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SS Drummond Castle

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Yard number
  
246

Beam
  
43.5 ft (13.3 m)

Length
  
111 m

Tonnage
  
3,706 (gross)

Launched
  
17 February 1881

Draft
  
9.54 m

Name
  
SS Drummond Castle (1883-1895)

Operator
  
Donald Currie & Co. (1881-1896)Castle Mail Packet Company (1896)

Fate
  
Ran aground and sank 16 June 1896

Builder
  
Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company

The SS Drummond Castle was a steamship built in 1881 by John Elder & Co. of Govan, Glasgow, Scotland, for the D. Currie & Co. and later operated by the Castle Mail Packet Company. The ship sank on 16 June 1896 off Ushant.

Sinking

The Drummond Castle departed Cape Town on 28 May 1896 for London via Delagoa Bay, Natal and Las Palmas, she had 143 passengers and 102 crew. On 16 June the Drummond Castle was off Ushant, the sea was calm but foggy.

The safe passage past Ushant is to the north, but for an unknown reason the Drummond Castle sailed between Ushant and Molène. Around 23:00 the Drummond Castle struck rocks at the south entrance to the Fronveur Sound, within four minutes the ship had sunk.

Two crew were rescued by Breton fisherman; one passenger managed to reach Molène. The other 242 crew and passengers were drowned. The main cargo was 1,943 bales of wool, skins, hides and horns, weighing 450 tons the rest was 250 tons of coal.

A Board of Trade wreck inquiry was held in July 1896 in Westminister. The inquiry concluded that the loss was due to "careless or unskillful navigation".

References

SS Drummond Castle Wikipedia


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