The Life and Loss of the Finnish Barque Vanadis (1874–1903)

Oil painting of the ship under full sail, bows to the right of the image, on a stylised blue sa and under grey-blue skies
A 19th-century oil painting of the Vanadis under sail, by unknown artist, courtesy of Pietarsaari (Jakobstad) Museum, Finland. Between 1809–1917, when Finland was a Grand Duchy of the Russian Empire, Finnish ships used the Russian national (civil) ensign for merchant purposes. The Russian white-blue-red tricolour was also the official flag of the Grand Duchy.

Introduction

As part of the Nordic Shipwrecks project my colleague Tanja Watson, Maritime Research Specialist, has taken a look at a Finnish shipwreck on the north-west coast. Finnish wrecks form a rather unusual nationality sub-group in Historic England’s National Marine Heritage Record (NMHR), [1] where Finnish vessels currently account for just under 3.5% of England’s records of over 1,600 Nordic shipwrecks.

This is the story of a regular cargo vessel, Vanadis, wrecked in bad weather on 22nd February 1903 in Morecambe Bay. The remains of the wooden hull lie embedded in the sand in a small, shallow embayment called Half Moon Bay on the Heysham coastline in Lancashire, north-west England. Occasionally exposed to beachgoers by weather and changing sands, they serve as a reminder of the elegant three-masted ships that sailed this coastline some 120 years ago.

Vanadis (Vanadís) is an epithet for Freyja – the Norse goddess of love, beauty, fertility, war, and magic. [2] For almost thirty years the Finnish sailing vessel crossed the world’s oceans, carrying coal, timber, and trade between Europe, Asia, Africa, and North America. Built in 1874, it survived hurricanes, volcanic catastrophe, collisions, and the loss of crew at sea – only to be lost in the comparatively confined waters of Morecambe Bay – due to extreme weather, mechanical failure, and difficult navigational decisions – but thankfully without any loss of life.

Construction

The Vanadis was built in 1872-74 by master shipbuilder Johan Löfhjelm (1816-1878), at the Carlholmen shipyard in Jakobstad (now called Pietarsaari), on the west coast of Finland. It was one of three built for Otto August Malm of The Malm Trading House, one of the most prosperous shipping magnates at the time. Launched on 19 September 1874, the vessel was constructed as a full-rigged, three-masted wooden fregattskepp or frigate [3] copper- and iron-fastened, carvel-built, and sheathed with felt and yellow metal. It had one deck and was roughly 56 metres in length, 11m in breadth, and 10m in height (185 ft × 35 ft 1 in × 33 ft 3 in), with a carrying capacity exceeding 1,000 net register tons. It was one of three large frigates built at the yard for Otto Malm, the other two were called Equator and Europa. [4]

By the late nineteenth century, the Vanadis had been converted from a full-rigged ship to a barque, reflecting changes in crewing practices and economic conditions. (A barque retained much of the speed and cargo capacity of a full-rigged ship but was easier to operate, requiring fewer crew.)

Eventful voyages

Throughout its career, the Vanadis demonstrated both the resilience and vulnerability of wooden deep-sea sailing ships – captured in letters written by its crew members, held by Pietarsaari (Jakobstad) museum and compiled by Jukka Mikkola. [5] These track passages to Singapore, Java, Hong Kong, New York, South Africa, and later repeated timber runs between North America and Europe.

Its first voyage to England took place two months after its launch, on 12 November 1874, destined for Hull. Some particularly eventful voyages are recorded for the following years:

1882: Tragedy struck the frigate on 7 December, while en route from Cardiff to Singapore, the frigate encountered a severe storm in the English Channel. Heavy seas swept across the deck, carrying five crewmen to their deaths; a sixth later died of stomach trouble. The ship sought refuge in Falmouth before continuing its voyage.

