List of shipwrecks in 1881
The list of shipwrecks in 1881 includes ships sunk, foundered, grounded, or otherwise lost during 1881.
1881 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr |
May | Jun | Jul | Aug |
Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec |
Unknown date | |||
References |
January
1 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
George B. McClellan | United States | The tug exploded. Her smokestack fell on the master of the barge she was towing, killing him.[1] |
3 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Lupata | United Kingdom | The ship sank about 200 yards (180 m) from the Teilamork Rock Lighthouse, San Francisco with the loss of the crew.[2] |
4 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Active | United Kingdom | The 200-ton Newcastle steamer struck the Stag Rocks off Lizard Point, Cornwall while bound for Caen with coal from Neath.[3] |
Brazilian | The Warren Line steamer broke in two while stranded on the Burbo Bank off Liverpool. The steamer was out of Boston with cattle.[4] |
5 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Farnley | United Kingdom | (first report) The Newcastle screw steamer was out of Savannah with cotton for Revel.[4] Farnley left Dartmouth on 26 December 1880 and, on an unreported date, two bodies and several bales of cotton were washed up on the coast of Jutland, near Ringkøbing.[5] |
Indian Chief | United Kingdom | The full-rigged ship was wrecked on the Long Sand, in the North Sea off the coast of Kent with the loss of seventeen of her 28 crew. Survivors were rescued by the lifeboat Bradford ( Royal National Lifeboat Institution). Indian Chief was on a voyage from Middlesbrough, County Durham to Yokohama, Japan.[6][7] |
Nymphaea | United Kingdom | The cargo ship ran aground on the Sunk Sand, in the North Sea off the coast of Kent. Her crew took to the lifeboats and were rescued by another vessel.[8] |
6 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Unnamed | A large steamer when ashore on the Goodwin Sands and sank with all hands.[9] |
7 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
John Tillotson | The steamer Idlewild collided with the Tittleson barque John Tillotson which foundered within five minutes. The pilot and five of the crew drowned.[10] | |
Sly Boots | United Kingdom | (first report) The Brixham trawler was run down by the steamer, Compton. All five crew drowned.[11] |
11 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Hereford | South Australia | The full-rigged ship ran aground at Point Lonsdale, Victoria. She was later salvaged and repaired.[12] |
14 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Emily | United Kingdom | The Brixham trawler was run down by a sailing vessel approximately 20 miles (32 km) off the Eddystone. A nearby fishing boat picked up the crew.[13] |
15 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Lumley | United Kingdom | The brig stranded on a rock approximately one mile (1.6 km) offshore, north of Whitby. The crew lost their lives.[14] |
16 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
BAP Atahualpa | Peruvian Navy | War of the Pacific: Scuttling of the Peruvian fleet in El Callao: The monitor was scuttled by her crew at El Callao, Peru, to prevent her capture by advancing Chilean forces. She was salvaged later in 1881 and became a storage hulk. |
BAP República | Peruvian Navy | War of the Pacific: Scuttling of the Peruvian fleet in El Callao: The torpedo boat was scuttled by her crew at El Callao, Peru, to prevent her capture by advancing Chilean forces. |
BAP Talismán | Peruvian Navy | War of the Pacific: Scuttling of the Peruvian fleet in El Callao: The troopship was scuttled by her crew at El Callao, Peru, to prevent her capture by advancing Chilean forces. |
BAP Toro Submarino | Peruvian Navy | War of the Pacific: Scuttling of the Peruvian fleet in El Callao: The submarine was scuttled by her crew at El Callao, Peru, to prevent her capture by advancing Chilean forces. |
17 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Enterprise | United Kingdom | The Porthleven dandy went ashore on Clodgy Point, St Ives, Cornwall. The crew were taken off by the steamer Gwent before the dandy went ashore.[15] |
BAP Rímac | Peruvian Navy | War of the Pacific: Scuttling of the Peruvian fleet in El Callao: The troopship was scuttled by her crew at El Callao, Peru, to prevent her capture by advancing Chilean forces. She was salvaged in June 1881. |
Rosa Joseph | France | The schooner went ashore at St Ives, Cornwall while taking coal from Briton Ferry to Cherbourg.[15] |
Unnamed | France | A vessel, possibly a chasse-marée sank in Yarmouth roads.[16] |
18 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Abraham Thomas | United Kingdom | The Yarmouth lifeboat capsized while returning with the sole survivor of the Guiding Star. Two survived.[16] |
Anna Decéil | France | The Boulogne ketch went ashore at Ipswich.[16] |
Ann Turgoose | United Kingdom | The Goole schooner, with a cargo of wheat, from London to Hull, stranded near Saltfleet.[16] |
Charlotte Dunbar | France | The Lorient brigantine went ashore on Burnt Island, St Agnes, Isles of Scilly while bound from Newport for Morlaix. There was no sign of the crew or the ship's boat.[17] |
Edith Mary | United Kingdom | The London barque went ashore at Yarmouth. Five of the crew were saved by the rocket apparatus and five drowned.[16] |
Felix and Rosalie | France | The schooner foundered approximately 1.5 miles (2.4 km) west of Boscastle, Cornwall while in ballast for Swansea from Trouville. Five men and a boy landed near King Arthur's Castle.[18] |
