Letters

Fate of the CSS Georgia

February 16, 2010

Ahoy, Mac, 

I live in Maine and spend the warmer months on Whitehead Island on West Penobscot Bay within sight of the location where the Georgia was lost. Being curious about its history I found the account of the CSS Georgia as a commerce raider among the great number of articles and accounts on Mac’s Web Log. 

In its last years the Georgia was in freight and passenger service on the Halifax, NS and Portland, Maine run. The final voyage began at Halifax on the morning January 13, 1875. It was wrecked very early the next morning within sight of Whitehead. The Georgia grounded at high tide on ledges and fatally broke its back. It was a total loss. Fortunately the twelve passengers and a crew of forty-one escaped with no loss of life.

Attached is a document I authored that describes the untimely and unfortunate demise of the Georgia and that you might find of interest. (see below and here.)

Sincerely
David A. Gamage
Jay, Maine

February 15, 2010

David,

Thanks, but there is no attachment when your mail reached me.

Regards,
Mac.


February 16, 2010

By gosh!  It looks like that attachment got stranded on a reef. I'll see if I can kedge it off and secure it bow and stern to the larboard side this email. 

David


February 16, 2010

David,

Its there now thanks. You prized it from the reef!!

At the end of your piece where you acknowledge the Naval Historical Society can you please change that to Mac's Web Log at ahoy.tk-jk.net?

Best wishes.
Mac.

 

CSS Georgia:
The rest of the story

On the early morning of January 14, 1875 the 212-foot steamer Georgia ended what was to be its final journey when in darkness the ship grounded on a ledge in lower Western Penobscot on the Maine coast. The ship was in route from Halifax to Portland with passengers and freight. The passengers, including women and children and crew were removed safely to shore from the fatally wrecked Georgia by means of the ship’s lifeboats and the Whitehead Life-Saving Station surfboat. This was the first rescue performed by the newly established Whitehead Life-Saving Station.
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The CSS Georgia returned to France in October 1864 with an severely fouled iron hull from marine growth in the southern waters. Because it was a slow sailer, too slow for effective commerce raiding, the Georgia was taken to Liverpool and sold on June 1 to a merchant. When four days enroute with cargo the Georgia was taken on August 15 by the U.S Navy frigate Niagara and sent to Boston and sold as a lawful prize.

The Georgia was purchased and documented in 1865 by New Bedford merchant. The ship was redocumented in Canada in 1870. Above deck accomodations for crew and passengers was added for the ship to be used for Maritime Provence service to and from Quebec City.  In the winter of 1874 the ship became trapped in ice in the St. Lawrence and sunk. It was latter refloated and repaired and thereafter went into freight and passenger service on the Portland and Halifax run.

The final and fateful voyage of the Georgia began on January 13, 1875 when the ship departed Halifax at 9pm. enroute to Portland. On board were twelve passengers and a crew of forty-one. After passing Seal Island at the southern tip of Nova Scotia ta the ship assumed a westerly heading across the Gulf of Maine that would approach Matinicus Rock lighthouse 110 miles distant. At 1pm it began to snow and it became very thick by 8pm. The ship was stopped and a sounding showed 70 fathams. While enroute on two occassions the captain believed both compasses were off and had twice made adjustments to each.

The Georgia had passed northerly of Matinicus Rock unseen from the ship. It continued 12 miles beyond.to then pass through the passage between Two Bush Island and the Crow Island Ledges on the starboard and the Northern Triangle ledges to port. It had been estimated they would reach Matinicus Rock at 10:30 pm.  About that time with diminishing snow a light was seen on the starbard quarter that was thought to be Matinicus lighthouse.  Continuing on a red flashing light was seen ahead. This light was Southern Island at the entrance to Tenants harbor and they realized the white light was not Matinicus. It was Whitehead.

The steamer was stopped for a period of time while the captain and the pilot discussed the options to proceed in a southwesterly dirction along the steamship route or to back track easterly on their original route to open water to await daylight. The pilot insisted on the latter, a fateful choice. The ship had drifted southerly for nearly an hour during this idle period. Within ten minutes of getting underway about midnight the iron hull of the Georgia stuck and slid onto the jagged protruding granite rocks of the Northern Triangles. The ship came to a stop with half her length aground. With the tide high and beginning to ebb there was no hope of backing off.

The captain thought with the stern afloat the ship could remain there safely until morning. Seas were running high at the time, lifting and dropping the ship’s stern. From the continual pounding on the ledge the hull soon began to leak profusely. The hull was fatally breached and the ship began to break up. Water flooded the baggage and engine room and soon flooded the below deck passenger cabin. The passenges and crew were then gathered on deck. The captain then ordered the boats lowered.

The captain took one boat, the engineer the second, the pilot the third and the mate the fourth. An able seaman was appointed for each boat. The captain took the women and children in his boat along with twelve men. When the Captain’s boat had launched and was pushing off two men jumped from the ship into the boat nearly swamping it.

The boat with the engineer and the boat with the mate then pushed off. However, the pilot’s boat capsized having fouled in the davits when being lowered leaving the pilot and five men stranded on the wrecked ship.  The pilot begged to be taken aboard one of the other boats but was denied.  The boats were fully loaded and for one to return to the Georgia’s hull in the high seas could be disaterous.

The captain and the engineer headed for Tenants Harbor about seven miles distant.  The engineer reached the port at 7am. The captain with his overloaded boat arrived sometime later with a help of a tug intending to go to the wreck. The mate’s boat with lantern and compass and twelve men on board made for Whitehead where they arrived before daylight at about 6am. Very shortly Keeper Norton of the Whitehead Lifesaving Station was informed of the wreck with six people still on board. Because no flares were fired and no signal lights displayed neither the keeper of the lighthouse or the lifesavers on watch and patrol were aware of the wreck.

Onboard the wrecked Georgia the pilot made a potentially fatal decision. Whereas the bow section of a ship is of necessity the strongest part of a vessel and the Georgia bow was solidly grounded on the ledge, the pilot gathered the the men aft. With the bow held firmly the seas were lifting and dropping the still floating stern. The ship suddenly began to break in half. The men abandoned the stern and went forward to the bridge just as the stern section broke free and sunk.

The surfboat was launched and reached the wreck site in about one hour. Heavy seas were running and the surfmen were obliged to watch their chances and to cautiously approach the wreck among exposed ledges six times with one person from the wreck dropping on board each time. One of the passengers was so exhausted (hypothermia) that Keeper Norton chose to divert northerly three miles to Hewett Island where this victim was taken to a house and revived. The surfboat soon after returned to White Head where the shipwrecked persons were cared for. On the next day they were taken to Tenants Harbor in the surfboat to join the others from the Georgia and to then be taken to Portland by the Revenue Cutter Dallas.

The Georgia was a total loss. A portion of the cargo consisting of skin of various kinds was salvaged along with rigging, anchors and chains, and two donkey engines. The ship was valued at $100,000 and insured for $60,000. It was owned by the Quebec and Gulf Ports Steamship Company.
*   *   *
Sources:  The last voyage and grounding of the Georgia was described in The Rockland Opinion. The rescue was described in Horace Norton’s journal.  Early history of the ship was obtained from internet sites of the Department of the Navy –Naval Historical Center and the Naval Historical Society of Australia.

David A. Gamage
Jay, Maine
February 10, 2010

dgamage@gwi.net


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