Loch Ard (ship)

History
United Kingdom
NameLoch Ard
NamesakeLoch Ard, Scotland
OwnerGeneral Shipping Co
OperatorJames Aitken
Port of registryGlasgow
BuilderCharles Connell & Co, Scotstoun
Yard number87
Launched8 November 1873
Maiden voyage
  • Glasgow – Melbourne
  • 26 January – 24 May 1874
Identification
FateWrecked 1 June 1878
General characteristics
TypeClipper
Tonnage1,693 GRT, 1,624 NRT
Length262.7 ft (80.1 m)
Beam38.3 ft (11.7 m)
Depth23.0 ft (7.0 m)
Propulsionsail, three masts
Sail planfull-rigged ship
Crew17
NotesGave her name to Loch Ard Gorge, where she was wrecked.

Loch Ard was an iron-hulled clipper ship that was built in Scotland in 1873 and wrecked on the Shipwreck Coast of Victoria, Australia in 1878.[1][2]

Building

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Charles Connell and Company of Scotstoun, Glasgow built Loch Ard for the General Shipping Company, part of the Loch Line of Glasgow that operated between Great Britain and Australia. Her yard number was 57 and she was launched on 8 November 1873. Her registered length was 262.7 ft (80.1 m), her beam was 38.3 ft (11.7 m) and her depth was 23.0 ft (7.0 m). Her tonnages were 1,693 GRT and 1,624 NRT. She had three masts and was a full-rigged ship.[3]

Her owners registered Loch Ard in Glasgow. Her official number was 68061 and her code letters were WSGD.[4][5]

The ship was named after Loch Ard in Scotland, a loch west of Aberfoyle and east of Loch Lomond. It means "high lake" in Scottish Gaelic. She gave her name to Loch Ard Gorge on the Shipwreck Coast.

Maiden voyage

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Loch Ard was twice dismasted on her maiden voyage from Glasgow to Melbourne. The first dismasting was in December 1873, only days after leaving Glasgow. She was able to turn back and be repaired. On 26 January 1874 she left Glasgow for the second time. On 2 April a gale in the Southern Ocean broke all three of her masts. On the fourth day after the accident, her crew managed to bale her out and make jury-masts. She reached Melbourne on 24 May.[1][6]

Final voyage

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Loch Ard with the Thames tugboat Robert Bruce

Loch Ard left Gravesend, Kent on 1 March 1878, bound for Melbourne, commanded by Captain George Gibbs and with a crew of 37 men and 17 passengers, a total of 54 people. She was loaded with a general mixed cargo. On 1 June she was approaching Melbourne. The crew expected to sight land but encountered heavy fog. The inquest determined that, unable to see the Cape Otway lighthouse; having faulty chronometers on board; and not having been able to take a reading to establish his exact position due to bad weather conditions over the previous few days, Gibbs was unaware how close he was running to the coast. The fog lifted around 4am, revealing breakers and cliff faces. Gibbs quickly ordered sail to be set to come about and get clear of the coast, but they were unable to do so in time, and ran aground on a reef. The masts and rigging came down, killing some people on deck and preventing the lifeboats from being launched effectively. The ship sank within 10 or 15 minutes of striking the reef.

Graves of some of the passengers and crew of Loch Ard, near Loch Ard Gorge

The widespread popular belief that Gibbs mistook the opening of the nearby Loch Ard Gorge for Port Phillip Heads has no basis in fact or probability. There is no physical or cartographic resemblance whatever, ships are obliged to stop outside the Heads to take on a pilot, and Loch Ard never entered the Gorge.

The only two survivors of the wreck were Eva Carmichael, who survived by clinging to a spar for five hours, and Thomas Pearce, an apprentice who clung to the upturned hull of a lifeboat. Pearce came ashore first, then heard Carmichael's shouts and went back into the ocean to rescue her. They came ashore at what is now known as Loch Ard Gorge and sheltered there before seeking help. Pearce was the stepson of Captain RGA Pearce, Master of SS Gothenburg, which had been wrecked off Queensland in 1875.

