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词条 List of shipwrecks in 1866
释义

  1. January

     4 January  9 January  10 January  11 January  14 January  20 January  22 January 

  2. February

     12 February  Unknown date 

  3. March

     3 March  4 March  10 March  15 March  20 March  23 March  Unknown date 

  4. April

     1 April  4 April  12 April  17 April  21 April  23 April  25 April  26 April  Unknown date 

  5. May

     2 May  3 May  13 May  14 May  19 May  Unknown date 

  6. June

     10 June  21 June  22 June  24 June  25 June  Unknown date 

  7. July

     4 July  12 July  13 July  14 July  15 July  16 July  17 July  20 July  23 July  Unknown date 

  8. August

     6 August 

  9. September

     2 September  5 September  10 September  12 September  15 September  18 September  21 September  24 September  27 September 

  10. October

     2 October  31 October  Unknown date 

  11. November

     3 November  12 November  29 November 

  12. December

     5 December  8 December  16 December  20 December  24 December  25 December  27 December  Unknown date 

  13. Unknown date

  14. References

     Notes  Bibliography 

The list of shipwrecks in 1866 includes ships sunk, foundered, grounded, or otherwise lost during 1866.

{{shipwreck list toc |ud=2}}{{Expand list|date=August 2008}}

January

4 January

{{shipwreck list begin |date=4 January 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship={{USS|Narcissus|1863|6}}
|flag={{navy|United States|1866}}
|desc=The screw steamer was wrecked at Egmont Key, Florida, and sank with the loss of all hands. }}{{shipwreck list end}}

9 January

{{shipwreck list begin |date=9 January 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=William and Mary
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner was being towed to sea at Greymouth by the tug Lioness. The tug, through the pilot's inattention, drifted too far north causing the William and Mary to ground. Owing to the heavy swell, the Lioness was forced to cut the schooner loose.[1]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

10 January

{{shipwreck list begin |date=10 January 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Hannah Moore
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore and wrecked on Rat Island, Devon, England, with the loss of nineteen of her 25 crew. She was on a voyage from Chile to Queenstown, County Cork.[2] }}{{shipwreck list end}}

11 January

{{shipwreck list begin |date=11 January 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship={{SS|London|1864|2}}
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The passenger steamship sank in the Bay of Biscay. Of the 239 or 263 people on board (sources differ), only 19 survived. }}{{shipwreck list end}}

14 January

{{shipwreck list begin |date=14 January 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Ocean Bride
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The schooner was driven ashore and wrecked near Langton Matravers, Dorset, England.[3] }}{{shipwreck list end}}

20 January

{{shipwreck list begin |date=20 January 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Martha
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner went aground while trying to cross the rivermouth bar at Greymouth. She was stuck fast, and all attempts to free her failed. Note: this wreck should not be confused with the wreck of an identically named ship on 1 April 1866.[1]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

22 January

{{shipwreck list begin |date=22 January 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Dinanais
|flag={{flagcountry|France}}
|desc=Sailing from Dinan (Brittany), ran aground on the coast of St Ouen Jersey, Channel Islands [4] }}{{shipwreck list end}}

February

12 February

{{shipwreck list begin |date=12 February 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Esther
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner went aground and was wrecked to the south of the mouth of the Manawatu River, with the loss of four lives.[1]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

Unknown date

{{shipwreck list begin |date=Unknown date February 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Jessie
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner left Stewart Island for Hokitika on February 26, carrying a crew of four. She was never sighted again.[1]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

March

3 March

{{shipwreck list begin |date=3 March 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Catherine
|flag=unknown
|desc=The whaling barque was lost in fine weather in the Chatham Islands. The ship's master, Captain James Lucas, died on board on February 21, and command passed to a Mr McGuinness who — through inexperience, drunkenness, or a combination of the two — failed to successfully handle the ship.[1]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

4 March

{{shipwreck list begin |date=4 March 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Libelle
|flag={{flag|Bremen}}
|desc=The barque struck the reef at Wake Island and sunk. After three weeks, the crew and passengers departed the uninhabited and dry atoll in a longboat and a gig. The ship's buried and scattered treasure of mercury (quicksilver), coins and precious stones was recovered by various vessels over the next two years.[5]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