1893: In August, Vanadis was sailing near Krakatoa, Indonesia at the time of the catastrophic volcanic eruption. Ash fell onto the vessel, a thick layer of pumice floated on the sea, and the ship sailed for a week half buried in debris from one of the most violent natural disasters in recorded history.

Historic black and white photograph of explosion of Krakatoa, seen from the sea: large clouds of dust and smoke rise up in the air. The image has been historically retouched and enhanced in a fashion typical of late 19th to early 20th century photos to bring out the key subject.
De uitbarsting van de Krakatau, University of Leiden, public domain
https://hdl.handle.net/1887.1/item:788817

1894: In July, the Vanadis was struck by a hurricane as it sailed towards the Florida coast. The ship was battered for many hours by storm force winds but arrived in Pensacola, despite all sails having been blown to shreds and severe damage to masts and rigging.

1898: On 25 August the Vanadis left Plymouth heading for the north American coast to pick up a cargo of timber. On 2 October they were hit by another massive hurricane north of the Bahamas. The main top sails were torn to pieces and the mast was destroyed. Somehow the crew survived and set to work to put up masts out of the wreckage left on the decks and rig up the sails and get the ship sailing again. In a letter to his wife, first mate Frans Hägglund described this hurricane as so devastating the Vanadis could easily have been ‘lost with all hands’. But after a few more days at sea the ship was able to limp into the city of Savannah in Georgia. The Vanadis stayed there until early 1899 as repairs took many months. [6]

On 27 July 1899 the vessel was sold to Captain John Andersson and his partners Victor Sundman and K A Karlsson, of Mariehamn, Åland (now part of Finland). Under new ownership, it continued to trade primarily in timber, making repeated transatlantic voyages between Georgia and northern Europe.

Mechanical failure

Vanadis set off on what was to become its final voyage on 12 January 1903, departing Darien, Georgia, for Fleetwood, Lancashire, with a cargo of pitch pine and softwood logs. The passage was difficult for the fifteen-strong crew. The vessel was reported overdue to Lloyd’s of London before finally being sighted off Rathlin Island (Northern Ireland). After 41 days at sea, it finally reached Fleetwood about 5pm on Sunday 22 February 1903. The weather at the time was exceptionally mild (14°C). A “spectacular dry dust fall”, likely originating from the Sahara, had darkened the skies earlier that day and covered everything on land with yellow sand, while there were storms at sea. [7]

Pilot Albert Iddon boarded the barque at the Morecambe lightship and anchored it, with sails furled, in Lune Deep near Wyre Point. Gale-force winds from the southwest rapidly worsened. During the night, the ship’s windlass failed on the starboard side, placing enormous strain on the anchor cables. The chains were torn from the hold, resulting in the loss of both anchors and cable, leaving only a spare anchor without cable. [8]

Later testimony from Jakobstad museum records indicates that the windlass had not been properly maintained by the new owners, a fact agreed upon by both captain and pilot as the primary cause of the wreck. The windlass was a critical, heavy-duty mechanical device located on the forward deck (forecastle) used to raise the anchors and manage anchor chains. By the turn of the 20th century, these mechanisms had evolved from simple manual devices into sophisticated, often steam-assisted, machinery.

Sepia pen and ink drawing of seven men pulling on a windlass aboard ship: six men, three on either side, operate the windlass, while the 7th man in left foreground pays out the chain. The image is canted at an angle to right, suggesting the movement of a ship at sea, while seagulls fly in the sky.
Print of a wooden windlass in use, from Dr. Isaac I. Hayes, Cast Away in the Cold: An old man’s story of a young man’s adventures as related by Captain John Hardy, Mariner (Boston, Lee and Shepard Publishers: 1892) Public domain: Wikimedia Commons

Heysham Rescue

The pilot advised the Master, Karl Oskar Karlsson, to head for the sandbanks at Heysham, as this was considered the safest area in Morecambe Bay: anywhere else was too risky. The vessel reached a position at 54.3N, 2.54W NNE of Heysham Pier with high tide at 8.07pm.

