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Friday, July 28, 2017
Wednesday, July 26, 2017
108 years ago: SS Waratah Anniversary
108 years
ago
Monday,
26th July 1909, 8.00 pm
SS
Waratah – departing from ‘C’ Shed, Durban, South Africa
Destination -
Cape Town
Route -
London via Las Palmas and Plymouth
Commander – J
E Ilbery
Captain Ilbery and his crew
knew a heavy southerly storm was blowing up from the Cape and they would soon be
confronted by enormous seas. This stretch of the South African coastline is
notorious and treacherous, taking merchant ships close to the very edge of the
Continental Shelf, which generates gigantic swells, especially when very strong
winds blowing from the south-west, oppose the 3 knot south-running coastal
current.
During the passage from Adelaide, (Australia) to Durban, the Waratah had not been well-received by many passengers when moderate to rough seas had manifested in her top-heavy promenade deck being the cause of her insecure righting motion. Would Captain Ilbery and his senior officers have felt apprehensive in anticipation of this wild storm ahead of them?
Did that underlying unease amongst some of the crew and passengers start to increase now, as they recalled the recent Adelaide passage and the disagreeable way in which the Waratah had rolled, remaining on her sides for a long time before recovering? Little did any of them imagine that they were sailing directly to their deaths!
Where and when, exactly,
did Waratah meet her demise?
Most haunting of all is
how the passengers and crew would have faced their terrifying imminent doom.
They would have been hurled about the ship as she hit the enormous waves and
possibly rolled over completely. Perhaps she was engulfed by an enormous rogue
wave as she drove down into a trough. We can only hope that their demise was
quick, with perhaps no time to realise what was happening, before the thousands
of tons of icy water poured over the ship to drag them helplessly into the
depths of the Indian Ocean’s Continental Shelf.
Psalm
107:23-31
They that
go down to the sea in ships, that do business in great
waters;
These see
the works of the Lord, and his
wonders of the deep.
SS Waratah: by Seth Wade |
Wednesday, July 5, 2017
SS Waratah – Wednesday 7th July 1909 ...108 years ago
From Ocean
Steamers Wharf for the Indian Ocean crossing to Durban, South
Africa.
That Wednesday, in a ghostly drizzle as the tug guided the SS Waratah from the wharf, no-one on board would have had the slightest notion of the impending doom that awaited them much further into their voyage.
Winter had come to the Southern Hemisphere, storms at sea were now commonplace for shipping in these lower latitudes and much heavy weather was expected. It had already been noted by some passengers that soon after leaving Adelaide the weather had become rough, as forecast, and it seemed that the Waratah rolled in a very disagreeable way, remaining for a long time on her side before recovering. While she was recovering and the deck became horizontal, she often gave a decided jerk.
As the voyage continued, an underlying unease grew amongst some passengers regarding the Waratah’s design, with her high promenade deck, instability due to the design and slow righting movements of the ship.
However, none of the passengers would ever have imagined that this ship would vanish so completely without trace on that fateful night of 27 July 1909………
Acknowledgement to Susanne-Jo Leff Patterson
Sunday, July 2, 2017
The Waratah begins her fateful voyage 108 years ago
108 years ago yesterday, 1 July at 4 pm Australian time, cargo loaded and passengers from
Melbourne embarked, SS Waratah crosses Port Philip Bay, bound for
Adelaide.
Saturday, July 1, 2017
Souvenir Saturday: Finley Gibson 1841 - 1924
Finley (or Finlay) Gibson, 1841 - 1924, was entitled to the Afghan Campaign Medal, seen above, as he served in that conflict. My great grandfather, he was in the 15th Hussars from attestation at the age of 18 years in 1859 to his discharge at the age of nearly 40 in 1880. His papers indicate that he intended residing at Stevenston in Ayrshire, though he was a Londoner by birth (birthplace St George's, Borough, East London, England).
The reason would become clear. I discovered that living in that Scottish village was his widowed sister, Margaret McIntyre, with her children. Finley and his brother, William, also a soldier, both made their home with Margaret for a while. Finley married Annie Bell in Stevenston in May 1881 and started his own family. By 1911 he was Foreman of the Dynamite Factory at Ardeer, known locally as the 'dinnamit'. Several of his children worked in the factory - a dangerous environment as explosions could, and did, occur.
Annie Bell married Finley Gibson in 1881
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