10 March

{{shipwreck list begin |date=10 March 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Sea Bird
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} Tasmania
|desc=The schooner went aground close to Greymouth, New Zealand, and broke up.[6]}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=William
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New South Wales
|desc=The schooner went aground on a spit at the mouth of New Zealand's Grey River, seriously damaging her hull. She was washed off the spit several days later and sank.[7]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

15 March

{{shipwreck list begin |date=15 March 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Eleanor
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The 58-ton paddle steamer was washed ashore three miles north of Greymouth, and became a total wreck.[6]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

20 March

{{shipwreck list begin |date=20 March 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Eliza Jane
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship sprang a leak and was abandoned in the Bristol Channel. Her crew were rescued by the schooner Equity ({{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}).[2] }}{{shipwreck list end}}

23 March

{{shipwreck list begin |date=23 March 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Elizabeth
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The smack sank at Cardigan, Wales. Her six crew were rescued by John Stuart ( Royal National Lifeboat Institution).[8]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Vesta
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The brig foundered in Swansea Bay, Wales. Her seven crew were rescued by Martha and Anne ( Royal National Lifeboat Institution).[2] }}{{shipwreck list end}}

Unknown date

{{shipwreck list begin |date=Unknown date 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Fusilier
|flag=None
|desc=The unregistered schooner was wrecked in the Derwent River.[9]
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Queen
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The paddle steamer struck the Tings Rocks, in the Bristol Channel off Hartland Point, Devon, England, and was holed. She was beached at Clovelly, Devon, where she subsequently broke her back and was a total loss. All on board survived[2] }}{{shipwreck list end}}

April

1 April

{{shipwreck list begin |date=1 April 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Curlew
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The cutter was wrecked at Auckland wharf during a gale which raged from 30 March to 1 April.[6]}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Martha
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner was wrecked at Mechanics Bay, Auckland, during a gale which raged from 30 March to 1 April. Note: this wreck should not be confused with the wreck of an identically named ship on 20 April 1866.[6]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

4 April

{{shipwreck list begin |date=4 April 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship= Ebgante
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI|civil}} Canada
|desc=While en route to Liverpool from New York City with a cargo of oak, the vessel was abandoned by her crew in the Atlantic Ocean 100 miles west of the Isles of Scilly. The crew were picked up by the Ferdinand ({{flag|Bremen}}) and later transferred to the pilot cutter Agnes ({{flag|United Kingdom|civil}}) and taken to St Mary's, Isles of Scilly.[10] }}{{shipwreck list end}}

12 April

{{shipwreck list begin |date=12 April 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship={{ship||Gilmore|1824 ship|2}}
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The full-rigged ship was wrecked off St Martin's, Isles of Scilly. Her crew survived. She was on a voyage from Southampton, Hampshire to Quebec City, Canada.
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

17 April

{{shipwreck list begin |date=17 April 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Morning Star
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner was wrecked on Stephenson Island while en route from Whangaroa to Auckland. All hands were saved.[11]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

21 April

{{shipwreck list begin |date=21 April 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship= Amphion
|flag={{navy|France}}
|desc=The sloop-of-war was wrecked off Veracruz, Mexico.[12]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

23 April

{{shipwreck list begin |date=23 April 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship= Yarra
|flag=unknown
|desc=The 63-ton schooner was wrecked off the New Zealand coast.[13]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

25 April

{{shipwreck list begin |date=25 April 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship= Cubana
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The Sunderland barque struck the Seven Stones reef while both her master and mate were asleep below. She was bound for St Jago, Cuba, with 16 crew, one passenger, and a cargo of coal, iron, and mining gear. Ten of the crew and the passenger took to one of the boats, rowed to the Sevenstones Lightship, and transferred to St Mary's, Isles of Scilly, by pilot cutter.[10] }}{{shipwreck list end}}

