List of maritime disasters in the 18th century

A maritime disaster is a disaster that occurs like sea, such as a ship sinking or foundering to the point of causing the death of many of its occupants. Many maritime disasters happen other than as a result of war. All ships, including those of the military, are vulnerable to problems from weather conditions, faulty design or human error. Some of the disasters below occurred during periods of conflict, although their losses were unrelated to any military action. The table listings are in decreasing order of the magnitude of casualties.

A painting of the sinking of the Royal George, by John Christian Schetky.

Peacetime disasters

Many maritime disasters happen outside the realms of war. All ships, including those of the military, are vulnerable to problems from weather conditions, faulty design or human error. Some of the disasters below occurred in periods of conflict, although their losses were unrelated to any military action. The table listings are in descending order of the magnitude of casualties suffered.

Year Country Description Deaths Image
1782  Great Britain 1782 Central Atlantic hurricane – On 17 September 1782, a hurricane caught a British fleet under Admiral Graves off the banks of Newfoundland. The French prizes in the fleet, captured at the Battle of the Saintes, Ville de Paris, Glorieux and Hector foundered, as did HMS Ramillies and HMS Centaur. A number of the merchant fleet, including Dutton, British Queen, Withywood, Rodney, Ann, Minerva and Mentor also foundered. Altogether around 3,500 lives were lost from the various ships. 3,500
1703  England The Channel Storm – In November 1703 a great storm swept the English Channel, causing the loss of thirteen men-of-war and the deaths of an estimated 1500 seamen. 1,500+
1707  Great Britain The Scilly naval disaster of 1707 – On 22 October 1707, a Royal Navy fleet en route from Gibraltar to Portsmouth sailed through dangerous reefs west of the Isles of Scilly. Four ships (HMS Association, HMS Eagle, HMS Romney and HMS Firebrand) sank. The exact number of crew lost is unknown. Statements vary between 1,400[1] and over 2,000.[2] It was later determined that the main cause was the navigators' inability to calculate their longitude accurately. 1,400–2,000
1744  Great Britain HMS Victory – The 100-gun first-rate sank in a storm in the English Channel while returning to England on the night of 4 October 1744. With her were lost Admiral Sir John Balchen and her entire complement of around 1,150 men. 1,150
1760  Great Britain HMS Ramillies – the second-rate, formerly HMS Royal Katherine, was wrecked at Bolt Head near Plymouth on 15 February 1760. Of the crew of 850 aboard, 20 seamen and one midshipman survived. 829
1782  Great Britain HMS Royal George – sank while moored at Portsmouth while the ship was being heeled for repairs on the underside on 29 August 1782 with a full crew and a considerable number of visitors aboard. The ship heeled too far and began taking water in the gun ports and sank. More than 800 people were lost, including Rear Admiral Richard Kempenfelt, and up to 300 women and 60 children who were visiting the ship. 800
1800  Great Britain HMS Queen Charlotte – a British 100-gun first-rate ship of the line that, on 17 March 1800, while serving as flagship of Vice-Admiral Lord Keith, was reconnoitering the Tuscan island of Capraia when she caught fire. She exploded and sank, killing 673 officers and men. 673
1738 Netherlands Leusden – On 1 January 1738 the slave ship "Leusden" ran aground on a sand bank in the Marowijne River in Suriname. An estimated 664 people were lost when, as the ship sank, the crew sealed the compartments, locking in the slaves who had been herded within. 664
