List of shipwrecks in 1879
The list of shipwrecks in 1879 includes some ships sunk, foundered, grounded, or otherwise lost during 1879.
1879 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr |
May | Jun | Jul | Aug |
Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec |
Unknown date |
January
3 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Nederland | Belgium | Stranded off Cherry Island, Maryland. Later refloated and returned to service.[1] |
6 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Gerhardine | German Empire | The brigantine was abandoned by her crew approximately 30 miles south of St Agnes, Isles of Scilly. She was towed into St Mary's by Gladiator. The crew were landed at Le Havre on the 16 January.[2] |
7 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Speedy | United Kingdom | The ship was driven ashore and wrecked at Chesil Beach, Dorset.[3] |
8 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Riverside | United Kingdom | The Belfast brigantine was abandoned in the Atlantic while carrying pitch pine from St. Marys, Georgia to Montevideo.[4] |
Sarah Ann | United Kingdom | The barque foundered in Swansea Bay. Her crew were rescued by Wolverhampton ( Royal National Lifeboat Institution).[5] |
9 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Le Mignon | France | The Dunkerque dandy went onshore on the Little Bezeath ridge of rocks at Marazion beach, Mount's Bay, Cornwall in a south-east gale. She was en route from Swansea to Saint-Valery-sur-Somme with coal. All the crew survived.[6][7] |
William and Mary | United Kingdom | The Workington brig was driven on to rocks at Cloughey Bay, County Down. The fate of the crew is unknown.[8] |
11 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Hellespont | United Kingdom | The steamer, out of Swansea with coal, floundered in the Bay of Biscay during a gale. The first and second officers were swept off the ship and the rest of the crew were rescued by the Madonna and landed at Gibraltar.[9] |
12 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Hugenot | United States | While entering Carrick Roads without a pilot the guano carrying ship drifted in to the brigantine Cassandra and went ashore in St Mawes Creek. She was refloated with the help of two tugs. Cassandra lost her headgear and jibboom.[10] |
Luigiolivari | Italy | The barque, From Philadelphia, via Falmouth, Cornwall for Silloth, was lost on the Cumberland coast between Netherton and St Bees. A number of bodies have been found and it is thought that all fourteen on board are lost.[11][12] |
16 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
USS Constitution | United States Navy | The American training frigate went aground at Bolland Point, Swanage, United Kingdom. She was refloated and repaired and returned to service.[13] |
21 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Besie Grenfell | United Kingdom | The St Ives schooner went ashore at Saffi in a heavy gale and broke up on rocks. Three of the crew were drowned.[14] |
Mercur | Norway | The barque was driven ashore and wrecked at Slade, Glamorgan, United Kingdom. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Boston, Massachusetts, United States to Penarth, Glamorgan.[5] |
Unnamed fishing boat | United Kingdom | Left Aberdeen harbour on Tuesday morning (possibly 14 January) and attempted to return to port in the afternoon. Later found upturned and no sign of the four crew.[15] |
23 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Assistant | Capsized while attempting to enter the harbour at Antwerp, Belgium. All eight on board drowned.[16] |
24 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
HMS Active | Royal Navy | The Volage-class corvette grounded on an unmapped shoal north of the Tugela River, South Africa. She was refloated almost immediately.[17] |
Expert | United Kingdom | The steamship Countess of Durham struck the fishing-boat off Kincardineshire drowning three men.[18][19] |
Tenedos | United Kingdom | The corvette grounded on an unmapped shoal north of the Tugela River, South Africa and on the next high tide was hauled off by HMS Active.[17] |
27 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Diadem | United Kingdom | The barque was abandoned in the Atlantic Ocean after a collision with the stores ship USS Supply ( United States Navy). All the crew were landed at Madeira.[20] |
Unknown date
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Bertha | United Kingdom | The Liverpool barque was abandoned off the Isles of Scilly after a collision with J Brown which headed for Queenstown with the crew of the abandoned ship. Bertha foundered shortly after.[21] |
Frederick | German Empire | The barque was abandoned in the Atlantic Ocean while carrying pitch pine from Doboy to Falmouth, Cornwall. The crew and ship's dog (except the Captain) were rescued by an Italian barque, Gaetano.[22] |
Marie Louise | Norway | The Tønsberg barque, out of Calais with deals]wrecked at Dymchurch. All the crew saved, bar one who died of exposure.[8] |
Mayard | United Kingdom | Two survivors from the steamer were landed at Ferrol by a Spanish vessel.[23] |
Sofia | Italy | The brigantine was driven ashore in the Longhole Gut, Glamorgan, United Kingdom after 21 January. All ten people on board survived. She was on a voyage from Naples to Swansea, Glamorgan.[5] |
