Ocean Monarch (barque)

Ocean Monarch was an American emigration barque built by Donald McKay in East Boston in 1847. She is famous for her ill fate: in 1848, she caught fire at sea and sank near Liverpool with the loss of 178 lives.

Burning of the Ocean Monarch, Samuel Walters
Burning of the Ocean Monarch (1850) by Samuel Walters
History
United States
NameOcean Monarch
OperatorWhite Diamond Line
Port of registryBoston, Massachusetts
RouteBoston-Liverpool
BuilderDonald McKay, East Boston[1]
LaunchedJuly 1847[1]
FateCaught fire and sank, 24/25 August 1848
General characteristics
TypeBarque
Tons burthen1,301 tons bm[1]
Length179 ft (55 m)[1]

History

edit

Ocean Monarch was launched from the East Boston shipyard of Donald McKay on 13 June 1847. With three regular decks she measured at 177 feet between uprights, 40 feet beam and 27 feet depth. She had a 7 foot tall figurehead of Neptune. Ocean Monarch was registered at 1301 tons. Her first captain was Murdoch, previously commanded James Bates.[2] The estimate cost was reported at $80,000. She was the biggest American ship at the time and the second ship on the Atlantic route.[3] The barque was owned by the White Diamond Line and was registered in Boston.

Burning of Ocean Monarch

edit

Ocean Monarch had left Liverpool on the morning of 24 August 1848 carrying passengers to Boston in the United States. Helmed by Captain Murdoch, Ocean Monarch was towed from the port and entered the open sea around eight o'clock in the morning. Not far from harbor, between Abergele Bay and Great Orme's Head off Llandudno, at around noon, Ocean Monarch was witnessed to put up its helm as if to return to port and then a flag of distress was raised. Within a short time flames were seen rising towards the rear of the vessel.

In an attempt to control the fire, which was now a blaze, Captain Murdoch attempted to turn the ship up wind, but in failing to do so, dropped both anchors. At this time it was apparent that the crew had lost control of the passengers who had begun fleeing the fire, rushing around deck in panic and even throwing themselves overboard.[4] The captain ordered all movable spars overboard to give those passengers in the water an aid in flotation.

 
The Ocean Monarch' comes to the rescue, by Henry Melling

Two other vessels in the area, came immediately to the ships aid, they were the yacht Queen of the Ocean, captained by Mr. Thomas Littledale; and the Brazilian frigate Dom Afonso, captained by Joaquim Marques Lisboa. On board of Dom Afonso were Prince de Joinville, Duke and Duchess of Aumale, a Brazilian Minister, and Admiral John Pascoe Grenfell.[3] The latter one and Captain Lisboa manned two of the four boats lowered from Dom Afonso to assist in rescue. Later on the American packet New World and the railway steamer Prince of Wales joined the rescue. These rescuing vessels launched boats to aid the collection of the survivors. Dom Afonso managed to get close enough to Ocean Monarch to fasten a rope to her allowing for rapid ferrying of passengers via boats.[5]

By three o'clock the last ship at the scene, Queen of the Ocean turned and headed for Liverpool with their cargo of survivors.

 
The wreck of the Ocean Monarch off Great Orme's Head, by Charles Henry Seaforth
 
Engraving from the frontispiece of Notable Shipwrecks, by Uncle Hardy, published in London, 1879, showing the stern of the Dom Afonso, right

On 25 August 1848 Ocean Monarch went down at her anchored point to a depth of roughly 14 fathoms (26 m). Her location is listed at 53°25′40.00″N 3°35′27.00″W / 53.4277778°N 3.5908333°W / 53.4277778; -3.5908333.[6]

The Burning of the Ocean Monarch off the Great Orme is a series of three paintings by British artist Samuel Walters (1811–1882).[7]

Cause of the fire

edit

It was initially reported in the Liverpool Mercury that the fire came from a wooden ventilator, which a passenger had mistaken for a chimney. This was later refuted by Captain Murdoch, stating that the craft had iron ventilators, and he believed that smoking amongst the steerage passengers, from whom he had confiscated smoking pipes earlier, was the cause.

Frederick Jerome

edit

Frederick Jerome a sailor working aboard New World, born in Portsmouth, but then a resident of New York, showed personal bravery during the rescue. He dived into the sea, swam to the burning ship and lifted more than fifteen female passengers into a rescuing boat. On his return to New York he was awarded the freedom of the city by the Common Council of New York. He also received a £50 award from Queen Victoria and another £50 from the Prince de Joinville and the Duc d'Aumale, both aboard the Dom Afonso.

Survivor statistics

edit

Almost all the cabin (1st Class) passengers were saved.[3]

Count of persons aboard Ocean Monarch
Class Count
Steerage passengers 322
1st Class and 2nd Class 32
Captain and crew 42
Total 398
Correct as of 2007-08-27
Lives saved by vessel
Class Count
Dom Afonso 156
Queen of the Ocean 32
Prince of Wales 17
Fishing smack 13
Total saved 218
Total lives lost 1781
Correct as of 2007-08-27

1 The figures given for the event are mathematically incorrect, but are recorded as given by the newspapers of the time.

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d "On the Water - Oil Painting, The Queen of the Ocean Going to the Rescue of the Ocean Monarch". americanhistory.si.edu. 2012. Retrieved 7 September 2012.
  2. ^ "Launch". Boston Evening Transcript (published as Daily Evening Transcript). 9 June 1847.
  3. ^ a b c "Arrival of the Hibernia! 6 Days Later from Europe". Boston Evening Transcript (published as Daily Evening Transcript) (Boston, Massachusetts). 8 September 1848.
  4. ^ "One Week Later". Semi-weekly Eagle (published as The Semi-Weekly Eagle) (Brattleboro, Vermont). 11 September 1848.
  5. ^ "Biography of Admiral John Pascoe Grenfell". Dictionary of National Biography. 2011. Archived from the original on 5 February 2012. Retrieved 7 September 2012.
  6. ^ "Wrecks: Ocean Monarch". UK Diving. 2012. Retrieved 7 September 2012.
  7. ^ "Burning of the Ocean Monarch off the Great Orme". Peabody Essex Museum. 2009. Archived from the original on 17 July 2012. Retrieved 7 September 2012.
edit