26 April

{{shipwreck list begin |date=26 April 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship= Water Witch
|flag={{flag|United States|1866}}
|desc=Overloaded with iron ore, the schooner sank in a storm on Lake Champlain. An infant on board was killed. }}{{shipwreck list end}}

Unknown date

{{shipwreck list begin |date=Unknown date April 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Quickstep
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The cutter was lost while en route from Manukau to Greymouth. Wreckage was found near Waiuku.[6]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

May

2 May

{{shipwreck list begin |date=2 May 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Wonga Wonga
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The 40-ton steamer was lost while attempting to enter the Grey River at Greymouth. A strong current caught her and slewed her, causing her to run aground. The heavy surf knocked her about to the extent that her back was broken. No lives were lost.[26]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

3 May

{{shipwreck list begin |date=3 May 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Flach
|flag={{navy|Chile}}
|desc=The submarine sank with the loss of her entire 11-man crew during a test run in the bay off Valparaiso, Chile.
}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Hornet
|flag={{flag|United States|1866}}
|desc=The clipper ship burned at sea and sank in the Pacific Ocean during a voyage from New York City to San Francisco, California. The crew abandoned ship in three open lifeboats, two of which disappeared. Fourteen men survived for 43 days aboard the third boat before reaching Hawaii on 15 June 1866.
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

13 May

{{shipwreck list begin |date=13 May 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship= {{ship||General Grant|ship|2}}
|flag={{flag|United States|1866}}
|desc=The 1,200-ton barque ran aground and sank off the Auckland Islands, south of New Zealand. She was en route from Hobsons Bay, Victoria, to London carrying passengers, plus a cargo of wool, hides, and some 2,576 ounces of gold. Sixty-eight of those aboard (55 passengers and 13 crew) were lost. The remaining crew and passengers were marooned on the Auckland Islands for over a year and a half, and several of them did not survive the ordeal. They survivors were finally rescued by the New Zealand whaling brig Amherst in November 1867. Several unsuccessful attempts were made to salvage gold from the wreck.[14]{{shipwreck list end}}
}}

14 May

{{shipwreck list begin |date=14 May 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Brisk
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The cutter was holed and foundered in the Hauraki Gulf. It is thought that it was deliberately scuttled as an insurance fraud.[11]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

19 May

{{shipwreck list begin |date=19 May 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Progress
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The cutter was lost several miles off the mouth of the Manukau Harbour. Of the crew of three, only one made it ashore alive. [11]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

Unknown date

{{shipwreck list begin |date=Unknown date May 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Maria
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The 161-ton schooner went aground on a spit at Hokitika ripping out the starboard side of her hull.[26]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

June

10 June

{{shipwreck list begin |date=10 June 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Triton
|flag=unknown
|desc=The 140-ton brigantine was wrecked at Palliser Bay, New Zealand, while en route from Port Chalmers to Newcastle.[11]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

21 June

{{shipwreck list begin |date=21 June 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Wild Wave
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner was caught in a strong gale in Pelorus Sound and capsized. Only two of the crew of seven survived.[11] This ship should not be confused with another schooner of the same name which was lost in the Chatham Islands on 17 July.}}{{shipwreck list end}}

22 June

{{shipwreck list begin |date=22 June 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Annie
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The ketch was caught in a violent storm in Lyttelton Harbour. She broke her cables and was driven into rocks.[15]}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Brothers
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner was caught in a violent storm in Lyttelton Harbour. She broke her cables and was carried down harbour where she was driven onto rocks.[15]}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Streamlet
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner was caught in a violent storm in Lyttelton Harbour. She was driven onshore, hitting a large whaling boat en route, and was holed. When her cargo of lime made contact with the water, she caught fire.[11]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

24 June

{{shipwreck list begin |date=24 June 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship={{ship||Agincourt|1841 ship|2}}
|flag={{flag|United Kingdom|civil}}
|desc=The ship foundered at {{coord|36|S|25|E}} while sailing from Southampton to Hong Kong with coal and boilers. The crew was saved but the captain died of exhaustion. [16]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