According to Pilot Iddon, the ship experienced a calm night with very little rolling. However, at 3am, one of Vanadislifeboats was launched carrying five crew members and Pilot Iddon, reaching the shore just 100 yards away without difficulty. The men then walked to the Higher Heysham post office, arriving at around 4am. As there was no immediate danger, the captain and nine crew members remained aboard the Vanadis. They would have been able to disembark at low tide since the vessel was lying level; however, as the tide rose, the gale intensified and by dawn it was making signals of distress. At 7:30am, the lifeboat station at Fleetwood fired a gun after harbour authorities received a telegram confirming that Pilot Iddon and five crew members were safe. The lifeboat crew launched the lifeboat Maude Pickup at 8am, setting sail towards the Vanadis 12 miles away, in very rough seas, reaching the vessel in under an hour, and rescuing the remaining 10 crew. The ship had run aground on Sunderland Bank at the entrance to the River Lune, but with no effective anchoring capability and conditions deteriorating, it floated off the bank and drifted up past the entrance to the new Heysham Harbour (not open to ships until 1904). [9]

Breaking Up

Newspaper and maritime reports from February and March 1903 documented the vessel’s rapid deterioration. The Vanadis had missed stays, had sprung a leak, and was full of water. It lay partially submerged and slowly sinking deeper into the sand close to the pier at Heysham, having unshipped its rudder. By 25 February it lay almost dry but was unfavourably positioned; a day later, embedded in sand, it was losing ground as strong westerly winds drove water into its hull. It was condemned as a total loss. [10]

Once condemned, a hole was cut in the stern to access the hold. The cargo of softwood logs was hauled out by horses and carts and sold to the highest bidder. The hull was partially stripped for scrap metal, while masts, decking, and superstructure were cut away. Over time, the remains slowly broke apart on the beach until “virtually nothing was left” above the sand. [11]

Historic black and white photograph of the Vanadis, seen in port bow view with her masts having collapsed over the side. An inset at top right shows the detail of the figurehead from the same photograph.
The stranded Vanadis with broken masts, and figurehead still intact. The figurehead [inset] may still exist: it was displayed in the rose gardens of Heysham Head until it closed (date unknown). It was a carved full-length figure of a woman in a long dress with large collar, painted in pale colours, with dark, pinned hair, standing on a plinth. Image courtesy of Lancaster Maritime Museum.

Today’s remains

Modern digital colour photograph of the 'ship shape' of the exposed hull timbers full of sand and pools of water, looking out towards the sea.
Remains of the Vanadis, taken by Ian Taylor, 12 February 2010
Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Photographs of Vanadis aground are preserved in Lancaster Museum and Heysham Heritage Centre, while archaeological investigation has confirmed the extent of dismantling and loss. Although largely buried, elements of Vanadis continue to surface on re-exposure due to the shifting sands, a feature common to the several other ships also known to have been lost in the area over the last few centuries.

A three-foot long cannon was recovered from the wreck in 2005 by two Heysham locals, believed to date from the ship’s earlier service in eastern seas when defensive armament was common against pirates. The cannon is displayed at the Heysham Heritage Centre, along with the ship’s bell and several other items salvaged from the site.

Modern digital colour photograph of a black cannon displayed indoors on a black wheeled gun carriage
The Vanadis cannon, displayed on a modern gun-carriage. Photograph by Graham Dean: image by kind permission and courtesy of Heysham Heritage Centre



Footnotes

[1] At the time of writing in 2026, the NMHR is currently publicly accessed via the Heritage Gateway portal

[2] Vanadís – as Vana dís – occurs as an epithet for Freyja in the Skáldskaparmál within the Prose Edda, compiled by Snorri Sturluson (1179-1241) in Old Icelandic: cf also the element vanadium, named after Vanadis by the Swedish chemist Nils Gabriel Sefström (1787-1845). It seems to have been a reasonably popular name in contemporary Scandinavian circles – see, for example, four Norwegian ships of this name in Det Norske Veritas 1879, p405, and HM Fregatt Vanadis (HSwMS Vanadis), commissioned 1862.

