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The list of shipwrecks in 1905 includes ships sunk, foundered, grounded, or otherwise lost during 1905 This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources .
1905 20 feet (6.1 m) On September 1, 1905 the Sevona left Superior, Wisconsin with a load of iron ore bound for Erie, Pennsylvania. On the morning of September 2, 1905, she ran hard aground on Sand Island Shoal off York Island and sank with the loss of 7 lives. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1993.
List of shipwrecks in 1905 ~ Template:1905 shipwrecks; A. HMS A8; Russian cruiser Admiral Nakhimov (1885) Russian coast defense ship Admiral Ushakov;
Year Country Description Deaths Use Image 1905 Russia Battle of Tsushima – the decisive naval battle of the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–1905, in which two-thirds of the Russian fleet was destroyed. 4,380 Russians were killed and 5,917 captured, including two admirals; 1,862 were interned.
The Amboy and George Spencer Shipwreck Site is an archeological shipwreck site which consists of the wrecks of the wooden bulk freighter George Spencer and the wooden schooner-barge Amboy. Both vessels were wrecked during the Mataafa Storm of 1905. In 1994 the site was added to the National Register of Historic Places. [2]
Madeira was a schooner barge that sank off the coast of Minnesota in Lake Superior on November 28, 1905. A schooner barge is a type of ship that functions like a barge, in that it is towed by a steamship, but also has sails like a schooner. This type of ship evolved from wooden sailing ships that were cut down into barges and towed behind ...
The George Spencer was a wooden lake freighter that sank on along with her schooner barge Amboy on Lake Superior, near Thomasville, Cook County, Minnesota in the Mataafa Storm of 1905. [2] On April 14, 1994, the wrecks of the Spencer and the Amboy were listed on the National Register of Historic Places .
2 September 1905 A wooden steamer that sank near the Huron Islands: Ira H. Owen United States: 28 November 1905 Early steel steamer lost off Outer Island with all hands Invincible: 1816 A wooden two-masted schooner employed in the fur trade by the Northwest Company. It was lost in a storm in 1816.