Built in Stockton-on-Tees, England in 1886 by Richardson, Duck & Company shipbuilders, the Bangalore was a three-masted square-rigged ship intended for the East Indian trade. She was 260 feet long, 40 feet beam, and 23 feet deep, measuring 1,743 gross register tons. Typical of other ships built by Richardson, Duck & Company at the time, the Bangalore had a steel hull, which was painted a lead color.
Employed by the Bangalore's original owners, G. Crenshaw and Company, her first commander was Captain Ray D. Congdon from Rhode Island. Under his command, she made several trips between England and America to points east, most notably Calcutta and Hong Kong. Congdon is reported to have helped design the Bangalore.
Due to illness in early 1896, Congdon was replaced by his first mate, who while returning to Boston, "went aground about one-half mile north of the Bell buoy, on the middle grounds, near Cape Charles, at 2:30 o'clock yesterday afternoon". [1] Refloated by a pilot boat, the Bangalore again went aground "on the Horseshoe to the northward of the lighthouse". After being towed to Boston for repairs, the Bangalore changed to a United States registry in 1901, purchased by the Maine Navigation Company of New York. [2]
Under American ownership, command of the ship changed to Captain Albert Nickels Blanchard of Searsport, Maine. Captain Blanchard both commanded and took one-fifth ownership of the ship until 1906, establishing a steady route between the eastern United States and the Hawaiian Islands. Cargo primarily consisted of coal en route to Hawaii and sugar to the eastern ports of Delaware Breakwater, Baltimore, and Philadelphia.
Albert Blanchard's younger brother Phineas Banning Blanchard took command of the Bangalore in 1906, continuing command of the route that took her around Cape Horn two more times. Banning Blanchard retained command of the Bangalore until October 1907, when command was succeeded briefly by a Captain Colley. [3]
On October 23, 1907, the Bangalore sailed with a crew of 21 men from Norfolk bound for Honolulu with 2,600 tons of coal consigned for the United States Navy. Captain Colley's wife and children were also on board. [4]
On November 24, 1907, she was reported at 7°N26°W / 7°N 26°W . [5] This was her last reported sighting.
By mid-July 1908, over 270 days out, she had still not officially been posted at Lloyd's of London as missing, although insurance adjustments indicated that inevitability. Out more than 9 months, on a voyage that normally took about 5 months, she would almost certainly have been out of provisions and forced to some port for food and water. [6]
There are several theories about her disappearance. Two of them, suggested years afterward by former captains, are that the Bangalore collided with another vessel - for example, the Falkenbank which disappeared around the same time - or with an iceberg, which were a common hazard below the Roaring Forties. [7] (On a voyage around Cape Horn in 1906, Captain Banning Blanchard reported seeing an iceberg estimated at 9 miles long and 800 feet high, about 200 miles southeast by south from Cape Horn. [8] [9] [10] ) This is the account in the vessel history, for a model of the Bangalore in the collection of the Mariners' Museum and Park of Newport News, Virginia. By April 21, 1908, five ships had made the same trip around Cape Horn arriving safely in Honolulu and reporting no sign of the Bangalore. [11]
Another theory is that a storm drove her east, forcing her to sail around Cape of Good Hope instead. Contemporaneous reports speculate whether the Bangalore is the "large ship with her topgallantmasts gone, lying to the northeast of the reef" at Middleton reef, Australia. [12] [13]
At the time of her disappearance the Bangalore was "valued at about $75,000, of which less than two-thirds [was] insured". [14]
Although not built for speed, the Bangalore was fast, with a best day record of 351 nautical miles and "holding the record from the Cape of Good Hope to Anjer in twenty-two days". [15]
On May 20, 1895, the Bangalore under the command of Captain Congdon was one of two ships - the other being Wandering Jew - to leave New York "in ballast" for Anjer to await further orders. It was reported that this was the "first time in the history of the merchant marine of a vessel leaving an American port for Anjer without cargo." [16]
In 1906, on a voyage between Philadelphia and Honolulu, a coal fire took hold in the ship's hull. She managed to round Cape Horn, safely reaching port in Valpariso, Chile on January 8, 1907, in order to fully extinguish the fire by January 12, before continuing on to Honolulu.
Paul Eve Stevenson wrote A Deep-Water Voyage as an account of being a passenger aboard the Bangalore. In the novel, written in diary form between June 29 and November 8, 1897, on a voyage from New York and Calcutta, Stevenson tells of the daily experiences aboard the ship Mandalore (Bangalore) with a Captain Kingdon (Congdon).
The Bangalore was the subject of an exhibition in 1948 at The Mariners' Museum in Newport News, Virginia. [17] She was also included in an exhibition from 2001 titled Women and the Sea, also at The Mariners' Museum. This exhibition included "an example of a sextant used by Georgia Maria Gilkey Blanchard of Searsport, Maine, who honeymooned [with her husband Captain Phineas Banning Blanchard] at sea aboard the Bangalore." [18] The account of this honeymoon adventure is retold is several publications, including American Merchant Ships 1850-1900 [19] and Hen Frigates: Wives of Merchant Captains Under Sail. [20] [21]
HMS Endeavour was a British Royal Navy research vessel that Lieutenant James Cook commanded to Tahiti, New Zealand and Australia on his first voyage of discovery from 1768 to 1771.
USS Vincennes was a 703-ton Boston-class sloop of war in the United States Navy from 1826 to 1865. During her service, Vincennes patrolled the Pacific, explored the Antarctic, and blockaded the Confederate Gulf coast in the Civil War. Named for the Revolutionary War Battle of Vincennes, she was the first U.S. warship to circumnavigate the globe.
