A formal studio full-length portrait photograph of L. S. Harris

A formal studio full-length photograph of the apprentice L. S. Harris, one of three survivors from the wreck of the three-masted sailing ship Khyber (1880). Harris is in a three-piece suit facing the camera leaning against a rock behind him, with his left hand on the rock behind his left upper thigh. He has placed his right hand into the jacket pocket. The background is a painted scene of a large rock formation, sea and clouds. The foreground is covered with sand, shells and pebbles to represent a beach.

The three-masted ship Khyber (1880) was on passage from Melbourne to Falmouth, Queenstown or Plymouth for orders with a cargo of wheat in bags. Having left on 24 October 1904, the passage had been uneventful until a gale off the Azores on about 5 March 1905 when they hove to. They did not sight land until 14 March when they saw Wolf Rock while on starboard tack heading towards The Lizard. On making The Lizard at about 630pm the crew found that they were not going to weather it so wore onto port tack. The wind increasing to a gale blew the sails out and the replacement storm sails. They fired 24 rockets and burnt flares to call for assistance. The ship drifted until anchors were dropped at about 11pm off Guthensbras Point and eventually dragged shoreward. Sometime after 710am on 15 March 1905 the anchors parted and the Khyber struck the rocks, breaking up in about 10 minutes. 23 of the 26 crew were lost [Inquiry Report, 30 May 1905].

Object Details

ID: G14300
Collection: Historic Photographs
Type: Glass plate negative
Display location: Not on display
Creator: Gibson & Sons of Scilly
Date made: After 15 March 1905
Credit: National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London, Gibson's of Scilly Shipwreck Collection
Measurements: Overall: 8 1/2 in x 6 1/2 in
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