Showing posts with label 1910. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1910. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Steamer Arroyo ~ 20 February 1910

The British steamer Arroyo (2,307 tons) ran aground on Core Banks about five miles south of the station during a dense fog. The vessel was on passage from Santiago de Cuba to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, with a cargo of iron ore valued at $140,512.00 with a crew of 30.

Annual Report of the Operations of the United States Life-Saving Service for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1910:

Stranded during a dense fog at 11.10 p.m. on the 20th, 5 miles south of station. Discovered by patrolman on the morning of the 21st. Life saving crew went to her assistance with beach apparatus, and made 5 unsuccessful attempts to shoot a line on board. Seeing that they would not be able to effect a landing with the breeches buoy, the keeper sent the crew to the station for a surfboat. While thus engaged the steamer’s crew of 30 succeeded in making a safe landing in their own boats, the keeper directing them as to the best place to come ashore. Four of them were furnished dry clothing and 28 were sheltered from the 21st to the 27th. The master and mate were sheltered until Mar. 1. The master and part of the crew were carried on board 6 different times in surfboat to save the crew’s personal effects. The underwriter’s agent was also taken out twice. The vessel became a total loss. 

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Schooner Frances ~ 1 February 1910

Annual Report of the Operations of the United States Life-Saving Service for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1910:

Wreck of the schooner Frances, February 1, 1910

In the latter part of January, 1910, the schooner Frances, a wooden vessel of 67 tons, left New York for Jacksonville, Fla., with a cargo of cement. She carried a crew of eight men, all told. She went to pieces near the Big Kinnakeet Life-Saving Station, a few miles north of Cape Hatteras, on the morning of February 1, and, but for the discovery of a piece of wreckage bearing her name, her fate might never have been definitely known, as all hands on board perished.

The night proceeding the day of the disaster was so stormy as to make the coast guard of the service stationed on the outlying sands of the coast mentioned more than ordinarily vigilant. A strong gale had sprung up from the northwest in the early evening, accompanied by snow flurries. As the wind swept over the beach if kicked up the dry sand from among the hummocks and drove it out over the surf, snow, sand, and flying spray forming a curtain that shut out the view seaward as effectually as a fog. Moreover, the temperature had fallen to the freezing point and the sea was exceptionally high. Notwithstanding the weather conditions, the night was an eventful one for the life-saving crews near Cape Hatteras, yet somewhere at sea the gale was driving a ship to destruction on their beach.

When day broke on February 1 it was still snowing, but the temperature had risen several degrees, and the wind, while still fresh, had moderated to 35 miles an hour. The snow and sand flurries, however, still obscured the view along the beach, and the surf was still very high. Ordinarily the patrol is maintained only in the night-time, but on this morning the weather was so bad off the cape that the performance of that duty at the Big Kinnakeet station was not discontinued with the return of the day. At 8 a.m. Surfman C.R. Hooper, temporarily in charge of the Big Kinnakeet station crew, sent Surfman E.F. Miller on patrol southward toward Cape Hatteras. Half an hour later Miller presented himself at the station in a state of great exhaustion from running, and announced that he had discovered a vessel coming on the beach. What he had seen is set forth here in his own words:

She bore to the southward and eastward of my position, which was about a mile from the station, and appeared to have a piece of her mainsail set and the fore staysail on. I had a glimpse of her only for a moment. After a little I saw her a second time, and it appeared to me that she had hauled more to the southward. I had three views of her, all very brief and obscured by the squalls of snow driving from the beach. I did not proceed farther toward her or tarry to try to make out her hull and appearance, knowing that if she held on her course she must surely become a wreck.

Another member of the Big Kinnakeet crew also got a view of the vessel. He testifies that on hearing Miller make his report to the acting keeper he caught up a marine glass and looked down the beach from an open window. Owing to the driving snow and the spray from the breakers, he could not distinguish her hull plainly, but made out two masts, one of them upright, the other hanging over as if broken. The vessel seemed to him to be stationery. It does not appear from the evidence that any other member of this crew saw the vessel again before she broke up.

The acting keeper sent a telephone message to the Little Kinnakeet and Cape Hatteras Life-Saving Stations, several miles to the northward and southward, respectively, requesting the assistance of the crews at those places, he being of the opinion that the vessel would strike within the limits of his patrol. The crew under his temporary command had in the meanwhile made the beach-apparatus cart ready, and in a short time all hands were on their way down the beach.