Unnamed smack | Wrecked on Puffin Island, Anglesey while bound for Bangor, North Wales. All the crew were saved.[8] | |
Unnamed smack | Wrecked on Puffin Island, Anglesey while bound for Bangor, North Wales. The crew are reported to have drowned.[8] |
February
1 February
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Angé | France | The lugger went ashore in a strong SSE at Porthcurno, Cornwall. The crew of four were saved by employees of the Eastern Telegraph Company.[24] |
11 February
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Mary Stenhouse | United Kingdom | The ship was driven ashore at Rhosilli, Glamorgan. Ten of the twenty-two people on board were lost trying to reach land. She was refloated the next day,.[5] |
12 February
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Faulconnier | France | The steamship sank after running into the schooner Beta off Nash Point, South Wales. Beta docked at Cardiff with the crew of Faulconnier.[25] |
20 February
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Ralph Creyke | United Kingdom | The steamship was lost in a storm in the Celtic Sea 16 miles southwest of Lundy Island while on a voyage from Cardiff, Wales, to Dieppe, France. |
21 February
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Jura | A boat and medicine chest from Jura were brought into Yarmouth by the steam tug Pilot. Jura was on a voyage from Kingston upon Hull to Smyrna. One body was seen, and it was assumed that Jura′s crew of 16 drowned.[26] |
23 February
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Mary | United Kingdom | The steamship was driven ashore on rocks at North Shields, England, while trying to enter harbour with a cargo of iron ore from Huelva, Spain. A Royal National Lifeboat Institution () lifeboat rescued her crew.[26] |
24 February
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Dolphin | United Kingdom | The fishing lugger went ashore on the coast of Wexford. The crew were saved by the local lifeboat.[27] |
Mary Cook | The barque was wrecked on the coast of Aberdeenshire. Eleven of the fourteen on board drowned.[26] |
26 February
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Rosaire | France | The Nantes brig sank when she hit the Seven Stones Reef, between the Isles of Scilly and Cornwall while carrying coal from Newport to Brest. Three men drowned and four of her crew were picked up by the pilot cutter Queen, off Crow Sound in the Isles of Scilly.[28][29] |
Unknown date
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Adriatic | United Kingdom | The three-masted sailing ship, carrying guano from Callao stranded in the English Channel, approximately 5 miles west of Dunkirk. Only seven of the forty-nine on board saved.[30] |
Augusta | The steamer went ashore on Tory Island, County Donegal while being towed by Flying Hurricane from Sligo to Glasgow; they are likely to become total wrecks. Both crews survived.[26] | |
Flying Hurricane | The steamtug went ashore on Tory Island while towing Augusta from Sligo to Glasgow; they are likely to become total wrecks. Both crews survived.[26] | |
Unnamed vessel | Two men were saved from a steamer which foundered in the Bristol Channel.[31] |
March
10 March
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Bonnie Dundee | New South Wales | The steamship was cut in two in a collision with the steamship SS Barrabool (flag unknown) and sank with the loss of five lives at 33°06.327′S 151°42.258′E / 33.105450°S 151.704300°E, about 5 km (3 mile) off Caves Beach, New South Wales, Australia. Barrabool suffered a gash in her bow but remained afloat. |
13 March
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Edinburgh | United Kingdom | The 62 ton pilot cutter was struck by the iron-screw steamer Severn ( United Kingdom) (1,736 ton) two miles south of Dungeness lighthouse with the loss of ten pilots and five of the cutter's crew.[32] |
15 March
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Unnamed vessel | Derelict barque reported by Eboe at latitude 48N, longitude 8.50W.[33] |
19 March
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Happy Return | United Kingdom | The sloop was wrecked at Port Eynon Point, Glamorgan. She was on a voyage from Swansea, Glamorgan to Carmarthen.[5] |
24 March
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Tabasco | France | The schooner carrying coal from Greenock to Bordeaux struck White Island, St Martin's, Isles of Scilly. Her master mistook the Sevenstones Lightshp for Trevose Head on the north Cornish shore. She was on her maiden voyage and the vessel and cargo are a total loss. All the crew survived.[34] |
26 March
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
EJ M'Kinnon | The schooner became waterlogged, six days out from San Francisco and the crew drowned during the next few days. One survivor was rescued by the Otago from the waterlogged ship at 42°14′00″N 29°37′10″W / 42.23333°N 29.61944°W.[35] |
27 March
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Unidentified vessel | A brig was seen to keel over and sink on Hasborough Sands by a Yarmouth fishing-boat.[36] |
April
3 April
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Clyde | United Kingdom | The transport steamer was wrecked on Dyer's Island while carrying troops of the 24th Regiment to Natal for the Anglo-Zulu War. The troops were transferred to the troopship HMS Tamar ( Royal Navy).[37] |
