“ARGONAUT,” in the Clyde.
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In April, 1899, when on a passage to Adelaide under Captain Nichol, the Loch Sloy overran her distance and was wrecked on Kangaroo Island. Captain Nichol was trying to pick up Cape Borda light, but it was shut out from him by the cliffs between Cape Bedout and Cape Couldie, and the Loch Sloy, in the darkness of the morning of 24th April, drove on to the Brothers Rocks and became a total loss in a few moments, the heavy surf sweeping right over her. The crew and seven saloon passengers took refuge in the rigging, but one by one the masts went over the side, and the men were hurled into the breakers. The ship had struck 300 yards from the shore and only four men reached it—a passenger, two able seamen and an apprentice. None of the survivors remembered how they got ashore; they heard the crash of the masts, then felt the wreckage bumping them about in the surf, and finally found themselves lying wedged amongst the rocks, where the breakers had washed them up.
The following account of their subsequent hardships appeared in an Adelaide paper:—
The survivors endured dreadful privations before they reached a settlement. They had plenty of whisky, which had floated ashore from the wreck, but for solid food they had to eat grass, dead penguins cast up by the waves, and shellfish. They suffered terribly through insufficient clothing and lack of boots. Two of them walked along the coast until they came to the Cape Borda light. One went inland to May’s Settlement. The other survivor, David Kilpatrick, the passenger, was so ill that he had to be left behind. When search parties came back for him he had disappeared, and it was not till a week later that a systematic search of the island led to the discovery of his dead body a mile and a half from the spot where the others had left him.
The Loss of Lochs “Shiel” and “Sunart.”
Loch Shiel, the sister ship of Loch Sloy, was lost on the Thorne Rock, Milford Haven on the 30th January, 1901. Her master mistook the Great Castle Head lights and got on the rocks at 8.40 p.m., the Loch liner being bound out to Australia from Glasgow. There was no loss of life, however, on this occasion, half the crew being taken out of the mizen rigging by a lifeboat, and the other half climbing ashore on to the rocks by means of her bowsprit.
Loch Sunart, the last three-master built for the Loch line, was launched in January, 1878. Her life was a very short one, as on her second passage out to Melbourne she was piled up on the Skulmartin Rock, 11th January, 1879.
Notes on Passages to Australia in 1877.
Loch Maree left Glasgow on 5th May, but was held up for four days in sight of Tory Island, first by calms and then strong S.W. winds. Between 21° S.—the limit of the S.E. trades—and the Cape meridian, she had ten days of strong N.W. winds, during which she logged over 300 miles a day for several days in succession.
Ben Cruachan had such favourable winds in the Channel that she carried the Channel pilot on to Madeira, where she landed him on 25th April. She made very steady running down south, for her best day’s work was only 296 miles. Her sister ship, Ben Voirlich, on the contrary, made a run of 350 miles on 26th July in 35° 37′ S., 22° 10′ W., though she took 83 days from Achill Head to Hobson’s Bay.
Pericles, with 489 emigrants on board, made a good start in her career, like all Thompson’s ships. Between the 23rd and 24th November in 44° S., she ran 354 miles before what Captain Largie called a hurricane, so it is not surprising that Brilliant failed to catch her in spite of an average of 261 miles a day for 22 days between the Cape and Otway. Brilliant, however, instead of emigrants, had 4000 tons of general cargo on board.
Patriarch, who very rarely suffered damage in bad weather, took a very heavy sea over her poop during a W.N.W. gale on the 2nd September in 100° E., and lost 9 feet of her taffrail and three stanchions over the side. This sea would not have been a pleasant one for Loch Vennachar or Sir Walter Raleigh, both of which had their decks lumbered up with horse boxes full of draught stock.
Samuel Plimsoll as usual made some good running down south, her best week’s work being 2050 miles.
