we have a thread for aircraft , tanks and if I look hard enough probably ships
thought a shipwreck one was needed , what caused this was a random search and I found this . we have a reputation for having huge storms ( gales) and seas that have regularly
"killed" ships for at least 2 hundred years ( how long Newcastle has existed )
so here it is, a terrible list of all the ships wrecked on Newcastle's "wreck coast "
this is a picture of the last one to be wrecked here + a few others I found newest to oldest, take note of the ship in the calm "after "shot and then look at the "storm" shot to get an idea of the size of the seas
had to post in a few parts so post up if you have any
same beach
Newcastle, situated at the entrance to the Hunter River 170 kn north of Sydney, developed as a major port due to the discovery of coal in 1797. The entrance to Port Hunter was not altogther sympathetic to shipping, and over two hundred vessels were lost entering or leaving the port, many on the infamous Oyster Bank. As port facilities developed, some of the vessels were interred in groynes, no doubt exciting some future archaeologist. The listing includes vessels lost at Port Hunter, Hunter River, Nobbys Head, Stockton Bight, Stockton Beach (Newcastle Beach), Oyster Bank, Williams River and inland Raymond Terrace. Several very large vessels have been lost in the region. The largest vessel to be losst in the vacinity happened only recently, with the loss of the 53,000 ton Norwegian bulk carrier Sygna, on Stockton Beach in 1974. The next largest was a sailing ship, the four masted barque Adolphee, lost on Oyster Bank in 1904. We then have the 2286 ton steamer Colonist, again on the Oyster Bank, in 1894. In fact, such were the closeness of many of the wrecks that five years latwer the steamship Lindus, 1678 tons, sank on top of the Colonist. The 1747 ton steamship Mareeba was lost in 1908; the 1640 ton Steamer Wendouree in 1898, the 1239 barquentine Adderley went shore on Stockton Beach in 1897, and the 1204 ton wooden barque Susan Gilmour in 1884.
References:
The maritime history and wrecks of New South Wales are well covered by a number of respected authors, many of whom have concentrated on a small coastal region, even on one or two specific ships, thus providing a wealth of information. The base of this listing is Loney [LN], however it is by no means the most comprehensive, with excellent contributions from Bateson [AS1], Berry [GB], Makean [JM], Gleeson [MGS], and Richards [MR]. The Shipwreck Atlas of New South Wales [SAN] provides a comprehensive listing, albiet without much detail. Byron [BN] adds informative current wrecksite status.
[206 records]
Associated links: NEW SOUTH WALES PORT JACKSON
Active. Wooden ketch, 49 tons. #74902. Built NSW 1877; reg. Sydney 11/1877. L 67.6 ft. Struck a floating object while entering Newcastle harbour and sank near the vessel Colonist, 19 January 1898. [LN],[SAN],[ASR]
Active. Composite ketch, 40 tons. Built NSW, 1850; reg. Sydney, 57/1850. L 48.9 ft. Lost Newcastle, Hunter River entrance, 18 February, 1852. [SAN]
Ada. Ketch, 50 tons. Wrecked on the Oyster Bank, Newcastle, NSW, 29 April 1897. [SAN]
Adderley. Steel barquentine, 1239 tons. Built Scotland, 1888; reg. Liverpool. L 215 ft. Ashore Stockton Beach, 3 nm south of Morna Point during a ‘furious squall’, 23 April 1897. The Newcastle lifeboat was unable to reach her in the heavy surf but the crew of twenty landed safely next day when the seas abated. [SAN],[LN - barque, 1141 tons]
Adelaide. Wooden schooner, 217 tons. #75062. Built NSW, 1879; reg. Sydney, 28/1880. L 144.6 ft. Lost between Newcastle and New Zealand, May 1898. [SAN]
Note: It was on the night of 5-6 May 1898 that the "Maitland (qv) Gale" struck the coast off NSW.