25 June

{{shipwreck list begin |date=25 June 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Gundagai
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The paddle steamer was wrecked at Patea when she went ashore and broke her back.[15]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

Unknown date

{{shipwreck list begin |date=Unknown date June 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Two Sisters
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The cutter was lost off the Coromandel Peninsula. She stranded on rocks on 25 June, but was successfully refloated and continued her journey for Auckland. She was not sighted again, though wreckage was discovered near Whangapoua in early July.[15]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

July

4 July

{{shipwreck list begin |date=4 July 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Calypso
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New South Wales
|desc=The brig was en route from Newcastle, New South Wales to Dunedin, New Zealand with a cargo of coal. She struck a gale in Foveaux Strait and was damaged, and changed course for Stewart Island to repair the damage. Here she struck an uncharted reef and was holed. Her captain changed course again, to try to make harbour, but she hit bottom close to the island's southern shore, becoming a wreck.[17]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

12 July

{{shipwreck list begin |date=12 July 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship={{SS|Cawarra||2}}
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New South Wales
|desc=The paddle steamer was overwhelmed by large waves and sank bow first in the harbour at Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia, with the loss of 60 lives. Only one passenger survived. }}{{shipwreck list end}}

13 July

{{shipwreck list begin |date=13 July 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Rambler
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner foundered off the New Zealand North Island east coast with the loss of three lives. The ship was last spotted from the Cutter Greenwich on the 12th, which was running from an approaching gale and heavy sea.[40]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

14 July

{{shipwreck list begin |date=14 July 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Netherby
|flag={{flag|United Kingdom|civil}}
|desc=The full-rigged ship ran aground and sank off King Island in the Bass Strait. All 462 people on board survived both the sinking and being marooned on the island.}}{{shipwreck list end}}

15 July

{{shipwreck list begin |date=15 July 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Annie Laurie
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The cutter foundered five miles from the Aldermen Islands in New Zealand's Bay of Plenty.[41]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

16 July

{{shipwreck list begin |date=16 July 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Vivid
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner encountered bad weather while en route from Wairoa to Napier and began to leak. She filled fast and was abandoned by her captain and two passengers off Mahia Peninsula. The wreckage of the boat came ashore two days later.[18]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

17 July

{{shipwreck list begin |date=17 July 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Wild Wave
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner foundered on an uncharted reef near Cuba Channel, northwest of Chatham Island. The ship became a total wreck but all hands were saved.[19] This ship should not be confused with another schooner of the same name which was lost in the Marlborough Sounds on 21 June.}}{{shipwreck list end}}

20 July

{{shipwreck list begin |date=20 July 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Deese
|flag=unknown
|desc=The schooner was wrecked on Cape Farewell, New Zealand. The crew abandoned ship and were marooned on the spit until rescued by the steamer Tararua.[20]}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship= Palestro
|flag= Regia Marina
|desc=Third Italian War of Independence, Battle of Lissa: The coastal defense ship exploded and sank in the Adriatic Sea off Lissa with the loss of 211 of her 230-man crew after the ironclad warship SMS Erzherzog Ferdinand Max ({{flagicon|Austrian Empire}} Imperial Austrian Navy) rammed her, dismasting her and setting her afire.}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship= Re d'Italia
|flag= Regia Marina
|desc=Third Italian War of Independence, Battle of Lissa: The ironclad warship capsized and sank in the Adriatic Sea off Lissa with the loss of 400 of her 566-man crew after the ironclad warship SMS Erzherzog Ferdinand Max ({{flagicon|Austrian Empire}} Imperial Austrian Navy) rammed her. }}{{shipwreck list end}}

23 July

{{shipwreck list begin |date=23 July 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=George
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner foundered near Waiheke Island whilst en route from Thames to Auckland. All hands were lost with the ship.[20]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

Unknown date

{{shipwreck list begin |date=Unknown date July 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Caroline
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The ketch sailed from Okarito sometime in July, and was not seen again. There were four men on board.[18]}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Sea Serpent
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner sailed from Chatham Island for Wellington during July, and was not seen again. There were six on board.[20]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