1782  Great Britain HMS Glorieux – On 16–17 September 1782 the second-rate was lost with all hands in a hurricane off the coast of Newfoundland. 600
1749  Great Britain HMS Namur – the second-rate was wrecked on 14 April 1749 in a storm near Fort St David. In total, 520 of her crew were drowned, though Captain Marshal survived. 520
1794  Great Britain HMS Ardent – In April 1794 the third-rate was stationed off the harbour of Villa Franca, Corsica to watch two French frigates. It is presumed that she caught fire and blew up. HMS Berwick encountered some wreckage while cruising in the Gulf of Genoa in the summer that suggested fire and an explosion. A part of Ardent's quarter deck with some gunlocks deeply embedded in it was found floating in the area as was splinter netting driven into planking. No trace was ever found of her 500 crew. 500
1796  Great Britain HMS Courageux – on 18 December 1796, this former French ship was shipwrecked in a gale on the Barbary Coast opposite Gibraltar. 464
1781  Sweden Prinsessan Sophia Albertina – Sank off Texel in the Netherlands in heavy weather. 419 people died. 419
1782  Great Britain HMS Centaur – In September 1782 the third-rate ship of the line was one of the ships escorting prizes back to Britain from Jamaica when she foundered in the 1782 Central Atlantic hurricane near the Newfoundland Banks. Some 400 of her crew were lost. Captain John Nicholson Inglefield and 11 of his crew survived the wreck in one of her pinnaces, reaching the Azores after being in the open boat for 16 days without compass, quadrant or sail, and with only two quart bottles of water. 400
1703 England HMS Restoration – The third-rate was wrecked on the Goodwin Sands in the Great Storm of 1703 on 27 November 1703. All 387 men were lost in the sinking. 387
1800  United States USS Insurgent – On 29 April 1800 the frigate was ordered to cruise between the West Indies and the US coast to protect US shipping interests and to capture any enemy vessels encountered. Insurgent departed Baltimore 22 July and after a brief stop at Hampton Roads sailed for her station 8 August 1800. Never heard from again, the frigate and her crew were presumed lost as a result of the severe storm which struck the West Indies 20 September 1800. 340
1796  Great Britain HMS Amphion – On 22 September 1796 the fifth-rate ship of the line was completing repairs at Plymouth, England. Being due to sail the next day, she had more than 100 relatives and visitors aboard as well as her crew. At about 4 p.m. she exploded without warning killing 300 of the 312 aboard. The cause was never proven, but it was thought that the ship's gunner accidentally spilled gunpowder near the fore magazine which then ignited and set off the magazine itself. 300
1743 Dutch East India Company Hollandia – was a Dutch East India Company ship that was wrecked near Scilly on 13 July 1743 causing 276 deaths. She became separated from the fleet she was traveling with and struck Gunner Rock near Annet, Isles of Scilly in the early hours of the morning sinking nearby with the loss of all hands. 276
1799  Great Britain HMS Lutine – Sank off Vlieland in heavy weather. She was carrying a large cargo of gold, most which remains unsalvaged. 269 people were lost. 269
1735  Netherlands 't Vliegend HertDutch East India Company ship sank due to heavy weather. 256 people died. 256
1755 British East India Company Doddington – On 17 July 1755 the Honourable East India Company ship was wrecked at Bird Island in Algoa Bay near present-day Port Elizabeth after she struck a rock. Of 270 crew and passengers, 23 survived. 247
1790  Netherlands Negotie – Dutch East India Company ship Negotie sank off Texel due to heavy weather. 238 people died. 238
1797  Great Britain HMS Tribune – On 16 November 1797 the fifth-rate was wrecked and sank after running onto Thrum shoal at Herring Cove, Nova Scotia, in a storm. 12 of the 244 aboard survived. 232
