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SSWaikato

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cargo ship

SS Waikato atPort Chalmers
History
NameWaikato (1892–1905)

Augustus (1905–1912)

Teresa Accame (1912–1923)
Owner
BuilderWilliam Doxford & Sons,Sunderland[1]
Completed1892[1]
FateScrapped 1923
General characteristics
Tonnage4,767 GRT, 3,071 NRT
Length400 ft (120 m)[2]
Beam48 ft (15 m)
Capacity70,000 carcases of frozen mutton and 6 or 7 thousand bales of wool.[3]

SS Waikato was arefrigerated cargo ship built for theNew Zealand Shipping Company. It became famous in 1899, when it was involved in a drifting incident, when it broke down off the South African coast and drifted for 103 days before being discovered and towed to Australia.

Background

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The ship was built in 1892, byWilliam Doxford & Sons ofSunderland for the New Zealand Shipping Company. It measured 400 ft (120 m) long, by 48 ft (15 m) wide, and 29.3 ft (8.9 m) deep.[4] It was designed for trade between the United Kingdom and New Zealand, its refrigerated chambers had capacity for 70,000 carcases of frozen mutton, and it could also carry six or seven thousand bales of wool.[3]

It was powered by atriple expansionsteam engine, via a single propeller.[4]

1899 drifting incident

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On the night of 5 June 1899, when theWaikato was on a voyage from London toWellington, located approximately 120 miles (190 km) fromCape Agulhas (the geographic southern tip ofAfrica) the ship's propeller shaft sheared within the stern tube, a location impossible to repair at sea, disabling the ship. Reaching land in a small boat was ruled out as too dangerous, due to the distance and strong currents, and so the crew decided that they had no alternative other than to drift and hope that they would be sighted and put into tow.[5]

From then on the ship was adrift for the following 103 days, some days drifting as much as 100 miles (160 km), often drifting in random directions, and doubling back on their previous course. On 28 July the ship was sighted by thebarquentineTakora, which attempted unsuccessfully to tow theWaikato. On 2 August they sighted a Danish ship,Aalbuy which refused to tow them, but refreshed their food provisions. Finally, on 15 September the ship was sighted by atramp steamerAsloun and taken into tow, where she was taken toFremantle,Western Australia, arriving on 12 October. By the time theWaikato was found, it had drifted about 2,500 miles (4,000 km) in total, and 1,800 miles (2,900 km) in an easterly direction.[5][6]

In 1909 Mr. J. A. P. Turnbull, who was second officer on theWaikato gave the following description of the events:[5]

"The Waikato was a steamer of about 5,000 tons, bound from London to Wellington, New Zealand. On the night of June. 5, 1899, we were suddenly aroused by a terrific noise in the engine-room, the engines running away with a loud buzzing noise, and the ship vibrating horribly. When at last steam was shut off, and an examination made, it was found that the tail-shaft had snapped in the stern tube in a place impossible to repair at sea without' cutting the stern-tube and tipping the ship, an experiment our engineers would not risk in such a rough and unsettled part of the ocean. The Waikato carried a fair amount of square sail on her foremast, and we were able to rig a small jury mast as a main mast, but they might just as well have been set on the flagstaff, as they were continually blowing away without giving the ship steerage-way and, though several sea-anchors were tried, none of them were successful in keeping the ship's head to sea, and she drifted broadside, to the seas' rolling continually. Luckily for us, she made such a broad smooth wake going sideways, that some of the force of the seas were reduced before reaching us. But it was anything but pleasant to have big Cape rollers tumbling down on us, looking as if they must roll right over us. However, no serious damage was done.

"At the time of our breakdown we were 120 miles from Cape Agulhas, and suggestions-were made that a boat should be sent to try and make for the coast, but the captain and officers thought that it would be almost impossible to reach land against the strong Agulhas current that runs down the South African coast, past Port Natal, East London; and Algoa Bay, so there was nothing for it but to wait in hope of being picked up. At night we had a huge flare-up, consisting of a large iron drum on the upper deck, with a coal fire in it. On this, at short intervals' oil was thrown, which blazed up, lighting up the sea for miles around."The current took us at first in a westerly direction,, and then shot us off down south, to a latitude of 40deg. the ship drifting as much as 60, 80, or 100 miles a day. Some days when we expected to be driven north by the gales, we would find instead that we were miles south of the previous day's position. We were adrift for 52 days without sighting a sail, rolling and wallowing all the while between latitudes 36deg and 40deg. south, gradually working east.

On the 103rd day the tramp steamer Asloun hove in sight, and at last our long wait was to be ended in lon. 60deg east, lat 41deg south. After drifting about 2,500 miles, and 1,800 miles in an easterly direction, going round in squares, circles, and triangles, and crossing our own track several times, we were really in tow at last, heading for Freemantle, W.A. The Waikato's hull was undamaged, with the exception of the loss of a good many of our deck fittings. Oil was used with very good effect when the seas were extra high".

Later history

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In 1905, the ship was sold to C. Andersen ofHamburg, Germany, and renamedAugustus. In 1911 she was sold to Emil R. Retzlaff ofStettin, and then the following year sold again to Fratelli Accame di Luigi ofGenoa, Italy, and renamed againTeresa Accame. In 1923 the ship was scrapped atSpezia.[4]

References

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  1. ^abHeritage & Education Centre | Lloyd's Register Foundation (29 June 1899)."Lloyd's Register of Shipping 1899 Steamers". Retrieved29 June 2023 – via Internet Archive.
  2. ^Lyttelton Times, Saturday 22 July 1899
  3. ^abBritish Australasian (newspaper), 8 February 1893
  4. ^abc"WAIKATO". Wear Built Ships. Retrieved16 June 2023.
  5. ^abc"The Waikato's Experience. ADRIFT FOR 103 DAYS".Gympie Times And Mary River Mining Gazette. Vol. XLI, no. 5412. Queensland, Australia. 21 August 1909. p. 6. Retrieved16 June 2023 – via National Library of Australia.
  6. ^"THE S.S. WAIKATO".The Mercury. Vol. LXXIV, no. 9239. Tasmania, Australia. 12 October 1899. p. 2. Retrieved17 June 2023 – via National Library of Australia.

External links

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Media related toWaikato (ship, 1892) at Wikimedia Commons


Shipwrecks and maritime incidents in 1899
Shipwrecks
Other incidents
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