The crew of the Cape Hatteras station reached the vicinity of the disaster first, having set out unencumbered by any apparatus. One of their number went on ahead of the rest with instructions to meet the Big Kinnakeet crew and help them along with their life-saving equipment. This Surfman passed the vessel shortly after 9 o’clock. Relating what he saw offshore, he says:

When the breakers ran back I could see the shape of the hull of a vessel her entire length. As far as I could tell, she was heading nearly northeast. No masts were standing, but they were washing about on top of the wreck. I saw no signs of life, although I remained watching a couple of minutes. I judged the vessel to be between 550 and 600 yards from the beach.

The three life-saving crews met about 930 a.m. There was no wreck work to be performed, however, for the ship had already been destroyed. There were no masts to be seen, nor any parts of a broken hull; “only confused wreckage in the boiling surf.” The wreck stuff, which consisted of some spars and other debris, did not drift away in the tremendous southerly current then running, from which it would seem that it was held fast by rigging to submerged parts of the vessel.

The Surfmen were disposed up and down the beach in readiness to take from the surf any survivors or bodies that might be cast up. Nothing more could be done in the circumstances. Those in command on the beach having satisfied themselves after a period of watching that there was no hope of saving any of the ship’s company, the service crews separated and returned to their stations.

The officer who investigated this disaster was on the beach the day following its occurrence. His report contains the following with respect to the state of the sea and what he observed in the locality of the wreck:

The surf was still so high and powerful as far out as the outer bar as to preclude any attempt to launch a boat, even under the guidance of the most able crew. The tremendous combers crashed on the beach with irresistible force, presenting, as they broke, not the curling, concave front so familiar, but simply dropping down in vertical walls.

All that remained of the vessel were two spars on the outer bar, about 600 yards offshore, one, apparently a mast, lying horizontally with some top hamper at one end, and the other, a smaller timber like a broken lower boom, standing vertically. Both timbers were moving, but were evidently attached to some object under water, since they remained practically in one position.

Continuing our progress southward we found one of the quarter-boards of the vessel with her name upon it. A little farther along a large portion of her half-breadth hull had been washed up, and at a distance of probably a mile from the wreck the entire breadth of her stern, with some 20 feet of the forward frame attached to it, had come ashore. On this was painted “Frances of New York.” An examination of these several groups of timbers showed that they were rotten at the ends and near the fastenings.

As there were no survivors, what took place aboard the vessel before she came ashore, or what circumstance, or combination of circumstances, brought misfortune upon her can only be conjectured. The investigating officer ventures the following hypotheses as within the range of possibility First, that the vessel may have become waterlogged and in danger of sinking from previous stress of weather, and as a last desperate hazard her master tried to beach her to save the crew; second, that he might have thought he had passed the Diamond Shoals, and consequently hauled more to the wind to come under the lee of the land and lay his course to his destination, thus unknowingly getting too close inshore; or, third, he may have been in entire ignorance of his whereabouts during prevalence of the gale that drove him ashore and unable to control the movements of his ship. The opinion was also advanced that the vessel was a derelict when she struck, and that her crew may have been taken off by some passing vessel. As no survivors were ever reported, this theory seems no more susceptible of proof that then others.

Schooner Frances ~ 1 February 1910

Annual Report of the Operations of the United States Life-Saving Service for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1910:

In the latter part of January, 1910, the schooner Frances, a wooden vessel of 67 tons, left New York for Jacksonville, Fla., with a cargo of cement. She carried a crew of eight men, all told. She went to pieces near the Big Kinnakeet Life-Saving Station, a few miles north of Cape Hatteras, on the morning of February 1, and, but for the discovery of a piece of wreckage bearing her name, her fate might never have been definitely known, as all hands on board perished.

The night preceding the day of the disaster was so stormy as to make the coast guard of the service stationed on the outlying sands of the coast mentioned more than ordinarily vigilant. A strong gale had sprung up from the northwest in the early evening, accompanied by snow flurries. As the wind swept over the beach if kicked up the dry sand from among the hummocks and drove it out over the surf, snow, sand, and flying spray forming a curtain that shut out the view seaward as effectually as a fog. Moreover, the temperature had fallen to the freezing point and the sea was exceptionally high. Notwithstanding the weather conditions, the night was an eventful one for the life-saving crews near Cape Hatteras, yet somewhere at sea the gale was driving a ship to destruction on their beach.