August

6 August

{{shipwreck list begin |date=6 August 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Affondatore
|flag= Regia Marina
|desc=The ironclad warship sank in a storm while in port at Ancona, Italy. She was refloated, repaired, and returned to service.[2] }}{{shipwreck list end}}

September

2 September

{{shipwreck list begin |date=2 September 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Rio de Janeiro
|flag={{navy|Brazil}}
|desc=Paraguayan War, Battle of Curuzú: The ironclad warship sank immediately with the loss of 53 lives after striking a mine in the Apa River. }}{{shipwreck list end}}

5 September

{{shipwreck list begin |date=5 September 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=General Sherman
|flag={{flag|United States|1866}}
|desc=After several days under attack by Korean forces while stranded on Yanggak island in the Taedong River across from Pyongyang, Korea, the sidewheel paddle steamer was set ablaze by Korean fireboats. Those of her crew who survived to reach shore were massacred by the Koreans.[2] }}{{shipwreck list end}}

10 September

{{shipwreck list begin |date=10 September 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Chasseur
|flag={{flag|France}}
|desc=The brig was wrecked on the Greengrounds, in the Bristol Channel. Her crew were rescued by the tug Tweed ({{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}). Chasseur was on a voyage from Swansea, Glamorgan, United Kingdom to Barcelona, Spain.[2] }}{{shipwreck list end}}

12 September

{{shipwreck list begin |date=12 September 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Culgoa
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The barque went aground on a bar in Hokianga Harbour.[21]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

15 September

{{shipwreck list begin |date=15 September 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Three Sisters
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner was en route from Dunedin to Greymouth when she was caught in a gale. The captain attempted to put her into Nelson Harbour for safety, but she hit Arrow Rock and foundered.[22]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

18 September

{{shipwreck list begin |date=18 September 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship= Emilie
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The schooner sank in five minutes after hitting the Seven Stones reef, between the Isles of Scilly and Cornwall, England, in fog while bound from Poole for Runcorn, England. Her crew of five survived.[10] }}{{shipwreck list end}}

21 September

{{shipwreck list begin |date=21 September 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Thane
|flag=unknown
|desc=The steamer was wrecked when she stranded on the bar at the mouth of New Zealand's Grey River while leaving Greymouth for Sydney with a load of coal.[22]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

24 September

{{shipwreck list begin |date=24 September 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Sheridan
|flag={{flag|United States|1866}}
|desc=The screw steamer was lost through stranding. }}{{shipwreck list end}}

27 September

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 27 September 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Ontario
|flag={{flag|United States|1865}}
|desc=The 489-ton whaling bark was abandoned in the Chukchi Sea at 70 degrees 25 minutes North latitude after she collided with the whaling bark Helen Mar ({{flag|United States|1865}}). She floated through the Bering Strait as a derelict during the winter of 1866–1867, eventually washing ashore on the coast of the Russian Empire in Siberia, {{convert|9|nmi}} north of Cape Chaplino in Chukotka.[23]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

October

2 October

{{shipwreck list begin |date=2 October 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=James Daly
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner was wrecked at Waikawa in the Catlins with the loss of all her crew.[22]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

31 October

{{shipwreck list begin |date=31 October 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Juno
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} Tasmania
|desc=The barque, laden with 466 tons of coal, was wrecked on Farewell Spit, New Zealand. All hands were saved but the cargo was lost.[24]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

Unknown date

{{shipwreck list begin |date=Unknown date October 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Sylph
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner left Kaipara Harbour for Auckland on 10 October. Wreckage from the ship was washed up near Ahipara eight days later. All hands were lost.[22]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

November

3 November

{{shipwreck list begin |date=3 November 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Lizzie Scott
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The barque was wrecked on a reef near Chatham Island while en route from Wellington to Callao. The crew were rescued by the New Zealand government steamship St Kilda.[25]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