Adeline. Screw steamer. Lost at Newcastle Harbour, NSW; beached near Callens slip, 1898. [SAN]
Adolphe. French four-masted barque, steel, 3204/2676 tons. Built and reg. at Dunkirk, 1902. Lbd 296.7 x 44.9 x 26 ft.Inward bound from Antwerp, lost on the Oyster Bank, Newcastle, 30 September 1904. As she was being towed through the entrance, the tugs Hero and Victoria could not hold her and she was swept on to the wreck of the Colonist, then battered by giant waves. The lifeboat hurried to the scene and within two hours all 32 of the crew had been taken off.The northern breakwater of the entrance to the port of Newcastle was extended after the loss of the Adolphe. The French consul made an offical visit to Newcastle to recognise the efforts of the lifeboat crew. [LN],[#NH],[LH],[SAN - barquentine]
@When the breakwater was extended in 1906 and reached the remains of the Adolphe, her remaining two masts and jib-boom were removed for safety reasons; she is actually resting across the remains of SSWendouree, wrecked in 1898, and SS Lindus, lost in 1899. [LAH]
Afghan. Screw steamer. Lost on the Newcastle Harbour dyke, 1889. [SAN]
Agnes. Cutter, 13 tons. Built NSW, 1853; reg. Sydney, 35/1853. Length 59.3 ft. Ashore and lost in a gale off Newcastle, 13 July 1860. [SAN],[LN]
Ajax. Iron screw steamer, 344 tons. Built at Morts Dock, Balmain, 1874; reg. Sydney. Lbd 128.7 x 21 x 12 ft. Operated as a pilot boat at Newcastle from 1897 till 1927. Abandoned, enclosed in a pond at Koorangang, north of Stockton Bridge, NSW.
[LH],[SAN - lost 1928 at Newcastle, north of Stockton Bridge]
In June 1900, involved in rescue - see steamer Croki, lost at Seal Rocks, NSW. [MGS]
In December, 1908, involved in search for casualties from the barque Iverna - tug Advance collision, NSW; later crew were criticised for not effecting an immediate search after the collision. [MGS]
Alexander & John. Schooner, 117 tons. #32300 Built USA, 1849; reg. Sydney, 45/1852. L 80 ft. Lost ashore under Nobbys when leaving Newcastle, 1861. [SAN],[LN - lists as Alexander John]
Alice. Wooden schooner, 80 tons. #31505. Built Tasmania, 1849; reg. Sydney, 4/1860. L 64.6 ft. Lost when struck rocks at Newcastle, Nobbys Head, 2 April 1861. [SAN],[LN]
Alice Cameron. Wooden barque or barquentine, 347 tons. Built USA,1854; reg. Auckland. Left Newcastle for Manila in February 1874 but not seen again. Her remains might lie off the NSW north coast. [LN],[SAN],[LAH]
On 16 October 1871, involved in rescue - see barque A.H.Badger, lost 1871, in the Tasman Sea, after a collision with the paddle steamer Nevada. The Nevada continued on her way, leaving the hapless crew of the barque to abandon ship with their vessel holed beneath the waterline, to be picked up by the barque Alice Cameron.
Loney also lists this same vessel as being lost in 1894.
Ann. Wooden ketch, 28 tons. #64371. Built NSW 1871; reg. Sydney. Lost ashore 3 nm of Newcastle, 13 March 1886. [SAN - also lists ketch of this name and number, lost 9 nm from Newcastle on 12 March 1887],[LN lists ketch of this name and tonnage ashore and lost at Port Stephens during a gale, March 1886; the master decided to beach her to save lives]
Ann. Wooden schooner, 62 tons. #32466. Built NSW 1832; reg. Sydney, 34/1855. L 54.7 ft. Lost on the Oyster Bank, Newcastle, 26 January, 1856. [SAN],[LN - 103 tons]
Arthur. Wooden ketch, 39 tons. #49272 Built NSW 1864; reg Sydney 73/1864. L 55.8 ft. Lost in Newcastle Bight during ‘the great gale’, 12 July 1866. Foundered when attempting to enter the channel into Newcast;le, with the loss of five lives. See also loss of Cawarra, William Watson, Lismore, and Keder. [SAN],[LN - last seen off Lake Macquarie, NSW],[MGS]
Bell Flower. Schooner, 98 tons. Built NSW. L 106 ft. Lost on the Newcastle northern breakwater, 9 July 1904. [SAN]
Bengal. Barquentine, 428 tons. #13744. Built Scotland, 1845; reg. Dinedin, NZ, 11/1870. Lost off Newcastle, 6 May 1872. [SAN]
On 5 October 1868, from New Zealand under Captain Jamieson, sighted an upturned vessel 20 miles SSE of Norah Head; it could have been the schooner Elizabeth, lost in September. [GB - barque]
