Lalla Rookh (1856 ship)

Last updated

Lalla Rookh (1856 ship)
History
Civil Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
NameLalla Rookh
OwnerWilliam Prowse & Co.
BuilderLiverpool
Launched1856
FateWrecked on rocks off Prawle Point, Devon, 3 March 1873
General characteristics
Type Tea clipper
Tons burthen869 tons
Length179 feet (55 m)
Depth of hold20 feet (6.1 m)

Lalla Rookh was a square-rigged, iron-hulled tea clipper of 869 tons, built in 1856 in Liverpool, Lancashire, owned by William Prowse & Co. and said to travel fast. She was used for trade with India and China, and was advertised in 1871 as a packet ship to take passengers to Australia. She was completely wrecked at Prawle Point, Devon on 3 March 1873, with the loss of one crew member and all of her cargo of tea and tobacco.

Contents

Description

Lalla Rookh was a square-rigged, [1] iron-hulled tea clipper of 869 tons, built in 1856 in Liverpool, Lancashire. [2] She was owned by William Prowse & Co. [lower-alpha 1] of Liverpool, [2] [4] although one report cites the owners as Adams and Co. of Liverpool. [5] She was 179 feet (55 m) in length and 33 feet (10 m) in breadth, with a hold 20 feet (6.1 m) deep. [4]

Use and voyages

She was used to transport tea from China to Britain. [6]

Lalla Rookh sailed under the command of masters "Connibe'r" (Colliver? [3] ) (1860–61); T. Brown (1865–66); Wilson (1865–66, 1870–71); and Fullerton (1872–73). [2]

On 28 October 1859, the Danish schooner Ida collided with a ship named Lallah Rookh and sank at Liverpool, but was able to be refloated, and all crew were saved. [7] [8] [lower-alpha 2]

In April 1867 Lallah Rookh sailed from Liverpool to Calcutta under Captain Wilson. [9]

In 1871 she was "re-classed at Lloyd's for a period of twenty-one years". [10]

In December 1871 she was being advertised to carry passengers, as a packet ship, to Melbourne, Adelaide, Geelong, Sydney, Hobart and Launceston under Captain Fullerton. She was described as a Liverpool-built iron clipper of 947 tons register, of the highest class, built "under special survey". She boasted of having made the passage to Bombay in 89 days. [11]

Wrecking

On 3 March 1873 she was wrecked when returning from Shanghai, having left on 22 October 1872, with 1300 tons of tea and 60 tons of tobacco, [1] at Prawle Point, Devon, [6] when she struck a rock at Gammon Head. She was carrying 19 people, including Captain Fullerton, and most managed to jump onto the rocks, while some used a buoy sent out by Prawle coastguards using a rocket. The ship's mate, who was trying to launch the ship's lifeboat, drowned, while the circumstances of the death of a stowaway, who had been ill before the event, were unclear. [1] [12] [13]

The cause of the wreck was described an "utterly inexplicable blunder", when she steered right on Prawle Point. Captain Fullerton was said to be instantly on deck and behaved "with great intrepidity". Unsuccessful attempts were made to launch the lifeboats, but a rocket was fired by coastguards on shore carrying a hawser, which was used to save all of the crew within 30 minutes. An American stowaway, who had been discovered three days after leaving Shanghai and had been very ill during the voyage, apparently died shortly before the ship struck the shore. [5]

Her wreck, which broke up within a couple of weeks, still lies under the sand at Elender Cove. A few weeks after the wrecking, [1] some of the cargo and pieces of wreckage were washed up on Slapton Sands, further up the coast to the north-east, and other small beaches nearby. It was said that tea and tobacco was heaped up to 11 feet (3.4 m) high in places. [13] [1]

A Board of Trade inquiry was held into the sinking of the vessel, in which it was stated that the wreck took place during a dense fog, and, according to the second mate, all that was possible to save the ship was done, although the two lead lines on deck were not used. [4]

The estimated value of the ship was £10,000 and its cargo £50,000, but the total was only insured for £10,000. [4]