Thermopylae was hard chased by Cutty Sark, in spite of a 17-day run from the Lizard to the equator. It is a pity the two ships did run their easting down on the same parallel, as they must have been neck and neck down south, but Cutty Sark kept in 46° S., whilst Thermopylae did not go higher than 44° 30′ S. Both ships by the way were forced by bad weather to put back to the Downs on their first attempts to get down Channel.C
| PASSAGES TO SYDNEY UNDER 80 DAYS IN 1877. | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ship | Departure | Crossed Equator |
Crossed Cape Meridian |
Passed S.W. Cape Tasmania |
Arrived | Days Out |
||||||
| Cutty Sark | Lizard | Dec. | 6 | Dec. | 28 | Jan. | 18 ’78 | Feb. | 13 ’78 | Feb. | 16 ’78 | 72 |
| Patriarch | Start | July | 3 | July | 26 | Sept. | 12 | Sept. | 15 | 74 | ||
| (Otway) | ||||||||||||
| Pericles | Plymouth | Sept. | 20 | Oct. | 17 | Nov. | 7 | Nov. | 30 | Dec. | 3 | 74 |
| Brilliant | Start | Oct. | 2 | Oct. | 31 | Nov. | 26 | Dec. | 10 | Dec. | 20 | 79 |
| (Otway) | ||||||||||||
| Samuel Plimsoll | Plymouth | June | 9 | July | 7 | July | 28 | Aug. | 23 | Aug. | 27 | 79 |
| (Otway) | ||||||||||||
| PASSAGES TO MELBOURNE UNDER 80 DAYS IN 1877. | ||||||||||||
| Ship | Departure | Crossed Equator |
Crossed Cape Meridian |
Passed Cape (Otway) |
Arrived | Days Out |
||||||
| Loch Maree | Cape Clear | May | 13 | June | 3 | June | 24 | July | 19 | July | 19 | 67 |
| Ben Cruachan | Lizard | April | 17 | May | 13 | June | 23 | 67 | ||||
| Thermopylae | Lizard | Dec. | 3 | Dec. | 20 | Jan. | 17 ’78 | Feb. | 14 ’78 | Feb. | 15 ’78 | 74 |
| Mermerus | Start | June | 30 | July | 28 | Aug. | 19 | Sept. | 13 | 75 | ||
| Miltiades | Start | June | 13 | July | 10 | July | 31 | Aug. | 27 | 75 | ||
| Loch Vennachar | Channel | April | 7 | May | 2 | May | 29 | June | 22 | 75 | ||
| Romanoff | Lizard | April | 1 | Apl. | 25 | May | 19 | June | 15 | 75 | ||
| Loch Fyne | Tuskar | Dec. | 20 | Mar. | 5 ’78 | 75 | ||||||
| Salamis | Start | July | 7 | Aug. | 1 | Aug. | 26 | Sept. | 21 | 76 | ||
| Thomas Stephens | Tuskar | Aug. | 12 | Sept. | 9 | Sept. | 30 | Oct. | 26 | Oct. | 27 | 76 |
| Loch Ryan | Tuskar | Mar. | 6 | Mar. | 27 | Apl. | 23 | May | 21 | 76 | ||
| Theophane | Holyhead | June | 30 | July | 30 | Aug. | 21 | Sept. | 15 | 77 | ||
| Parthenope | Holyhead | Aug. | 17 | Sept. | 19 | Oct. | 10 | Nov. | 1 | Nov. | 2 | 77 |
| Sir Walter Raleigh | Lizard | July | 5 | July | 30 | Aug. | 22 | Sept. | 20 | 77 | ||
| Loch Garry | Qu’nstown | July | 11 | Aug. | 10 | Sept. | 2 | Sept. | 25 | Sept. | 26 | 77 |
| Maulesden | Tuskar | Mar. | 4 | Mar. | 26 | Apl. | 24 | May | 22 | 79 | ||
“Cimba.”
In April, 1878, Hood launched the beautiful little Cimba for A. Nicol, and with her green hull, gold scrolls and lion figure-head she was a familiar visitor to Port Jackson for close on 30 years.
An out and out wool clipper, she was very heavily rigged, her chief measurements being:—
Main lower mast |
60 | feet. |
Fore and main yards |
82 | feet. |
Fore and main lower topsail yards |
76 | feet. |
Fore and main upper topsail yards |
69 | feet. |
Fore and main lower topgallant yard |
58 | feet. |
Fore and main upper topgallant yards |
52 | feet. |
Fore and main royal yards |
41 | feet. |
Her lower masts were short compared to some clippers, but her lower yards were very heavy, her fore and main yards weighing over 4 tons each.
Her first master was J. Fimister, who had her until 1895, when Captain J. W. Holmes took her over until she was sold abroad in 1906.
Under Captain Fimister her best passages were:—
| 1880 | Channel to Sydney |
71 | days |
| 1882 | Channel to Sydney |
82 | days |
| 1884 | Channel to Sydney |
79 | days |
| 1889 | Sydney to London |
75 | days |
| 1891 | Sydney to Channel |
84 | days |
| 1892 | Channel to Sydney |
83 | days |
| 1893 | Sydney to Channel |
86 | days |
| 1894 | Channel to Sydney |
80 | days |
On her maiden trip she left London 27th June—left Channel 2nd July, 5 days out—crossed the line 28th July. 26 days from departure—crossed Cape meridian 20th August, 49 days from departure—arrived Sydney 29th September, 89 days from departure.
A curious notoriety came upon the new clipper in Sydney owing to Captain Fimister, in his eagerness to get loaded and away in good time for the wool sales, jumping Patriarch’s loading berth at Circular Quay.
The berth was vacated by Nineveh on a Saturday.