List of shipwrecks in 1891

Summary

The list of shipwrecks in 1891 includes ships sunk, foundered, grounded, or otherwise lost during 1891.

table of contents
← 1890 1891 1892 →
Jan Feb Mar Apr
May Jun Jul Aug
Sep Oct Nov Dec
References

January edit

2 January edit

List of shipwrecks: 2 January 1891
Ship State Description
Thames   United Kingdom The Penzance steamer was on a voyage to London when she grounded on the Chesil Bank in thick fog.[1]

8 January edit

List of shipwrecks: 8 January 1891
Ship State Description
Kaffraria   United Kingdom
 
Part of the wreck of Kaffraria in March 2007
The cargo steamer was wrecked in the River Elbe in Germany.

9 January edit

List of shipwrecks: 9 January 1891
Ship State Description
James W. Wherren   United States The schooner was stranded in a storm at Barrancas Light, Pensacola, Florida.[2]

11 January edit

List of shipwrecks: 11 January 1891
Ship State Description
Charles H. Boynton   United States The schooner was wrecked on Libby Island, near Machias, Maine and became a total loss. Crew made it to shore in her dories.[3]

Unknown date edit

List of shipwrecks: Unknown January 1891
Ship State Description
Veteran   United States The schooner left Gloucester, Massachusetts on 7 January for the Georges Bank and vanished. Lost with all 12 hands.[4]

February edit

3 February edit

List of shipwrecks: 3 February 1891
Ship State Description
Senator Morgan   United States The schooner was wrecked at Cow Bay. Crew made it to shore.[5]

5 February edit

List of shipwrecks: 5 February 1891
Ship State Description
Chiswick   United Kingdom The 1,261-ton steamship ran aground in calm weather on the northeast ledges of the Seven Stones Reef, while bound for St Nazaire, France, with coal from Cardiff, Wales. The captain is supposed to have said "every man for himself" before going down along with ten crew and his ship. Eight survivors were picked up by the Sevenstones Lightship's longboat.[6][7]

6 February edit

List of shipwrecks: 6 February 1891
Ship State Description
Hattie G. McFarland   United States The bark was stranded on Santa Rosa Island, Florida (30°19′N 87°18′W / 30.317°N 87.300°W / 30.317; -87.300 (Hattie G. McFarland)).[2]

7 February edit

List of shipwrecks: 7 February 1891
Ship State Description
Sarah E. Lee   United States The schooner was wrecked at Lockeport, Nova Scotia in heavy seas, a total loss. Crew was rescued.[8]

18 February edit

List of shipwrecks: 18 February 1891
Ship State Description
Bruce   United Kingdom The sailing ship capsized in New York Harbor. She was salvaged and placed in use as a coal storage hulk.

19 February edit

List of shipwrecks: 19 February 1891
Ship State Description
Trignac   France The steamer sprang a leak, blew up and sank within five minutes, between the Isles of Scilly and the Seven Stones Reef. She was carrying coal from Newport to St Nazaire.[7]

20 February edit

List of shipwrecks: 20 February 1891
Ship State Description
Teresa Garnham   Chile The ship was sailing from Valparaiso to Chiloé when she struck a rock. The crew took to her boats and reached port.[9]

March edit

1 March edit

List of shipwrecks: 1 March 1891
Ship State Description
H.L.C.   France The brigantine ran aground on the Mixon Shoal, in the Bristol Channel and was wrecked. Her crew survived. She was on a voyage from Port Talbot, Glamorgan, United Kingdom to Pornic, Loire-Inférieure.[10]

9 March edit

List of shipwrecks: 9 March 1891
Ship State Description
Dundela   United Kingdom The cargo ship was wrecked at "Straythe" with the loss of a crew member. She was on a voyage from São Miguel Island, Azores, Portugal to Hull, Yorkshire.[11]

