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Shipwrecks on Cape Cod

Chapter 16: LOSS OF THE SHIP ASIA
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About This Book

A longtime marine reporting agent at Highland Light compiles eyewitness narratives and investigations of numerous shipwrecks and maritime mysteries along Cape Cod. The collection recounts individual losses, rescue attempts, weather- and navigation-related causes, abandoned or puzzling vessels, and large-scale disasters, while describing coastal observation, telegraph reporting, and life-saving practices. Personal recollections and practical detail are interwoven with thematic discussion of the sea’s hazards and local responses, producing a series of concise case studies that illustrate how storms, fog, shoals, and human error have repeatedly shaped the region’s maritime history.

LOSS OF THE SHIP ASIA

This was one of the worst wrecks that had occurred on the New England coast in many years.

This ship was on a voyage from Manila for Boston with a cargo of East India goods. Approaching the Cape Cod coast she encountered a terrific storm and struck one of the outlying shoals off Nantucket.

The furious sea which drove over her decks in torrents soon began the work of destruction. When she struck the shoal on Sunday morning there was a furious northeast gale tearing the sea into a fearful condition. The next day the ship gave every indication that she must soon be a broken and dismantled wreck.

Besides the crew of twenty-three men, Capt. Dakin’s wife and little daughter were on board.

When the ship began to pound to pieces the mate and such members of the crew as had not already been swept overboard did all in their power to assist Capt. Dakin in shielding his wife and daughter from being swept away by the seas which broke in fury over the vessel. Before the ship broke up the mate lashed the captain’s daughter and himself to a large piece of wreckage, hoping in that way to reach the shore.

Capt. Dakin and his wife were swept away before they could fasten themselves to any part of the wreckage. Of the whole number on board the ill-fated craft but three were saved. These were sailors who clung to a piece of the ship, and after drifting about in Vineyard Sound for several days were finally picked up, and placed on the lightship, more dead than alive.

The bodies of the mate with his arms locked about the captain’s daughter, and both securely lashed to a piece of wreckage, were picked up a few days later far down the coast. Both had been frozen to death. The bodies of the captain and his wife were never recovered, and only a few bodies of the crew were ever found.