Wreck of the Admella |
|||
---|---|---|---|
Title : | Wreck of the Admella |
|
|
Source : | Adelaide observer, 20 August 1859, Supplement | ||
Place Of Creation : | Adelaide | ||
Publisher : | John Stephens | ||
Date of creation : | 1859 | ||
Format : | Newspaper | ||
Contributor : | State Library catalogue | ||
Catalogue record | |||
The State Library of South Australia is keen to find out more about SA Memory items. We encourage you to contact the Library if you have additional information about any of these items. |
Copyright : | Reproduction rights are owned by State Library of South Australia. This image may be printed or saved for research or study. Use for any other purpose requires permission from the State Library of South Australia. To request approval, complete the Permission to publish form. |
Description : |
View a "zoomable" version. The special supplement to the Adelaide Observer provides full details of the wreck of the Admella steamship on the Carpenter Rocks off Cape Banks 6 August 1859, and draws together accounts from several newspapers over the preceding weeks. Lists are provided of the passengers and crew, both survivors and those who died. The cargo of the ship is also given. The supplement continues with descriptions of the many rescue attempts and of the tragic scenes witnessed by the survivors. Details of the many telegrams which notified authorities of the wreck and attempts to unify the rescue attempts are also provided. Notices of prayer meetings for the lost and the survivors are given, and the first moves for a rescue and relief fund. SS Admella had sailed from Adelaide early on Friday, 5 August 1859, bound for Melbourne laden with 93 tons of copper; flour and general merchandise for the Victorian goldfields; seven horses, 87 passengers and a crew of 26. The ship was an iron single screw steamer of 392 tons, built in Glasgow in 1857. She had been constructed with water-tight bulkheads, riveted to the hull. These were designed as a special safety feature, but were ultimately the cause of her speedy breaking up when she grounded on the rocks off Cape Banks in the early hours of 6 August. The remoteness of the wreck, coupled with the continued crashing of the waves over the reef and the ongoing poor weather and the design of the ship which severely weakened her hull were all factors in the low numbers of survivors: only 24 people survived the wreck. In the years immediately following the wreck the South Australian government stationed lifeboats and rocket crews on the south eastern coast. |
Subjects | |
Related names : | Admella (ship) Ant (ship) Lady Bird (ship)
|
Coverage year : | 1859 |
Period : | 1852-1883 |
Place : | Cape Banks |
Region : | South East |
Further reading : | Mossman, Samuel. Narrative of the shipwreck of the "Admella", inter-colonial steamer, on the southern coast of Australia drawn up, from authentic statements furnished by the rescuers and survivors Melbourne: Printed and published for the Committee of the "Admella" Fund by J.H. Moulines and Co., 1859 Mudie, Ian. Wreck of the Admella Adelaide: Rigby, 1966 Loney, J. K. Admella North Geelong, Vic.: J.K. Loney, [1975] |
Internet links : | |
Exhibitions and events : | State Library of South Australia: Mortlock Wing exhibitions. Wooden Walls and Iron Sides August 2004- |