14 April
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Robert and Agnes | United Kingdom | The fishing boat went ashore on the western side of the Hayle Estuary, Cornwall while attempting to enter the harbour.[38] |
Saint Michel | Haiti | The warship collided with the steamer Bolivar ( United Kingdom) and foundered with the loss of 108 lives. Seventy-two people were saved.[39][40] |
15 April
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
North Star | United Kingdom | The tug was driven ashore on the western side of the Hayle estuary when her screw was fouled by a rope while attempting to refloat the stranded fishing boat Robert and Agnes.[38] |
18 April
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Great Republic | United States | Wrecked on Sand Island in the Columbia River in Oregon with the loss of ten lives.[41] |
22 April
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Maria | United Kingdom | The Plymouth trawler ran on to the Gear Rock, in Mount's Bay, Cornwall and began to break up.[42] |
29 April
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
SS Nile | United Kingdom | The Sunderland steamer sank off Cape Finisterre while en route to Newport. The three surviving crew out of twenty-three were landed at St Mary's, Isles of Scilly by the steamer Recovery.[43][44] |
Unknown date
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Gladiolus | The timber-laden ship en route from Doboy for Shields became waterlogged and all the crew bar one washed overboard.[45] |
May
17 May
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Ponthieu | France | The brig drifted in Mount's Bay, Cornwall, after losing a mast and her sails. She eventually grounded at Perranuthnoe and all the crew were saved by the coastguard. She was carrying iron-ore from Pomaron to Liverpool.[46] |
18 May
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Christina | Sweden | The barque changed course and ran in front of the Sydney bound passenger vessel Dunbar Castle ( United Kingdom). The barque was cut in two and sank with the loss of three of the nine crew.[47] |
19 May
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Firebrick | United Kingdom | The Caernarfon sloop sank off the Pembrokeshire coast. The crew survived for three days on a rock eating gulls' eggs.[48] |
21 May
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Esmeralda | Chilean Navy | War of the Pacific, Battle of Iquique: The wooden-hulled steam corvette was sunk by the ironclad turret ship Huáscar ( Peruvian Navy).[49] |
Independencia | Peruvian Navy | War of the Pacific, Battle of Punta Gruesa: The armored corvette ran aground while chasing the steam schooner Covadonga ( Chilean Navy). Independencia was destroyed by the ironclad turret ship Huáscar ( Peruvian Navy) to prevent her capture by Chile.[49][50] |
24 May
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Ava | United Kingdom | The British-India Steam Navigation Company steamer was hit amidships by the Brenhilda while en route from Calcutta for Madras, Colombo and London. Aga sank, in less than twenty minutes, 70 miles from the Sandheads drowning sixty-seven. An estimated 70 to 100 lives were lost.[51][52] |
June
15 June
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Scot's Craig | United Kingdom | Ran aground, in thick fog, under the Lizard Lighthouse, despite the foghorn sounding. Scot's Craig refloated on a rising tide and proceeded to Greenock.[53] |
July
1 July
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Foam | United Kingdom | The Plymouth schooner ran agound on Luburcur Beach, near St Anthony's Lighthouse, Cornwall with the loss of two crew. Foam was carrying sugar from her home port to Marseilles.[54] |
10 July
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Vittorio Emannele | Regia Marina | The frigate was stranded on a shoal off Ischia. She was refloated on 22 July.[55] |
12 July
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
State of Virginia | The steamship went ashore on the eastern end of Sable Island while en route from New York to Glasgow. Three women and two children lost their lives.[56][57] |
20 July
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Naiad | United Kingdom | The Falmouth schooner was wrecked on The Manacles, Cornwall during a south-west gale and poor visibility. Naiad was carrying coal to Falmouth and Truro from Port Talbot and was the second wreck on the rocks in three weeks.[58] |
21 July
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
S A Hawthorne | United Kingdom | The barge, with a cargo of shingle, foundered near Margate sands. Two crew were saved.[59] |
27 July
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Maipu | United Kingdom | The barque was wrecked in Hell Bay on Bryher, Isles of Scilly. She was bound for Hamburg from Iquique with a cargo of saltpetre. All seventeen crew saved.[60][28] |
River Lune | United Kingdom | The iron-barque in ballast from Lorient to Ardrossan was lost on Brothers Rock in Muncoy Neck, the channel between Annet and Melledgan, after a faulty chronometer put her off course. She sank in ten minutes, but the crew escaped to the nearby island of St Agnes, Isles of Scilly in the ship's boats.[60][28] |
30 July