Guiding Star | United Kingdom | The Padstow schooner went ashore at Yarmouth. The captain and two crew were ashore, and the mate left on board drowned.[19][20] |
Havelock | United Kingdom | The collier was washed on to the pier at Ryde, Isle of Wight.[16] |
John Ward | United Kingdom | The collier was washed on to the pier at Ryde, Isle of Wight.[16] |
Palestine | United Kingdom | The West Hartlepool barque was wrecked at Thorpeness, Suffolk. The crew were saved by the rocket apparatus[16] |
Rapid | United Kingdom | The Whitby brig went ashore at Gorleston, Norfolk. The seven crew drowned.[16] |
Restless | United Kingdom | The brigantine was driven ashore at Penarth.[16] |
Rhoda | United Kingdom | The Middlesbrough schooner went ashore at Ipswich.[16] |
Rook | United Kingdom | The steamer, with a cargo of coal and syrup, sank at Lookdow, near Tobermory.[16] |
Sarah Jane | United Kingdom | The Whitehaven three-masted schooner went ashore at Yarmouth with the loss of the mate.[16] |
Victor | United Kingdom | The tug was damaged by ice and sank in Leith harbour.[16] |
Unnamed | United Kingdom | One hundred barges sank in the Thames with considerable loss of life.[16] |
Unnamed | United Kingdom | Several fishing boats went ashore at Harwich.[16] |
Unnamed | United Kingdom | Several vessels foundered at Ryde, Isle of Wight.[16] |
Unnamed | United Kingdom | Several trows from Gloucester and Bristol were driven ashore.[16] |
Unnamed | United Kingdom | Many vessels in Brixham harbour foundered with some washed onto the streets.[16] |
Unnamed | United Kingdom | A vessel came ashore at Shovepoint, Walton-on-the-Naze.[21] |
19 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Anthrodite | Netherlands | The Friesland brig was wrecked off Beachy Head and four of the crew drowned.[22] |
Rising Sun | United Kingdom | Went ashore in the River Thames. The crew were saved.[23] |
Unnamed | Nine vessels were wrecked off Yarmouth and nearly fifty lives lost. Many wrecks on the coast around Harwich.[22] | |
Unnamed | Thirty vessels beached near Cardiff and several more reported.[24] |
20 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Bothalwood | United Kingdom | A barque-rigged vessel sailing from Carthagena for Leith hit rocks in St Ouen's bay. No crew were lost.[25] |
21 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Alexandrea | France | The ship was driven ashore on the coast of Glamorgan, United Kingdom.[26] |
Amiral | France | The ship was driven ashore on the coast of Glamorgan.[26] |
British Lady | United Kingdom | The 89-ton schooner from Penzance, Cornwall lost her mast in a gale and sank near the Runnel Stone. Her crew were picked up by the Isles of Scilly ferry Queen of the Bay ( United Kingdom).[27] |
Buckinghamshire | United Kingdom | The full-rigged ship was driven ashore on the coast of Glamorgan.[26] |
Cecile | France | The ship was driven ashore on the coast of Glamorgan.[26] |
Etta | United Kingdom | The full-rigged ship was driven ashore on the coast of Glamorgan.[26] |
Mirella | United Kingdom | The full-rigged ship was driven ashore on the coast of Glamorgan.[26] |
27 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Cresswell | New South Wales | The barque was driven ashore and wrecked at Paviland, Glamorgan, Wales, United Kingdom. Her crew were rescued.[26] |
Eleanor | United Kingdom | The paddle steamer was wrecked at Leestone Point, Kilkeel, Ireland.[28] |
Telegraph | United Kingdom | The steamer ran aground at Cooley Point, Ireland. She was salvaged but waa deemed beyond economical repair and was scrapped.[28] |
22 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Mintie | United States | The sternwheel steamer was sunk in Perdido Bay when her boiler exploded 3 miles east of Minez Ferry. 3 killed.[29] |
29 January
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Harvest Queen | United Kingdom | The American ship McLauria found the British barque, in poor condition, in the Atlantic on 28 January. Eight of the crew were taken on board with the captain and mate staying on the Harvest Queen, which foundered during the night.[30] |
Unknown date
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Blyth | United Kingdom | The steamer ran aground on rocks at Santoria Bay. The crew survived.[31] |
Josephine | United States | The paddle steamer sprang a leak and foundered in the Gulf of Mexico. She was on a voyage from Cuba to New Orleans, Louisiana.[32] |
Saint Jean | France | The barque sank, with the loss of three men, after colliding with the barque Privateer off the Isles of Scilly.[33] |
February
6 February
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
T. J. Mitchell | United States | The schooner sank in a storm in Pensacola Bay.[29] |
7 February
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Bohemian | United Kingdom | The cargo ship was wrecked near Crookhaven, County Cork with the loss of 33 lives.[34] |
8 February
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Kron Prinz von Preussen | Germany | The brigantine was driven ashore in New Grimsby harbour, Tresco, Isles of Scilly.[35] |
Unidentified schooner | A three-masted schooner foundered in Bideford Bay, near Clovelly.[36] |
10 February
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Ridge Park | Australia | The cargo ship sank after hitting the Beware Reef, Cape Conran, Australia.[37] |
13 February
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Flying Spur | United Kingdom | The clipper ship was wrecked on Martin Vas, North Rock, in the South Atlantic Ocean. |
Sylphide | France | The Nantes brigantine foundered and became a total wreck on the beach at Perranuthnoe, Cornwall while bound from Audierne, France to Cardiff, Wales with a cargo of potatoes. The crew were saved by the Prussia Cove rocket appartatus.[38] |