13 March edit

List of shipwrecks: 13 March 1891
Ship State Description
USS Galena   United States Navy While under tow by the tug USS Nina (  United States Navy), the decommissioned armed steamer ran aground in fog on Devil's Bridge — a reef off Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts — without loss of life. She was refloated several days later. Deemed damaged beyond repair, she was sold for salvage on 2 May 1892.[12]
USS Nina   United States Navy While towing the steamer USS Galena (  United States Navy), the 137-foot (42 m) tug ran aground in fog on Devil's Bridge — a reef off Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts — without loss of life. She was refloated several days later, repaired, and returned to service.[13]
Roxburgh Castle   United Kingdom The 1,222-ton cargo steamer was on a voyage from Newport, Wales, to Piraeus, Greece, with a cargo of coal when she collided with the sailing ship British Peer (  United Kingdom) 120 nautical miles (220 km; 140 mi) southwest of the Isles of Scilly during the Great Blizzard of 1891. Roxburgh Castle sank, losing 22 of her 24 crew members.[14]

15 March edit

List of shipwrecks: 15 March 1891
Ship State Description
USS Triana   United States Navy The 137-foot (42 m), 450-ton tug was wrecked off the coast of Massachusetts on a sandbar off the east end of Cuttyhunk Island because of a navigational error by her crew. She sank in up to 20 feet (6.1 m) of water just west of Canapitsit Channel at 41°25′15″N 070°55′02″W / 41.42083°N 70.91722°W / 41.42083; -70.91722 (USS Triana).[15]

17 March edit

List of shipwrecks: 17 March 1891
Ship State Description
Utopia   United Kingdom
 
Utopia

The passenger ship collided with the battleship HMS Anson (  Royal Navy) in the Bay of Gibraltar and sank with the loss of 552 of the 880 people aboard.

19 March edit

List of shipwrecks: 19 March 1891
Ship State Description
Bay of Panama   United Kingdom The full-rigged ship was driven ashore at Penare Point, Cornwall with the loss of eight lives. She was on a voyage from Calcutta, India to Dundee, Forfarshire.[16]

20 March edit

List of shipwrecks: 20 March 1891
Ship State Description
Sovereign   Norway The full-rigged ship was destroyed by fire while loading coal.

April edit

2 April edit

List of shipwrecks: 2 April 1891
Ship State Description
Amicus   United Kingdom The barque was stranded on Flug Island Shoals hear the West Pass to Apalachicola Bay. Florida.[2]

6 April edit

List of shipwrecks: 6 April 1891
Ship State Description
Premier   United States Carrying 18 fishermen, seven crewmen, and a cargo of 350 tons of cannery supplies, the 307.69-gross register ton, 141.7-foot (43.2 m), three-masted schooner was wrecked during a snowstorm in Ramsey Bay (55°10′N 160°00′W / 55.167°N 160.000°W / 55.167; -160.000 (Ramsey Bay)) in the Territory of Alaska on the south coast of the Alaska Peninsula. All on board survived. Premier was salvaged, repaired, and returned to service.[17]

15 April edit

List of shipwrecks: 15 April 1891
Ship State Description
Dashing Wave   United States During a voyage in the Territory of Alaska from Sand Point to a destination identified as "Isatok" with a crew of eight and a cargo of 120 tons of general merchandise on board, the 141.46-ton 106-foot (32.3 m) schooner was wrecked without loss of life during a gale and heavy snowstorm in a location identified as "Coal Bay." This location often is equated with Coal Harbor (55°20′13″N 160°36′15″W / 55.3369°N 160.6042°W / 55.3369; -160.6042 (Coal Harbor)) on Unga Island in the Shumagin Islands, but it might instead be Coal Bay (55°22′N 161°22′W / 55.367°N 161.367°W / 55.367; -161.367 (Coal Bay)) on the south coast of the Alaska Peninsula. The wreck may also have occurred in Zachary Bay (55°20′44″N 160°37′54″W / 55.3455°N 160.6316°W / 55.3455; -160.6316 (Zachary Bay)) – often called "Coal Bay" at the time – on the coast of Unga Island, and some early reports place it somewhere in the Bering Sea, while an 1892 report places it on Hair Seal Cape – now known as Seal Cape (55°59′42″N 158°25′58″W / 55.9950°N 158.4328°W / 55.9950; -158.4328 (Seal Cape)) – on the south coast of the Alaska Peninsula.[17]