When day broke on February 1 it was still snowing, but the temperature had risen several degrees, and the wind, while still fresh, had moderated to 35 miles an hour. The snow and sand flurries, however, still obscured the view along the beach, and the surf was still very high. Ordinarily the patrol is maintained only in the night-time, but on this morning the weather was so bad off the cape that the performance of that duty at the Big Kinnakeet station was not discontinued with the return of the day. At 8 a.m. Surfman C.R. Hooper, temporarily in charge of the Big Kinnakeet station crew, sent Surfman E.F. Miller on patrol southward toward Cape Hatteras. Half an hour later Miller presented himself at the station in a state of great exhaustion from running, and announced that he had discovered a vessel coming on the beach. What he had seen is set forth here in his own words:

She bore to the southward and eastward of my position, which was about a mile from the station, and appeared to have a piece of her mainsail set and the fore stay sail on. I had a glimpse of her only for a moment. After a little I saw her a second time, and it appeared to me that she had hauled more to the southward. I had three views of her, all very brief and obscured by the squalls of snow driving from the beach. I did not proceed farther toward her or tarry to try to make out her hull and appearance, knowing that if she held on her course she must surely become a wreck.

Another member of the Big Kinnakeet crew also got a view of the vessel. He testifies that on hearing Miller make his report to the acting keeper he caught up a marine glass and looked down the beach from an open window. Owing to the driving snow and the spray from the breakers, he could not distinguish her hull plainly, but made out two masts, one of them upright, the other hanging over as if broken. The vessel seemed to him to be stationery. It does not appear from the evidence that any other member of this crew saw the vessel again before she broke up.

The acting keeper sent a telephone message to the Little Kinnakeet and Cape Hatteras Life-Saving Stations, several miles to the northward and southward, respectively, requesting the assistance of the crews at those places, he being of the opinion that the vessel would strike within the limits of his patrol. The crew under his temporary command had in the meanwhile made the beach-apparatus cart ready, and in a short time all hands were on their way down the beach.

The crew of the Cape Hatteras station reached the vicinity of the disaster first, having set out unencumbered by any apparatus. One of their number went on ahead of the rest with instructions to meet the Big Kinnakeet crew and help them along with their life-saving equipment. This surfman passed the vessel shortly after 9 o’clock. Relating what he saw offshore, he says:

When the breakers ran back I could see the shape of the hull of a vessel her entire length. As far as I could tell, she was heading nearly northeast. No masts were standing, but they were washing about on top of the wreck. I saw no signs of life, although I remained watching a couple of minutes. I judged the vessel to be between 550 and 600 yards from the beach.



Sunday, February 12, 2012

Schooner Martha E. Wallace ~ 21 December 1910

Annual Report of the Operations of the United States Life-Saving Service for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1911:

At 6.30 a.m. the south patrol of the Cape Lookout (N.C.) station discovered the four-masted schooner Martha E. Wallace, 1,108 tons register, stranded on Lookout Shoals, 3 miles south of the station and 1-1/2 miles offshore. She was bound from Brunswick, GA, to New York City with a cargo of pine cross ties, and had run out of her course my mistaking lights. The life-savers went out to her and stood by for a time while the ship's captain (Osborne Ray) was making up his mind whether or not to leave the vessel. The captain finally decided, however, to abandon her, as she was rapidly filling. Her crew of 9 men were accordingly landed. The next day, the sea having moderated, the personal belongings of the crew were saved from the wreck. The vessel became a total loss, and but a small portion of her cargo was saved.

All nine crew men were saved. They were: Captain Osborne Ray, Brooklyn, New York; Mate J.S. Capp, Rockland, Maine; 2nd Mate S.P. Stovell, Portland, Maine; Cook, Charles R. Hamilton, Lakeport, New Hampshire; Engineer Gustav A. Linden, Germany Seamen, L. Eskeldsen, J. Proffensen and Correlson Olsen of Norway; and E. Fredelarg, Finland.

Wreck of the Martha E. Wallace


Painting of the Martha E. Wallace provided by
Lisa Hanson, the Great Grandaughter of Capt. Ray.
She was built by the Mather Shipping Co.
On December 21, 1910, the schooner Martha E. Wallace, built in 1902 and owned by Amos D. Carver and others of New York City, stranded on Lookout Shoals due to the negligence of the second mate in mistaking the light house for the lightship. The incident occurred during clear weather and a moderate northwest gale. She was discovered by Surfman Walter M. Yeomans. Keeper Gaskill's report follows:

"Dec. 21st at 6:30 this a.m. the south patrol discovered a four masted Schooner a shore on the South Side of Cape Lookout Shoals about one and a half miles from the beach and three miles from the station. We got out the power life boat at once and went to her which proved to be the Sch. MARTHA E. WALLACE with cargo of cross ties from Brunswick, Geo bound to New York. A short time after we arrived the Capt. decided to leave the ship as she was pounding heavy and fast filling up having then four feet of water in the hole and the steam pump going steady. We went along side and took of the Capt. and crew, nine all tole with their personal effects. Also taking their large boat in tow and arrived at the station at 11:05 a.m.