Berbice. Ship, composite, 717 tons. #55470. Built Scotland, 1868; reg. Greenock, UK. Captain Ross. Swept on to the Oyster Bank, Newcastle, in a gale and lost, 5 June 1888.The Newcastle rocket crew were quickly on the scene and after a line had been fired out to her, all the crew were brought to safety. [LN],[#NH],[SAN - 760 tons, lost ashore half a nautical mile north of the breakwater, Newcastle]
Berlinda. Steamship, 36 tons. Reg. Newcastle, 1881. Broken up at Newcastle, 1896. [ASR]
Bessie Maud. Wooden schooner, 63 tons. #83611. Built NSW 1880; reg. Sydney 57/1880. Length 76.4 ft. Rammed and sunk by SSVirawa when outward bound from Newcastle, 4 October 1898. [LN],[SAN - lost 4 September 1898]
Bluebell. Wooden screw steamer, 40 tons. #128785. Built NSW 1914; reg. Newcastle, 1/1915. Length 65 ft. Collided with the coaster Waraneen in Newcastle harbour and sank within minutes, 9 August 1934. Three passengers drowned. A Court of Inquiry at Newcastle blamed the ferry's master for the collision. [LN - Bluebell],[SAN - Blue Bell I]
[ASR lists vessel Blue Bell Island, steamship, 18 tons. Built Newcastle, 1914. Sunk Newcastle Harbour, reg closed 1935]
Boambee. Wooden steamer, 236 tons. Built Bellinger River, NSW, 1908. Rerenamed Illalong. Ashore on Belmont Beach, south of Newcastle, after losing her rudder, and was later dismantled where she lay, 10 March, 1948. [LN],[MR]
In 1934 she sank at Clarence Town, but was refloated.
In 1947 she sprang a leak when leaving Newcastle and sank shortly after returning to port. Again she was re-floated, and renamed Illalong..
Boyd. Wooden schooner, 18 tons. Lost on Stockton Beach, Newcastle, 16 July 1812. [SAN],[LN lost near Port Stephens]
Bungaree. Paddle steamer, tug, 62 tons. #69736. Built NSW 1872; reg. Sydney, 84/1873. Length 78.2 ft. Stranded on rocks, Nobbys Head, Newcastle, 17 July 1866. [SAN]
On 8 October 1865, whilst leaving her bearth at Newcastle, backed under the bows of the steamer City of Newcastle, entering Newcastle, and sank. [NH],[LN]
Burnett. Brig, 137 tons. #32391. Built NSW 1853; reg. Sydney, 11/1862. Length 85 ft. Broke up in huge seas near Oyster Bank, Newcastle, in a gale that claimed several ships, 9 May 1869. Crew lost. [LN],[NH],[SAN]
Canmore. Wooden schooner, 131 tons. Reg. Sydney, 108/1832. Length 82 ft. Lost on the Oyster Bank, Newcastle, 21 October 1854. [SAN]
Caroline. Ketch. Foundered in full view of a number of Newcastle residents inside Nobbys Head, 18 July 1866. There were no survivors. [LN],[SAN]
Cawarra. Iron paddle steamer, 552 ton. #49282. Built Glasgow, Scotland, 1864 for the Australian Steam Navigation Company; reg. Sydney, 88/1864. Lbd 207 x 25 x 13 ft. Arrived in Sydney Harbour under Captain Vaircross on 7 December 1864. Captain Chatfield. Foundered in raging seas during ‘the great gale’off Oyster Bank, (Newcastle), 12 July 1866. When almost across the bar she was swept by a succession of enormous seas which destroyed her within a few minutes, sweeping passengers and crew into the raging water. Sixty-two lives were lost. Wreckage and bodies of those lost littered a large area both in and out of the harbour. The sole survivor, seaman Frederick Hedges grabbed a plank as the ship sank and was eventually washed more dead than alive against a harbour buoy. He was rescued by James Johnson (and two others), the sole survivor of the Dunbar lost in 1857. See also loss of Arthur, William Watson, Lismore, and Keder. [#LN],[#NH],[GB],[SAN],[#MJ],[#MGS],[LAH],[DG - 438 tons]
Ceylon. Vessel lost near Newcastle, February 1834. [SAN]
Champion. Lighter, 42 tons. #51584. Built NSW, 1863; reg. Newcastle, 3/1872. Length 70.5 ft. Sliced in two by SS Maitland and sank off Newcastle, 10 April 1877. One man lost. [LN],[SAN - lost Hunter River entrance, Newcastle, 10 May 1877]
Champion. Ketch, 42 tons. Sank following a collision off Newcastle, June 1879.
[LN],[SAN]
Chance. Ketch. Lost near Newcastle, September 1851.