1702 England HMS Northumberland – was a 70-gun third-rate ship of the line of the English Royal Navy that was lost on 27 November 1703 with all hands at the Goodwin Sands in the Great Storm of 1703. Captain Greenway was among the 220 men (including 24 marines) who drowned. 220
1703 England HMS Stirling Castle – The third-rate was wrecked on the Goodwin Sands off Deal on 27 November 1703, killing 206 men. The same storm also wrecked HMS Northumberland and HMS Restoration with large losses. 206
1726  Netherlands Aagtekerke – a Dutch East India Company ship that was lost without trace in 1726. The ship was lost after leaving Cape Town which it left on 3 January 1726 and Batavia. There is some evidence from the crew of the wrecked ship Zeewyk that Aagtekerke may have been wrecked on the Abrolhos Islands because they found some remains of a Dutch vessel that had been wrecked before them. 200
1786 British East India Company Halsewell – On 6 January 1786 the Honourable East India Company ship was wrecked at the start of a voyage from London to Madras. She lost her masts in a fierce storm in the English Channel and was driven onto the rocks below a cliff on the Isle of Purbeck in Dorset, England. Of her 240 crew and passengers, 74 survived. 166
1717 Pirate ship Whydah Gally – a slave ship that was captured by the pirate Captain "Black Sam" Bellamy, and refitted as his flagship. On 26 April 1717 off of Cape Cod she ran aground and capsized in a fierce storm. Bellamy and 143 of his crew were lost, as was and more than 4.5 short tons (4.1 tonnes) of gold and silver. There were two survivors. Whydah and her treasure eluded discovery for over 260 years, until being discovered in 1984 under only 14 feet (4.3 m) of water and 5 feet (1.5 m) of sand. She is the only authenticated pirate shipwreck yet found.[3] 144
1780  Great Britain HMS Ontario – she sank in a storm on 31 October 1780 while en route from Fort Niagara to Oswego. About 130 men went down with the ship, consisting of soldiers, crew and prisoners of war.[4] News of the ship's sinking was kept quiet for a number of years to hide the military loss.[5] 130–172
1777  United States USS Reprisal – On September 14, 1777, Reprisal left France, for the United States. About October 1, Reprisal was lost off the banks of Newfoundland and all 129 on board, except the cook, went down with her. 129
1799  Great Britain HMS Orestes – The 18-gun Dutch-built brig-sloop disappeared around 5 November 1799 in the Indian Ocean and is presumed to have foundered in a hurricane with the loss of her entire crew. 125
1797  Great Britain HMS Vipere – A British brig-sloop, previously captured from the French, capsized in the Shannon Estuary just off the coast of County Clare.[6] 120
1761  Great Britain Auguste – On 15 November 1761 the sailing ship Auguste sank after grounding in a gale at Aspy Bay, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia in 1761 while carrying exiles from the fall of New France. Of the 121 aboard, seven survived. 114
1793  Great Britain Pelican – On 20 March 1793 the privateer, while on a pleasure and working-up cruise, sank in a sudden storm on the River Mersey. Of 134 people aboard, 102 were lost. 102
1800  United States USS Pickering – Ordered to join Commodore Thomas Truxton's squadron on the Guadeloupe Station in the West Indies, she sailed from Newcastle, Delaware on 20 August, and was never heard from again. She is presumed to have been lost with all hands in a gale in September, but this was never proven. This storm is also thought to have sunk the USS Insurgent, which vanished without a trace. The exact cause of the cutter's disappearance remains a mystery. 90
1781  United States USS Saratoga – On 18 March 1781 the sloop USS Saratoga was lost with all hands during a gale off the Bahamas. 86

