请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 List of shipwrecks in February 1853
释义

  1. 1 February

  2. 2 February

  3. 3 February

  4. 4 February

  5. 6 February

  6. 7 February

  7. 8 February

  8. 9 February

  9. 10 February

  10. 11 February

  11. 12 February

  12. 13 February

  13. 14 February

  14. 17 February

  15. 18 February

  16. 22 February

  17. 23 February

  18. 24 February

  19. 25 February

  20. 26 February

  21. 27 February

  22. 28 February

  23. Unknown date

  24. References

The list of shipwrecks in February 1853 includes some ships sunk, foundered, grounded, or otherwise lost during February 1853.

February 1853
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28Unknown date

1 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date=1 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Felicity
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was holed by an anchor and sank at Cork.[1]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

2 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date=2 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Atlantic
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was in collision with Harwich and sank in the North Sea. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from London to Hartlepool, County Durham.[2]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Ocean
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore and wrecked at Plymouth, Devon. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Shoreham-by-Sea, Sussex to Plymouth.[2]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Rapid
|flag={{flag|Prussia|civil}}
|desc=The schooner was in collision with Symmetry ({{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}) and sank in Liverpool Bay off the North West Lightship ( Trinity House). Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Pillau to Liverpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom.[1]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Secret
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore north of Scarborough, Yorkshire. She was on a voyage from Sunderland, County Durham to Hong Kong, China. She was refloated and put back to Sunderland.[1]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

3 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date= February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Margaret and Grace Dalrymple
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was run into by a Board of Customs steamship and sank at Rathmullen, County Donegal. Her crew were rescued by the steamship.[2]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Mark Breeds
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was damaged by fire at Whitstable, Kent.[2]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Sirius
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore at Balbriggan, County Dublin. She was on a voyage from Liverpool, Lancashire to Pará, Brazil.[2]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

4 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date=4 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Alnwick
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore at Walberswick, Suffolk. She was refloated on 8 April and taken in to Southwold, Suffolk.[3]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

6 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date=6 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Barrowgate
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore and damaged at Dundalk, County Louth.[10]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Naomi
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship ran aground on the Horse Shoe Bank, in Chesapeake Bay. She was on a voyage from Liverpool, Lancashire to Baltimore, Maryland, United States. She was later refloated and taken in to Baltimore in a leaky condition.[11]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

7 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date=7 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Eberdina Scherenza
|flag={{flag|Netherlands}}
|desc=The schooner was in collision with a British vessel and sank off Majorca, Spain with the loss of a crew member.[12]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

8 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date=8 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Britannia
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore near Cape Greco, Cyprus. She was consequently condemned.[13]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Combinazione
|flag= Wallachia
|desc=The brig ran aground and was wrecked at Marsala, Sicily. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Constantinople, Ottoman Empire to Falmouth, Cornwall, United Kingdom.[14][15]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

9 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date=9 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Chase
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship ran aground on the Burbo Bank, in Liverpool Bay. She was on a voyage from Liverpool, Lancashire to Greenock, Renfrewshire and Demerara, British Guiana. She was later refloated and put back to Liverpool.[4]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Colony
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was wrecked on the Collins Patches. She was on a voyage from New Orleans, Louisiana, United States to London.[17]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Frances
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The sloop was driven ashore at Sunderland, County Durham.[5]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Sardinian
|flag= Kingdom of Sardinia
|desc=The bombard was wrecked near "Torre Island". She was on a voyage from Nova Scotia, British North America to "Della Guardia".[12]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=St. Thomas
|flag={{flag|Denmark}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore at Helsingør. She was on a voyage from Messina, Sicily to Helsingør.[10]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Vyf Broeders
|flag={{flag|Kingdom of Hanover|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore and wrecked south of Seaham, County Durham. Her crew were rescued.[5]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

10 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date=10 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Adelaide
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI|civil}} Jersey
|desc=The ship was driven ashore and wrecked at Tynemouth, Northumberland. Her crew were rescued.[5]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Baron Haynau
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore at Portstewart, County Londonderry. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Londonderry to Constantinople, Ottoman Empire.[5]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Charlotte
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was in collision with a brigantine and foundered in the North Sea off Flamborough Head, Yorkshire. Her crew survived. She was on a voyage from South Shields, County Durham to London.[5]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Jane White
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship ran aground on the Brake Sand, off the coast of Kent. She was on a voyage from Hartlepool, County Durham to Dieppe, Seine-Inférieure, France.[6]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Marie
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore and wrecked near Huttoft, Lincolnshire. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from South Shields to Spalding, Lincolnshire.[5]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Sadak
|flag={{flag|Ottoman Empire|naval-1844}}
|desc=The ship ran aground on the Goodwin Sands, Kent. She was on a voyage from Smyrna to London, United Kingdom. She floated off and sank. The wreck was subsequently dispersed by explosives.[6]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