[LN],[SAN simply lists vessel lost in 1851]
Chance. Wooden ketch, 39 tons. #32674. Built NSW, 1849; reg. Sydney, 1/1853. Length 51.5 ft. Lost in a gale that took four other vessels, on inside Oyster Bank, Newcastle, 28 July 1857. [SAN],[GB],[LN]
Chance. Cutter, 20 tons. #59561. Built NSW, 1870; reg. Newcastle, 27/1870. Length 44 ft. Lost on the south spit, 12 nm north of Newcastle, 17 June 1879. [SAN]
Also listed:
Chance. Ketch. Abandoned in a gale and drifted ashore several kilometres south of Newcastle, 11 June 1879. The crew saved ‘suffered severely’ before being rescued. [LN]
Charlotte. Sloop, 10 tons. Left Sydney for places north of Newcastle on 7 September 1827, and was returning when she foundered during a gale, 19? September 1827. Two passengers and the crew of two lost their lives. Wreckage was found six miles north of Newcastle. [LN],[SAN],[ASW1]
Chipperkyle. Barque, 1709 tons. Built 1892. Disappeared having left Newcastle, 1905. [LAH]
City of Newcastle. Iron paddle steamer, 390/293 tons. #41117. Built Great Britain 1859; reg. Sydney, 53/1859. Length 192 ft. Captain Summerbell. With a full list of passengers and cargo, wrecked ashore in a fog at Shepherds Hill, 2 nm south of Newcastle, 12 September 1878. Passengers landed by walking along planks to the beach. Cargo was removed and the vessel abandoned, to break up after several years. [NH],SAN],[DG],[BNN]
On 8 October 1865, collided with and sank the tug Bungaree.
Colonist. Steamer, steel, 2286/1467 tons. #96673. Built at Sunderland, Great Britain, 1889; reg. London. Lbd 290 x 38, x 20 ft. Captain Mars. Ashore on the Oyster Bank, near the buoy marking the remains of the Cawarra, 10 September 1894. The lifeboat was called and eventually the complement of 29 was rescued. A decade later the Adolphe stranded on her remains and when the breakwater was extended a few years later she disappeared under the boulders.
[LH],[LN - built 1887],[LAH - built 1887],[LAH],[SAN - lost 9 September],[DG - wrecked 6 September]
Comet. Wooden schooner, 87 tons. #32319. Built NSW, 1845; reg. Sydney, 65/1863. Length 70 ft. Lost ashore in a gale at Newcastle Bight, NSW, 11 June 1866. [SAN],[LN]
Commodore. Iron paddle steamer, 187 tons. #74986. Built Great Britain, 1878; reg. Sydney, 52/1878. Length 130 ft. Operated for some fifty years as a tug and as a passenger vessel in the Sydney area and between Newcastle and Sydney. She was a popular vessel on the weekends, taking people to Manly, and thus helped develop the residential and holiday suburb. Stripped of her fittings and scuttled 3 nm east of Nobbys Head, Newcastle, 3 September 1931. [SAN], [MGS],[BNN]
In 1908, towed stricken Iverna into Sydney Harbour, December, 1908.
@ Wrecksite known, in 35 metres. Only the boiler, engine and paddle wheel shafts and scattered wreckage remain.
