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List of shipwrecks: 11 July 1905 Ship State Description Normandie United States: The 13-gross register ton steam screw yacht was sunk in a collision with the screw steamer Volund ( Norway) in the Hudson River off Dobbs Ferry, New York. Three people on board – two crewman and a female passenger – were killed; sources differ as to whether ...
Joseph S Fay, c. 1874. The schooner D. P. Rhodes was built as the Fay's consort, and the pair worked in tandem hauling iron ore.On October 17, 1905, the two ships departed from Escanaba, Michigan en route to Ashtabula, Ohio with a load of iron ore, and the Fay towing the Rhodes.
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]
List of shipwrecks: 1 July 2024 Ship State Description Unknown boat Flag unknown A fishing boat, carrying refugees/migrants, capsized in heavy seas and strong wind 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) off Ndiago, Mauritania in the Atlantic Ocean. 89 people were killed, 9 survivors were rescued by the Mauritanian coastguard, and 72 people were reported missing ...
Here are some of the documented November shipwrecks on Lake Michigan over the years: Anna C. Minch - Nov. 11, 1940. Appomattox - Nov. 2, 1905. Carl D. Bradley - Nov. 18, 1958. Francisco Morazan ...
She had an overall length of 242 feet (74 m), she was 230 feet (70 m) long between her perpendiculars, her beam was 37 feet (11 m) wide and her cargo hold was 20 feet (6.1 m) deep. [4] She was powered by a 625-horsepower fore and aft compound engine which was fueled by a coal burning Scotch marine boiler .
SS Ira H. Owen was a steel-hulled American lake freighter in service between 1887 and 1905. One of the first steel lake freighters, she was built in 1887 in Cleveland, Ohio, by the Globe Iron Works Company, and was built for the Owen Line of Chicago, Illinois.
Built in Cleveland, Ohio in 1905, the SS Marquette & Bessemer No. 2 was a train ferry built to transport railway cars across Lake Erie from Conneaut, Ohio, to Port Stanley, Ontario. She had a length of 338 feet (103 meters) and a beam of 54 feet (16 meters), and her gross register tonnage was 2,514.