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Alcaser | United Kingdom | The steamer collided with Flamingo and sank off Ushant. Flamingo took the crew to Dartmouth, Devon.[61] |
31 July
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Pericles | United Kingdom | The passenger ship grounded on Penere Point, on the shore-side of The Manacles, The Lizard and refloated on a rising tide two hours later. The ship continued on her journey to Sydney with 496 emigrants, and on the following day headed for Plymouth for repairs to a leak in the fore peak.[62] |
Unknown date
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Fanny | United Kingdom | The Rochester ship was wrecked on the French coast while en route for Dieppe.[63] |
Lady Belhaven | United Kingdom | Stranded on the Argo flat at the mouth of the Mutlah. Some of the crew were taken to Calcutta.[59] |
Samacood | Egypt | The government steamer sank near Réunion with the loss of twenty-four lives.[64] |
August
1 August
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Angela | United Kingdom | The Dundee London Shipping Company steamer ran aground on Ladybank, six miles south of Dundee during fog.[57] |
Hannah Louisa | United Kingdom | The ketch beached at Perranporth after the captain mistook Perran for Padstow. The crew were taken off by the rocket apparatus and the ship was refloated on 4 August.[65] |
4 August
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Hannah Louisa | United Kingdom | The Chepstow ketch foundered off Trevose Head, Cornwall while being towed to Padstow by the steam-tug Amazon. Two of the eight on board lost their lives.[65] |
Unnamed ship | France | The lugger went ashore near Hartland Quay, Devon.[66] |
7 August
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Marie Louise | Belgium | Wrecked on the Penarvan rocks, off Quessant while bound for Alicante. Seven of the thirty-four on board were saved.[67] |
11 August
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
SS Nankin | United Kingdom | The ship in ballast ran ashore at Mear's Point, Coverack, Cornwall in thick fog while out of London for Cardiff.[68][69] Refloated and towed to Falmouth in September.[70] |
13 August
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
City of London | United Kingdom | The passenger steam-boat sank on Barking beach following a collision with the Hamburg steamer Vesta ( German Empire). City of London was refloated on 16 August.[71] |
20 August
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Manilla | Italy | The Rubattino Line steamer grounded in the Suez Canal, stopping traffic.[72] |
21 August
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Peace | United Kingdom | The steamship capsized in Whitby harbour.[73] |
27 August
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Queen of Britain | United Kingdom | The brig was abandoned in the Bristol Channel. Her crew were rescued by Wolverhampton ( Royal National Lifeboat Institution).[5] |
Unknown date
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Barry | United Kingdom | Sank off North Foreland.[74] |
Louis David | The steamer en route for Naples was lost off Ushant sometime between 1 – 5 August. Seven of the twenty-seven on board survived.[75] |
September
3 September
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Salamander | United Kingdom | The Padstow schooner was hit by the 2,000 ton screw collier Lycham, 10 miles (16 km) off Hartland Point, and sank almost immediately.[76] |
4 September
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Columbia | Norway | The barque, from London for Quebec, was holed following a collision with either a fish or "some other sea monster". Columbia sank within thirty minutes of the crew taking to two boats and were picked up by the Dutch steamer Plealand, on 9 September.[77] |
6 September
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Brest | United Kingdom | The Cunard Line steamship with sails went ashore at Polbarrow near Lizard Point, Cornwall at full speed in thick fog. All the crew and migrants were saved by the RNLI lifeboat, Joseph Armstrong and local fishing boats.[78][79][80] |
Marion | United Kingdom | The Carnarvon owned iron ship ran aground on Rickham Sands, east of Salcombe harbour, Devon while carrying rice from Rangoon to London. The crew were saved.[81] |
9 September
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Favourite | United Kingdom | The Bute fishing boat was lost near Loch Fyne. All three crew drowned.[82] |
11 September
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Corrina | United Kingdom | The barque, carrying coffee, plumbago and cocoa-nut oil for London, was hit by the steamer Zeeland ( Belgium) and sank off Dungeness, with the loss of four lives.[83] |
18 September
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Malakoff | United Kingdom | The Newlyn lugger sank off Robin Hood's Bay, Yorkshire, after being struck by the Erith of London. Three lives lost.[84] |
20 September
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Sylvanus Blanchard | United States | Abandoned in the Atlantic Ocean while en route from Liverpool to Rio de Janeiro. The captain and nine men were picked up by the Vale of Nith.[85] |
22 September
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Erith | United Kingdom | The London collier collided with Orwell and sank in the Lower Hope Reach off Gravesend, Kent. All the crew were landed at Gravesend.[86] Erith was in collision with a fishing boat off Scarborough four days previous. |