USS Tacoma (C-18/PG-32/CL-20) was a Denver-class protected cruiser in the United States Navy during World War I. She was the second Navy ship named after the city of Tacoma, Washington.
Marco Polo was a three-masted wooden clipper ship, launched in 1851 at Saint John, New Brunswick. She was named after Venetian traveler Marco Polo. The ship carried emigrants and passengers to Australia and was the first vessel to make the round trip from Liverpool in under six months. Later in her career, the ship was used as a cargo ship before running aground off Cavendish, Prince Edward Island, in 1883.
Cape Horn is the southernmost headland of the Tierra del Fuego archipelago of southern Chile, and is located on the small Hornos Island. Although not the most southerly point of South America, Cape Horn marks the northern boundary of the Drake Passage and marks where the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans meet.
Marlborough was an iron-built two-decked merchant sailing ship which disappeared in 1890. She was built by the firm of Robert Duncan and Co., Port Glasgow and launched in 1876. First managed by James Galbraith for the Albion Shipping Company, she was registered in 1880 to the ownership of John Leslie of London, while continuing to operate within the fleet of Albion Line. Marlborough disappeared during a voyage in January 1890, and has not been seen or heard from in over a century. Searches and investigations have yielded nothing conclusive, and the ship's ultimate fate, and that of her crew, remains unknown.
USS Nero (AC–17), a steel steam collier, was launched in 1894 as the steamer Whitgift by J.L. Thompson and Sons, Sunderland, England. The vessel was purchased on 30 June 1898 from McCondray and Co. at San Francisco and commissioned on 8 June 1898.
Ravenscrag is the name of several ships, some being sailing vessels and some steamships. One of the sailing vessels is historically significant for bringing to the Hawaiian Islands in 1879 Portuguese immigrants who subsequently introduced the ukulele to island culture.
Simon Hatley was an English sailor involved in two hazardous privateering voyages to the South Pacific Ocean. On the second voyage, with his ship beset by storms south of Cape Horn, Hatley shot an albatross, an incident immortalised by Samuel Taylor Coleridge in his 1798 poem The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.
The 2009 USS Port Royal grounding was a ship grounding by the United States Navy guided missile cruiser Port Royal off Oahu, Hawaii on 5 February 2009. The ship ran aground on a coral reef, damaging both the ship and the reef. The incident received wide press coverage in Hawaii, in part because of the damage caused to a sensitive coral environment, and also because the stranded ship was within sight of Honolulu off the airport.
William Matson was a Swedish-born American shipping executive. He was the founder of Matson Navigation Company.
The King George's Sound Company, also known as Richard Cadman Etches and Company after its "prime mover and principal investor", was an English company formed in 1785 to engage in the maritime fur trade on the northwest coast of North America. The company had nine partners in 1785: Richard Cadman Etches, John Hanning, William Etches, Mary Camilla Brook, William Etches, John Etches, Nathaniel Gilmour, Nathaniel Portlock (captain), and George Dixon (captain). No change in the list of partners after 1785 has been found.
Port au Prince was built in France in 1790. The British Royal Navy captured her in 1793 off Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Her original name was General Dumourier; her new owners named her for her place of capture. She became a letter of marque, slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people, and privateer cum whaler. In 1806 she anchored at a Tongan island where the local inhabitants massacred most of her crew and then scuttled her.
The whaler Globe, of Nantucket, Massachusetts, was launched in 1815. She made three whaling voyages and then in 1824, on her fourth, her crew mutinied, killing their officers. Eventually most of the mutineers were killed or captured and the vessel herself was back in Nantucket in her owners' hands. She continued to whale until about 1828. She was broken up circa 1830.
John Gilpin was an 1852 clipper in the California trade, named after the literary character John Gilpin. The ship was known for its 1852 race against the clipper Flying Fish, and for its collision with an iceberg.
Syren was the longest lived of all the clipper ships, with a sailing life of 68 years 7 months. She sailed in the San Francisco trade, in the Far East, and transported whaling products from Hawaii and the Arctic to New Bedford.
Emma was a merchant vessel launched at Calcutta in 1809 that in 1810 served as a government armed ship in the British invasion of Île de France. In 1811 she sailed to England where she was sold. She then became a transport and later a whaler. Between 1815 and 1853 she made 11 whaling voyages. She was then sold and became a merchantman on the England-Australia run. Between 1851 and 1853 she made one more whaling voyage to the South Seas fisheries. She then returned to the England-Australia trade. In 1857 her home port became Hull, and she became a Greenland whaler, though that role may have begun as early as 1855. She was converted in 1864 to a screw steamer but was lost in April while seal hunting.
Captain Phineas Banning Blanchard (1879–1962) was a tall ship sea captain, among the last of the American merchant trade in the age of sail.
Hurricane was a large extreme clipper of 1608 tons burthen built in Hoboken, New Jersey, United States in 1851. Reputedly the most extreme clipper ever built, Hurricane proved a very fast vessel, reportedly capable of speeds of up to 18 knots (33 km/h) in ideal conditions, and establishing a number of record passages in the early years of her career.
SS Chester A. Congdon was a steel-hulled American lake freighter in service between 1907 and 1918. She was built in 1907 by the Chicago Shipbuilding Company of South Chicago, Illinois, for the Holmes Steamship Company, and was intended to be used in the grain trade on the Great Lakes. She entered service on September 19, 1907, when she made her maiden voyage. In 1911, Salt Lake City was sold to the Acme Transit Company. A year later, she was transferred to the Continental Steamship Company, and was renamed Chester A. Congdon, after lawyer and entrepreneur Chester Adgate Congdon. She was involved in several accidents throughout her career.