T F Whiton | United States | The Searsport, Maine barque bound for London from Victoria, Vancouver Island carrying a mixed cargo of oil, tinned fish, wool, etc, foundered at Praa Sands, Cornwall. The crew were saved by the Prussia Cove rocket appartatus and the ship became a total loss after it caught fire.[38] |
19 February
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Caledonia | United Kingdom | Carrying mail and passengers from Southampton, England, to Guernsey, Sark, and Jersey in the Channel Islands, the steamer was wrecked off Oyster Rock, just outside the harbour at Saint Helier, Jersey, in the Channel Islands.[39][40] |
Jesse Rhnas | United States | The Brig was stranded on the East Pensacola Bar on Santa Rosa Island, Florida at the entrance to Pensacola Bay.[29] |
20 February
22 February
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Georgina | United Kingdom | The Port Madoe schooner ran ashore on the rocks off Porthoustock, Cornwall while en route to Cork from London. The crew attracted attention by lighting a tar-barrel and the ship and cargo of railway sleepers was destroyed. The crew were rescued by the Porthoustock lifeboat.[42] |
24 February
25 February
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Liverpool | United States | The ship left New York, on 21 February, with a cargo of tobacco for Bordeaux. Liverpool was abandoned when on her beam-ends and the crew were picked up by the Norwegian barque Valkyrien and some were landed in the Isles of Scilly.[44] |
Unknown date
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Boomtide | United Kingdom | The steamer sank off Sunderland and eighteen of the crew was saved by the lifeboat Florence Nightingale.[45] |
Harry See | United States | The schooner was lost near Pensacola, Florida.[29] |
Isabel | United Kingdom | The ship was lost in Peter's River, Newfoundland with all hands.[46] |
John Kendall | United Kingdom | The Penzance brig carrying coal from Greenock to Barbadoes was a total wreck on a ridge at CloghyCloughey Bay.[46] |
Redown | United States | The New York brig was wrecked near Passages, Spain. The crew were picked up by the Alverton and landed at Cardiff.[47] |
Stamford | United Kingdom | The Sunderland steamer struck the west point of Ushant and foundered. Stamford was out of Bilbao for Middlesbrough with a cargo of mineral. Thirteen of the crew died.[48] |
Unnamed | The Rocket Brigade shewn alacrity last week to reach the scene of the wreck in Hoblyn's Cove, St Agnes, Cornwall.[49] |
March
2 March
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Cecilie Caroline | France | The Croisec vessel left Charlestown with china clay for Nantes. She was driven ashore, a few hours after she left port, at Apple-tree on the south Cornish coast. The five crew lost their lives.[50] |
3 March
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Victorine | France | The brigantine carrying pitwood for Port Talbot went ashore at Mevagissey, Cornwall. Two of the crew drowned.[51] |
4 March
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Ajace | Kingdom of Italy | During a voyage from Belgium to New York City with a cargo of scrap railroad iron and 2,040 empty petroleum barrels, the 566-ton sailing vessel was wrecked off Rockaway Beach, Queens, New York, during a storm. Only one member of her crew survived. Her wreck settled in 25 feet (8 m) of water and became known as "the Italian Wreck".[52] |
5 March
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Essen | German Empire | The steamer was abandoned after she stranded on the Isle of Wight.[53] |
Merlin | United Kingdom | The barque went ashore at St Andrews, Scotland with the loss of eight or nine crew.[53] |
12 March
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Benin | United Kingdom | The Elder Dempster 1,530-grt cargo ship sank in the English Channel following a collision with Duke of Buccleugh off Start Point, Devon, England. Ninety-four elephant tusks were removed from her wreck in 1954.[54] |
29 March
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Geraldine | United Kingdom | The schooner sank in Port Eynon Bay off Swansea, Wales. Her crew survived.[26] |
Unknown date
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Gilbert Thompson | United Kingdom | The barque, from Calcutta to Liverpool, sank after hitting a ledge.[53] |
Juno | United Kingdom | The schooner was run down by Lady Ruthven off Beachy Head and sank with the loss of three crew.[53] |
Sultan | United Kingdom | The steamer sank in the Humber.[53] |
April
2 April
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Goldhunter | United States | The 8.1-ton schooner was wrecked on the coast of the Territory of Alaska 30 nautical miles (56 km; 35 mi) east of the entrance to "Behring Bay" – probably a reference to Yakutat Bay, which historically was sometimes known as "Bering Bay" – after she lost her rudder in a storm. All seven people aboard survived.[55] |
3 April
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
United States | United States | Carrying a valuable cargo, the passenger-cargo steamer was wrecked near the outer shoal of Cape Romain, South Carolina.[56] |
6 April
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Cornish Girl | United Kingdom | The vessel was abandoned at sea while en route for her home port of Falmouth, Cornwall from Aracaju.[57] |
9 April
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Newton | United Kingdom | The 1,324 GRT cargo ship was wrecked in the Atlantic Ocean off Madeira while carrying coffee and sugar from Bahia, Brazil, to London.[58] |