12 November

{{shipwreck list begin |date=12 November 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Tambo
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner was lost after becoming stuck on a bar at the mouth of the Hokitika River. After failed attempts to free her, the crew abandoned ship. Shortly after this, part of the sandbar collapsed, and the unmanned ship was carried into the surf where she foundered.[26]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

29 November

{{shipwreck list begin |date=29 November 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship= Adolphus
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New South Wales
|desc=The brigantine was wrecked without loss of life on rocks west of Pier Head at the harbour at Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia.[10] }}{{shipwreck list end}}

December

5 December

{{shipwreck list begin |date=5 December 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Wallace
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner was lost after it struck a reef of Chaslands Mistake in the Catlins. The crew were rescued by the schooner Edward and Christopher, laden with 466 tons of coal, was wrecked on Farewell Spit, New Zealand. All hands were saved but the cargo was lost.[26]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

8 December

{{shipwreck list begin |date=8 December 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Ellen
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The cutter, heavy with a cargo of flour bound for Hokitika became stranded on the bar at Sumner, New Zealand, and broke up. All hands were saved.[26]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

16 December

{{shipwreck list begin|date=16 December 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Eliza
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} South Australia
|desc=The ship was wrecked at Port Fairy, Victoria.[9]
}}{{shipwreck list end}}

20 December

{{shipwreck list begin|date=20 December 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Clarendon
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The 16-ton schooner was wrecked when it ran into an unexpected gale at Moeraki while en route from Port Chalmers to Oamaru. She was driven on shore and was inundated by the surf.[27]}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Volunteer
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The cutter was wrecked on the bar at the mouth of the Fox River, with the loss of one life.[26]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

24 December

{{shipwreck list begin|date=24 December 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Pioneer
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The steamer was wrecked at the Manukau Heads when she parted her moorings during a heavy swell.[28]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

25 December

{{shipwreck list begin|date=25 December 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Cambodia
|flag=unknown
|desc=The 811-ton barque was wrecked on the bar at the mouth of New Zealand's Manukau Harbour. She was en route from Bombay to Howland Island and was attempting to put into the harbour for provisions, but the captain mistook a smaller channel for the main entrance channel.[28]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

27 December

{{shipwreck list begin|date=27 December 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Prince Consort
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The 35-ton schooner was wrecked at Timaru. She was hit broadside by a heavy sea which shifted her ballast causing her to heel over.[29]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

Unknown date

{{shipwreck list begin |date=Unknown date December 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Eclipse
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner was wrecked at the mouth of the Buller River in early December.[29]}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Isabella
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner went ashore on rocks at the mouth of the Fox River, severely holing her hull.[26]}}{{shipwreck list end}}

Unknown date

{{shipwreck list begin |date=Unknown date 1866 |sort=}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship= Eliza Simpson
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The 53-ton schooner left Port Chalmers on 22 June and was not seen again.[15]}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=General McNeil
|flag=Unknown
|desc=The sternwheel paddle steamer struck a snag and sank in the Missouri River at Howards Bend near St. Louis, Missouri, sometime during the 1860s.[30]}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship= Kate
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The ketch was wrecked at Okarito in late April or early May.[31]}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship= Lady Franklin
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The 40-ton schooner left Port Chalmers on 22 June and was not seen again.[15]}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship= Oamaru
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The 25-ton schooner left Port Chalmers in June and was not seen again.[15]}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship= Sarah
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} Victoria (Australia)
|desc=The schooner was wrecked to the north of the mouth of the Rangitikei River during a heavy gale early in the year. All hands were saved.[6]}}{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Victoria
|flag={{flag|United States|1864}}
|desc= The 487-ton sidewheel paddle steamer was lost in 1866.[32] }}{{shipwreck list end}}