Orwell | United Kingdom | The London collier collided with Erith and sank in the Lower Hope Reach off Gravesend, Kent. All the crew were landed at Gravesend.[86] |
23 September
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Unnamed herring craft | United Kingdom | The Flamborough herring craft sank after being struck by the fishing boat Mary of Fowey.[87] |
24 September
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Primitive | United Kingdom | The Mousehole smack sank off Scarborough, Yorkshire, after a collision with the Newcastle steamer Talisman which was bound for Rotterdam. All the crew were landed at Scarborough.[88] |
25 September
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
De Ruyter | Belgium | Aground in the Scheldt near Hoedekenskerke.[89] Refloated on 27 September and returned to service.[90] |
26 September
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Racer | United Kingdom | The Ramsgate fishing lugger was run down by the screw-steamer Pleiades off the North Foreland in the North Sea. One drowned.[91] |
28 September
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Anna Clara | The boiler of the steamer exploded while entering the bar at Santa Cruz, with the loss of two crew and a passenger. Most of the cargo and the mail was saved.[92] | |
Emmanuel | France | The brigantine stranded on the Sokendal coast, to the north of the Haadyr look-out station, Norway, and sank almost immediately.[93] |
Unknown date
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Quebec | United Kingdom | The Dominion Line steamer stranded off East Point, Prince Edward Island. The sixty passengers were taken off by Griffin.[94] |
Seagull | The steamship was wrecked on Maldive Island.[95] |
October
18 October
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Nuevo Pajano del Oceano | The ship caught fire while en route to Nuevitas from Havana and sank in the Old Bahama Channel. Seventeen of the crew were landed at New Orleans and forty-two passengers died.[96] |
26 October
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Sea Spray | United Kingdom | The Sunderland barque sank after catching fire approximately 240 miles from St Vincent. The crew took to the boats and arrived at St Vincent two days later.[97] |
27 October
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Sally | United States | The brigantine capsized during a gale in the Gulf of Mexico. Two survivors were picked by up by the Spanish steamer Enrique and landed at New Orleans.[98] |
November
5 November
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Taufahau | New South Wales | The two-masted brigantine ran aground off Seal Rocks, New South Wales.[99] |
9 November
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Florence and Johanna | United Kingdom | The Yarmouth smack was hit by another vessel and sank at the fishing grounds in the North Sea. The five crew drowned and only the master survived.[100] |
13 November
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Scarborough King | United Kingdom | The smack was swamped in a heavy sea and sank in the North Sea, with the loss of the skipper and all four crew.[101] |
Name unreported | United Kingdom | The mast of a smack was seen above water on the Scroby Sands, off Great Yarmouth. The crew was thought to have perished.[102] |
15 November
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Venerata | United Kingdom | The barque was abandoned off the coast of Portugal after springing a leak on 5 November following a south-east gale three days earlier. Fifty tons of pig iron was thrown overboard in an attempt to stay afloat and the crew abandoned ship when the Vega ( Norway) was nearby.[103] |
18 November
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Warren Hastings | United Kingdom | The barque left Lisbon for the Delaware River in ballast on 6 November, and during a heavy gale on 15 November was hit by large waves which took away the wheel-house. On 18 November the Tollington ( Canada) of Nova Scotia picked up the crew and transferred them to Mabel, and the crew were finally landed at Falmouth, Cornwall, England.[104] |
22 November
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Waubuno | Canada | The paddle steamer foundered off Christian Island, Lake Huron, with the loss of all 24 on board. |
Unknown date
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Edith | United Kingdom | The barque foundered in the Atlantic Ocean while en route for Queenstown from Philadelphia. Survivors were picked up by Atlas of the Cunard line and landed at New York.[105] |
December
4 December
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Relic | United Kingdom | The Brixham smack was driven onto the breakwater in Brixham harbour during a gale and became a total loss. Two fishing boats were grounded and others received damage.[106] |
5 December
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Romola | United Kingdom | The Arbroath schooner was taken in tow to Dartmouth by the steamer Yorkshireman ( United Kingdom). Romola was found dismasted and abandoned, in the English Channel approximately 60 miles west of Start Point.[107] |
11 December