Speed | The Guernsey schooner sank after a collision with the steamer Solent off the Longships, Cornwall, causing the death of the master. Speed was carrying salt from Runcorn to Jersey and the surviving crew were picked up by Victua and landed at Plymouth.[59][60] |
12 April
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Daisy | United States | The steamer suffered a machinery failure and capsized. Two crewmen killed.[61] |
Marmora | Denmark | The barque was wrecked on the Scarweather Sands in the Bristol Channel. Her eight crew were rescued by the lifeboat Chafyn Grove ( Royal National Lifeboat Institution).[26] |
15 April
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Kestrel | United Kingdom | On a voyage from London, England, to Bordeaux, France, carrying twenty passengers and cargo in patchy fog, the steamer struck Burhou Island, west of Alderney in the Channel Islands[62] |
17 April
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Annie | United Kingdom | The Padstow registered schooner struck a rock while on a course between Land's End and the Longships. The schooner began to take on water and was taken in tow by the steamer Mary Monica for Mount's Bay. After two hours the crew went on the steamer and after another hour of tow Annie sank.[63] |
Katie | United Kingdom | Carrying starch from Norwich, England, to Dublin, Ireland, the 99-ton Padstow, Cornwall-registered schooner struck the Runnel Stone in the English Channel off Gwennap Head, Cornwall, and sank with no loss of life.[27] |
21 April
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Ellen Vair | United Kingdom | The crew were taken off and landed in Newport, when she collided with the Gertrude off The Lizard.[64] |
25 April
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
City of Sanford | United States | The steamer burned in the St. Johns River, a total loss. Four burned to death and five drowned.[65] |
26 April
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
HMS Doterel | Royal Navy | The Doterel-class sloop sank while at anchor 1⁄2 mile off Sandy Point, Chile, following an explosion and the loss of 143 lives. There were twelve survivors.[66][67] |
27 April
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Saint George | United States | During a voyage in the waters of the Territory of Alaska from Kodiak to English Bay and Nutchick with three passengers, a cargo of general merchandise, and a crew of seven aboard, the 100.41-ton schooner struck an uncharted rock off Twin Rocks (57°50′05″N 152°18′45″W) near Kodiak. There was no loss of life, but she filled with enough water to become unmanageable. The schooner Pauline Collins ( United States) towed her to Long Island in the Alexander Archipelago in Southeast Alaska, but she was so badly damaged that she was declared nearly a total loss.[68] |
30 April
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Tararua | United Kingdom | The passenger steamer struck the reef off Waipapa Point in the Catlins, New Zealand, on 29 April, and sank the next day. This is the worst civilian shipping disaster in New Zealand's history with 131 deaths; only twenty of the 151 passengers and crew survived. |
Unknown date
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
James Harris | United Kingdom | The steamship collided with the Andalusia in the North Sea, off the Farne Islands and sank within five minutes. Fourteen of her crew drowned and four survived.[69] |
May
7 May
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Culmore | United Kingdom | The steamer with a cargo of onions, peppers and oranges hit the Crim Rocks, near the Bishop Rock, Isles of Scilly.[70] The captain and three of the crew lost their lives.[71] |
10 May
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Gananoque | United Kingdom | The barque collided with an iceberg in the Gulf of St. Lawrence 4 miles (6.4 km) off the Bird Rocks in the Magdalen Islands and sank quickly.[72][73] The crew landed on Bird Rocks, and were picked up on 12 May.[72] |
24 May
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Victoria | Canada | While carrying passengers back to downtown London, Ontario, Canada during Victoria Day celebrations, the steamboat sank in the Thames River, due to overcrowding causing her to strike a rock in the shallow river and ultimately capsize. Approximately 182 people drowned out of a total of 600 on board.[74] |
28 May
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Mary Hough' | United Kingdom | The steamer collided in thick fog with the Castilian in the River Mersey. Taken under tow by the steam tug Hercules, a few minutes later, she was run into by the mail steamship African and sank. The crew were landed at Liverpool.[75] |
Unknown date
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Queen of Nations | United Kingdom | The clipper ship was wrecked on Corrimal Beach, New South Wales, Australia, with the loss of one life. |
June
2 June
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Alster | United Kingdom | The steamship collided with Adam Smith ( United Kingdom) and sank off Happisburgh, Norfolk. She was on a voyage from Hull, Yorkshire to Antwerp, Belgium.[76] |
6 June
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Seine' | United Kingdom | The 222-ton steamer sank immediately after being hit by the 1,058 ton steamer Prado off Godrevy Head, Cornwall. Prado landed the crew at Falmouth.[77] |
13 June
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
USS Jeannette | United States Navy |
26 June
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Jamestown | United States | The abandoned sailing ship was found aground at Hafnir, Iceland. Badly battered by high seas in December 1880 and January 1881, she had been abandoned in the North Atlantic Ocean in January 1881 at 43.10°N 22°W with all 27 people aboard rescued by the steamer Ethiopia ( United Kingdom). She then had floated unmanned for four months before running aground. |