Coolabah. Iron, hulk, 479 tons. # 131503. Built Scotland, 1911. Reg. Sydney 10/1912. Length 148.9 ft. Hulked Newcastle, North Stockton, 24 September 1949. [SAN]
Cumberland. Colonial Government, wooden vessel. Stolen by convicts, Broken Bay, NSW, September 1797. A search for the Cumberland by the Government vessel Reliance, Lieutenant Shortland, failed to find the vessel but it was during this search that coal was discovered at the entrance to the Hunter River 'and this important discovery made up for their failure to recapture the pirates'. [JM],[SAN - lost of Jervis Bay, 1797]
Cumberland. Wooden schooner, 59 tons. #32652. Built NSW, 1848; reg. Sydney, 22/1848. Length 57.4 ft. Foundered suddenly 2 nm off Newcastle while reducing canvas when running for shelter during a gale, 8 April 1862. The ketch Elfin, which was nearby, saw men in the water but was powerless to save them. [SAN], [LN - lost 6 April 1862]]
Currumbene. Wooden screw steamer, 245 tons. #150180. Built NSW, 1922; reg. Sydnet, 12/1922. Length 125 ft. Lost at Williams River, near Seaham (Hunter River tributary), 9 January 1934. [SAN]
thought a shipwreck one was needed , what caused this was a random search and I found this . we have a reputation for having huge storms ( gales) and seas that have regularly
"killed" ships for at least 2 hundred years ( how long Newcastle has existed )
so here it is, a terrible list of all the ships wrecked on Newcastle's "wreck coast "
this is a picture of the last one to be wrecked here + a few others I found newest to oldest, take note of the ship in the calm "after "shot and then look at the "storm" shot to get an idea of the size of the seas
had to post in a few parts so post up if you have any
same beach
Newcastle, situated at the entrance to the Hunter River 170 kn north of Sydney, developed as a major port due to the discovery of coal in 1797. The entrance to Port Hunter was not altogther sympathetic to shipping, and over two hundred vessels were lost entering or leaving the port, many on the infamous Oyster Bank. As port facilities developed, some of the vessels were interred in groynes, no doubt exciting some future archaeologist. The listing includes vessels lost at Port Hunter, Hunter River, Nobbys Head, Stockton Bight, Stockton Beach (Newcastle Beach), Oyster Bank, Williams River and inland Raymond Terrace. Several very large vessels have been lost in the region. The largest vessel to be losst in the vacinity happened only recently, with the loss of the 53,000 ton Norwegian bulk carrier Sygna, on Stockton Beach in 1974. The next largest was a sailing ship, the four masted barque Adolphee, lost on Oyster Bank in 1904. We then have the 2286 ton steamer Colonist, again on the Oyster Bank, in 1894. In fact, such were the closeness of many of the wrecks that five years latwer the steamship Lindus, 1678 tons, sank on top of the Colonist. The 1747 ton steamship Mareeba was lost in 1908; the 1640 ton Steamer Wendouree in 1898, the 1239 barquentine Adderley went shore on Stockton Beach in 1897, and the 1204 ton wooden barque Susan Gilmour in 1884.
References:
The maritime history and wrecks of New South Wales are well covered by a number of respected authors, many of whom have concentrated on a small coastal region, even on one or two specific ships, thus providing a wealth of information. The base of this listing is Loney [LN], however it is by no means the most comprehensive, with excellent contributions from Bateson [AS1], Berry [GB], Makean [JM], Gleeson [MGS], and Richards [MR]. The Shipwreck Atlas of New South Wales [SAN] provides a comprehensive listing, albiet without much detail. Byron [BN] adds informative current wrecksite status.
[206 records]
Associated links: NEW SOUTH WALES PORT JACKSON
Active. Wooden ketch, 49 tons. #74902. Built NSW 1877; reg. Sydney 11/1877. L 67.6 ft. Struck a floating object while entering Newcastle harbour and sank near the vessel Colonist, 19 January 1898. [LN],[SAN],[ASR]
Active. Composite ketch, 40 tons. Built NSW, 1850; reg. Sydney, 57/1850. L 48.9 ft. Lost Newcastle, Hunter River entrance, 18 February, 1852. [SAN]
Ada. Ketch, 50 tons. Wrecked on the Oyster Bank, Newcastle, NSW, 29 April 1897. [SAN]
Adderley. Steel barquentine, 1239 tons. Built Scotland, 1888; reg. Liverpool. L 215 ft. Ashore Stockton Beach, 3 nm south of Morna Point during a ‘furious squall’, 23 April 1897. The Newcastle lifeboat was unable to reach her in the heavy surf but the crew of twenty landed safely next day when the seas abated. [SAN],[LN - barque, 1141 tons]
Adelaide. Wooden schooner, 217 tons. #75062. Built NSW, 1879; reg. Sydney, 28/1880. L 144.6 ft. Lost between Newcastle and New Zealand, May 1898. [SAN]
Note: It was on the night of 5-6 May 1898 that the "Maitland (qv) Gale" struck the coast off NSW.
