List of disasters in Great Britain and Ireland

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

The following list of disasters in Great Britain and Ireland is a list of major disasters (excluding acts of war but including acts of terrorism) which relate to the United Kingdom since 1801, or the states that preceded it (England and Wales and Scotland before 1707, Ireland and Great Britain from 1707 to 1800), or involved their citizens, in a definable incident or accident such as a shipwreck, where the loss of life was forty or more. The list is ranked by death toll.

Deaths
Italics indicate an
estimated figure
Event Year Notes
900,000 Black Death pandemic 1347–1350
750,000 to 1 M Great Irish Famine 1845–1849
225,000 Spanish flu pandemic 1918 (Sep–Nov)
100,000 Harrying of the North 1069–70 (winter) The slaughter of the native English in the north of England by the Normans under William the Conqueror, followed by famine.
100,000 Great Irish Famine (18th century) 1740–1741
65,000 Year Without a Summer 1816 Famine and typhoid fever in Ireland[1] and food riots in England and France.
60,000 Great Plague of London 1665
20,000 [2] Laki volcano fissure eruption 1783–1784 (Jun–Feb)
8,000 Great Storm of 1703 1703 (26 November)
5,000+ Great Famine (14th century) 1315–1317
4,000 to 12,000 "The Great Smog", London 1952
4,000+ Blockade of Porto Bello 1726–1727 Deaths resulting from yellow fever.
3,500+ 1782 Atlantic hurricane season 1782 (16–17 Sep) Loss of HMS Ramillies, HMS Centaur; storeships Dutton and British Queen; captured French prize ships Ville de Paris, Glorieux, Hector and Caton; plus other merchantmen.
3,000 Early fires of London 1212 (July) Source for fatalities is the Guinness Book of Records[citation needed], but historical evidence unclear.
2,139 [3] 2003 European heat wave 2003 (4–13 August)
2,000 Bristol Channel floods 1607 (30 January)[4]
2,000 Sweating sickness (sudor anglicus) 1485 ff.
2,000 Darien scheme 1690s An unsuccessful attempt to establish a Scottish colony in present-day Panama.
1,900+ Christmas Eve storm 1811 (24 December) Wrecks HMS St George, HMS Defence and HMS Fancy off Thorsminde, Jutland; and HMS Hero and HMS Archimedes off Texel, Netherlands.
1,550+ Scilly naval disaster 1707 (22 October) HMS Association, HMS Eagle, HMS Romney and HMS Firebrand.
1,490 RMS Titanic 1912 (15 April) USA investigation gave 1,517 fatalities.[citation needed]
1,200 Strait of Gibraltar storm 1694 (1 March)[4] Wrecks the HMS Sussex and accompanying ships.
1,012 RMS Empress of Ireland 1914 (29 May) Ship registered in London, crew almost entirely from Merseyside.
1,000 1867 Barbados hurricane 1867 RMS Rhone, RMS Wye and up to 50 other vessels driven ashore.[5]
1,000 Great Hurricane of 1780 1780 (10 October) Royal Navy ships lost included HMS Cornwall, HMS Experiment and HMS Ontario
900+ Plymouth Sound storm 1691 (3 September) Wrecks HMS Coronation and HMS Harwich.
900 HMS Victory 1744 (3 October) Wrecked on the Casquets in the Channel Islands.
890+ Walker Expedition disaster 1711 (22 August) Seven transport ships and one storeship wrecked in thick fog on the Saint Lawrence River, Canada.
843 HMS Vanguard explosion 1917 (9 July) Magazine explosion.
800 HMS Royal George capsizes 1782 (29 August)
748+ Royal Charter Storm 1859 (26 October) The Royal Charter and other ships wrecked in Lligwy Bay, Anglesey.
738 HMS Bulwark explosion 1914 (26 November) Magazine explosion.
699 HMS Ramillies [6] 1760 (15 February) Runs aground off Bolt Head, Devon.
690 HMS Queen Charlotte fire 1800 (17 March)
646 SS Mendi 1917 (21 February) Rammed by SS Darro off the Isle of Wight.
640 Princess Alice disaster 1878 (3 September) Collision with the Bywell Castle in the River Thames near Woolwich.
635 SS Norge shipwreck 1904 (28 June)
612 Tramore Bay storm 1816 (30 January) Wrecks the Seahorse, Lord Melville and Boadicea.[7]
564 SS Utopia disaster 1891 (17 March) Collision with HMS Anson off Gibraltar.[8]
546 RMS Atlantic 1873 (1 April)
531[9] 1953 North Sea storm and flood 1953 (31 Jan – 1 Feb) Included the ferry MV Princess Victoria.
520 HMS Namur 1749 (14 April) Wrecked in a storm near Fort St David.
500+ 1854 Broad Street cholera outbreak 1854 (Aug–Sep) Cholera epidemic in London.
500 HMS Minotaur 1810 (22 December) Wrecked on Haak Bank near Texel, Netherlands.
500 "Black Monday" 1209 Massacre of English settlers by Irish clans, near Ranelagh, Dublin, on Easter Monday.

Contents

[edit] 300–499 fatalities

[edit] 200–299 fatalities

[edit] 100–199 fatalities

[edit] Fewer than 100 fatalities

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Bill Bryson; A Short History...;p 372; ISBN 0385 408188
  2. ^ Estimate of mortality in England.
  3. ^ Difference between the number of deaths in that period and the average number in other years.
  4. ^ a b New style dating.
  5. ^ Marshall, Logan, Sinking of the Titanic and Great Disasters of the Sea, 1912.
  6. ^ Formerly HMS Royal Katherine.
  7. ^ Grocott, Terence (1999). Shipwrecks of the Revolutionary & Napoleonic Eras. Journal of Navigation: Cambridge University Press 52 p.149–162. 
  8. ^ 562 passengers and crewmembers of Utopia and two rescuers from HMS Immortalité. "The Dead of the Utopia", The New York Times, March 20, 1891.
  9. ^ British victims only.
  10. ^ Grocott, p41.
  11. ^ Memorials & Monuments in St Ann's Church – HMS Eurydice -
  12. ^ "Albion Colliery". BBC Wales. 2008. http://www.bbc.co.uk/wales/coalhouse/sites/mines/pages/albion_colliery.shtml. Retrieved 2010-10-15. 
  13. ^ "Albion Colliery Cilfynydd". Welsh Coal Mines. http://www.welshcoalmines.co.uk/GlamEast/Albion.htm. Retrieved 2010-10-15. 
  14. ^ Rootsweb: "S.S. London – founded in the English Channel"
  15. ^ Woodward, Antony and Penn, Robert (2007). The Wrong Kind of Snow. ISBN 9780340937877
  16. ^ Marshall, Logan, Sinking of the Titanic and Great Disasters of the Sea 1912.
  17. ^ On the Rocks: Shipwrecks of Nova Scotia – Maritime Museum of the Atlantic, Halifax, Nova Scotia
  18. ^ - Photograph of William Pit
  19. ^ "Naval Colliery disasters". Welsh Coal Mines. http://www.welshcoalmines.co.uk/deathrolls/Naval.htm. Retrieved 2010-10-14. 
  20. ^ Nitshill 15th March 1851 scottishmining.co.uk, accessed 5 April 2009
  21. ^ "The Catastrophe in the Regent's Park", The Times, 22 January 1867, p.12

[edit] External links

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Interaction
Toolbox
Print/export
Languages