Unknown date
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Flora P Stafford | United Kingdom | The barque was run down by the Haytien and abandoned while returning to Hampton Roads from Bordeaux with iron ore. The crew were taken off the barque but the captain died within an hour.[78] |
July
2 July
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Daniel Webster | United States | The 327-ton whaling vessel was crushed in ice and sank in the Arctic Ocean 5 nautical miles (9.3 km; 5.8 mi) south of Point Barrow, Territory of Alaska.[79] |
3 July
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Glen | United Kingdom | The schooner collided with the screw-steamer Alliance off St Ives, Cornwall and foundered. The crew were landed at Penarth on board the Alliance.[80] |
4 July
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Britannic | United Kingdom | The White Star Line ocean liner ran aground in fog at Kilmore, County Wexford, Ireland, and remained stuck for two days. All the passengers were safely landed at Waterford. She sprang a leak in her engine room after being re-floated and was beached at Wexford Bay. She had to be patched up and pumped before returning to Liverpool. |
26 July
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Unnamed | Thirty lives were lost when three sailing vessels sank during a ″terrific gale″ at East London.[81] |
28 July
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Nordstjernan | Norway | The passenger-cargo steamer was wrecked at Knivskjærodden, near North Cape, Norway, and sank. Tourist passengers and crew saved.[82][83] |
August
8 August
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Isaac Pereire | France | The steamer was scuttled to extinguish a fire at Tunis French Tunisia. Raised, repaired and returned to service.[84] |
9 August
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Hugo | German Empire | The crew abandoned their vessel in the Pacific Ocean, while carrying coal from Newcastle to San Francisco, after it was destroyed by fire. The nine crew reached Chilbe, Chile in the lifeboat, taking nine days to cover 800 miles.[85] |
15 August
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
W. F. March | United States | Carrying 10 miners as passengers, a cargo of 35 tons of ballast, provisions, ore, and mining tools, and a crew of seven, the 95.92-ton schooner dragged her anchor during a gale and was wrecked without loss of life on the beach at Golovnin Bay in the Territory of Alaska.[86] |
20 August
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
A. B. Ward | United States | The tug blew up and sank in the Chicago River at the Clark Street Bridge, Chicago as a result of a boiler explosion. Later towed to Miller's Dry Dock and rebuilt. Two crewmen killed.[87][88] |
Courier | The schooner foundered and the crew were landed at Falmouth, Cornwall on 12 September by Golden Sea.[89] |
21 August
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Eira | United Kingdom | The steam exploration yacht of Benjamin Leigh Smith was heavily damaged by floating ice on 21 August and sank near Cape Flora, Franz Joseph Land. The owner and his crew were all rescued almost a year later.[90] |
30 August
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
City of Richmond | United States | With approximately 60 passengers and crew aboard, the 227-foot (69 m), 875-gross register ton coastal sidewheel paddle steamer struck a reef — the south ledge of Mark Island — in Penobscot Bay off the coast of Maine and sank without loss of life. She later was refloated, rebuilt, renamed City of Key West, and placed back in service.[91] |
Unknown date
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Asterope | United Kingdom | The brig was lost on the coast near the Para River while carrying coal from Cardiff to Para. The crew of eight were rescued following two days in the ship's boat.[92] |
Thomas Blythe | United Kingdom | The Hayle barque filled with water and sank about 500 miles (800 km) from the Isles of Scilly. The seven crew took to the ships boat and were picked up my a Norwegian ship. The barque was carrying iron ore from Samanco, Peru to Liverpool.[93] |
Unnamed fishing vessels | United Kingdom | Fifty-eight fishermen from Shetland drowned during a recent storm.[94] |
September
10 September
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Clarovine | United Kingdom | A fire in the forecastle spread to the rest of the barque while docked at Milford Haven. Both the ship and the cargo of timber were destroyed with no loss of life.[95] |
24 September
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Independenza | The barque first hit the Crim Rocks in the Isles of Scilly, and later the Barrel of Butter rock on The Garrison where she sank. She was carrying guano from Pabella de Pica to Rotterdam. The crew took to the ship's boat and survived.[96] |
28 September
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
W J Taylor | United Kingdom | The Penzance steamer was hit amidships by the Plover, in the Warp Channel at the mouth of the River Thames and sank shortly after. The cargo and crew were lost.[97] |
Unknown date
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Elizabeth Irving | A number of crew drowned in the Fraser River while trying to escape from the burning steamer.[98] | |
St Louis | The brig sank off Beachy Head following a collision with the Seriol Wyn. Eight crew of the St Louis drowned.[99] | |
