Jump to content

Calburga

Coordinates: 52°01′04″N 5°5′35″W / 52.01778°N 5.09306°W / 52.01778; -5.09306
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Tassedethe (talk | contribs) at 15:40, 5 July 2015. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

History
NameCalburga
OwnerAdam MacDougall
OperatorW.D. Nelson
RouteHalifaxLiverpool.
BuilderAdam MacDougall
Completed1890
IdentificationIMO number90478
FateRan Ground[1]
StatusWrecked
General characteristics
Tonnage1406 GT
Length64.008 m (210.0 ft)
Beam11.94 m (39.2 ft)
Height7.07 m (23.2 ft)
Installed powerSail
Crew14
NotesLast Canadian-built square-rigger of large tonnage left that was still registered in Canada.

Calburga was a Canadian barque, the last Canadian-built square-rigger of large tonnage.[2] She was built in 1890 at South Maitland, Nova Scotia by local shipbuilder, Adam MacDougall. Calburga was a spruce built vessel, iron and copper fastened, and equipped with three masts. Calburga boasted luxuries such as a windmill pump installed in 1913 to keep free of water, a wheelhouse completely enclosing the helmsman and wheel gear, round and elliptical stems, and an exterior ornamented by hand-carved scrolling.[3]

Calburga was an important transporter in the timber trade to South America and also sailed to South Africa, Buenos Aires, and Great Britain. Amidst her travels, Calburga also transferred ownership and command. She was owned at various times by Thomas Douglas, and W.K. Stair and commanded by Jonatha Douglas, Captain Mackenzie, and W.D. Nelson.

During World War I, Calburga saw service as a transport ship between Canada and Great Britain. On November 13, 1915, on her second transport voyage from Canada to Great Britain, under the command of W.D. Nelson, Calburga ran aground on rocks off the coast of Strumble Head in Wales.[3] Nelson and his crew of 14 came upon a gale described as "one of the most violent storms experienced in twenty years."[3] A lifeboat was deployed from the Strumble Head Lighthouse and found Calburga on the rocks at Penbrush, a total wreck, with the crew nowhere to be found and the coast strewn with timber. The crew had managed to escape in their own lifeboat and came ashore at Aberbach, where they were welcomed by The Shipwrecked Fishermen and Mariners' Royal Benevolent Society and provided transport back to their home port in Halifax. [4]

The wreck of Calburga still lies on sea floor off of Wales, and along with the many other wrecks in the area, has become a popular diving destination. A model of the ship, created by David Coldwell and Glenn Buckmaster, is on display at the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic in Halifax.

Notes

  1. ^ Bennet, Thomas (1981). Welsh Shipwrecks. Laidlaw-Burgess.
  2. ^ Kendrick, Pete (1978). "Ships of Yesteryear". Amherst Daily News.
  3. ^ a b c Wallace, Frederick William (1937). Wooden Ships and Iron Men: The Story of the Square-Rigged Merchant Marine of British North America. Charles E. Lauriat. pp. 156–158.
  4. ^ The Country Echo. 18 November 1915. {{cite news}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)

52°01′04″N 5°5′35″W / 52.01778°N 5.09306°W / 52.01778; -5.09306