Adeline. Screw steamer. Lost at Newcastle Harbour, NSW; beached near Callens slip, 1898. [SAN]
Adolphe. French four-masted barque, steel, 3204/2676 tons. Built and reg. at Dunkirk, 1902. Lbd 296.7 x 44.9 x 26 ft.Inward bound from Antwerp, lost on the Oyster Bank, Newcastle, 30 September 1904. As she was being towed through the entrance, the tugs Hero and Victoria could not hold her and she was swept on to the wreck of the Colonist, then battered by giant waves. The lifeboat hurried to the scene and within two hours all 32 of the crew had been taken off.The northern breakwater of the entrance to the port of Newcastle was extended after the loss of the Adolphe. The French consul made an offical visit to Newcastle to recognise the efforts of the lifeboat crew. [LN],[#NH],[LH],[SAN - barquentine]
@When the breakwater was extended in 1906 and reached the remains of the Adolphe, her remaining two masts and jib-boom were removed for safety reasons; she is actually resting across the remains of SSWendouree, wrecked in 1898, and SS Lindus, lost in 1899. [LAH]
Afghan. Screw steamer. Lost on the Newcastle Harbour dyke, 1889. [SAN]
Agnes. Cutter, 13 tons. Built NSW, 1853; reg. Sydney, 35/1853. Length 59.3 ft. Ashore and lost in a gale off Newcastle, 13 July 1860. [SAN],[LN]
Ajax. Iron screw steamer, 344 tons. Built at Morts Dock, Balmain, 1874; reg. Sydney. Lbd 128.7 x 21 x 12 ft. Operated as a pilot boat at Newcastle from 1897 till 1927. Abandoned, enclosed in a pond at Koorangang, north of Stockton Bridge, NSW.
[LH],[SAN - lost 1928 at Newcastle, north of Stockton Bridge]
In June 1900, involved in rescue - see steamer Croki, lost at Seal Rocks, NSW. [MGS]
In December, 1908, involved in search for casualties from the barque Iverna - tug Advance collision, NSW; later crew were criticised for not effecting an immediate search after the collision. [MGS]
Alexander & John. Schooner, 117 tons. #32300 Built USA, 1849; reg. Sydney, 45/1852. L 80 ft. Lost ashore under Nobbys when leaving Newcastle, 1861. [SAN],[LN - lists as Alexander John]
Alice. Wooden schooner, 80 tons. #31505. Built Tasmania, 1849; reg. Sydney, 4/1860. L 64.6 ft. Lost when struck rocks at Newcastle, Nobbys Head, 2 April 1861. [SAN],[LN]
Alice Cameron. Wooden barque or barquentine, 347 tons. Built USA,1854; reg. Auckland. Left Newcastle for Manila in February 1874 but not seen again. Her remains might lie off the NSW north coast. [LN],[SAN],[LAH]
On 16 October 1871, involved in rescue - see barque A.H.Badger, lost 1871, in the Tasman Sea, after a collision with the paddle steamer Nevada. The Nevada continued on her way, leaving the hapless crew of the barque to abandon ship with their vessel holed beneath the waterline, to be picked up by the barque Alice Cameron.
Loney also lists this same vessel as being lost in 1894.
Ann. Wooden ketch, 28 tons. #64371. Built NSW 1871; reg. Sydney. Lost ashore 3 nm of Newcastle, 13 March 1886. [SAN - also lists ketch of this name and number, lost 9 nm from Newcastle on 12 March 1887],[LN lists ketch of this name and tonnage ashore and lost at Port Stephens during a gale, March 1886; the master decided to beach her to save lives]
Ann. Wooden schooner, 62 tons. #32466. Built NSW 1832; reg. Sydney, 34/1855. L 54.7 ft. Lost on the Oyster Bank, Newcastle, 26 January, 1856. [SAN],[LN - 103 tons]
Arthur. Wooden ketch, 39 tons. #49272 Built NSW 1864; reg Sydney 73/1864. L 55.8 ft. Lost in Newcastle Bight during ‘the great gale’, 12 July 1866. Foundered when attempting to enter the channel into Newcast;le, with the loss of five lives. See also loss of Cawarra, William Watson, Lismore, and Keder. [SAN],[LN - last seen off Lake Macquarie, NSW],[MGS]
Bell Flower. Schooner, 98 tons. Built NSW. L 106 ft. Lost on the Newcastle northern breakwater, 9 July 1904. [SAN]
Bengal. Barquentine, 428 tons. #13744. Built Scotland, 1845; reg. Dinedin, NZ, 11/1870. Lost off Newcastle, 6 May 1872. [SAN]
On 5 October 1868, from New Zealand under Captain Jamieson, sighted an upturned vessel 20 miles SSE of Norah Head; it could have been the schooner Elizabeth, lost in September. [GB - barque]