[3] Although a cognate, the English word ‘frigate’ does not accurately convey the vessel type, as in English it has historically predominantly referred to a warship during the age of sail or later. In the Nordic languages fregatt or fregattskepp (and variants) instead refer (by transference from the form of warship so called, which was also the initial primary meaning) to a three-masted full-rigged fast-sailing ocean-going vessel such as the Vanadis: see Store norske leksikon: fregatt. Although by no means an exact equivalent, the English-language clipper ship such as the Cutty Sark is both contemporary with, and better conveys the function of, the non-naval Nordic fregattskepp in English.

[4] Larn, Richard & Bridget. Shipwreck Index of the British Isles, Volume 5: West Coast and Wales. Section 2, Lancashire, 2000; ‘Vanadis’, by Jukka Mikkola. https://www.jamikko.fi/Purjelaivat_Vanadis.htm, accessed 14 Jan 2026; ’Jakobstad’, Uppslagsverket Finland, https://www.uppslagsverket.fi/sv/view-170045-Jakobstad, accessed 14 Jan 2026; wrecksite.eu, ‘Vanadis’: UK Hydrographic Office Wreck Report and information from Lloyd’s Register, compiled by Chris Michael. https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?65359, accessed 14 Jan 2026 [subscription required].

[5] Vanadis’, by Jukka Mikkola. https://www.jamikko.fi/Purjelaivat_Vanadis.htm, accessed 14 Jan 2026. This is the source for all the voyages described.

[6] ibid; “Shipwreck still interests Heysham inhabitants”, The Visitor, published 8 Nov 2007. pdf, , accessed 14 Jan 2026     

[7] wrecksite.eu; ‘Weather – Feb 1903’, https://community.netweather.tv/topic/99882-february-1903-exceptionally-mild-a-dustfall-and-a-great-gale/, accessed 19 Mar 2026

[8] Åland Newspaper Report, 25-FEB-1903, No.16, pp 2, 4.

[9] The Visitor

[10] Åbo Underrättelser [in Swedish] 03-MAR-1903, No.60, p 3; 04-MAR-1903, No.61, page 3; 06-MAR-1903, No.63, page 4; Historic England Archive, Archaeological Diving Unit, Report No. ADU 97/04: Vanadis, Half Moon Bay, Heysham

[11] ibid; ‘Weather – Feb 1903

Disability History Month 2022

Shipwrecks: an investigation of disability in shipwrecks

Contemporary black & white print of tavern scene with disabled sailors in the foreground and other sailors in the background

Fig.1 Image caption: etching by Isaac Cruikshank, c.1791, depicting an old sailor with a wooden leg in the foreground, and, to left, an armless man being assisted to drink. (Wellcome Collection 26889i)

This blog post takes a look at shipwrecks in our waters through the stories of disabled sailors and passengers as part of Disability History Month 2022 (16th November – 16th December).

As a maritime historian, the language used in historical maritime records, particularly those of shipwrecks, is fascinating. One phrase that has always jumped out at me is the description of ships as ‘disabled’ by the loss of masts, rigging, anchors or other equipment as a precursor to ultimate loss in a storm: another phrase is ‘distressed’.

We might think of these as very ‘human’ terms, used in an anthropomorphic sense, but these phrases are used in a very technical sense to indicate that the ship is no longer capable of navigation or of avoiding natural hazard, as in this account from a watcher at the Spurn Head light during the Great Storm of 1703:

And then Peter Walls observed about six or seven and twenty sail of ships, all driving about the Spurn Head, some having cut, others broke, their cables, but all disabled, and render’d helpless.’ [1]

Seafaring has always been a dangerous profession – and even now the capacity of a ship’s equipment to cause death and life-changing injuries is added to the inherent dangers of the natural hazards of the sea: the potential for shipwreck is ever-present. Records tend to concentrate on the event itself and injuries which presented at the time, so it is difficult to follow up on their lasting impact, but occasionally there are hints of life-changing disabilities and this must have been more common than the documentary record, based primarily on the loss event itself, actually shows, as the lasting impact of injuries did not, generally, make it into the press record.