11 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date=11 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Antelope
|flag={{flag|Norway|1848}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore and wrecked on Papa Westray, Orkney Islands, United Kingdom with the loss of four of her crew. She was on a voyage from Dublin, United Kingdom to Bergen.[12]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Caroline Schink
|flag={{flag|Netherlands}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore. She was on a voyage from Pernambuco, Brazil to Amsterdam, North Holland.[4]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Return
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship struck a sunken wreck in the Swin, off the coast of Essex and foundered. Her crew were rescued.[4]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

12 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date=12 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Anna Dorothea
|flag={{flag|Norway|1844}}
|desc=The derelict ship was towed in to A Coruña, Spain.[12]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Britannia
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore and wrecked at Constantinople, Ottoman Empire.[14]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=John
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was in collision with the Bull Float and sank in the Humber. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Newcastle upon Tyne, Northumberland to Dunkerque, Nord, France.[7]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Susannah
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore and wrecked at Seaham, County Durham. Her crew were rescued.[5]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

13 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date=13 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Caspian
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore and wrecked in Torbay.[4]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Eclipse
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The schooner was abandoned off Cape Finisterre, Spain. Her crew were rescued before she foundered. She was on a voyage from Ancona, Papal States to Amsterdam, North Holland, Netherlands.[8]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Esther
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship struck rocks and was damaged. She was on a voyage from Cardiff, Glamorgan to Liverpool, Lancashire. She put in to Holyhead, Anglesey in a leaky condition.[4]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Frances and Ann
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI|civil}} Jersey
|desc=The schooner was severely damaged by fire at Jersey.[10]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Mary
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was wrecked on Inchcolm. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Wisbech, Cambridgeshire to Port Dundas, Renfrewshire.[4]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Marys
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship ran aground on the Black Tail Sand, in the Thames Estuary.[4]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Nouvelle Marie
|flag={{flag|France}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore at the mouth of the Gironde. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Bordeaux, Gironde to Bayonne, Pyrénées-Atlantiques.[41]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Venus
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship ran aground on the Black Tail Sand. She was refloated.[4]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

14 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date=14 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Lady of the Lake
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore and severely damaged at North Berwick, Lothian. Her crew were rescued.[10]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Maitre Jacques
|flag={{flag|France}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore at Port-en-Bessin, Calvados. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Courcelles to Port-en-Bessin.[14]}}{{shipwreck list end}}==15 February=={{shipwreck list begin |date=15 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item|ship=Courier|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}|desc=The ship capsized at Liverpool, Lancashire.[9]}}{{shipwreck list item|ship={{PS|Queen Victoria|1838|2}} |flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}|desc=The paddle steamer was wrecked at Howth Head, County Dublin with the loss of about 83 lives. There were seventeen survivors. She was on a voyage from Liverpool to Dublin.}}{{shipwreck list end}}==16 February=={{shipwreck list begin |date=16 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item|ship=Economy|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}|desc=The [sloop was discovered derelict in the North Sea {{convert|2|nmi|km}} north east of Happisburgh, Norfolk.[46]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Independence
|flag={{flag|United States|1851}}
|desc=The steamship, under Captain Sampson, struck a rock at the southernmost point of the Island of Margarita, off the coast of Lower California, while en route San Juan del Sud, Nicaragua to San Francisco, California. Although she backed off the rock she was making too much water so was deliberately beached in a small cove, grounding just outside the breakers. The rising water level caused a fire and the vessel burned to the water line. Of the 418 crew and passengers on board, 129 died and 289 were rescued from the Island a few days later after attracting the attention of the whaling ships Omega, Meteor, James Maury and the barque Clement (all {{flag|United States|1851}}). Captain Sampson had meanwhile rowed North in an open boat to find rescue and after 30 hours rowing reached the schooner A. Emory ({{flag|United States|1851}}), though this arrived shortly after the rescue by the whalers.[10][11]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

