Sunday, April 22, 2012

Steamship Canonbury ~ 28 March 1888

Annual Report of the Operations of the United States Life-Saving Service for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1888:

The British steamship Canonbury, of London, with a cargo of sugar from Matanzas, Cuba, bound to Boston, Massachusetts, at half past 2 o’clock in the afternoon of this date, struck on the west end of Old Man’s Shoal (Nantucket Island) five miles to the southeast of Surfside Station (Second District) coast of Massachusetts. A fog had prevailed for several days, and the captain, who had no observations after getting north of Cape Hatteras (North Carolina) was uncertain of the ship’s position. Half an hour after the accident the fog lifted a little, and the watch at the station descried the vessel with a flag at half-mast. He gave the alarm at once, and the station crew hastily manned the surf boat. The surf was very high and it was some twenty minutes before they got out away from the beach. They then pulled for the steamer, but when they had gone about four miles they met her crew of twenty four men, who had abandoned her in two boars and were on their way to the shore. The keeper turned back with them, and, when they were off the station outside the surf, directed them to anchor. He then took a portion of them into the surf boat and landed them. A large number of people had gathered on the beach; with assistance from them the keeper launched the large surf boat, and, making two trips out to the anchored boats, brought the remainder of the crew safely to land. He had, before attempting to land through the surf, directed the men to remain in the boat until she should strike the beach. Nevertheless, one of them, as the boat was running in on a high sea, was thrown into great consternation and jumped overboard. Surf man Gardner instantly plunged into the water, seized the man with one hand, and, clinging to the boat with the other, brought him to the beach. But for the presence of mind and nerve of the surf man the man would probably have drowned. The heavy surf rendered the landing of the unfortunate crew a very exciting affair, as the people who saw it declare, while the rescued men and witnesses alike testify that the whole exploit was marked by great coolness and skill on the part of Keeper Veeder and efficiency and discipline on the part of the life saving crew. The shipwrecked men were taken to the station and provided with dry garments from the store of clothing sent by the Women’s National Relief Association. Richard Williams, a seaman of the steamer, had been sick at the time of the accident, and by order of a medical attendant he was removed from the station to a neighboring cottage; but the exposure and fatigue of landing had been greater than he could endure, and at 2 o’clock of the following morning he died. With the exception of one man, the steamer’s people were fed and sheltered at the station till the morning of the 30th, when the captain arranged for other quarters for them. The vessel drove over the shoal during the night following the casualty and drifted some five miles to the northeast, upon what is locally known as Pochick Reef, where she sunk with the water up to her lower yard. She was examined on the succeeding 1st day of April, with  view to saving her engines, but the current was so strong that divers could not work and the project was abandoned The vessel subsequently broke up where she lay, and became, with her cargo, a total loss. With the exception of the ship’s papers and the officers’ instruments, nothing of importance was saved from the wreck.

No comments:

Post a Comment