Surviving artefacts

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The Loch Ard Peacock, now in Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum

Loch Ard's cargo included various luxury goods, including a grand piano which later washed up in the Gorge, and a large decorative porcelain peacock made by Minton in England, intended to be displayed in the Melbourne International Exhibition in 1880. The peacock was recovered intact and was eventually able to be displayed a century later for the Victoria Pavilion at the Brisbane 1988 World Exposition. It is now on display at the Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum in Warrnambool, Victoria, along with other relics of the wreck.

Also recovered was a unique Georgian pocket watch, made in 1814 by the Belfast watchmaker James McCabe, reputedly for Dublin Corporation to present to King George IV in 1814. It was found in the waistband of Eva Carmichael's elder sister Rebecca, whose body was among those recovered and buried after the shipwreck. Eva returned to Ireland, and in 1884 married a Thomas Townsend, to whom she gave the watch.[7] The watch remained with their heirs until October 2011, when their grandson auctioned it in Australia. Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum had the watch designated an "item of national significance", thereby securing federal government funding to buy the watch for the museum.[8][9]

Wreck

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Loch Ard's wreck lies at a depth of 25 metres (82 ft). It is a recreational wreck diving site, rated "Advanced Open Water and beyond".[10]

Play

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Eva and the Cabin Boy by Sheila Dewey, produced at the Warehouse Theatre in Croydon in 1994, concerned the Loch Ard shipwreck.[citation needed]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "The Loch Ard Lost". The Argus. No. 9, 972. Melbourne. 3 June 1878. p. 5. Retrieved 9 March 2017 – via Trove.
  2. ^ "The loss of the Loch Ard". Cairns Post. Vol. XXXV, no. 5137. Cairns. 18 March 1925. p. 3. Retrieved 9 March 2017 – via Trove.
  3. ^ "Loch Ard". Scottish Built Ships. Caledonian Maritime Research Trust. Retrieved 2 September 2022.
  4. ^ Mercantile Navy List. London. 1875. p. 330. Archived from the original on 31 May 2024. Retrieved 2 September 2022 – via Crew List Index Project.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. ^ Lloyd's Register of British and Foreign Shipping. London: Lloyd's Register. 1877. LLE. Retrieved 2 September 2022 – via Internet Archive.
  6. ^ "The dismasted ship Loch Ard". The Argus. No. 8, 719. Melbourne. 25 May 1874. p. 5. Archived from the original on 4 December 2022. Retrieved 4 December 2022 – via Trove.
  7. ^ Greene, J Patrick (20 July 2021). "'I have seldom seen a more fearful section of coastline': How an Irish family was shipwrecked". The Irish Times. Archived from the original on 13 February 2024. Retrieved 13 February 2024.
  8. ^ Lee, Jeremy (24 November 2011). "The Carmichael Watch". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Archived from the original on 13 February 2024. Retrieved 13 February 2024.
  9. ^ "Instrument – Fob watch, 1814". Victorian Collections. Museums Victoria and Australian Museums and Galleries Association Victoria. Archived from the original on 13 February 2024. Retrieved 13 February 2024. – includes four photographs of the watch
  10. ^ "Loch Ard". Scuba Doctor. Archived from the original on 31 May 2024. Retrieved 2 September 2022.

Sources

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Further reading

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  • Christopher, Peter (2012). Australian Shipwrecks. A Pictorial History (2nd ed.). Stepney, SA: Axiom Publishing. pp. 39–45. ISBN 978-1-8647658-8-5.
  • Jacobs, Coleman. The Young Hero. Melbourne: Messieurs Roberts – via Trove. – score of a schottische dance composed to raise money for the Loch Ard fund, with a photograph of Tom Pearce on the cover
  • Lubbock, Basil (1921). The Colonial Clippers (2nd ed.). Glasgow: James Brown & Son. pp. 290, 247–250. OCLC 1750412.
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38°38′55″S 143°04′19″E / 38.64861°S 143.07194°E / -38.64861; 143.07194