Teuton | United Kingdom | The Cape Mai steamer struck a rock and started to take on water, the captain altered course for Simon's Bay, near Cape Town, at initially 12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph). At ten in the evening the engines were stopped and the ship's boats lowered but the ship sank quickly, along with four of the ship's boats, drowning 236.[100] |
October
5 October
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Lucie M. | United States | The schooner sprang a leak and sank 50 miles (80 km) northwest of Key West. |
5 October
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Koning der Nederlanden | Netherlands |
6 October
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Pauline Collins | United States | With six passengers and four crewmen aboard, the 69.33-ton fur-trading schooner was wrecked without loss of life on the coast of Kodiak Island near Karluk, Territory of Alaska.[103] |
12 October
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Pasha | United Kingdom | While carrying coal from Burnt Island, the Dundee steamer sank off the Norwegian coast. The crew were saved.[104] The master was reprimanded for having an unfit ship and the crew were drunk because they felt that ″... as the vessel did not look very well, and they thought they might as well go down with a bellyful of whisky as a bellyful of water.″[105] |
Unknown | During a gale a vessel sank off Formby with the loss of all hands.[104] |
14 October
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Bertha | United Kingdom | The Newcastle steamer foundered with all hands lost.[106] |
Cyprian | United Kingdom | The steamer sank within 2 miles (3.2 km) of Liverpool with the loss of twenty-one lives. Six other vessels were lost within a few miles.[107] |
Emma Mary | United Kingdom | The barque foundered near Yarmouth and the crew were rescued by the St Bernard.[106] |
Ganges | United Kingdom | During a voyage from Middlesbrough, England, to Calcutta, India, with a cargo of railway iron, the sailing ship was wrecked on the Goodwin Sands in the English Channel off Kent, England, with the loss of three lives. |
Sunflower | United Kingdom | The Falmouth vessel was foundered in the North Sea and the crew were taken to Yarmouth.[106] |
Unione | Italy | The barque sank in the North Sea. Eight of the crew were taken to Yarmouth by the Seaflower and the other four were picked up by fishermen from Lowestoft.[106] |
Unnamed | United Kingdom | At least twenty fishing boats were lost in the North Sea, off Eyemouth during a gale.[108] All told 189 men lost their lives. |
18 October
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Alexandre Smyers | Belgium | The steamer foundered off Hanstholm, Denmark.[109] Her crew was rescued by the steamer Orlando (flag unknown). |
Balclutha | New South Wales | The steamship foundered off Gabo Island, Victoria with the loss of all 22 crew.[110] |
20 October
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Calliope | United Kingdom | The steamer sank with all hands, bar one, off Cape Corubedo near Cape Finisterre. Calliope was carrying grain from Odessa to Bremen.[111] |
21 October
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Clan Macduff | United Kingdom | The steamer left Liverpool for Bombay on 18 October and foundered in the Atlantic three days later. Some of the crew and passengers took to the boats the day before she sank, and ten people were picked up by the steamer Palestine, There were not enough lifeboats and nineteen were left on board. Clan Macduff were picked up by the Cork Liner Upupa and taken to Plymouth.[112] |
24 October
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Sagittarie | France | The crew abandoned their vessel, while en voyage from Cardiff to Nantes with coal, at lat. 50.15N and long. 11.10W, following six days of heavy weather. They were picked up by the Variverts and taken to Falmouth.[113] |
Victoria | United Kingdom | The schooner became total wreck in Newlyn harbour, Cornwall during a storm. Onboard was ten tons of coal and fifteen tons of ballast.[114] |
27 October
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Dixie | United States | The Schooner was stranded on Santa Rosa Island, Florida 30 miles east of the entrance to Pensacola Bay.[29] |
Jennie Gilchrist | United States | The tow steamer suffered engine failure above a Government bridge causing her to strike the bridge in the Mississippi River between Rock Island, Illinois and Clinton, Iowa and was wrecked, a total loss. Nine lost.[115] |
Unnamed | unknown | The steamer Venetia, was sailing with another steamer which disappeared during a sudden squall.[116] |
31 October
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Flying Fish | United Kingdom | The ship was driven ashore and wrecked at Lyme Regis, Dorset, England.[117] |
Unknown date
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Balclutha | The steamer foundered during a gale while en voyage from Melbourne to Sydney. All twenty-two on board lost their lives.[118] | |
England's Glory | United Kingdom | The vessel struck a rock and foundered in Bluff Harbour, New Zealand.[119] |
Fortitude | United Kingdom | The Hartlepool ship was driven ashore and wrecked at Towan Beach, near St Anthony Head, Cornwall.[120] |
Omba | The vessel foundered off Newcastle while sailing from Batavia to Melbourne. It is believed all on board perished.[118] |
November
1 November
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Sophie | France | The Regniville schooner was wrecked and went to pieces on Battery Point, Prussia Cove in Mount's Bay with the loss of all the crew.[121] |
5 November
7 November
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
