History
 United Kingdom
NameBlossom
RouteNewcastle upon Tyne-Nieuwediep
Out of service19 October 1863
Fatewrecked on Haaks Bank the Netherlands on 19 October 1963
General characteristics
TypeBrig

Blossom was a 19th-century British brig. The captain of the ship was captain Thomas Oliver. The ship regularly sailed with a cargo of coal to the Netherlands.[1][2] On 19 October 1863 the ship wrecked on Haaks Bank, the Netherlands.[3]

Fate

While on a voyage from Newcastle upon Tyne, Northumberland to Nieuwediep, the Netherlands with a load of coal, the ship wrecked during the evening of 19 October 1863 at Haaks Bank, the Netherlands. While the ship shattered and sank, six crew members were able to get into the lifeboat of the ship.[4] They were able to reach Onrust, a sandbank off the coast of Texel, and could not row further due to fatigue.[1][2] They also failed to reach the mainland the next morning and were driven away by the water.[5] Their boat, which was in distress, was however seen by people from the mainland. Jan Stol, Klaas Molenaar, Jacob Stol and Lodewijk Schendelaar were able to rescue them with their Punt by 9 am.[2][5]

References

  1. 1 2 "De reddingkaap op Onrust". haaksgronden.nl (in Dutch).
  2. 1 2 3 "Nieuwediep, 20 Oct". Algemeen Handelsblad (in Dutch). 22 October 1863 via Delpher.
  3. "Marine Intelligence". Newcastle Courant. No. 9852. Newcastle upon Tyne. 23 October 1863.
  4. "Texel 20 Oct". Rotterdamsche Courant (in Dutch). 21 October 1863 via Delpher.
  5. 1 2 "Binnenland". Nieuwe Rotterdamsche Courant (in Dutch). 23 October 1863 via Delpher.
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