17 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Agnes
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore at Grimsby, Lincolnshire. She was on a voyage from London to Hartlepool, County Durham. She had broken in two by 25 February.[17]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Lady Elizabeth
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore and wrecked on Terceira Island, Azores. Her crew were rescued.[12]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Masonic
|flag={{flag|United States|1851}}
|desc=The ship ran aground on the Goodwin Sands, Kent, United Kingdom. She was on a voyage from Newcastle upon Tyne, Northumberland, United Kingdom to New York.[6]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Reval
|flag={{flag|Portugal|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore and wrecked on Terceira Island. Her crew were rescued.[12]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Ringsbridge
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore and wrecked on Terceira Island. Her crew were rescued.[12]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

18 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date=18 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Ludovico
|flag= Trieste
|desc=The ship was driven ashore {{convert|2|nmi|km}} north of Messina, Sicily. She was on a voyage from Trieste to Marseille, Bouches-du-Rhône, France.[14]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

==20 February=={{shipwreck list begin |date=20 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Valiant
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The brig was abandoned in the Atlantic Ocean.[13]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

22 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date=22 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Thomas and Nancy
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The polacca was run into by Bolton ({{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}) and sank {{convert|5|nmi|km}} north north east of the Eddystone Lighthouse. Her crew were rescued by 'Bolton. Thomas and Nancy was on a voyage from Plymouth, Devon to Newport, Monmouthshire.[14]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Trois Soeurs
|flag={{flag|France}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore at the mouth of the Palmones. She was on a voyage from Cherbourg, Mache to Marseille, Bouches-du-Rhône. She was later refloated.[15]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

23 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date=23 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Dame Dorothy
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore and wrecked near Warkworth, Northumberland. Her crew were rescued.[16]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Robert
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship ran aground on the West Hoyle Bank, in Liverpool Bay. Her crew were rescued by the Rhyl Lifeboat. She was on a voyage from Dublin to Chester, Cheshire. She was refloated the next day and beached at the Point of Ayr, Cheshire.[16]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Sir William Wallace
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship ran aground on the Herd Sand, in the North Sea off the coast of County Durham and capsized with the loss of all hands. She was on a voyage from South Shields, County Durham to a Scottish port.[16]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

24 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date=24 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Dolphin
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore near Dieppe, Seine-Inférieure, France. Her crew were rescued.[8]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Sarah Ann
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship ran aground at Archerstown, County Waterford. She was on a voyage from Waterford to Portsmouth, Hampshire. She was refloated and resumed her voyage.[41]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

25 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date=25 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Aboyne
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore and wrecked south of Grimsby, Lincolnshire.[17]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Elizabeth
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore south of Grimsby.[17]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Gefion
|flag={{flag|Norway|1844}}
|desc=The brig sank off the Barbary Coast. Her crew were rescued by the brig Washburn ({{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}). Gefion was on a voyage from Constantinople, Ottoman Empire to Queenstown, County Cork, United Kingdom.[13][17]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Robert Moffat
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore at "Porto Paglia", on the west coast of Sardinia with the loss of all but one of her crew. She was on a voyage from Newcastle upon Tyne, Northumberland to Calvi, Corsica, France.[67]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=St. Privat
|flag={{flag|France}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore at Carloforte, Sardinia. Her crew were rescued.[18]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Union
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was lost in the Bay of Authie with the loss of all hands. She was on a voyage from South Shields, County Durham to Dieppe, Seine-Inférieure, France.[8]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