Figurehead

The figurehead from her bow remained intact and washed up on the coast of Jersey [1] and was found in 1939, shortly before World War II. [12] It is preserved as part of the Long John Silver Collection at the Cutty Sark (now a museum ship) at Greenwich in London. The figurehead represents Princess Lalla Rookh, a character in Thomas Moore's 1817 romantic poem, Lalla Rookh . [6] This figurehead was in a collection created by British businessman Sydney Cumbers (1875–1959), known as "The Long John Silver Collection". Its complete provenance is unknown. [12]

Footnotes

  1. At a court case in 1860 about the collision of another of their ships, Peerless, Joshua Prowse, William Prowse jnr, John Prowse, Robert Saunders Prowse, and Peter Colliver were listed as owners. [3]
  2. It is yet to be confirmed that it was this Lalla Rookh involved in the collision, but it seems likely, given the lack of other substantial ships of this name recorded around this time.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Clipper</span> Very fast sailing ship of the 19th century

A clipper was a type of mid-19th-century merchant sailing vessel, designed for speed. Clippers were generally narrow for their length, small by later 19th-century standards, could carry limited bulk freight, and had a large total sail area. "Clipper" does not refer to a specific sailplan; clippers may be schooners, brigs, brigantines, etc., as well as full-rigged ships. Clippers were mostly constructed in British and American shipyards, although France, Brazil, the Netherlands, and other nations also produced some. Clippers sailed all over the world, primarily on the trade routes between the United Kingdom and China, in transatlantic trade, and on the New York-to-San Francisco route around Cape Horn during the California Gold Rush. Dutch clippers were built beginning in the 1850s for the tea trade and passenger service to Java.

<i>Cutty Sark</i> British clipper ship, on display at Greenwich, England

Cutty Sark is a British clipper ship. Built on the River Leven, Dumbarton, Scotland in 1869 for the Jock Willis Shipping Line, she was one of the last tea clippers to be built and one of the fastest, coming at the end of a long period of design development for this type of vessel, which halted as steamships took over their routes. She was named after the short shirt of the fictional witch in Robert Burns' poem Tam o' Shanter, first published in 1791.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Donald McKay</span> American shipbuilder

Donald McKay was a Canadian-born American designer and builder of sailing ships, famed for his record-setting clippers.

<i>Blackadder</i> (clipper)

Blackadder was a clipper, a sister ship to Hallowe'en, built in 1870 by Maudslay, Sons & Field at Greenwich for Jock Willis & Sons.

<i>Halloween</i> (clipper)

Hallowe’en was a 920-ton iron clipper ship. She was built in 1870 by Maudslay, Son & Field at Greenwich, England, for Jock Willis & Sons, and was a sister ship to the clipper ship Blackadder.

<i>Lothair</i> (clipper) British clipper ship

Lothair was a British clipper ship built by William Walker and launched in Rotherhithe, London, on 2 July 1870. After many years of service as a tea clipper, she was operated by merchants in Italy and Peru before being lost in 1910.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Slapton, Devon</span> Village and civil parish in Devon, England

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Prawle Point</span> Headland in south Devon, England

Prawle Point is a coastal headland in south Devon, England. It is the southernmost point of Devon. Just to the west is Elender Cove, and further west are Gammons Head Beach, also known as Maceley Cove, and Gammon Head.

<i>Ambassador</i> (clipper)

<i>Golden Fleece</i> (clipper)

Golden Fleece was an 1855 medium clipper in the California trade, built by Paul Curtis. She was known for arriving with cargoes in good condition, for making passages in consistently good time, and for catching fire with a load of ice.

<i>Lahloo</i> (clipper)

Lahloo was a British tea clipper known for winning the Tea Race of 1870, and finishing second in the Tea Race of 1871. She sailed from Fuzhou to London with over a million pounds of tea in 1868.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sydney Cumbers</span>

Sydney "Long John Silver" Cumbers was a British businessman and collector of Merchant Navy memorabilia. He was noted for his large collection of ships' figureheads that he maintained at his house in Gravesend, and which he later donated to the Cutty Sark museum.

