When thinking oneself back into the Age of Mercantile Sail –
which lasted up to WW2 – it is hard to imagine just what a menace was
represented by derelicts – ships abandoned by their crews but still afloat. The
most serious class of derelict consisted of wooden-hulled ships carrying cargos
of wood. Large numbers of such ships were employed on the North Atlantic,
carrying timber from Canada to Europe, and another big lumber trade involved
carrying hardwoods from South America to the Eastern USA through the hurricane-prone
West Indies.
Steel hulls, with their associated heavy machinery are
likely to sink if badly damaged but a wooden hull packed with timber might
border on the unsinkable. In the case of crews abandoning such ships they were
expected to set fire to them. This was however not necessarily done, and if it
was, it might not be effective. An example is the barque Lysglint, abandoned and set on fire in May 1921, but which only sank
two months later. The photograph shows her as a charred hulk, but still capable
of floating and a massive danger to any ship that might encounter her in
darkness or fog – this being before the days of radar.
Lysglint barque as a derelict in
1921
Such derelicts could drift for very long distances. In 1888 the
schooner W.L.White was abandoned off
Delaware Bay. She drifted for eleven months and her movements were carefully
plotted by the U.S. Hydrographic Department which was studying derelict
movements. She travelled over 5000 miles, driven hither and thither by wind and
current. Reported no less than 45 times
by passing ships, she was finally driven ashore at the island of Lewis, in Scotland’s
Outer Hebrides.
Another long-lived derelict was the Alma Cummings which drifted for 587 days in the North Atlantic after
she had been dismasted and her crew taken off by a passing steamer. Other vessels sent boarding parties no less
than five times but efforts to burn her reduced her upper hull almost to the water’s
edge, making her all but invisible and an even greater hazard. After covering
at least 5000 miles she finally grounded off Panama, her cargo of wood and her
metal fittings being highly prized by those who found her.
The derelict barque Edward L.
Maybury, photographed in the North Atlantic in 1905
The most spectacular derelict voyage was probably that of the
Fannie E. Wolsten, an American
schooner that was estimated to have covered over 10,000 miles in four years,
following her abandonment on the edge of the Gulf Stream in 1891. She was
reported scores of times in the North Atlantic but finally sank off the coast
of New Jersey, not far from where she was originally abandoned.
The scale of the derelict menace was immense. C.D. Sigsbee (1845-1923)
of the US Navy, who was later a Rear Admiral and is perhaps best remembered as
captain of the USS Maine when she
blew up in the harbour of Havana, spent much of his career as a hydrographer. In 1894 he published
a report on "Wrecks and Derelicts of the North Atlantic 1887 through 1893"
which indicated that in this period there were 1,628 derelict vessels adrift
(or lost) in the Atlantic alone.
On both sides of the Atlantic it was agreed that “Something
must be done” and naval vessels were enlisted to tackle the problem. The
solution was not however easy. A timber-filled wooden hull, especially if almost
awash, was not easily sunk by gunfire and torpedoes were considered too
expensive. The only really effective way was to place gun-cotton charges in
such a position as to break the vessel’s back, but gaining access to do so was always
dangerous and often all but impossible. Ships employed by the U.S. Navy for this
purpose included the aged USS Kearsage,
which had sunk the Confederate raider Alabama
during the Civil War but which was now relegated to more humble duties.
Ramming was considered as an option, but this required
sturdily built ships. Though this had fallen out of favour as a battle-tactic
by the 1890s, most naval vessels were constructed with ram-shaped bows. In
practice however derelicts proved tough opponents, capable of giving perhaps
more than they got. The American cruiser USS Atlanta was damaged during such a manoeuvre in 1895, as was Royal
Navy’s protected cruiser HMS Melampus in
1899, both needing to limp home for dockyard repairs.
HMS Melampus, 2nd-class
cruiser, in happier circumstances,
at Kingstown (now Dun Laoighre) in Ireland
An 1896 bureaucratic measure by Britain was to impose a fine
of £5 for failure to report a derelict at the first opportunity. Even allowing
for inflation since then, the sum involved was derisory and the means of
enforcing were limited.
The most
effective measure was finally taken by the Americans who, in 1908, launched the
1445 tons Coast Guard cutter USCGC Seneca,
specifically intended for of locating and destroying abandoned vessels. Heavily
armed for her size and with excellent sea-keeping and towing capabilities she
embarked on a varied 40-year career that also included wartime, ice-patrol, and
rum-runner seizure duties. The photograph
below shows her in action.
USCGC Seneca with a
derelict in tow
The solution to the derelict menace was not however recovery
or sinking – it was time itself. The disappearance of the wooden-hulled merchant
ship, especially those involved in the timber trade, made such hazards rare,
though isolated cases still occur, usually involving much smaller vessels.
Iron/steel hulled vessels have at least the scrap value to make salvage worthwhile. It'd be hard to even cover your costs by selling a wooden derelict as firewood! Most modern navies and air forces would relish such a selection of free practice targets though.
ReplyDeleteI had read in the past on how wooden ships were much harder to sink than one might imagine, but hadn't gone to the next step. Fascinating.
ReplyDeleteWhat a fantastic Voyage this Blog Hop has been! The third part of my Blog Hop article is now up - please do share in this final phase of the Nautical On Line Voyage http://ofhistoryandkings.blogspot.co.uk/2013/08/weigh-anchor-nautical-blog-hop.html
ReplyDeleteAnd...
Thank you to all who participated, authors and visitors alike. The Voyage has been wonderful!
Tanks for the post, I think I always thought that an abandoned ships would sunk quickly.
ReplyDeleteFallen containers are now a similar problem for sailing boats.