The ship Cromartyshire
History
NameCromartyshire
FateRan aground off the coast of Chile
General characteristics
Tonnage1,554 gross register tons
Length248.8 feet (75.8 m)
Beam38.1 feet (11.6 m)
Cromartyshire illustration in the Oregonian newspaper on November 16, 1900

Cromartyshire was an iron sailing vessel with three masts that was built in 1879 by Russell & Co Port Glasgow (yard No 19) for Thomas Law & Co, Glasgow. In 1898 it collided with the CGT liner SS La Bourgogne off Nova Scotia. La Bourgogne sank, resulting in the loss of 571 passengers and crew members while Cromartyshire suffered severe hull loss but was towed into Halifax Harbour by the Allan Line Royal Mail Steamer SS Grecian and managed to get repairs at Halifax, Nova Scotia. In 1901 on a voyage from Leith to Port Elizabeth, Cromartyshire was abandoned on fire off Mossel Bay, but subsequently retrieved. On 24 October 1906, after leaving Antofagasta to load at Iquique, she ran aground on offshore rocks and was destroyed.


References

  1. Clyde Ships

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.