Geltwood

Geltwood was an iron-hulled barque that was shipwrecked on or about 14 June 1876 during a storm on a remote stretch of the south east coast of South Australia. Nearing the completion of her maiden voyage from Liverpool bound for Melbourne the ship struck a reef, capsized and broke up. The wreck 37°37′36″S 140°10′51″E occurred 1.6 km from shore near the northern end of Lake Bonney and 16 km south-east of Southend.

Geltwood by J. Witham
History
Britain
Name: Geltwood
Owner: John Sprott of Harrington U.K[1]
Port of registry: Workington, Cumberland U.K[1]
Route: Liverpool - Melbourne[1]
Builder: R.Williamson & Sons shipyard at Harrington [1]
Launched: 18 January 1876[1]
Maiden voyage: 23 March 1876[1]
Out of service: 1876
Fate: Wrecked off the south east of South Australia 14 June 1876[1]
Status: Historic shipwreck [1]
General characteristics
Class and type: Iron Barque
Tonnage: 1056 tons(Net)
Length: 215.5 ft (65.7 m) [1]
Beam: 33.78 ft (10.30 m) [1]
Draft: 6.4 m (21 ft)
Depth: 220.99 ft (67.36 m) [1]
Sail plan: 3 masts[1]
Crew: 28[1]

Of the 31 passengers and crew there were no survivors. It wasn't until 5 July that the fate of the ship became known to authorities.

Looters

The events surrounding Geltwood are made infamous by reports of looting by some locals. The wreck was not reported to the police for two weeks, and in that time a number of people stole equipment and belongings that were washed ashore. A trial was held in Millicent which resulted in the acquittal of two men on the grounds they didn't know looting a shipwreck was a crime.

Relics

One of the Geltwood anchors can be viewed in Southend at a lookout on Cape Buffon drive. It is a memorial to those who have perished at sea, including local amateur and professional fishermen who have lost their lives at sea.

Another anchor and memorabilia can be viewed at the Millicent Living History Museum. Some Geltwood artifacts are also displayed in the Beachport museum.

gollark: In Intel laptop CPUs, CPU and GPU are on the same die. But this is generally worse than discrete graphics cards for thermal, power and memory bandwidth reasons.
gollark: It works on my phone's Firefox for Android, but *not* on another Firefox on Linux install which isn't signed into my account.
gollark: I assume they would be HTTP or HTTP/2 ones, and while I seem to be able to see the rest of those going to my server, there's just *nothing* for the websocket.
gollark: This is weird. I may be capturing wrong, or... Firefox just isn't actually sending any requests to make the websocket?
gollark: I tried looking at it in Firefox's network pane in the debug thing, the websocket connection just doesn't show. I also tried mitmproxy, which also doesn't show anything. Now I'm trying wireshark, but I don't know how to work that, though it seems to show discord opening websockets okay.

See also

References

  1. "View Shipwreck - Geltwood". Australian National Shipwreck Database. Australian government. Retrieved 29 August 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.