Berbice. Ship, composite, 717 tons. #55470. Built Scotland, 1868; reg. Greenock, UK. Captain Ross. Swept on to the Oyster Bank, Newcastle, in a gale and lost, 5 June 1888.The Newcastle rocket crew were quickly on the scene and after a line had been fired out to her, all the crew were brought to safety. [LN],[#NH],[SAN - 760 tons, lost ashore half a nautical mile north of the breakwater, Newcastle]
Berlinda. Steamship, 36 tons. Reg. Newcastle, 1881. Broken up at Newcastle, 1896. [ASR]
Bessie Maud. Wooden schooner, 63 tons. #83611. Built NSW 1880; reg. Sydney 57/1880. Length 76.4 ft. Rammed and sunk by SSVirawa when outward bound from Newcastle, 4 October 1898. [LN],[SAN - lost 4 September 1898]
Bluebell. Wooden screw steamer, 40 tons. #128785. Built NSW 1914; reg. Newcastle, 1/1915. Length 65 ft. Collided with the coaster Waraneen in Newcastle harbour and sank within minutes, 9 August 1934. Three passengers drowned. A Court of Inquiry at Newcastle blamed the ferry's master for the collision. [LN - Bluebell],[SAN - Blue Bell I]
[ASR lists vessel Blue Bell Island, steamship, 18 tons. Built Newcastle, 1914. Sunk Newcastle Harbour, reg closed 1935]
Boambee. Wooden steamer, 236 tons. Built Bellinger River, NSW, 1908. Rerenamed Illalong. Ashore on Belmont Beach, south of Newcastle, after losing her rudder, and was later dismantled where she lay, 10 March, 1948. [LN],[MR]
In 1934 she sank at Clarence Town, but was refloated.
In 1947 she sprang a leak when leaving Newcastle and sank shortly after returning to port. Again she was re-floated, and renamed Illalong..
Boyd. Wooden schooner, 18 tons. Lost on Stockton Beach, Newcastle, 16 July 1812. [SAN],[LN lost near Port Stephens]
Bungaree. Paddle steamer, tug, 62 tons. #69736. Built NSW 1872; reg. Sydney, 84/1873. Length 78.2 ft. Stranded on rocks, Nobbys Head, Newcastle, 17 July 1866. [SAN]
On 8 October 1865, whilst leaving her bearth at Newcastle, backed under the bows of the steamer City of Newcastle, entering Newcastle, and sank. [NH],[LN]
Burnett. Brig, 137 tons. #32391. Built NSW 1853; reg. Sydney, 11/1862. Length 85 ft. Broke up in huge seas near Oyster Bank, Newcastle, in a gale that claimed several ships, 9 May 1869. Crew lost. [LN],[NH],[SAN]
Canmore. Wooden schooner, 131 tons. Reg. Sydney, 108/1832. Length 82 ft. Lost on the Oyster Bank, Newcastle, 21 October 1854. [SAN]
Caroline. Ketch. Foundered in full view of a number of Newcastle residents inside Nobbys Head, 18 July 1866. There were no survivors. [LN],[SAN]
Cawarra. Iron paddle steamer, 552 ton. #49282. Built Glasgow, Scotland, 1864 for the Australian Steam Navigation Company; reg. Sydney, 88/1864. Lbd 207 x 25 x 13 ft. Arrived in Sydney Harbour under Captain Vaircross on 7 December 1864. Captain Chatfield. Foundered in raging seas during ‘the great gale’off Oyster Bank, (Newcastle), 12 July 1866. When almost across the bar she was swept by a succession of enormous seas which destroyed her within a few minutes, sweeping passengers and crew into the raging water. Sixty-two lives were lost. Wreckage and bodies of those lost littered a large area both in and out of the harbour. The sole survivor, seaman Frederick Hedges grabbed a plank as the ship sank and was eventually washed more dead than alive against a harbour buoy. He was rescued by James Johnson (and two others), the sole survivor of the Dunbar lost in 1857. See also loss of Arthur, William Watson, Lismore, and Keder. [#LN],[#NH],[GB],[SAN],[#MJ],[#MGS],[LAH],[DG - 438 tons]
Ceylon. Vessel lost near Newcastle, February 1834. [SAN]
Champion. Lighter, 42 tons. #51584. Built NSW, 1863; reg. Newcastle, 3/1872. Length 70.5 ft. Sliced in two by SS Maitland and sank off Newcastle, 10 April 1877. One man lost. [LN],[SAN - lost Hunter River entrance, Newcastle, 10 May 1877]
Champion. Ketch, 42 tons. Sank following a collision off Newcastle, June 1879.
[LN],[SAN]
Chance. Ketch. Lost near Newcastle, September 1851.