<i>Windhover</i> (clipper ship)

Windhover was a British tea clipper built in the closing years of construction of this sort of ship. She measured 847 tons NRT. Like the majority of the tea clippers built in the second half of the 1860s, she was of composite construction. She was built by Connell and Co, Glasgow, Scotland in 1868.

<i>Wylo</i> (clipper) Scottish composite clipper

Wylo a composite clipper was built by Robert Steele & Company, Greenock, and launched on 15 April 1869. Robert Steele & Company also built the famous clippers Ariel and Taeping who took part in the great tea race of 1866, and Sir Lancelot another renown clipper ship.

<i>Osaka</i> (barque) English composite barque

Osaka, A composite barque, built by William Pile, Sunderland, at Yard No. 179 for Killick Martin & Company, the company founded by Captain James Killick and launched on 12 July 1869. William Pile also built Osaka's sister ship Miako, for Killick Martin & Company launched on 15 April 1869.

Lalla Rookh was an Australian wooden two-masted ketch, also sometimes referred to as a schooner, 59 tons. She was built on the Bellinger River in New South Wales in 1875, and named after Lalla Rookh, the first sizeable ship to visit Brisbane. The ketch Lalla Rookh was first registered in Townsville, Queensland, by Aplin Brown & Company.

Lalla Rookh was a 380-ton sailing vessel, possibly a brig and most likely built in 1823. She traded in North and South America, and transported a steam engine to New South Wales and a detachment of troops to Brisbane in 1825. She later traded and carried passengers between the East Indies, India and Britain. She was under the command of Captain Green until November 1827, when she came under the command of Captain McCallum, and was wrecked at Pondicherry on 6 March 1828.

Lalla Rookh was a wooden sailing vessel, 333 tons, built by Thomas Metcalfe & Son in South Shields, "rigged as a Snow", meaning that, unlike a normal brig, she had an extra lower square sail on the main mast, which provided additional power. She was completed in March 1825 and owned by Thomas & John Fenwick of North Shields.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Clarkson, Steve (June 2016). "Start Point Project" (PDF). p. 20. Retrieved 28 January 2021. This Start Point project documents the research carried out by the teamon the inshore shipwrecks on the South Devon coast. It covers the area between Start Point and Prawle Point
  2. 1 2 3 "Sailing Ships: Lalla Rookh (1856)". Bruzelius.info. Source: Lloyd's Register of Shipping . Retrieved 27 January 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  3. 1 2 "Appellant: Joshua Prowse, William Prowse jnr, John Prowse, Robert Saunders Prowse, and..." The National Archives . 1860. Retrieved 27 January 2021. Appellant: Joshua Prowse, William Prowse jnr, John Prowse, Robert Saunders Prowse, and Peter Colliver, all of Liverpool, owners of the ship Peerless. Respondent: European and American Steam Shipping Company, owners of the screw steamship Jason. Subject: Collision between said vessels on 14 May 1858. Lower Court: High Court of Admiralty of England.
  4. 1 2 3 4 "Wreck of the Lalla Rookh". Liverpool Mercury . No. 7855. 25 March 1873.
  5. 1 2 "Ship News". The Standard . No. 15163. London. 5 March 1873. p. 7.
  6. 1 2 3 "Cutty Sark Figureheads: Literature". Royal Museums Greenwich . 15 April 2016. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
  7. "Ship News". The Times. No. 23451. London. 31 October 1859. col E-F, p. 5.
  8. "Ship News". The Times. No. 23456. London. 5 November 1859. col F, p. 10.
  9. "Wreck and Loss of Life at Prawle". Liverpool Daily Post . Vol. XLIX, no. 2587. 6 March 1873. p. 6.
  10. "Vessels sailed from Liverpool (Thurs. Feb. 21)". North Devon Journal . Vol. IV, no. 166. 1 March 1828. p. 4.
  11. "Advertisement". Liverpool Mercury . No. 7450. 8 December 1871.
  12. 1 2 3 "Figurehead of the Lalla Rookh". Royal Museums Greenwich . Retrieved 28 January 2021.
  13. 1 2 Harper, C.G. (2019). The South Devon Coast. Good Press. p. 165. Retrieved 28 January 2021.