19 April edit

List of shipwrecks: 19 April 1891
Ship State Description
Lydia Skolfield   United States Carrying a cargo of cottonseed oil, the square-rigged ship was wrecked in fog without loss of life at Newport, Rhode Island, off Bateman's Beach, just east of Butter Ball Rock. Her wreck sank in up to 30 feet (9.1 m) of water at 41°27′31″N 071°21′41″W / 41.45861°N 71.36139°W / 41.45861; -71.36139 (Lydia Skolfield).[18]

23 April edit

List of shipwrecks: 23 April 1891
Ship State Description
Blanco Encalada   Chilean Navy 1891 Chilean Civil War: The Almirante Cochrane-class central battery ship was sunk by a torpedo gunboat in the port of Caldera, Chile.

28 April edit

List of shipwrecks: 29 May 1891
Ship State Description
SS Lawrence   New Zealand The 399grt collier damaged her propellor on the Mōkihinui River bar[19] and broke her back on the beach.[20]

May edit

2 May edit

List of shipwrecks: 2 May 1891
Ship State Description
Sadie F. Caller   United States During a voyage from San Francisco, California, to Chignik Bay, Territory of Alaska, carrying 158 cannery workers as passengers, a 450-ton salmon-canning outfit as cargo, and a crew of 10, the 413.81-gross register ton, 393.25-foot (119.86 m) schooner was wrecked on a sand bar whose position had shifted without the knowledge of the crew, altering the navigable channel, at the entrance to Chignik Bay Harbor (56°18′N 158°24′W / 56.300°N 158.400°W / 56.300; -158.400 (Chignik Bay Harbor)) on the Gulf of Alaska coast of the Alaska Peninsula near Chignik. The steamer Polar Bear (  United States) towed her to shore two hours later, and she was beached and declared a total loss. By 1913, her wreck reportedly had sunk in 60 feet (18.3 m) of water.[21]

3 May edit

List of shipwrecks: 3 May 1891
Ship State Description
Clan Lamont   United Kingdom The ship ran aground and sank off Vindiloas Point, Batticaloa, Sri Lanka.[22]

17 May edit

List of shipwrecks: 17 May 1891
Ship State Description
Martaban   United Kingdom The barque ran aground and was wrecked off the coast of Cuba. She was on a voyage from the Salt River, Jamaica to Glasgow, Renfrewshire.[23]

21 May edit

List of shipwrecks: 21 May 1891
Ship State Description
Thomas Hume   United States The lumber schooner sank in Lake Michigan in a squall. Lost with all 6 hands.[24][25]

June edit

4 June edit

List of shipwrecks: 4 June 1891
Ship State Description
Fayette Brown   United States The schooner was rammed and sunk by Northern Queen (flag unknown) in Pelee Passage in Lake Erie in 60 feet (18 m) of water. One crewman of Fayette Brown jumped aboard Northern Queen and the rest were rescued from her rigging by Robert Mills (flag unknown). The wreck was removed in 1893.[26][27][28]

16 June edit

List of shipwrecks: 16 June 1891
Ship State Description
David F. Low   United States The schooner was wrecked at Port au Port, Newfoundland in heavy seas. Crew was rescued.[29]

July edit

18 July edit

List of shipwrecks: 18 July 1891
Ship State Description
Princesse Stephanie   Belgium The steamer was wrecked off Christiansand, Norway.[30]

Unknown date edit

List of shipwrecks: Unknownd date in July 1891
Ship State Description
Harrier   United Kingdom
 
Harrier
The schooner was wrecked on the Great Barrier Reef.

