HMS Sapphire (1675)

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History
English Red Ensign 1620.svg England
NameSapphire
Ordered30 September 1675
Builder Anthony Deane, Harwich
LaunchedJune 1675
FateSunk on 11 September 1696
General characteristics
Class and type32-gun fifth rate
Tons burthen340 8194 bm
Length
  • 105 ft 8 in (32.2 m) (overall)
  • 89 ft (27.1 m) (keel)
Beam26 ft 10 in (8.2 m)
Draught13 ft 2 in (4.0 m)
Depth of hold10 ft (3.05 m)
PropulsionSails
Sail plan Full-rigged ship
Complement135/115/90
Armament
  • Under 1677 Establishment: 32/28
  • Lower deck: 18 x demi-culverins
  • Upper deck: 10 x sakers
  • Quarter deck: 4 x minions
  • Under 1685 Establishment: 28
  • 16 × 8 pdr sakers
  • 10 × minions
  • 2 × 3 pdrs

HMS Sapphire was a 32-gun fifth rate of the Royal Navy, scuttled at Bay Bulls, Newfoundland, Canada in 1696. It is currently a protected archaeological site. She was the only vessel of any size sunk in the Anglo-French wars in North America. [1]

Contents

History

HMS Sapphire (also spelled Saphire, and called Zephyr by the French [2] ) was designed and built by Sir Anthony Deane at Harwich in 1675, at a cost of £4,175.

In 1677, Sapphire was the first command of Cloudesley Shovell, who later became Admiral of the Fleet and eventually died in the Scilly naval disaster of 1707. [3] The warship left England during King Williams’s War in April 1696 with orders to escort fishing vessels across the North Atlantic and protect them from the French, and remained active in the waters around Newfoundland after its initial escort task. [4] The ship was under the command of Captain Thomas Cleasby, accompanied by Lieutenant James Brothers and 135 men. [5] Sapphire was cornered in Bay Bulls Harbour by a French squadron on 11 September 1696. Cleasby, in fear that the French would capture the ship,

...decided to scuttle the ship, lighting it on fire and ordering his crew off the vessel. As the French scrambled to put out the fire, the English fled overland towards the colony of Ferryland. The fire on the Saphire spread to the powder room and sent the ship to the bottom of Bay Bulls Harbour. [6]

Historian John Oldmixon described the battle thusly,

On the 11th September, the whole French Squadron came down upon the Saphire, and fir' d with the utmost Fury; Captain Cleasby made a brave Defence for 2 hours, and hall' d most of the Ship's Guns on her side next the Enemy; the French at the same time made a Descent, and having driven the Men that were ashore into the Woods, attack' d the Saphire on al l sides; the Captain finding 'twas impossible to maintain the Ship any longer, set her on fire, and retir' d with his Officers and 35 Men to the Woods. When the Saphire was on fire, 40 French Men came aboard, endeavouring to extinguish it, but they were all blown up into the Air as soon as the Fire reach'd the Powder Room. [5]

Cleasby escaped across land to the colony of Ferryland. There, he was captured and sent to France as a prisoner. [7] He was eventually released as part of an exchange of prisoners. On 26 October 1696, he was tried under a Royal Navy Court Martial on the charge of "Loss of ship by setting on fire." [8] A contemporary newspaper reported:

On Thursday at 11 a clock, was held a Court Martial, on board His Majesty's ship the Monmouth , riding at the Buoy in the Nore, Captain John Mundon President, for the tryal of Captain Thomas Clesby, for burning his Majesty's Ship the Saphire at the Bay of Bulls in Newfoundland, and upon a full hearing, he was honourably acquitted, and the Court was pleased to tell him, that he deserved a reward and preferment, for his courage and conduct in that Action. [9]

Cleasby returned to Newfoundland the following year in command of HMS Lyme. [7] He died 23 July 1718 at Greenwich Hospital. [10]

Excavation and protection

The wreck of Sapphire lies 61m from shore in approximately 15m of water. [11] Salvage divers discovered the remains of Sapphire in the 1960s. [12] The original discoverer is believed to have been Ernest "Ernie" Power, who discovered the cannons in 1969 and recovered an intact grey stoneware chamber pot from the site. [13] Three cannons were retrieved and sold in 1972. [12] What was then called the Bay Bulls Harbour Shipwreck was designated a Provincial Historic Site on 25 April 1974. [14]

In response to looting, the Newfoundland Marine Archaeology Society (NMAS) performed the first initial excavation and survey on the wreck in 1974; over 300 artifacts were retrieved including examples of late seventeenth century glass and ceramics. [15] A National Film Board documentary about the site was produced by Ted Remerowski in 1979, [16] which chronicles a 1977 underwater archeological expedition led by Robert Grenier of Parks Canada to recover artifacts from the wreck. [17]

Eventually about 2,500 artifacts were taken from the wreck and are in storage in St. John's and Ottawa. [18] One notable artifact recovered was an Ottoman pipe bowl, or chibouk , one of only a handful found in North America. [19] Also recovered in excellent condition was a nocturnal, with the paint used to highlight the incised numbers having survived. [20]