26 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date=26 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Amherst
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore at Bridlington, Yorkshire. She was on a voyage from Sunderland, County Durham to Aberdeen. She was refloated on 7 March and taken in to Bridlington.[15]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Anna Birch
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore at Dingle, County Kerry. She later broke in two.[71]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Atlas
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship ran aground at Liverpool, Lancashire. She was on a voyage from Liverpool to New Orleans, Louisiana. She was refloated and taken in to Liverpool.[71]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Britannia
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore at Redcar, Yorkshire. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from London to Hartlepool, County Durham.[41]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Camelia
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship ran aground in the Rock Channel. She was refloated and taken in to Liverpool in a leaky condition.[71]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Classina
|flag={{flag|Netherlands}}
|desc=The galiot was driven ashore at Bacton, Norfolk, United Kingdom. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from London to Sunderland, County Durham.[41][8]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Cheshire
|flag={{flag|United States|1851}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore at Knott's Hole, Liverpool. She was on a voyage from Liverpool to Boston, Massachusetts.[71]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship={{SS|City of Glasgow|1848|2}}
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The steamship was driven ashore near Rock Ferry, Cheshire. She was on a voyage from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States to Liverpool. City of Glasgow was refloated and taken in to Liverpool in a leaky condition.[19]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Cumberland
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was abandoned in the Mediterranean Sea {{convert|100|nmi|km}} south west of Sardinia. Her crew were rescued by Christina ({{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}). Cumberland was on a voyage from Alexandria, Egypt Eyalet to Queenstown, County Cork.[12]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Elizabeth
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was drive ashore near Redcar. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from London to Seaham, County Durham.[41]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Jane
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The barque ran aground and capsized in the River Mersey with the loss of eleven of the twenty people on board. She was on a voyage from Liverpool to Valparaíso, Chile.[19]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=May Queen
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was wrecked on the Herd Sand, in the North Sea off the coast of County Durham. Her crew were rescued by the South Shields Lifeboat. She was on a voyage from Bo'ness, Lothian to South Shields.[19]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Nisus
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore and wrecked at North Sunderland, County Durham with the loss of three of her crew.[41]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Prince Leopold
|flag=Flag unknown
|desc=The ship was wrecked at the mouth of the Somme with the loss of all hands. She was on a voyage from Newcastle upon Tyne, Northumberland to Abbeville, Somme.[8]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Prompt
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was wrecked on the coast of County Durham. Her crew were rescued by the South Shields Lifeboat.[19]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Rosetta
|flag={{flag|United States|1851}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore at Knott's Hole. She was on a voyage from Liverpool to Boston.[19]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

27 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date=27 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Abbotsford
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship ran aground on the Platters. She was refloated and taken in to Harwich, Essex.[41]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Fox
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was wrecked in the Bay of Authie.[41]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=John Ingo
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship ran aground on the Scroby Sands, Norfolk. She was refloated and taken in to Great Yarmouth, Norfolk.[20]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Kirtons
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore at Winterton-on-Sea, Norfolk.[20]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

28 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date=28 February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Amherst
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was wrecked at Bridlington, Yorkshire. She was on a voyage from Sunderland, County Durham to Aberdeen.[8]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Comet
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was wrecked at Padstow, Cornwall.[8]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

Unknown date

{{shipwreck list begin |date=Unknown date in February 1853 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Active
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The smack ran aground on the Halliday Flats, in the North Sea off the coast of Essex. She was refloated and taken in to Harwich, Essex.[93][21]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Anna Dorothea
|flag={{flag|Sweden|1844}}
|desc=The ship foundered in the Atlantic Ocean before 8 February. her crew were rescued by Matanzas ({{flagicon|Spain|civil-1785}} Cuba). Anna Dorothea was on a voyage from Stockholm to Messina, Sicily.[20]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Atlantic
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The brig was run down and sunk off the coast of Essex by the steamship Hunwicke ({{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}).[21]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Bidston
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was abandoned at sea. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Liverpool, Lancashire to "Callingapatam".[22]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Conecticut
|flag={{flag|United States|1851}}
|desc=The ship ran aground at Pass a Loutre, Louisiana before 4 February. She was on a voyage from New Orleans, Louisiana to Liverpool. She was refloated on 14 February.[13]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Dervant
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The brig ran aground on the Whiting Sand, in the North Sea off the coast of Suffolk. She was refloated but was consequently beached at Orford Haven. Later refloated and taken in to Harwich, Essex.[23]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Eglantine
|flag={{flag|France}}
|desc=The ship was destroyed by fire off Aveiro, Portugal before 19 February. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Oporto, Portugal to Havre de Grâce, Seine-Inférieure.[20]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Florida
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was wrecked in the Black Sea before 19 February. She was on a voyage from Odessa, Russia to a British port.[14]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Italy
|flag= Kingdom of Sardinia
|desc=The ship ran aground on the Manilla Reef, in the Atlantic Ocean before 15 February and was abandoned. She was on a voyage from New Orleans, Louisiana, United States to Genoa.[18]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=John Hutchinson
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was wrecked near Buena Ventura. She was on a voyage from Liverpool to Panama City, Republic of New Grenada.[24]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Mary Ann
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore at Wells-next-the-Sea, Norfolk. She was refloated on 28 February.[8]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Masonic
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore. She was on a voyage from South Shields, County Durham to New York, United States. She was refloated and taken in to Ramsgate, Kent in a leaky conditon. She arrived on 4 February.[2]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Metta Catharina
|flag={{flag|Hamburg|admiralty}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore at Cuxhaven. She was refloated on 24 February.[8]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Olympe
|flag={{flag|France}}
|desc=The ship sank at Cherbourg, Manche.[4]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Sally
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore in the Bay of Biscay. She was on a voyage from Bayonne, Pyrénées-Atlantiques, France to an Irish port.[9]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Sylph
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore and wrecked at ]Wells-next-the-Sea. She was on a voyage from London to Brancaster, Norfolk.[20]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Vrouw Wilhelmina
|flag={{flag|Netherlands}}
|desc=The ship was abandoned in the Dogger Bank. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from "Chushanie" to Hull, Yorkshire, United Kingdom.[4]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Wave
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was abandoned at sea. She was on a voyage from Falmouth, Cornwall to the Isles of Scilly.[5]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Woodside
|flag={{flag|United States|1851}}
|desc=The ship was wrecked on the Carysfort Reef.[24]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