For example, in 1899 the French brigantine Gazelle went ashore near Boscastle in a storm, two men being rescued from the wreck by being carried with some difficulty up a rope ladder thrown down the cliffs. One man had a broken leg which was in such a ‘precarious condition’ that amputation was considered likely. [2]

Text reads: Loss of a Boulogne Vessel. The brigantine Gazelle of Boulogne was totally wrecked at Boscastle, North Cornwall, in the gale of Friday last week. She was laden with coal, and carried a crew of four hands, two of whom were drowned.

Fig. 2 News of the wreck made it into the English-language Boulogne Times and Visitors’ List, April 13 1899, p2, which had begun publication in 1898 as a ‘tried and trusted friend’ for English residents and visitors alike.
Boulogne Times and Visitors’ List, April 13, 1899, p2 Source gallica.bnf.fr/Bibliothèque nationale de France

In a similar vein, in 1810 the Prussian ship Apries, laden with wheat from Dantzic (now Gdansk) stranded on the Whiting Bank off Suffolk during a gale: the sea was running high and ‘the current drew them’ (and other ships) onto the Whiting. The crew saved themselves while the captain was examining the chart and he found himself ‘abandoned, and the ship going to pieces’, whereupon he ‘got upon the mast, and remained in that perilous situation all night.’ He was rescued by a passing boat the next morning, but ‘one of his hands is so dreadfully bruised, that he will be obliged to have one finger amputated.’ [3]

There are other stories of that ilk among shipwreck accounts around the coastline – sometimes the effects may be amplified through recollection or through secondary sources and it can be difficult to tell what the real consequences were for the individuals concerned. For example, the main source for the wreck of the Norwegian barque Patria, which stranded on Chesil Beach, Dorset, in 1903 appears to be based on personal recollection, but has elements of the ‘seamen’s yarn’ about it, at any rate in the way that the story has been told. One of the crew was stated to have had his leg amputated as a result, but another was said to have ‘run mad’, in the language of the time, and then put in a straitjacket. Newspaper accounts of the wreck mention neither, though both amputation and mental trauma are quite plausible under the extreme stress of a shipwreck event, and this is another good example of how reliance on press reports can obscure the real physical and mental effects of shipwreck. [4]

So sources can be either frustratingly silent or difficult to interpret on the extent of injuries suffered and the permanent effects on survivors are difficult to establish. Given the precarious situations both crew and passengers found themselves in, particularly in winter conditions with prolonged exposure to the elements, there must have been many very serious and debilitating injuries with life-changing impact.

As well as in the usual run of accidents as the ship broke up, with falling debris and splinters, and injuries sustained in scrambling to safety, winter storms carried the additional and very real risk of hypothermia and frostbite, historically known as ‘exposure’ which probably caused the loss of many fingers and toes.

In 1881, the Norwegian brig Hasselø stranded on the Maplin Sand on the approaches to the Thames. They had, ‘at great risk, cut away the masts and rigging, which proved to be a very wise step’ in a ‘blinding snowstorm’, where they were ‘more than knee deep in water’: it took 20 hours for the lifeboat to make the round trip and return after their successful rescue of all the crew, 7 men and a boy. Even the lifeboatmen were suffering from exposure, ‘some of their hands being much swollen’, but the shipwreck victims were in much worse case. [5]