References

Notes

1. ^Ingram & Wheatley, p. 125.
2. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.swanseadocks.co.uk/Gower%20wrecks%20Rons%20write-up%20site.pdf |title=A Chronology of Bristol Channel Shipwrecks |first=Ron |last=Tovey |publisher=Swansea Docks |accessdate=19 December 2014 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20141222065415/http://www.swanseadocks.co.uk/Gower%20wrecks%20Rons%20write-up%20site.pdf |archivedate=22 December 2014 |df= }}
3. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.burtonbradstock.org.uk/History/Wrecks%20off%20Burton%20Bradstock/Historical%20list%20of%20wrecks.htm |title=Historical List of Shipwrecks at Chesil Beach & from Bridport to Lyme Regis |publisher=Burton Bradstock Online |accessdate=27 December 2014}}
4. ^cite web |url=http://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?213318 |title=Dinanais (+1866) |publisher=wrecksite.eu
5. ^"Den Tod vor Augen: Die unglückliche Reise der Bremer Bark LIBELLE in den Jahren 1864 bis 1866", Bernd Drechsler, Thomas Begerow, Peter Michael Pawlik, Hauschild Verlag, Bremen, 2007
6. ^Ingram & Wheatley, p. 126.
7. ^Ingram & Wheatley, pp. 125–126.
8. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.glen-johnson.co.uk/cardigan-district-shipwrecks-and-lifeboat-service/ |title=CARDIGAN & DISTRICT SHIPWRECKS AND LIFEBOAT SERVICE |publisher=Glen Johnson |accessdate=1 February 2015}}
9. ^{{Cite web |url=http://keyportarthur.org.au/extras/1060/Major%20vessels%20built%20at%20the%20Tasmanian%20Government%20Dockyards.pdf |title=Major Vessels Built at the Tasmanian Government Dockyards. |publisher=Keyportarthur |accessdate=3 December 2017 }}
10. ^{{cite book|last=Larn|first=Richard|title=The Shipwrecks of the Isles of Scilly|year=1992|publisher=Thomas & Lochar|location=Nairn|isbn=0-946537-84-4}}
11. ^Ingram & Wheatley, p. 128.
12. ^Chesneau, Roger, and Eugene M. Kolesnik, Conway′s All the World′s Fighting Ships, 1860-1905, New York: Mayflower Books, 1979, {{ISBN|0-8317-0302-4}}, p. 320.].
13. ^Ingram & Wheatley, pp. 126–127. The text of Ingram & Wheatley is confusing as to the actual location of the wreck, seeming to say that it was off the coast of Ninety Mile Beach, Banks Peninsula, and South Otago.
14. ^Ingram & Wheatley, pp. 130–135.
15. ^Ingram & Wheatley, p. 129.
16. ^"The Cape Mail." Times [London, England] 16 Aug. 1866: 9. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 8 Oct. 2018.
17. ^Ingram & Wheatley, pp. 129–130.
18. ^Ingram & Wheatley, p. 130.
19. ^Ingram & Wheatley, p. 135.
20. ^Ingram & Wheatley, p. 136.
21. ^Ingram & Wheatley, pp. 136–137.
22. ^Ingram & Wheatley, p. 137.
23. ^[https://alaskashipwreck.com/shipwrecks-a-z/alaska-shipwrecks-o/ alaskashipwreck.com Alaska Shipwrecks (O)]
24. ^Ingram & Wheatley, p. 138.
25. ^Ingram & Wheatley, pp. 138–139.
26. ^Ingram & Wheatley, p. 139.
27. ^Ingram & Wheatley, pp. 139–140.
28. ^Ingram & Wheatley, p. 140.
29. ^Ingram & Wheatley, p. 141.
30. ^Gaines, p. 106.
31. ^Ingram & Wheatley, p. 127.
32. ^[https://www.history.navy.mil/research/histories/ship-histories/confederate_ships/victoria.html Naval History and Heritage Command: Confederate Ships: Victoria]

Bibliography

  • Gaines, W. Craig, Encyclopedia of Civil War Shipwrecks, Louisiana State University Press, 2008, {{ISBN|978-0-8071-3274-6}}.
  • Ingram, C. W. N., and Wheatley, P. O., (1936) Shipwrecks: New Zealand disasters 1795–1936. Dunedin, NZ: Dunedin Book Publishing Association.
{{shipevents|1866}}{{1860s shipwrecks}}

2 : Lists of shipwrecks by year|Maritime incidents in 1866

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