Pericles | |
History | |
---|---|
United Kingdom | |
Name | Pericles |
Namesake | Pericles |
Owner | George Thompson & Co Ltd |
Operator | Aberdeen Line |
Port of registry | Aberdeen |
Route | London – Cape Town – Brisbane |
Builder | Harland & Wolff, Belfast |
Cost | £240,000 |
Yard number | 392 |
Launched | 21 December 1907 |
Completed | 4 June 1908 |
Maiden voyage | 8 July 1908 |
Identification |
|
Fate | Struck a rock and sank, 1910 |
General characteristics | |
Type | Ocean liner |
Tonnage | |
Length | 500.6 ft (152.6 m) |
Beam | 62.3 ft (19.0 m) |
Draught | |
Depth | 39.4 ft (12.0 m) |
Decks | 2 |
Installed power | 1,075 NHP |
Propulsion |
|
Speed | 15 knots (28 km/h) |
Capacity |
|
Crew | 163 |
Sensors and processing systems | submarine signalling |
Notes |
SS Pericles was a UK steam ocean liner and refrigerated cargo ship. She was launched in 1907 in Ireland for the Aberdeen Line service between Great Britain and Australia via South Africa. When new, she was the largest ship on the route.
Pericles was wrecked in 1910 off the coast of Western Australia, but without loss of life. [1] Federal Australian law now protects her wreck off Cape Leeuwin for its historic significance. [1]
In the 19th century Aberdeen Line named some of its sailing ships after classical Greek people and events. In the 20th century the company re-used some of these names on steamships.
Pericles was a statesman, orator and general in Classical Athens in the fifth century BC. Aberdeen Line's previous Pericles was a three-masted iron-hulled sailing ship launched in 1877 in Aberdeen and sold to Norwegian owners in 1904. [2]
Harland & Wolff built Pericles on slipway number four of its North Yard [3] in Belfast, launching her on 21 December 1907 and completing her on 4 June 1908. [4]
Pericles was 500.6 ft (152.6 m) long, her beam was 62.3 ft (19.0 m) and her depth 39.4 ft (12.0 m). [3] [4] She had a double bottom for the full length of her hull and eight watertight compartments to help keep her afloat in case her hull was breached. [5] Her hull had bilge keels to improve stability. [6]
Pericles had berths for 100 saloon class passengers spread over four decks, and 250 third class passengers. [6] Her holds were refrigerated and had a total of six hatches. [7] Her tonnages were 10,925 GRT, 7,045 NRT and 11,200 DWT. [8] On entering service she was the largest liner on the route between Britain and Australia. [6]
Pericles had twin screws driven by quadruple-expansion steam engines whose combined power output was rated at 1,075 NHP. [3] [4] Her navigational aids included submarine signalling apparatus. [5]
Pericles was the first ship Harland and Wolff built for Aberdeen Line. [9] She cost £240,000. [7] Harland and Wolff later built her two sister ships: Themistocles launched in 1910 and Demosthenes launched in 1911.