Elsewhere, hospital ships carrying the sick and wounded from naval combat, and conveying soldiers away from sites of terrestrial conflict, have a long history. The earliest known wreck of such a hospital ship in English waters is the San Pedro el Mayor, which came to rest with her passengers of sick and wounded men at Hope Cove, Devon, in 1588, having battled together with the other surviving ships of the Spanish Armada the complete circumnavigation of the British Isles. The English authorities dealing with the wreck called her a ‘Samaritan’, derived from the Biblical parable of the Good Samaritan, who tended the injuries of a man left for dead – although initially the authorities were rather less well disposed towards their prisoners of war, and were at first considering their execution! [6]

During the First World War hospital ships brought back badly injured men from the Western Front and other theatres of war – the prominent Red Cross painted on these ships should have protected them from attack at sea, in accordance with the Hague Convention (1899), but in practice this was not necessarily the case, and a number of hospital ships and ambulance transports were sunk by enemy action in English waters, leaving disabled men and ‘cot cases’ who were unable to get up independently very vulnerable in the event of attack (for the case study of the Rewa, please see an earlier entry in Wreck of the Week January 1918).

The physical and psychological damage of the First World War was immense, not only in limb loss, sensory trauma (blindness, deafness) and shell shock, but in syndromes such as ‘disordered action of the heart’, which was so common that it was simply named ‘DAH’. DAH was also known as ‘effort syndrome’ or ‘soldier’s heart’, in which stress and fatigue had physiological effects. An English Channel infested with mines and with the ever-present danger of torpedo attack from unseen submarines must have presented an immense psychological barrier for already traumatised, injured and sick soldiers until they set foot ‘back in Blighty’ on the other side of the Channel.

Such injuries must have had a significant impact on a sailor’s ability to earn a living – this was as true of men in the mercantile service as of those who crewed warships.

Like the need for hospital ships, the need to make provision for sailors disabled in the course of their duties was also recognised early on. On the English side of the combatants in the 1588 Armada, the Chatham Chest was an early form of pension fund set up to assist English naval men wounded or disabled in the wars with Spain, paid for by official deductions from their wages.  Greenwich Hospital was founded by Royal Charter in 1694 to support naval men ‘who by reason of age, wounds or other disabilities’ were ‘incapable of further service’ and eventually absorbed the Chatham Chest fund in 1803.

Black and white photograph of colonnaded building with a cupola seen through the columns of a building opposite, and a lamp at top right corner.

Fig.3 Exterior view of the Royal Naval Hospital looking towards the Queen Mary block from the colonnade of the King William block. Eric de Maré AA98/06416 © Historic England Archive

The various wars of the late 18th and early 19th centuries saw many troop movements across the seas and numbers of troopship losses, including those of homeward-bound troop transports carrying the sick and wounded. In February of 1776, the year that would see the US Declaration of Independence, the Lion transport ‘made the Island of Scilly in about 21 days from Boston’ homeward bound with ‘invalids and wounded men’. She made landfall there to revictual and repair and was about to resume her onward voyage when ‘a perfect hurricane’ blew up, and she lost her anchors, ‘standing in for a dreadful rock, about 15 yards in height, but suddenly struck upon a hidden one . . . which turned her half round. Thus did Providence, by this unseen rock, save our lives, as the general opinion was we had not half a minute to live.’ [7]

Despite the vulnerabilities of many of those on board, there was no loss of life, but it was still a difficult situation for Captain Pawlett of the 59th Regiment, ‘who lost one of his legs at Boston-Lines by an eighteen-pounder, when commanding a working party of 100 men.’ [8]

Four men load a cannon.

Fig. 4 Re-enactors dressed in American uniforms of the Revolutionary War load an 18-pdr siege cannon at Yorktown National Park. Yorktown (1781), which resulted in the surrender of the British troops under Lord Cornwallis, was the decisive battle of the American Revolutionary War (United States National Park Service: Wikimedia Commons)

As we have seen from other accounts of shipwrecks, the newspapers are silent on his ordeal in the immediate aftermath of the wreck, although he was presented to King George III and later in 1776 he was made the captain of an Independent Company of Invalids at Jersey, a post in the gift of the King. [9] Such companies were made up of wounded and disabled military men, who were thus enabled to continue home service. 

