A blog last month dealt with an 1876 case of a ship “passing
by on the other side” and not rendering assistance to a wrecked vessel (click here to read this article). An even more extreme case occurred the same year,
one involving “Hit and Run”, with a ship causing a collision that sank another
vessel ignoring the plight of her survivors without any significant effort to
render assistance.
SS Strathclyde, seen in 1873 |
On the afternoon of February 17th 1876 a large British
trading steamer, the Strathclyde – 1950
tons, 290-feet – was in the English Channel, just off Dover, on the first leg
of a voyage to Bombay. She carried a crew of 47 as well as 23 passengers. The weather
was fine, “with a fair wind”, visibility good and the sea relatively smooth. Strathclyde was making some nine knots. A
generally similar ship was spotted about two miles astern and still further out
to sea and it was estimated that courses, if maintained, would cross. The
stranger turned out to be the German Franconia,
en route for the West Indies, and steaming at higher speed than the Strathclyde. As the faster vessel. the Franconia was expected to take evasive
action and on this assumption the Strathclyde
held a steady course. A half-hour passed, during which time the Franconia had all but overhauled the Strathclyde and was giving no indication
of altering her course – indeed, according to one contemporary account “the Franconia came down upon the Strathclyde as if she had been an enemy’s
vessel in time of war.” What seems to have been a panicked order was given at the
last moment to avoid collision and the Franconia
was swung around, possibly in the hope of crossing the Strathclyde’s wake. The manoeuvre failed and the Franconia smashed into the Strathclyde amidships, tearing a huge
rent into which water rushed. She rebounded from the impact, then surged
forward again, striking the Strathclyde
and gouging a second hole in her side further aft. The Strathclyde began to settle by the stern and was clearly doomed.
A contemporary illustration shows the Franconia reversing from the Strathclyde The clouds of steam enveloping the latter may have been artistic licence! |
The Franconia’s
bows had been damaged, but not fatally so, but the over-riding desire of her
captain, one Ferdinand Keyn, was to get his ship safely into the nearby harbour
of Dover. He was encouraged in this by James Porter, a British pilot taken on board
for the transit of the Dover Straits. The Strathclyde’s
first mate and four seamen seem to have managed to jump across to the Franconia before the ships separated,
reporting later that discipline seemed to have broken down there. They urged
Captain Keyn to drop boats for the Strathclyde’s
survivors but he was deaf to their appeals. After no more than a few minutes,
with feeble attempts at rescue, the Franconia
backed off and headed for Dover.
Two of Strathclyde’s
lifeboats got away, the first with fifteen of the women passengers but it was
quickly swamped, most of the occupants drowning. The second boat got off safely
and recovered two living survivors from the water. The ship disappeared in less
than ten minutes and took many with her. A fishing lugger from Deal, the Early Morn, arrived on the scene and pulled
survivors from the water. The Dover lifeboat had been launched – the whole
tragedy had played out so close inshore as to be plainly visible – and was
towed towards the stricken vessel by a harbour tug. The final death toll was 38,
out of a total 70 crew and passengers. Strathclyde’s
captain, J.D. Eaton, stayed with her until the final plunge but he did survive.
The Strathclyde's last moments. Note Franconia on right and heading for Dover |
The Franconia
reached Dover safely but her Captain Keyn was charged with manslaughter for his
unwillingness to render sufficient assistance. Considerable opprobrium was also
heaped on the British pilot on board, of whom it was written at the time “Let us hand James Porter’s name down in
infamy; let us blush to think that he could call himself an Englishman!”
Keyn’s trail, at London’s Central Criminal Court, was to
have implications beyond the immediate case. He was convicted as charged, but the
verdict was quashed on appeal. The
grounds for this rested on the argument that English Law was not applicable to foreign
vessels in English waters. Sufficient feeling was however aroused by the case
that soon thereafter Britain adopted International Territorial Waters provisions
which were already in use by several other countries. These defined such waters
as extending three miles from the shoreline, this distance reflecting the contemporary
range of coastal artillery. As for the
owners of the Strathclyde, they brought
and action against the Franconia’s
owners in the Admiralty Court and were awarded £45,000. It seems a very paltry
sum in view of the loss of life.
Britannia’s Spartan
Six-inch breech loading guns represented the cutting edge of naval technology in the early 1880s. In my novel Britannia’s Spartan they are seen in use on both British and Japanese ships. The splendid Japanese woodcut below shows Japanese crews managing just such a weapon in the war of 1895 against China. Click here for further details.
Another fascinating post by Antoine Vanner! These cases, in which maritime and legal history overlap. I did a lot of sailing and yacht racing in my youth, but never stopped to wonder how the international law of the sea came into being.
ReplyDeleteAnd now I know where the three-mile rule comes from. The United States used to have it as well.
I'm curious -- do you know what the German captain said in his defense? Because he behavior was shocking.
The three-mile rule has morphed into "the edge of the Continental Shelf" - particularly relevant for oil and gas rights. Without it US and Western European countries would have their boundaries meet in mid ocean!
DeleteI meant: "I love these cases, in which maritime and legal history overlap!"
ReplyDeleteThis is very sad but also truly fascinating !
ReplyDeleteI agree Mary - it's dreadful when one thinks of the impact of so many lives - families, friends etc - in such disasters. Each statistic is a tragedy in itself.
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