Pericles was registered at Aberdeen. Her UK official number was 127153 and her code letters were HMQP. [10]
Aberdeen Line ran scheduled services between London and Australia via Cape Town. [11] On 8 July 1908 Pericles left London in her maiden voyage. [9] On 24 August she reached Sydney, where The Sydney Morning Herald greeted the "new mammoth Aberdeen liner" [5] as "a magnificent liner" [8] and "a floating palace". [5]
Pericles was the largest ship in the Aberdeen Line fleet. [11] Her Master was Alexander Simpson, [5] who was the Commodore of the Aberdeen Line fleet and had 46 years' experience at sea. [7]
Pericles' final voyage began from Brisbane in Queensland in 1910. She called at Sydney, Hobart and Melbourne and was due to call at Fremantle. She was heavily laden with a cargo that included 32,000 boxes of butter, 35,000 frozen carcasses of mutton, 6,000 bales of wool, several thousand cases of apples, 600 tons of lead ingots, 25 tons of tallow and a quantity of coconut oil. The lead was on its way to England in 1910 because it contained gold, platinum and silver, and at the time Australia lacked the means to separate the precious and base metals. Pericles and her cargo were insured for a total of £750,000. [7]
Miners in the Newcastle, New South Wales area had been on strike, which had caused a coal shortage in Australia. Coal had been imported from the US, India and Natal, [12] and the strike had ended by 14 March, [13] but the shortage was expected to continue for some weeks. [14] When Pericles called at Melbourne she was delayed there for three days until she could bunker. She then left for Fremantle on 24 March. [7]
At 1532 hrs on 31 March Pericles was off the coast of Western Australia, steaming at 14 knots (26 km/h) in good visibility, when she struck an uncharted rock off St Alouarn Island, 3+1⁄2 nautical miles (6.5 km) southeast of Cape Leeuwin, the most south-westerly point on the Australian mainland. She passed over the rock but the forward plates of her hull were damaged. Within three minutes there was 16.4 ft (5 m) of water in her forward hold. Her Chief Engineer, WL Robertson, and his crew worked waist deep in water to shore up her bulkheads and keep her pumps running. [7]
The cargo ship Strathfillan was within sight, steaming south. Pericles blew her whistle, flew a distress message with her signal flags and turned broadside to Strathfillan to attract her attention, but Strathfillan continued south. [7]
Captain Simpson gave the order to abandon ship. Within 25 minutes Pericles' crew had launched all 14 lifeboats, carrying all passengers and all of the crew. The only fatality was the one-eyed ship's cat, Nelson, who drowned. The crew of Cape Leeuwin Lighthouse lit fires ashore to guide the boats to safe landfall in Sarge Bay. [7]
The last boat, carrying Captain Simpson, stood close to Pericles while she remained afloat. The ship drifted southeast for a short while, down by her head, then listed to starboard and sank bow-first. The last boat made land at 1900 hrs, after nightfall. [7]
The next day the steamship Monaro embarked most of the passengers from Flinders Bay Jetty and took them to Fremantle. About 30 passengers chose instead to travel 200 miles (320 km) overland from Cape Leeuwin to Fremantle. Monaro was a smaller ship with limited accommodation, so her officers gave up their quarters to Pericles' female survivors. [7]
The Royal Humane Society of Australasia gave awards to the three keepers of the Cape Leeuwin Lighthouse for their effort rescuing Pericles' passengers and crew. A local clergyman was given a gold watch and his daughter was given a gold brooch for their care for the survivors. [7]
The Fremantle Harbour Master, Captain Irvine, held a preliminary inquiry on 5 April 1910. He recommended to the Colonial Secretary of Western Australia that a full Court of Marine Inquiry be held. This opened on 7 April at Fremantle Court House. [7]
The sloop HMS Penguin had surveyed the sea around Cape Leeuwin for an Admiralty chart in 1900. The court heard that Penguin had taken soundings at 1 nautical mile (1.9 km) intervals, and had missed the pinnacle that Pericles had struck. [7]
The court was therefore adjourned while a government steamship, a different Penguin, searched the area to find both the rock and the wreck. Penguin sounded the area by lead and line. She reported that Pericles lay two miles and seven chains off Leeuwin Lighthouse, in 16 fathoms (29 m) of water, and with the tops of her spars and derricks only 3 fathoms (5.5 m) below the surface. [7]
On 14 April the court found that Captain Simpson and his officers had exercised proper care and vigilance in planning Pericles' course, navigating her and determining her position. The rock that Pericles struck was uncharted and therefore Simpson and his officers were not to blame. [7]
The court also found that both the wreck and the rock were hazards to navigation. Therefore, on 22 April 1910 Captain Irvine posted a notice to mariners in the Government Gazette of Western Australia warning of the wreck at in the position that Penguin reported, and of the rock somewhere in the vicinity in about 24 feet (7.3 m) of water. [7]
Attempts to find the rock were unsuccessful. On 4 May 1910 Penguin was sent back to look for it. In mid-May it was reported that one of Pericles' masts or derricks was now 6 feet (2 m) above water, and a few days later it had risen to 3 feet (1 m). It was surmised that the wreck, which had sunk with a starboard list, had partly righted herself. [7]
In December 1910 the sloop HMS Fantome was sent find the rock. She too was unsuccessful. It was surmised that when Pericles hit the rock, she may have knocked the pinnacle off it. [7]
Some of Pericles' cargo was salvaged as flotsam in the weeks after she sank. Local residents recovered boxes of butter and apples, barrels of coconut oil, empty barrels, doors and other timber that had broken loose from the ship. Local men formed three syndicates with bullock teams to gather flotsam from the shore, and it was reported that each syndicate made £1,000. A steamship called Una salvaged 1,800 boxes of butter and some tallow. [7]
A fisherman from nearby Busselton acquired one of Pericles' lifeboats, rigged her as a cutter, named her Rose and used her for fishing. Two other lifeboats from Pericles were bought and rigged as fishing boats, one by a man from nearby Bunbury. [7]
In 1919 a company called Ball and Sons reportedly searched for the wreck but did not find it. However, on 12 January 1969 The Sunday Times published an article claiming that Ball and Sons did find the wreck, dived on it from a steamboat called Florrie, and recovered fittings from the wreck. [7]
Less than 10 days after Pericles sank, it was reported that Aberdeen Line had ordered "a duplicate steamer" to replace her, which would be ready for her maiden voyage to Australia in March or April 1911. [15] It is not clear whether this refers to Themistocles, which was launched in September 1910 and made her maiden voyage in February 1911, or Demosthenes, which was launched in February 1911 and made her maiden voyage that August.