England's Glory | United Kingdom | The ship was wrecked at The Bluff. The crew survived.[123] |
12 November
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Alverton | United Kingdom | The 1,821-ton screw steamer went ashore below a cliff, 10 miles (16 km) from Mugia, Portugal during fog. The Cardiff owned vessel was carrying pig iron from Bilbao to Cette, France.[124][125] The crew survived.[123] |
Brunswick | United States | The steamer was sunk in a collision with Carlingford ( United States) on a squally night 10 miles east of Dunkirk, New York 10 miles off shore. Three crewmen killed when a lifeboat was capsized by the sinking ship.[126][127] |
Carlingford | United States | The schooner was sunk in a collision with Brunswick ( United States) on a squally night 10 miles east of Dunkirk, New York 10 miles off shore. One crewman killed. Wreck discovered in mid 1990s.[128][129] |
21 November
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Gem | United Kingdom | The small steamer broke from her moorings in St Mary's Pool, Isles of Scilly and went ashore at William's Bay, becoming a total wreck. Gem was bound for South Africa for employment as a river boat.[130] |
22 November
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Barbara | United Kingdom | The barque, built by the Sunderland Shipbuilding Company in 1878, departed Cardiff, Wales, for Zanzibar on 14 September 1880. During the voyage, the captain, Richard Prichard of Llanbedrog, Wales, died and the mate, John Jones, took command. On the journey back to Liverpool, Barbara docked at Queenstown (Cobh), Ireland, and Jones enlisted a channel pilot, Thomas Lewis, to steer the remaining journey to Liverpool. A series of blunders followed and it appears Lewis was not qualified. In great confusion, Barbara was steered off course in heavy seas, the anchors were deployed but dragged, and the ship drifted onto rocks at Freshwater West, Pembrokeshire. All sixteen crew were saved except Jones, who drowned.[131] |
24 November
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
F. W. Gaylord | United States | The steamer sank in a collision with D. T. Lane ( United States) in the Ohio River. Her cook was drowned.[132] |
26 November
27 November
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Albion | United Kingdom | One of the crew drowned when the brigantine became a total wreck at Ramsgate.[133] |
Jackel | United Kingdom | The Preston steamer foundered off Trevose Head, Cornwall with the loss of the crew.[133] |
Jane Elsie | France | The crew abandoned their schooner which was driven ashore at Yarmouth. There was no loss of life.[133] |
Liverpool | United Kingdom | The vessel collided with the Larnaca in The Downs, southern North Sea and sank. The captain, pilot and some of the crew were lost.[133] |
Naval Reserve | United Kingdom | The full-rigged ship was wrecked at St Bees, in the Irish Sea. All twenty-five crew were saved.[133] |
Unnamed | A schooner was seen to ground on Scroby Sands, Norfolk. It is assumed that she was lost with all hands.[133] | |
Unnamed | Two barques were driven ashore at the ″back″ of the Isle of Wight.[133] |
28 November
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Annie Arbib | United Kingdom | The London steamer was abandoned in the North Sea, while on a voyage from Cronstadt, Russia to her home port with grain. The crew were landed at Great Yarmouth.[134] |
Calzean | United Kingdom | The Greenock vessel became a total wreck after going ashore in the Sound of Jura. All the sixteen crew died.[135] |
30 November
Unknown date
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Bendon | United Kingdom | The Liverpool barque foundered in the Atlantic while en route to St Johns. Five men from the barque Lowood died when attempting to save the crew of the Bendon.[137] |
Gem | United Kingdom | On 20 November, the pilot-cutter Presto landed three sailors onto the Isles of Scilly, from the shipwrecked steamer Gem.[138][139] |
Patriot | United Kingdom | The barque, carrying coal between Androssan and Galway was wrecked at Doolough Ireland. The Captain, his son and a crew member were drowned.[140] |
Henry Edye | Belgium | The steamer disappeared without trace after passing the Isle of Wight, United Kingdom, on 22 November. She is believed to have foundered in the Atlantic Ocean on or about 27 November.[141] |
Thistle | United Kingdom | The Falmouth brigantine was hit by an unnamed vessel and sank off Dover. All the crew was saved.[142] |
Unnamed | A large steamer struck the Barrels Rock near Courtmaesherry Bay.[134] | |
Warrior | United Kingdom | The London barque was loading at Homs on the Barbary coast when she was driven ashore in a gale. Five of the crew drowned.[143] |
December
1 December
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Archiduc Rodolphe | Belgium | The steamer sank in the Scheldt after a collision with Stephenson ( United Kingdom). She was raised in 1898 and scrapped.[144] |
USS Rodgers | United States Navy | The bark-rigged steamer, burning since 30 November after a fire started in her hold, sank in Saint Lawrence Bay off the Russian Empire's Chukotka Peninsula without loss of life after her magazine exploded. |
8 December
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Malaleel | Austria-Hungary | The barque hit the Shark's Fin, the northernmost rock of the Longships reef and became a total wreck. She was carrying pitwood for the collieries in South Wales from Bordeaux.[145] Wreckage was washed up below the Levant mine and in Portheras Cove.[146] |
15 December
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Eros | United Kingdom | While at anchor the steamer, was run down by an unnamed steamer and sank in the River Mersey, Liverpool.[147] |