In 1987, divers with the NMAS noted that the lead anchor for a nearby fish farm structure had been placed on the mounds of sandbags protecting the wreck; the owners of the fish farm relocated the anchor to a point south of Sapphire. [13] In 1993, Sapphire was one of eight known archaeological wrecks of British warships from the circa 1700 period. [21] Circa 1999, the HMS Sapphire Foundation was established to investigate creating an interpretation centre, [22] which was never built. In 2003, the Provincial Archaeology Office (PAO) worked with the Bay Bulls harbour authority (BBHA) to ensure the wreck was protected while oil rig work was done close to the site. [23]

The area of the wreck and surrounding debris fields, including any and all remaining in-situ artifacts, is protected under Newfoundland and Labrador's Historic Resources Act, and the site was listed on the Canadian Register of Historic Places on 23 August 2005. [24] In 2014, it was reported to be "in relatively good condition, with much of the upper and lower decks preserved, but collapsed and covered in fine silt." [11] It is a known spot for recreational divers. [25]

See also

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References

  1. "Sapphire, H.M.S.". Encyclopedia of Newfoundland and Labrador. St. John's: Harry Cuff Publications Ltd. 1994. p. 88.
  2. "Bay Bulls". Decks Awash. 9 (2): 6. 1980.
  3. www.kenthistoryforum.co.uk - The legacy of Sir Cloudsley Shovel
  4. Bush, Warren; Burgess, Neil (2021). "Exploring Shipwrecks from Coast to Coast: Hosting the Shipwreck Preservation Society of Newfoundland and Labrador" (PDF). Foghorn. 37 (1). Underwater Archaeological Society of British Columbia: 5.
  5. 1 2 Proulx, Jean-Pierre (1979). Histoire et naufrage des navires le Saphire, la Marguerite, le Murinet et l'Auguste (PDF). 337. Parks Canada.
  6. Elliott, Heather (15 June 2015). "Over the waves: HMS Saphire". Original Shipster. Retrieved 27 March 2022.
  7. 1 2 "Thomas Cleasby; 23 March, 1708". www.heritage.nf.ca. Retrieved 27 March 2022.
  8. f. 49 Thomas Cleasby, Captain, HMS Sapphire. Royal Navy Court Martial, 26 October 1696... 1696.
  9. "London, November 28". Post Man and the Historical Account. No. 244. Gale Document Number GALE|Z2001408951. 1 December 1696.
  10. "Thomas Cleasbey (d.1718)". threedecks.org. Retrieved 29 March 2022.
  11. 1 2 Betts, Matthew W.; Noël, Stéphane; Tourigny, Eric; Burns, Mélissa; Pope, Peter E.; Cumbaa, Stephen L. (2014). "Zooarchaeology of the Historic Cod Fishery in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada". Journal of the North Atlantic. 9 (24): 1–21. doi:10.3721/037.006.2401. ISSN   1935-1984. JSTOR   26671855. S2CID   162920022.
  12. 1 2 Dowsett, Kathy (9 December 2021). "Maritime History: The Mystery of Bay Bulls, Newfoundland". The Scuba News.
  13. 1 2 Ginns, Janette (1987). "Bay Bulls Underwater Archaeological Survey 1987" (PDF). Archaeology in Newfoundland and Labrador 1987: 98–109.
  14. O'Rielly, Deborah (February 2006). "Bay Bulls Harbour Provincial Historic Site". The Trident: 4.
  15. "Newfoundland Marine Archaeology Society". The Trident. 6 (1): 4. 1980.
  16. Canada, National Film Board of, The Mystery of Bay Bulls , retrieved 27 March 2022
  17. Burrows, Roger (1993). "Video Review [The mystery of Bay Bulls]". Decks Awash: 43.
  18. Frangou, Christina (31 July 2000). "Bay Bulls may be new home to oldest shipwreck's artifacts". The Telegram. p. 3.
  19. Bohms, Jeralyn (2014). "A Late 18th-Century Inuit Communal Winter House at Double Mer Point (GbBo-2)" (PDF). Provincial Archaeology Office 2014 Archaeology Review: 12.
  20. Swanick, Lois Ann (2005). An Analysis of Navigational Instruments in the Age of Exploration: 15th Century to Mid-17th Century (PDF). Texas A&M University. p. 133.
  21. Kenchington, Trevor (January 1993). "The Structures of English Wooden Ships: William Sutherland's Ship, circa 1710". Northern Mariner / Le Marin du Nord. 3 (1): 1–43. doi: 10.25071/2561-5467.766 . S2CID   247648723.
  22. Benson, Bob (25 July 1999). "Wreckage inspires museum project". The Telegram. p. 1.
  23. Bouzane, Bradley (15 June 2003). "Harbour authority protects shipwrecks". The Telegram. pp. A1.
  24. "Bay Bulls Harbour Provincial Historic Site". www.historicplaces.ca. 23 August 2005. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
  25. Moore, Dene (13 September 2004). "Rocky coast of Nfld., shipwrecks draw underwater adventurers". Canadian Press NewsWire. Toronto.