In 1957 a US submariner called Tom Snider found the wreck and formed a company to recover items from her. By 1961 his Universal Salvage Company had raised 400 to 500 tons of lead ingots, which he exported from Bunbury to London [7] for the precious metals to be separated from the base metal. [7]
In 1961 Snider was killed in an air crash. Salvage work continued, and at least three blades of Pericles' propellers were recovered for scrap. Pericles had two propellers in use, and a third chained to her deck as a spare. [7]
The salvage rights and ownership of the wreck passed through various hands, until some time after 1989 the wreck was given to the Western Australian Museum in Perth. [7]
The Western Australian Museum has an Aberdeen Line house flag that one of Pericles' engineers saved from the ship before she sank. Augusta Historical Museum has a bell that was recovered from the wreck. [16] Snider gave two bronze valves from the ship to the then Harbour Master of Fremantle, Captain FHB Humble. [7]
The Australian Underwater Cultural Heritage Act 2018 protects Pericles' wreck for several reasons. She is the largest historic wreck of her era in the area, the only wreck in Western Australian waters that has quadruple expansion engines, and she is of social significance. [7]
The wreck is about 590 ft (180 m) long and 230 ft (70 m) wide and lies at a depth of about 115 ft (35 m). Her twin engines, twin propeller shafts and three of her boilers are visible, along with her anchors, the unsalvaged parts of her propellers, and part of her frame. Some lead ingots still remain in and around the stern of the wreck. [7]
Cape Leeuwin is the most south-westerly mainland point of the Australian continent, in the state of Western Australia.
St Alouarn Islands are a group of islands and rocks south-east of Cape Leeuwin in Western Australia, approximately 11 km south of Augusta in Flinders Bay.
Maori was a British refrigerated cargo steamship built in 1893 by C.S. Swan & Hunter of Wallsend-on-Tyne for Shaw, Saville & Albion Co. of London with intention of transporting frozen meat and produce from Australia and New Zealand to the United Kingdom. The vessel stayed on this trade route through her entire career. In August 1909 while on one of her regular trips, she was wrecked on the coast of South Africa with the loss of thirty two of her crew.
SS Koombana was a passenger steamship that was built in Scotland in 1908 for the Adelaide Steamship Company, for coastal liner services between Fremantle and the northwest coast of Western Australia. She sank in a tropical cyclone somewhere off Port Hedland in 1912, with the loss of all 150 people aboard. Her loss was one of Australia's worst weather-related maritime disasters in the twentieth century.
The STS Leeuwin II is a tall ship based in Fremantle, Western Australia used for sail training for youths.
SS Laurentic was a British transatlantic ocean liner that was built in Belfast, Ireland, and launched in 1908. She is an early example of a ship whose propulsion combined reciprocating steam engines with a low-pressure steam turbine.