17 December
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Constance | United Kingdom | The three-masted schooner bound for Santander, Spain from Newport, with coal, grounded at the entrance to the Hayle River, Cornwall and became a total wreck. The crew and pilots were taken off by the Hayle lifeboat Isis.[148] |
18 December
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Tripolia | Sweden | The steamer ran aground in a storm at Ouddorp, the Netherlands, with the loss of five lives.[149] |
21 December
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Mary Julia | United Kingdom | The schooner was run down by a steamer with the loss of all hands.[150] |
23 December
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Granger | United States | The steamer burned in the harbor of Charleston, South Carolina. One passenger and one crewman died.[151] |
25 December
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Helenslea | United Kingdom | The Dundee barque was run down and sank off Roche's Point, Ireland. Some of the crew perished.[152] |
29 December
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Theta | United Kingdom | The vessel was scuttled at Stanley, Falkland Islands because the cargo was on fire. Theta was en voyage from Swansea to Valparaíso.[153] |
30 December
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Rosa B. | United States | The steamer was destroyed by fire at Bayou De'Arbonne. one crewman drowned swimming to shore.[154] |
Unknown date
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Harworth | United Kingdom | The Newcastle steamer was abandoned in the Atlantic following the loss of her rudder, while on a voyage from Montreal to Rotterdam. The steamer became a total wreck and the crew were rescued by Germanic.[155] |
Milton | United Kingdom | The ship caught fire and was abandoned at Christmas in latitude 3 N longitude, 110 W. Some of the crew were picked up by the Cochin and have not been heard of since. Five more were picked up by a steamer, off the coast of Lower California and are believed to be from the Milton.[156] |
Pilot | United Kingdom | The paddle steamer was wrecked off the mouth of the River Ogmore in South Wales.[26] |
Polly | United Kingdom | The Salcombe, Devon barque was a total wreck in the Bay of Honduras.[157] |
Unidentified | The steamship Bendigo ran down a sailing vessel at 43N 9W.[158] |
Unknown date
Ship | Country | Description |
---|---|---|
Arctic | Unknown | The brigantine was lost in the vicinity of "Squan," a term used at the time for the coast of New Jersey near Manasquan and sometimes for the 7-mile (11 km) stretch of coast between Manasquan Inlet and Cranberry Inlet or for the entire coast of New Jersey between Sea Girt and Barnegat Inlet.[159] |
Ellengowan | United Kingdom | The schooner-rigged screw steamer struck a sandbar in the Daly River in what is now the Northern Territory of Australia and sank. She was refloated in 1885 and was repaired and returned to service. |
Elliot Ritchie | United States | The three-masted schooner was abandoned at sea after a fire broke out in one of her cargo holds. |
Glendorgal | United Kingdom | The Padstow schooner became a total wreck near Ilfracombe, Devon.[160] |
Guacolda | Chilean Navy | War of the Pacific: The torpedo boat was wrecked on the coast of Chile.[161] |
Hattie M | United Kingdom | The Dublin barque was abandoned in the Atlantic. The surviving crew were landed in New York.[162] |
Kismet | United Kingdom | The Liverpool barque is missing and has probably foundered in the Atlantic. Left Bahia, Brazil for New York with coffee.[163] |
Los Angeles | United States | The vessel sank in Peril Strait in the Alexander Archipelago in Southeast Alaska.[164] |
O.K. | United States | The 48- or 75-ton sidewheel paddle steamer was lost in either 1867 or 1881.[165] |
Pepe Tono | The Mengual ship sailed from Pensacola for Barcelona on 2 February and not heard of since.[166] | |
Sarah Mandell | United Kingdom | Sailed from Pensacola for Dordt on 4 February and not heard of since.[166] |
Severn | United Kingdom | The barque was in collision with Mayumba ( United Kingdom) off Madeira, Portugal and sank.[167] |
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- "Steamer". The Cornishman (178). 8 December 1881. p. 5.
- "The Dangers of the Sea". The Cornishman (190). 2 March 1882. p. 6.
- "Devon". The Cornishman (180). 22 December 1881. p. 4.
- "SS Bendigo". The Cornishman (182). 5 January 1882. p. 7.
- njscuba.net "Lavallette Wreck"
- "Our Ships and our Sailors". The Cornishman (179). 15 December 1881. p. 4.
- Chesneau, Roger, and Eugene M. Kolesnik, Conway′s All the World′s Fighting Ships, 1860-1905, New York: Mayflower Books, 1979, ISBN 0-8317-0302-4, p. 414.
- "Disaster at Sea". The Cornishman (176). 24 September 1881. p. 6.
- "Apprehended Loss Of A Ship And 16 Lives". The Cornishman (156). 7 July 1881. p. 7.
- alaskashipwreck.com Alaska Shipwrecks (L)
- Gaines, W. Craig, Encyclopedia of Civil War Shipwrecks, Louisiana State University Press, 2008, ISBN 978-0-8071-3274-6, p. 30.
- "St Ives". The Cornishman (158). 16 July 1881. p. 5.
- "Sicilian". The Yard. Retrieved 18 February 2017.
Ship events in 1881 | |||||||||||
Ship launches: | 1876 | 1877 | 1878 | 1879 | 1880 | 1881 | 1882 | 1883 | 1884 | 1885 | 1886 |
Ship commissionings: | 1876 | 1877 | 1878 | 1879 | 1880 | 1881 | 1882 | 1883 | 1884 | 1885 | 1886 |
Ship decommissionings: | 1876 | 1877 | 1878 | 1879 | 1880 | 1881 | 1882 | 1883 | 1884 | 1885 | 1886 |
Shipwrecks: | 1876 | 1877 | 1878 | 1879 | 1880 | 1881 | 1882 | 1883 | 1884 | 1885 | 1886 |
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