History | |
---|---|
United Kingdom | |
Name | Lady Lyttleton |
Owner | Harold Smith |
Acquired | 1866 |
Stricken | Sank 1867 |
Fate | Foundered 17 July 1867 |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | Barque |
Tons burthen | 178 tons |
Length | 94.4 feet (29 m) |
Beam | 21.1 ft (6.4 m) |
Draught | 9.7 ft (3.0 m) |
Notes | [1] |
Lady Lyttleton was a barque that sunk in the Emu Point Channel in Oyster Harbour near Albany in the Great Southern region of Western Australia.
The ship was built as Sultan, with a female figurehead and a single deck. It was registered in Sydney in 1861 by the owners Alex Young and John Howard. [2]
In 1866 the vessel was sold to Harold Selwyn Smith in Melbourne and registered at the port there. [2]
On the ship's final voyage, in the command of John McArthur, [2] it departed Adelaide [1] on 29 May 1867 with three passengers and a cargo of 18 tons of bran, 10 tons of pollard, 443 tons of barley and other goods. It entered King George Sound on 16 June and was leaking badly. The crew had already jettisoned part of the cargo with the rest being unloaded in Albany before it sailed to Emu Point for repairs.
Lady Lyttleton was hove down to the shore by tackles from the masthead but the ship slipped and then foundered and sank on 17 July 1867. [2] [1] It was later abandoned. The wreck was rediscovered by divers in 1971. [3] The Western Australian Museum surveyed and partially excavated the site in 1978 and in 1990 with several artefacts being retrieved. [3]
King George Sound is a sound on the south coast of Western Australia. Named King George the Third's Sound in 1791, it was referred to as King George's Sound from 1805. The name "King George Sound" gradually came into use from about 1934, prompted by new Admiralty charts supporting the intention to eliminate the possessive 's' from geographical names.
The Port of Newcastle is a major seaport in the city of Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia. It is the world's largest coal port.
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Bayonet Head is an outer north-eastern suburb of Albany, Western Australia, on the west bank of Oyster Harbour. Its local government area is the City of Albany. Until the 1980s, it was known as Flinders Park.
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Fitzroy was a steel-hulled steamship built in 1912 at Old Kilpatrick, Scotland in 1912. Thirty-one people were killed when Fitzroy capsized in a gale whilst carrying a general cargo between Coffs Harbour and Sydney off Cape Hawke, New South Wales on 26 June 1921.
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Zanoni was a ship built in Liverpool, England in 1865 by W. H. Potter & Co as a 338-ton composite barque. It was owned by Thomas Royden & Sons who intended to use it for the East India trade.
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The Newcastle was a clipper ship of the Green Blackwell line that operated on routes from England to India and Australia in the late 19th century. Built in 1857 in Sunderland, England, she was wrecked near the northern tip of Queensland, Australia, in 1883.
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