The staboard side view of the bow section of the passenger/cargo liner Suevic (1900) on the Maenheere Reef off The Lizard.
A starboard beam view of the bow section (bow to bridge) of the passenger/cargo liner Suevic (1900) on the Maenheere Reef, off The Lizard. The stern section was removed using dynamite and steamed backwards under its own steam on 2 April 1907 for Southampton. The photographer was in a boat close to the bow section and has used the lesrge exposed rock as a focal point between him and the bow section. The bow has a slight list to starboard.
The negative has been altered with masking fluid on the glass side and graphite on the emulsion side to emphasise the dark areas of the ship's bridge and sea. This is a glass copy negative from an original print.
The Suevic was on passage from Melbourne to Liverpool with 382 passengers, 141 crew members and a nearly-full cargo, including thousands of sheep carcasses worth £400,000. Due to a navigational error the ship was closer in shore and further ahead of their assumed position. Suevic ran aground at full speed on 17 March 1907 and despite attempts to get her off using full stern the ship was stuck. The passengers and crew were removed by RNLI boats from four stations, taking 16 hours. As the bow was stuck on the rocks and lightening the ship did not refloat it, White Star decided to take the advice of their salvage contractors and had the stern section detached using small charges of dynamite on 2 April 1907. The stern section then steamed in reverse under its own power to Southampton while a new bow section was built by Harland and Wolff.
The negative has been altered with masking fluid on the glass side and graphite on the emulsion side to emphasise the dark areas of the ship's bridge and sea. This is a glass copy negative from an original print.
The Suevic was on passage from Melbourne to Liverpool with 382 passengers, 141 crew members and a nearly-full cargo, including thousands of sheep carcasses worth £400,000. Due to a navigational error the ship was closer in shore and further ahead of their assumed position. Suevic ran aground at full speed on 17 March 1907 and despite attempts to get her off using full stern the ship was stuck. The passengers and crew were removed by RNLI boats from four stations, taking 16 hours. As the bow was stuck on the rocks and lightening the ship did not refloat it, White Star decided to take the advice of their salvage contractors and had the stern section detached using small charges of dynamite on 2 April 1907. The stern section then steamed in reverse under its own power to Southampton while a new bow section was built by Harland and Wolff.
Object Details
ID: | G14108 |
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Collection: | Historic Photographs |
Type: | Glass plate negative |
Display location: | Not on display |
Creator: | Gibson & Sons of Scilly |
Vessels: | Suevic (1901) |
Date made: | after 2 April 1907 |
Credit: | National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London, Gibson's of Scilly Shipwreck Collection |
Measurements: | Overall: 254 mm x 304 mm |