December 22nd. Capt and crew still at the station. Storming, so that nothing could be done by wreckers.

Dec. 25th. Tug I.J. MERRITT went down to Schr early. Revenue Cutter SEMINOLE also came up in the early forenoon and anchored of the wreck. In the afternoon both steamers came up in the cove and we carted down their personal effects and the stores brought from ship and the Capt and crew went on board the tug in their own or Schr's boat having previously procured passage to Norfolk, Va."
Image from the Frank E. Claes Vintage Photograph Collection
at the Maine Maritime Museum.


Friday, January 6, 2012

Bark Spero ~ 24 December 1910

Annual Report for the Operations of the United States Life-Saving Services for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1911:

The Norwegian bark Spero, of 679 tons register, bound from Barbadoes, West Indies, to New York with a crew of 12 men, stranded before daylight on Hatteras Beach, 2 miles southwest of the Durants (NC) station. Before she struck, the patrol burned a Coston signal to warn her away, but apparently the warning was unheeded, for she failed to change her course. The station lookout saw the patrolman’s warning signal and called all hands. Upon the patrolman’s arrival at the station with the news the Creeds Hill crew were notified by telephone, after which the Durants crew hurried along the beach to the scene with the beach apparatus. A line was fired across the wreck, which lay 300 yards offshore. The Creeds Hill crew arriving at this juncture, assisted in the work of rigging up the apparatus. This accomplished, 9 men—all that were on the wreck—were landed, the three others in the crew having made shore in a boat before the arrival of the life-savers. The shipwrecked men were succored at the Durants station until their departure, four days later. The Spero became a total loss.

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Schooner Thomas G. Smith ~ 10 April 1910

Annual Report of the Operations of the United States Life-Saving Service for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1910:

Stranded 9 miles northeast of station at 2:30 a.m. and sank. Some fishermen discovered her at sunrise and notified keeper. Life saving crew landed her crew of 7, and their dunnage, with surfboat, and brought ashore the schooner’s yawl. Four of the sailors were sheltered for 2 days.

Wreck of the Thomas G. Smith

At 2:30 a.m. on April 10, 1910, the three-masted schooner Thomas G. Smith made a miscalculation in lights, stranded and sunk 9 miles northeast of the station and about 400 yards from the beach. She was en route from Charleston, SC to New York City with a load of coal.

Local fishermen discovered the vessel at sunrise and reported it to the station around 8 a.m. Keeper Willis was away so Number 1 Surfman Freddit Gillikin launched the lifeboat and went to the vessel with a crew from the station. They removed the vessel's crew along with their personal belongings, and brought them to the station where they were cared for until the 12th. Although the lifesavers were away from the station for over 8 hours, saving 8 lives, the keeper's report contains less than 60 words:

"This vessel stranded nine miles N.E. 1/2 east from this station weather smoky at sunrise some fishermen who were camping near by discovered her and walked to this station and reported same. At 8,20 a.m. the men left station with Beebe surf boat No. 1 man in charge. Services rendered crew with all their belongings took yawl ashore."

The rescued crew of the Smith were: E.C. Perkins, Captain, Maine; V.M. Brown, Nova Scotia; Henry Joseph, Camden, NJ; John Dent, NC; Frank Soloman, William Persall, Richard Wallace - all of Philadelphia, PA. The Thomas G. Smith and her cargo were completely lost.

Monday, January 2, 2012

Schooner William H. Davidson ~ 12 December 1910

Annual Report of the Operations of the United States Life-Saving Service for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1911:

Shortly before daylight the south patrol of the Paul Gamiels Station (NC) discovered the three-masted schooner William H. Davidson stranded, 1-1/2 miles south of his station and 150 yards offshore. When the vessel struck her rudder was carried away, as was also the lifeboat and davits. The patrolman burned a Coston signal to inform those on board that assistance was near, then hastened to the station. After telephoning news of the wreck to the Kitty Hawk station, 6 miles to the southward, the Paul Gamiels Hill crew went to the wreck with the breeches-buoy apparatus. A line was fired squarely across the vessel. The breeches-buoy apparatus was quickly rigged up, and the schooner’s crew of 6 men were safely landed. The crew of the Kitty Hawk station did not arrive on the scene until after the rescue had been made, but they helped to save the personal property of the sailors, which was brought ashore in the breeches buoy. The schooner was totally lost, and but a small part of her cargo of lumber was saved.