A bow view from the cliffs of the passenger/liner Mosel (1873), aground, semi-submerged below the cliffs of Bass Point, The Lizard.
A bow view from the cliffs of the passenger/liner Mosel (1873), aground, semi-submerged below the cliffs of Bass Point, The Lizard. The ship has a slight list to port. The left of the imageand foreground is dominated by the cliff face of The Lizard, where the photographer was standing.
The glass side has blue masking fluid in the sky to create clouds.
The Mosel was on passage from Bremen to New York with a crew of 100, 20 saloon-class passengers and 600 emigrants. The cargo consisted of specie, mail and 400 tons of English woollen goods. Just after 8am on 9 August 1882 the ship steamed into Bass Point at 14 knots while passing through a dense fog bank. The ship was so close ashore that the Coast Guard signalman from the station above was able to climb down and jump aboard. The crew, passengers and cargo were recovered. Despite salvage attempts, the ship broke in half on 24 August 1882.
The glass side has blue masking fluid in the sky to create clouds.
The Mosel was on passage from Bremen to New York with a crew of 100, 20 saloon-class passengers and 600 emigrants. The cargo consisted of specie, mail and 400 tons of English woollen goods. Just after 8am on 9 August 1882 the ship steamed into Bass Point at 14 knots while passing through a dense fog bank. The ship was so close ashore that the Coast Guard signalman from the station above was able to climb down and jump aboard. The crew, passengers and cargo were recovered. Despite salvage attempts, the ship broke in half on 24 August 1882.
Object Details
ID: | G14410 |
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Collection: | Historic Photographs |
Type: | Glass plate negative |
Display location: | Not on display |
Creator: | Gibson & Sons of Scilly |
Date made: | August 1882 |
Credit: | National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London, Gibson's of Scilly Shipwreck Collection |
Measurements: | Overall: 8 1/2 in x 6 1/2 in |