August edit

27 August edit

List of shipwrecks: 27 August 1891
Ship State Description
John J. Whittier   United States The schooner was wrecked at Flower's Cove, Newfoundland. Crew was rescued.[31]

Unknown date edit

List of shipwrecks: Unknown August 1891
Ship State Description
H. A. DeWitt   United States The schooner was found aground and abandoned four miles (6.4 km) east of St. Andrews Bay, Florida.[2]

September edit

5 September edit

List of shipwrecks: 5 September 1891
Ship State Description
USFC Grampus     United States Fish Commission The schooner, a fisheries research ship, was on a voyage from Hyannis to Woods Hole, Massachusetts, with U.S. Fish Commissioner Marshall McDonald and his wife and daughter, Assistant U.S. Fish Commissioner J. W. Collins, and two female guests aboard when she ran aground on L'Hommidieu Shoal in Vineyard Sound during a southeasterly storm. McDonald, Collins, McDonald's family members, and the other two women made it safely to Falmouth, Massachusetts, in a dory, and Grampus later was refloated and returned to service.[32]

6 September edit

List of shipwrecks: 6 September 1891
Ship State Description
Fiji   United Kingdom The barque was wrecked at Moonlight Head, Victoria with the loss of twelve of her 26 crew. She was on a voyage from Hamburg, Germany to Melbourne, New South Wales.[33]

7 September edit

List of shipwrecks: 7 September 1891
Ship State Description
City Point   United States Labor Day gale: The schooner was lost with all hands.[34]
Paul and Essie   United States Labor Day gale: The schooner was wrecked at Black Point, Nova Scotia. Crew saved.[35]
Percy   United States Labor Day gale: The fishing schooner sank on the Georges Bank in a gale. Lost with all 12 crewmen.[36][37]

13 September edit

List of shipwrecks: 13 September 1891
Ship State Description
John S. McQuin   United States The schooner was wrecked near Bath, Maine. Crew saved.[38]

Unknown date edit

List of shipwrecks: Unknown September 1891
Ship State Description
Ada   United States The schooner disappeared on a fishing trip out of Pensacola, Florida. Lost with all five crew.[2]

October edit

1 October edit

List of shipwrecks: 1 October 1891
Ship State Description
Clytie   United States The schooner went ashore near Matinicus Island, bilged and sank. Crew saved.[39]

3 October edit

List of shipwrecks: 3 October 1891
Ship State Description
William Lewis   United States While on an Arctic whaling voyage, the 463-gross register ton, 134-foot (41 m) steam bark was wrecked during a gale and snowstorm off Point Barrow, Territory of Alaska, when she became stranded on a snow-covered sandspit that her captain mistook for slush ice floating on the sea. The steamers Belvedere and Navarch (flags unknown) rescued her entire crew of 45. During salvage operations, the wreck of William Lewis was destroyed by an accidental fire on 20 March 1892.[40]

10 October edit

List of shipwrecks: 10 October 1891
Ship State Description
USS Despatch   United States Navy The steamer was wrecked without loss of life on Assateague Island off the coast of Virginia during a gale.

13 October edit

List of shipwrecks: 13 October 1891
Ship State Description
Ora et Labora   Norway The brig was driven ashore and wrecked near Chesil Cove, Dorset, United Kingdom.[41]

Unknown date edit

List of shipwrecks: Unknown date October 1891
Ship State Description
Red Wing The schooner was driven ashore and wrecked on the coast of Delaware just south of the Indian River Inlet during a gale, killing her entire crew of six.[42]

November edit

9 November edit

List of shipwrecks: 9 November 1891
Ship State Description
Maude M. Lane   United States The schooner barge sank 95 miles (153 km) south southwest of Pensacola, Florida.[2]

11 November edit

List of shipwrecks: 11 November 1891
Ship State Description
Benvenue   United Kingdom The full-rigged ship was driven ashore and wrecked at Sandgate, Kent with the loss of five lives. Twenty-seven survivors were rescued by the lifeboat Mayer de Rothchild (  Royal National Lifeboat Institution).[43]
Rappahannock   United States The full-rigged ship caught fire due to spontaneous combustion in her cargo of coal and was beached and burned out in Cumberland Bay, Juan Fernandez Island, Juan Fernandez Islands, Chile. The captain, his wife, two daughters, and 30 crew were eventually rescued by the government steamer Huemial (  Chile).[44][45]

15 November edit

List of shipwrecks: 15 November 1891
Ship State Description
Minnie Davis   United States The schooner was sunk in a collision with the schooner Hunter Savidge (  United States) 1+12 miles (2.4 km) off Point Morvia Light or Bar Point, in Lake Erie. The wreck was blown up in April 1893 as a hazard to navigation.[46][47]