References

1. ^{{Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Ship News |date=4 February 1853 |page_number=8 |issue=21343 |column=D }}
2. ^{{Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Ship News |date=5 February 1853 |page_number=8 |issue=21344 |column=E }}
3. ^{{cite web |url=http://walberswick.onesuffolk.net/assets/WLHG/ShipsShipwrecks1782-1845.pdf |title=Shipwrecks at or near Walberswick from 1848 - 1874 |first=Alan Farquar |last=Bottomley |publisher=Suffolk Records Society |accessdate=25 December 2014}}
4. ^{{Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Ship News |date=15 February 1853 |page_number=7 |issue=21352 |column=E }}
5. ^{{Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Ship News |date=12 February 1853 |page_number=7 |issue=21350 |column=F }}
6. ^{{cite book |title=Goodwin Sands Shipwrecks |pages=91-92 |first=Richard |last=Larn |publisher=David and Charles |location=Newton Abbott |year=1977 |isbn=0 7153 7202 5}}
7. ^{{Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Ship News |date= February 1853 |page_number= |issue=213 |column= }}
8. ^{{Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Ship News |date=2 March 1853 |page_number=7 |issue=21365 |column=F }}
9. ^{{Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Ship News |date=16 February 1853 |page_number=7 |issue=21353 |column=E }}
10. ^The New York Times, 26 April 1853.
11. ^{{cite news |title=Loss of the steamer Independence|newspaper=The Polynesian |location=Honolulu |date=2 Apr 1853 | url=http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn82015408/1853-04-02/ed-1/seq-2}}
12. ^{{Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Ship News |date=15 March 1853 |page_number=7 |issue=21376 |column=B }}
13. ^{{Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Ship News |date=12 March 1853 |page_number=8 |issue=21374 |column=D }}
14. ^{{Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Naval intelligence |date=24 February 1853 |page_number=8 |issue=21360 |column=F }}
15. ^{{Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Ship News |date=9 March 1853 |page_number=8 |issue=21371 |column=E }}
16. ^{{Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Ship News |date=26 February 1853 |page_number=3 |issue=21362 |column=F }}
17. ^{{Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Naval Intelligence |date=14 March 1853 |page_number=8 |issue=21375 |column=E }}
18. ^{{Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Ship News |date=16 March 1853 |page_number=7 |issue=21377 |column=F }}
19. ^{{Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=The Storm on Saturday |date=28 February 1853 |page_number=8 |issue=21363 |column=F }}
20. ^10 11 12 {{Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Ship News |date=1 March 1853 |page_number=8 |issue=21364 |column=8 }}
21. ^{{cite book |title=The Salvagers |first=Hervey |last=Benham |authorlink=Hervey Benham |page=184 |publisher=Essex County Newspapers Ltd |location=Colchester |year=1980 |isbn=00 950944 2 3}}
22. ^{{Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Ship News |date=28 February 1853 |page_number=7 |issue=21363 |column=F }}
23. ^{{cite book |title=The Salvagers |first=Hervey |last=Benham |authorlink=Hervey Benham |page=184 |publisher=Essex County Newspapers Ltd |location=Colchester |year=1980 |isbn=00 950944 2 3}}
24. ^{{Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Ship News |date=3 March 1853 |page_number=8 |issue=21366 |column=E }}
{{shipevents|1853}}{{1850s shipwrecks}}{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2019}}

2 : Lists of shipwrecks by year|Maritime incidents in February 1853

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/9/22 15:42:40