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Alexandra | United Kingdom | The Penzance vessel was taken in tow by Bessie Belle after being hit on the port side by Secret ( United Kingdom), a schooner from Truro, 5 miles east of Hartland Point. Within three hours Alexandra sank and the crew were landed at Portreath.[108] |
Bristol City | United Kingdom | The steamer leaving Bristol for New York, went ashore, in thick fog, at Nelson Point, at the mouth of the River Avon.[109] |
19 December
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Derby | United Kingdom | The brig, carrying mahogany, foundered nine days out of Ninatitlan. The crew, bar two, were picked up by Resolute and the captain only survived a few days.[110] |
21 December
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Adelphoi | New South Wales | The barque was wrecked off Port Hacking, New South Wales, Australia. |
28 December
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Agnes Irving | New South Wales | The paddle steamer was wrecked in the Macleay River, Trial Bay, New South Wales, Australia. |
Unknown date
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Fenella | United Kingdom | Left Penzance, Cornwall in late November/early December with a cargo of fish for the Mediterranean, and had not been heard off for three weeks. It is feared she was lost (along with many other ships) during recent storms in the Bay of Biscay.[111] |
Unknown date
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Albatross | The steamer left Grimsby for Alexandria on 10 January and has not been sighted since.[26] | |
Carrie Annie | United Kingdom | The ship left Cadiz on 27 May, and sank after colliding with a Brazilian steamer. The crew were landed in Rio Grande.[112] |
Covadonga | Chilean Navy | The steam schooner was stranded in the roadstead at Antofogasta, Chile. She was refloated and returned to service.[113] |
E J Harland | United Kingdom | The full-rigged ship collided with another vessel and foundered. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Ardrossan, Ayrshire to New York, United States.[114] |
Glencoe | United Kingdom | Refloated after running agound in the Shanghai River, which detained her for a week along with her cargo of the new-seasons tea.[115] |
Glynllifon | United Kingdom | The Swansea vessel left the Coosaw River, South Carolina, with phosphate rock on 29 January. She was not seen or heard from again.[116] |
Petrel | The whaling schooner capsized in mid-ocean with the loss of all fourteen crew.[117] | |
Samanoot | Egypt | The steamer was lost between Mauritius and Egypt with the loss of twenty-fives lives.[118] |
Shenandoah | Zanzibar | Wrecked in the Persian Gulf with the loss of several lives. Shenandoah was involved in the War of Secession and passed to the Sultan of Zanzibar following arbitration at Geneva.[119] |
References
- ↑ "Belgian Merchant H-O" (PDF). Belgische Koopvaardij. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
- ↑ "Rescue of an Abandoned Vessel". The Cornishman (28). 23 January 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "Historical List of Shipwrecks at Chesil Beach & from Bridport to Lyme Regis". Burton Bradstock Online. Retrieved 27 December 2014.
- ↑ "Two of the crew ....". The Cornishman (31). 13 February 1879. p. 3.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Tovey, Ron. "A Chronology of Bristol Channel Shipwrecks" (PDF). Swansea Docks. Retrieved 20 December 2014.
- ↑ "The Wreck of the Mignon". The Cornishman (27). 16 January 1878. p. 4.
- ↑ "Stranding of a French Schooner". The Cornishman (27). 16 January 1879. p. 7.
- 1 2 3 4 "The Weather and its Results". The Cornishman (27). 16 January 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Newlyn". The Cornishman (27). 16 January 1879. p. 4.
- ↑ "Falmouth". The Cornishman (27). 16 January 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "A Falmouth Pilot Drowned". The Cornishman (27). 16 January 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "A Falmouth Pilot Drowned". The Cornishman (28). 23 January 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "An American Frigage Ashore". The Cornishman (28). 23 January 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "The Loss of the Bessie Grenfell". The Cornishman (32). 20 February 1879. p. 4.
- ↑ "An Aberdeen fishing boat". The Cornishman (28). 23 January 1879. p. 4.
- ↑ "Capsizing of a boat at Antwerp". The Cornishman (29). 30 January 1879. p. 7.
- 1 2 "Hard and Successful Work by Lieut Marrack, RN, of Penzance". The Cornishman (34). 6 March 1879.
- ↑ "Loss of a Fishing-Boat and Three Lives". The Cornishman (29). 30 January 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Miscellaneous". The Cornishman (39). 10 April 1879. p. 8.
- ↑ "Collision with an American Man-of-War". The Cornishman (29). 30 January 1879. p. 8.
- ↑ "Collision off Scilly". The Cornishman (29). 30 January 1879. p. 6.
- ↑ "Terrible Sufferings at Sea". The Cornishman (35). 13 March 1879. p. 6.
- ↑ "A Spanish Vessel". The Cornishman (27). 16 January 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "Wreck of a French Lugger at Porthcurno". The Cornishman (30). 6 February 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "Messrs Bazeley and Sons' schooner Beta". The Cornishman (32). 20 February 1879. p. 7.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Shipping Disasters". The Cornishman (33). 27 February 1879. p. 3.