SS Suevic was a steamship built by Harland and Wolff in Belfast for the White Star Line. Suevic was the fifth and last of the Jubilee-class ocean liners, built specifically to service the Liverpool-Cape Town-Sydney route, along with her sister ship Runic. In 1907 she was wrecked off the south coast of England, but in the largest rescue of its kind, all passengers and crew were saved. The ship herself was deliberately broken in two, and a new bow was attached to the salvaged stern portion. Later serving as a Norwegian whaling factory ship carrying the name Skytteren, she was scuttled off the Swedish coast in 1942 to prevent her capture by ships of Nazi Germany.
Queen of Nations was a wooden-hulled, three-masted clipper that was built in Scotland in 1861 and wrecked on the coast of New South Wales in 1881. She spent her entire two-decade career with George Thompson, Junior's Aberdeen White Star Line.
SS El Sol was a cargo ship built in 1910 for the Morgan Line, a subsidiary of the Southern Pacific Company. During World War I, she was known as USAT El Sol in service with the United States Army and as USS El Sol (ID-4505) in service with the United States Navy. At the war's end, she reverted to her original name of SS El Sol.
SS Zealandic was a British ocean liner initially operated by White Star Line. She was used both as a passenger liner and a cargo ship as well as serving during both world wars.
The Nimbin was a steel screw steamer built in 1927 at Copenhagen, that was the first motor vessel placed into the New South Wales coastal trade. It was owned and operated by the North Coast Steam Navigation Company and was the first Australian registered merchant ship to be lost during World War II when it struck a mine laid by the German auxiliary cruiser Pinguin. The Nimbin was on its way from Coffs Harbour to its home port, Sydney, with a cargo of bundled three-ply timber and a cargo of pigs. One third of the ship was blown away and it sank in three minutes. Seven men were killed. The remaining thirteen clung to bundles of plywood. Some hours later an air force plane from RAAF Base Rathmines saw the survivors and directed the coastal ship SS Bonalbo to the scene to retrieve them.
SS Oceana was a P&O passenger liner and cargo vessel, launched in 1887 by Harland and Wolff of Belfast and completed in 1888. Originally assigned to carry passengers and mail between London and Australia, she was later assigned to routes between London and British India. On 16 March 1912 the ship collided in the Strait of Dover with the Pisagua, a 2,850 GRT German-registered four-masted steel-hulled barque. As a result Oceana sank off Beachy Head on the East Sussex coast, with the loss of 17 lives.
SS Kwinana was an Australian ocean-going cargo and passenger steamship. She was built in England in 1892 as the cargo ship SS Darius. In 1912 she changed owners, was refitted as a cargo and passenger ship and renamed Kwinana.
SS Themistocles was a UK steam ocean liner and refrigerated cargo ship. She was launched in 1910 in Ireland and scrapped in 1947 in Scotland. She was built for Aberdeen Line, White Star Line managed her for a few years, and she spent the latter part of her career with Shaw, Savill & Albion Line.
The Jubilee class were a group of five passenger and cargo ocean liners built by Harland and Wolff at Belfast, for the White Star Line, specifically for the White Star Line's service from the UK to Australia on the Liverpool–Cape Town–Sydney route. The five ships in order of the dates they entered service were:
Cumberland was built in India in 1827, probably at Cochin but possibly at Surat. She sailed to Great Britain and assumed British registration. She traded between England and India under a license from the British East India Company (EIC). She wrecked in March 1830 near Cape Leeuwin coming from Sydney on her way to Bombay.
Runnymede was built in 1854 at Sunderland, England. In 1856 she made her first voyage from London to Australia, transporting convicts to Western Australia. She was wrecked in 1866.
SS Demosthenes was a UK steam ocean liner and refrigerated cargo ship. She was launched in 1911 in Ireland for Aberdeen Line and scrapped in 1931 in England. In the First World War she was an Allied troop ship.
RMS Orama was a British steam ocean liner and Royal Mail Ship. She was launched in 1911 for the Orient Steam Navigation Company. When new, she was the largest liner sailing between Great Britain and Australia.
SS Norseman was a British cargo liner that was torpedoed by the German submarine SM U-39 in the Mediterranean Sea off Thessaloniki, Greece on 22 January 1916 while on route from Plymouth, United Kingdom to Thessaloniki, Greece, while carrying a varied cargo including about 1,100 mules and munitions. Norseman was subsequently beached at Moudros, Greece, and declared a total loss. She was scrapped in situ in 1920.