturally led to decreased (but not necessarily dangerous) stability. The last owner had repeatedly avoided a routine safety check of the ship that had been requested by British authorities; as the outcome of such a check remains unknown, it is unclear if the ship's stability was problematic and, if so, if the check would have detected it.[1]

References

  1. Parrott, Daniel. Tall Ships Down: The Last Voyages of the Pamir, Albatross, Marques, Pride of Baltimore and the Maria Asumpta. McGraw Hill, 2003. ISBN 0-07-143545-X.

Sources

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