- ↑ "Fishing lugger Dolphin". The Cornishman (33). 27 February 1879. p. 5.
- 1 2 3 Larn, Richard (1992). The Shipwrecks of the Isles of Scilly. Nairn: Thomas & Lochar. ISBN 0-946537-84-4.
- ↑ "Loss of a French Brig and Three Lives". The Cornishman (33). 27 February 1879.
- ↑ "The Wreck of the Adriatic". The Cornishman (34). 6 March 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Saved". The Cornishman (33). 27 February 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "Fifteen Lives Lost By A Collision In The Channel". The Cornishman (36). 20 March 1879. p. 6.
- ↑ "Islands of Scilly". The Cornishman (36). 20 March 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "Wreck of a French Schooner at Scilly". The Cornishman (37). 27 March 1879. p. 6.
- ↑ "Fearful Sufferings at Sea". The Cornishman (44). 15 May 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "A foreign brig ....". The Cornishman (38). 3 April 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Wreck of the Transport Steamer Clyde". The Cornishman (41). 24 April 1879. p. 5.
- 1 2 "Fishing-boat Ashore". The Cornishman (40). 17 April 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "England and Hayti". The Cornishman (42). 1 May 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Foundering of a Haytian War Vessel and Loss of 108 Lives". The Cornishman (48). 12 June 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Loss of a Steamer and 10 Lives". The Cornishman (44). 15 May 1879. p. 6.
- ↑ "Plymouth trawler Maria". The Cornishman (41). 24 April 1879. p. 4.
- ↑ "Latest News". The Cornishman (41). 1 May 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "Lamentable Disaster at Sea". The Cornishman (43). 8 May 1879. p. 6.
- ↑ "Ship Gladiolus". The Cornishman (42). 1 May 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Wreck of A French Brig. A Resolute and Stubborn Frenchman.". The Cornishman (45). 22 May 1879. p. 4.
- ↑ "Fatal Collision in the English Channel". The Cornishman (45). 22 March 1879. p. 8.
- ↑ "The crew of the sloop Frederick". The Cornishman (46). 29 May 1879. p. 7.
- 1 2 "Disastrous Naval Engagement". The Cornishman (47). 5 June 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "The War In South America. Wreck Of An Ironclad.". The Cornishman (48). 12 June 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Wreck of a British Steamer and Loss of 67 Lives". The Cornishman (46). 29 May 1879. p. 8.
- ↑ "The Loss Of The Steamer Ava". The Cornishman (50). 26 June 1879. p. 8.
- ↑ "The Lizard. Narrow Escape of a Brig". The Cornishman (49). 19 June 1879. pp. 4–5.
- ↑ "Wreck of a Schooner at Falmouth and Loss of Two Lives". The Cornishman (51). 3 July 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "Stranding Of An Italian Frigate". The Cornishman (55). 31 July 1879. p. 8.
- ↑ "State of Virginia". The Cornishman (55). 31 July 1879. p. 8.
- 1 2 "Miscellaneous". The Cornishman (56). 7 August 1879.
- ↑ "Wreck On The Manacles. A Light Needed There.". The Cornishman (54). 24 July 1879. p. 5.
- 1 2 "Our Ships And Our Sailors". The Cornishman (54). 24 July 1879. p. 8.
- 1 2 "Loss Of Two Large Vessels In A Fog". The Cornishman (55). 31 July 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "Mercantile Marine. Wrecks and Casualties". The Cornishman (56). 7 August 1879. p. 3.
- ↑ "Two Narrow Escapes Of An Emigrant Ship And 500 Persons". The Cornishman (56). 7 August 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "Accidents". Cornishman (55). 31 July 1879. p. 6.
- ↑ "Samacood". The Cornishman (55). 31 July 1879. p. 8.
- 1 2 "Sudden Foundering Of A Ketch. Loss Of Two Lives". The Cornishman (56). 7 August 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "French lugger". The Cornishman (56). 7 August 1879. p. 8.
- ↑ "Wreck Of A Belgian - Vessel. Loss Of 27 Lives". The Cornishman (57). 14 August 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "Ashore In A Fog". The Cornishman (57). 14 August 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "Local News". The Cornishman (59). 28 August 1879. p. 6.
- ↑ "Falmouth". The Cornishman (63). 25 September 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "Accidents". The Cornishman (58). 21 August 1879. p. 3.
- ↑ "Manilla". The Cornishman (59). 28 August 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Miscellaneous". The Cornishman (59). 28 August 1879. p. 6.
- ↑ "Miscellaneous". The Cornishman (58). 21 August 1879. p. 6.