[LN],[SAN simply lists vessel lost in 1851]
Chance. Wooden ketch, 39 tons. #32674. Built NSW, 1849; reg. Sydney, 1/1853. Length 51.5 ft. Lost in a gale that took four other vessels, on inside Oyster Bank, Newcastle, 28 July 1857. [SAN],[GB],[LN]
Chance. Cutter, 20 tons. #59561. Built NSW, 1870; reg. Newcastle, 27/1870. Length 44 ft. Lost on the south spit, 12 nm north of Newcastle, 17 June 1879. [SAN]
Also listed:
Chance. Ketch. Abandoned in a gale and drifted ashore several kilometres south of Newcastle, 11 June 1879. The crew saved ‘suffered severely’ before being rescued. [LN]
Charlotte. Sloop, 10 tons. Left Sydney for places north of Newcastle on 7 September 1827, and was returning when she foundered during a gale, 19? September 1827. Two passengers and the crew of two lost their lives. Wreckage was found six miles north of Newcastle. [LN],[SAN],[ASW1]
Chipperkyle. Barque, 1709 tons. Built 1892. Disappeared having left Newcastle, 1905. [LAH]
City of Newcastle. Iron paddle steamer, 390/293 tons. #41117. Built Great Britain 1859; reg. Sydney, 53/1859. Length 192 ft. Captain Summerbell. With a full list of passengers and cargo, wrecked ashore in a fog at Shepherds Hill, 2 nm south of Newcastle, 12 September 1878. Passengers landed by walking along planks to the beach. Cargo was removed and the vessel abandoned, to break up after several years. [NH],SAN],[DG],[BNN]
On 8 October 1865, collided with and sank the tug Bungaree.
Colonist. Steamer, steel, 2286/1467 tons. #96673. Built at Sunderland, Great Britain, 1889; reg. London. Lbd 290 x 38, x 20 ft. Captain Mars. Ashore on the Oyster Bank, near the buoy marking the remains of the Cawarra, 10 September 1894. The lifeboat was called and eventually the complement of 29 was rescued. A decade later the Adolphe stranded on her remains and when the breakwater was extended a few years later she disappeared under the boulders.
[LH],[LN - built 1887],[LAH - built 1887],[LAH],[SAN - lost 9 September],[DG - wrecked 6 September]
Comet. Wooden schooner, 87 tons. #32319. Built NSW, 1845; reg. Sydney, 65/1863. Length 70 ft. Lost ashore in a gale at Newcastle Bight, NSW, 11 June 1866. [SAN],[LN]
Commodore. Iron paddle steamer, 187 tons. #74986. Built Great Britain, 1878; reg. Sydney, 52/1878. Length 130 ft. Operated for some fifty years as a tug and as a passenger vessel in the Sydney area and between Newcastle and Sydney. She was a popular vessel on the weekends, taking people to Manly, and thus helped develop the residential and holiday suburb. Stripped of her fittings and scuttled 3 nm east of Nobbys Head, Newcastle, 3 September 1931. [SAN], [MGS],[BNN]
In 1908, towed stricken Iverna into Sydney Harbour, December, 1908.
@ Wrecksite known, in 35 metres. Only the boiler, engine and paddle wheel shafts and scattered wreckage remain.
Coolabah. Iron, hulk, 479 tons. # 131503. Built Scotland, 1911. Reg. Sydney 10/1912. Length 148.9 ft. Hulked Newcastle, North Stockton, 24 September 1949. [SAN]
Cumberland. Colonial Government, wooden vessel. Stolen by convicts, Broken Bay, NSW, September 1797. A search for the Cumberland by the Government vessel Reliance, Lieutenant Shortland, failed to find the vessel but it was during this search that coal was discovered at the entrance to the Hunter River 'and this important discovery made up for their failure to recapture the pirates'. [JM],[SAN - lost of Jervis Bay, 1797]
Cumberland. Wooden schooner, 59 tons. #32652. Built NSW, 1848; reg. Sydney, 22/1848. Length 57.4 ft. Foundered suddenly 2 nm off Newcastle while reducing canvas when running for shelter during a gale, 8 April 1862. The ketch Elfin, which was nearby, saw men in the water but was powerless to save them. [SAN], [LN - lost 6 April 1862]]
Currumbene. Wooden screw steamer, 245 tons. #150180. Built NSW, 1922; reg. Sydnet, 12/1922. Length 125 ft. Lost at Williams River, near Seaham (Hunter River tributary), 9 January 1934. [SAN]
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