Wartime disasters

Disasters with high losses of life can occur in times of armed conflict. Shown below are some of the known events with major losses.

Year Country Description Lives lost Image
1795  France Séduisant – a French 74-gun ship of the line that sank on 16 December 1796 while leaving Brest for the Expédition d'Irlande. Out of 600 crew and 610 soldiers, 60 survived. The wreck was found in 1986. max. 1,150
1711  Great Britain Quebec Expedition – On 22 August 1711, seven transport ships and one storeship were wrecked in thick fog on the Saint Lawrence River Canada, during a British attempt to attack Quebec in 1711 in Queen Anne's War. 850
1708 Spain San José – On 8 June 1708 in an engagement between a British squadron under Charles Wager and the Spanish treasure fleet, known as Wager's Action, the Spanish ship exploded and sank killing 689 of the 700 aboard. 689
1710  Denmark Dannebroge – On 4 October 1710, in the Great Northern War, the Dano-Norwegian ship-of-the-line exploded and sank after catching fire in the Bay of Køge. Few of the 600 men survived the explosion: some sources say three; others nine. 591–597
1796  France Impatiente – On 29 December 1796 the frigate sank in a gale. Seven of the 413 aboard survived. 413
1798  France Orient – The French 118-gun Océan-class ship of the line was flagship of the French fleet at the Battle of the Nile in August 1798. She came under fire from five British ships, caught fire and exploded when her magazines detonated. The number of casualties has been disputed with the British reporting 70 survivors. Her crew was far from complete at the time, and a number of survivors may have been rescued by French ships. Contre-amiral Denis Decrès reported 760 survivors. 370–1060
1758  Great Britain Duke William – The British transport, bound from Canada to France, was caught by a storm off England. She sank on 13 December 1758, foundering with all crew and passengers on board. 366
1799  Great Britain HMS Sceptre – a third-rate ship of the line caught at anchor in a storm on 5 November 1799 with seven other ships in Table Bay near the Cape of Good Hope. About 1900 hrs she was driven ashore on a reef at Woodstock Beach. She was battered to pieces and about 349 sailors and marines were lost. One officer, two midshipmen, 47 sailors and one marine were saved but nine of these died on the beach. 358
1794  France Vengeur du Peuple – In the battle named the Glorious First of June on 1 June 1794 the ship of the line was disabled after a fierce duel with HMS Brunswick and surrendered after losing hope of rescue by a French ship. After a few hours, as British ships were beginning rescue operations she listed and foundered taking almost half her crew with her. Of the 723 aboard 356 were lost in the battle and sinking. 356
1778  United States USS Randolph – On 7 March 1778 the US frigate's lookouts sighted sail on the horizon which proved to be the British 64-gun third-rate ship of the line HMS Yarmouth. That evening Randolph engaged the British warship and was engaged in a heavy exchange of fire with her when for some unknown cause, possibly a chance spark or more likely a stray cannon shot, ignited her magazine and Randolph exploded. 311 of her crew were lost; four survived. 311
1795  France Alcide – In the Battle of Hyères Islands on 13 July 1795 the 74-gun ship of the line was becalmed and had to fight the British ships HMS Victory, Culloden and Cumberland. She damaged Culloden's rigging but was outgunned and surrendered to Cumberland. The French frigates Justice and Alceste tried to tow her to safety but Victory drove them off. Soon after a fire broke out on Alcide', reportedly in her tops or from her own heated shots, and she exploded 30 minutes later killing 300 men. The British squadron rescued 300 survivors. 300
1782 Spain During the American Revolutionary War, Spain declared war on Great Britain in support of the American rebels and launched a massive expedition, combining forces with France and forming a massive 65,000 man force with 114 land guns and mortars along with 47 ships of the line, 7 xebecs and 40 gunboats against 7,500 British defenders with the aim of recapturing Gibraltar. The territory had been captured by a combined Anglo-Dutch force in 1704, during the War of the Spanish Succession. The Spanish launched several assaults which were all easily repulsed, with the British initiating a sortie after receiving information from Spanish deserters, spiking many cannon and killing 100 Spaniards. Afterwards, the Spanish constructed 10 floating batteries, with 212 cannons being crewed by 5,260 men. British heated shot quickly destroyed all of the batteries, with 719 men dying. The destruction of the floating batteries marked the end of actual operations during the siege. Gibraltar remains in British hands to this day, and the whole affair became one of the most humiliating defeats of the Spanish Army and Navy. 719
1797  France Droits de l'Homme – In the Action of 13 January 1797, off Penmarch, the French 74-gun ship of the line met the British frigates HMS Indefatigable and Amazon. The sea was rough preventing Droits de l'Homme from using her lower deck batteries and from boarding the British frigates. After 13 hours of combat the French ship, having lost her rudder, masts and anchors, ran aground off Plozévet. A storm delayed rescue for five days and 250–300 of her crew were lost. 250–390

See also

References

  1. biography of Cloudesley Shovell. Retrieved 8 January 2010.
  2. Sir Clowdisley Shovell and The Association, by Peter Mitchell, on 4 July 2007
  3. Commonwealth of Massachusetts v. Maritime Underwater Surveys, Inc., 403 Mass. 501 (Massachusetts Supreme Court 1988).
  4. Some sources say 172, Wood, William (1915). Chronicles of Canada: Part IX National Highways All Afloat – A Chronicle of Craft and Waterways. Toronto: Glasgow, Brook & Company.
  5. "HMS Ontario (Post-Revoluntary War Great Lakes British Brig-Sloop of War)". Doran Bay Ships. Archived from the original on 10 July 2011. Retrieved 15 June 2008.
  6. "La Vipere Record". Irishshipwrecks.com. Retrieved 10 February 2013.
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