- ↑ "Loss Of Twenty-Seven Lives". The Cornishman (56). 7 August 1879. p. 6.
- ↑ "The 2000 Ton Screw Collier Lycham". The Cornishman (61). 11 September 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Loss Of A Vessel From Contact With A Sea Monster". The Cornishman (64). 2 October 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Wreck Of The Steamer 'Brest'". The Cornishman (61). 11 September 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "The Lizard in Landewednack". Lizard History Society.
- ↑ "A Steamer With 130 Passengers Ashore At The Lizard. Distressing Panic On Board". The Cornishman (61). 11 September 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "Accidents". The Cornishman (61). 11 September 1879. p. 3.
- ↑ "Distant Fishery News". The Cornishman (61). 11 September 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Four Persons Drowned". The Cornishman (62). 18 September 1879. p. 6.
- ↑ "The County". The Cornishman (63). 25 September 1879. p. 4.
- ↑ "Five Days In An Open Boat". The Cornishman (71). 20 November 1879. p. 7.
- 1 2 "Sinking of The Steamer Which Sank The Newlyn Boat". The Cornishman (63). 25 September 1879. p. 8.
- ↑ "Mary of Fowey". The Cornishman (63). 25 September 1879. p. 8.
- ↑ "Another Boat (A Mousehole One) Sunk By A Steamer. The Crew Saved". The Cornishman (63). 25 September 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Stranding Of A Transatlantic Steamer". The Cornishman (64). 2 October 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Belgian Merchant A-G" (PDF). Belgische Koopvaardij. Retrieved 1 October 2010.
- ↑ "A Ramsgate Fishing Lugger Run Down". The Cornishman (64). 2 October 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Explosion On Board A Steamer". The Cornishman (68). 30 October 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "A Singular Shipwreck". The Cornishman (67). 23 October 1879. p. 8.
- ↑ "Stranding Of A Passenger Steamer". The Cornishman (61). 11 September 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Seagull". The Cornishman (64). 2 October 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Burning Of A Steamer. Forty-Two Lives Lost" (68). 30 October 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "A Ship On Fire At Sea. Exciting Scenes.". The Cornishman (71). 20 November 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "Terrible Sufferings At Sea.". The Cornishman (71). 20 November 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ Lettens, Jan. "Taufahau (+1879)". Wrecksite. Retrieved 5 November 2015.
- ↑ "Florence and Johanna". The Cornishman (70). 13 November 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Loss Of A Smack And All Hands". The Cornishman (73). 4 December 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "No title". The Cornishman (70). 20 November 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Loss of the Venerata". The Cornishman (79). 15 January 1880. p. 6.
- ↑ "Gale And Loss Of Life". The Cornishman (75). 18 December 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Wrecks And Loss Of Life". The Cornishman (73). 4 December 1879. p. 8.
- ↑ "Severe gale". The Cornishman (74). 11 December 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Florence and Johanna". The Cornishman (74). 11 December 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "Loss Of A Penzance Vessel". The Cornishman (75). 18 December 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "The Bristol City". The Cornishman (75). 18 December 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Disasters At Sea". The Cornishman (87). 11 March 1880. p. 5.
- ↑ "Penzance". The Cornishman (75). 18 December 1879. p. 4.
- ↑ "Our Ships And Our Men". The Cornishman (55). 31 July 1879. p. 8.
- ↑ "The War In South America". The Cornishman (50). 26 June 1879. p. 6.
- ↑ "E J Harland". The Yard. Retrieved 18 February 2017.
- ↑ "Occasional Notes". The Cornishman (53). 17 July 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "Overdue Vessel". The Cornishman (49). 19 June 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Accidents". The Cornishman (71). 20 November 1879. p. 7.
- ↑ "Wreck Of An Egyptian Steamer And Loss Of 25 Lives". The Cornishman (53). 17 July 1879. p. 5.
- ↑ "Telegram". The Cornishman (71). 20 November 1879. p. 8.
Ship events in 1879 | |||||||||||
Ship launches: | 1874 | 1875 | 1876 | 1877 | 1878 | 1879 | 1880 | 1881 | 1882 | 1883 | 1884 |
Ship commissionings: | 1874 | 1875 | 1876 | 1877 | 1878 | 1879 | 1880 | 1881 | 1882 | 1883 | 1884 |
Ship decommissionings: | 1874 | 1875 | 1876 | 1877 | 1878 | 1879 | 1880 | 1881 | 1882 | 1883 | 1884 |
Shipwrecks: | 1874 | 1875 | 1876 | 1877 | 1878 | 1879 | 1880 | 1881 | 1882 | 1883 | 1884 |
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