22 November edit

List of shipwrecks: 22 November 1891
Ship State Description
Samuel Mather   United States The wooden steam cargo ship sank after she was rammed by the steel cargo ship Brazil (flag unknown) in heavy fog in Whitefish Bay, Lake Superior.[48]

December edit

4 December edit

List of shipwrecks: 4 December 1891
Ship State Description
Ogemaw   United States The steam barge sprung a leak and sank between Point Peninsula and Poverty Passage in 65 feet of water. Raised in 1893, rebuilt and returned to service in 1894.[49][50]

5 December edit

List of shipwrecks: 5 December 1891
Ship State Description
Merannio   United Kingdom En route for Newport from Bilbao with a cargo of 1,300 tons of iron ore, the ship hit the Seven Stones Reef, but managed to reach St Ives, Cornwall where a 10 ft (3 m) hole was found in her bow.[7]

8 December edit

List of shipwrecks: 8 December 1891
Ship State Description
Torbay Lass   United Kingdom After unloading her cargo of coal on St Michael's Mount, the Brixham schooner was under tow by the tug Merlin (flag unknown) when Merlin suffered a drop in steam pressure and Torbay Lass drifted onto the Cressars off the promenade at Penzance, Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. The steamship Lady of the Isles (  United Kingdom) pulled her clear, but she sank after a few hundred yards, within a few hundred metres of Penzance harbour.[51]

10 December edit

List of shipwrecks: 10 December 1891
Ship State Description
Drumblair   United Kingdom The ship was driven ashore on Sully Island, Glamorgan. Her crew either took to the ships' boats or were rescued by the lifeboat Joseph Denman II (  Royal National Lifeboat Institution). Drumblair was on a voyage from Barry, Glamorgan to Mauritius. She was later salvaged, repaired and returned to service.[10]

18 December edit

List of shipwrecks: 18 December 1891
Ship State Description
Abyssinia   United Kingdom The cargo liner burned and sank in Mid Atlantic Ocean, no casualties. All rescued by Spree (  German Empire).[52][53]

23 December edit

List of shipwrecks: 23 December 1891
Ship State Description
Felicete   France The brig ran aground at Port Eynon Point, Glamorgan, United Kingdom, and was wrecked. Her crew survived. She was on a voyage from Nantes, Loire-Inférieure to Swansea, Glamorgan.[10]
Oakland   New South Wales The passenger-cargo ship ran aground on the southern breakwater at Ballina, New South Wales, Australia. She was refloated, repaired, and returned to service.

29 December edit

List of shipwrecks: 29 December 1891
Ship State Description
Maggie   United Kingdom The sailing vessel collided with the passenger-cargo steamer Inishtrahull (  United Kingdom) in the Irish Sea just off the Kish Bank off the east coast of Ireland. Her crew were rescued by Inishtrahull, after which Maggie drifted away in a sinking condition and probably sank somewhere near the Kish Lighthouse.[54]
Dexter Clark   United States The schooner sank after bottoming on Flug Island Shoals near the West Pass of Apalachicola Bay, Florida.[55]

Unknown date edit

List of shipwrecks: Unknown date 1891
Ship State Description
Sarsfield   United Kingdom The brigantine ran aground at Rhosilli, Glamorgan, Wales, and was wrecked. All seven people on board survived.[10]
Sea Serpent   United States The clipper's crew of 17 abandoned her at sea at (46°N 40°W / 46°N 40°W / 46; -40 (Sea Serpent)) and were rescued by the barque Gulnare (flag unknown). The derelict Sea Serpent was sighted on 18 October by the barque Ardgowan (flag unknown), having drifted 1,120 miles (1,800 km) unmanned in 93 days. Sea Serpent was sighted 19 times before disappearing.[56][57][failed verification]
Annie   United Kingdom A steamer carrying wood from Sävenäs, near Skellefteä, to Sutton Bridge ran aground off Umeå due to navigational error. The ship was taken under tow but sank. The crew was rescued.[58]

References edit

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