Only Pawlett’s obituary (a mere five years later in 1781) gives us a hint that the safe evacuation of the man with the missing leg might have been less than straightforward: ‘On his return to England he was ship-wrecked on the Isle of Scilly, and preserved with great difficulty.’ [10]

It is the only example we have so far found of the experiences of someone already disabled managing to survive shipwreck in English waters, but there must surely have been others. Zoom in to the terrifying experience of escaping from a similar wreck in The Wreck of a Transport Ship by J M W Turner, c.1810, Calouste Gulbenkian Museum, Lisbon on Google Arts and Culture.

Warfare at sea is another cause of life-changing injuries. It was the most ‘egalitarian’ of all industrial disabilities in the sense that it was equally likely to affect all ranks – i.e. the officer ranks were not removed from the cause of injury (as, say, a factory owner might have been from the industrial injuries on the shop floor of a mill). [11] Horatio Nelson is perhaps the most famous example: the sight in his right eye was impaired by action at Corsica (1794) and his right arm shattered by a musket ball at the Battle of Santa Cruz de Tenerife (1797) and amputated as a result.

As the case of Captain Pawlett demonstrates, cannon had enormous power to cause death and disability. During the age of sail their terror lay not only in direct contact but also on their terrifying impact on a ship’s hull, sending massive splinters of timber flying to kill and maim human beings as collateral damage.

One stanza in a Victorian poem looks back to the First Battle of Copenhagen (1801) and describes both this leading cause of disability in naval engagements, and a famous, if probably apocryphal, incident of Nelson literally turning a blind eye to a signal to retreat, turning it to his advantage and that of the fleet. Disability ties together the ordinary sailor and the most famous of British admirals:

Splinters were flying above, below,
           When Nelson sailed the Sound:
 “Mark you, I wouldn’t be elsewhere now,”
           Said he, “for a thousand pound!”
 The Admiral’s signal bade him fly
         But he wickedly wagged his head:
 He clapped the glass to his sightless eye,
        And “I’m damned if I see it!” he said.

(Admirals All, Henry Newbolt, 1897)

Black and white photo close up view of statue of Nelson, atop the capital of the column with ornamental leaf design

Fig. 5. Horatio Nelson at the top of Nelson’s Column, Trafalgar Square, 1933. Arthur James Mason Collection, AA64/00493 © Historic England Archive.

If historical sources use the language of disability and distress to describe wrecks, disabled seamen could also liken their physical condition to wrecked vessels. A song, The Greenwich Pensioner, by Charles Dibdin (1791) makes this connection with a pun upon the tiers of ships (rows of ships at a mooring in a river, particularly the Thames and Tyne) and the location of the Hospital. (The song was accompanied in print by the Cruikshank caricature illustrating the beginning of the article.)

Yet still am I enabled
     To bring up in life’s rear
 Altho’ I’m quite disabled
    And lie in Greenwich tier
.

These tiers of ships could be subject to damaging incidents and mass wreckings. We read of wrecks to these tiers of ships, for example in 1752 ‘during a gale of wind, a tier of ships at Limehouse broke loose, and the Wiltshire . . . being the outside ship, ran aground on the opposite shore, and lighting on a ledge, she overset and is entirely lost’, with a similar mass stranding in 1773, also at Limehouse. [12]

Dibdin’s folk song is thus full of psychological insight, grounded in the everyday reality of the nautical idiom, suggesting that disabled seamen felt a certain vulnerability, despite the shelter of Greenwich and the company of their peers. This everyday reality leaves frustratingly little trace in shipwreck accounts, yet it must have been very common: what seems much clearer is that the language of shipwreck gave seamen a language with which to articulate their own disabilities.

Footnotes:

[1] Defoe, D, 1704 The Storm; or, a Collection of the most remarkable casualties and disasters which happen’d in the late dreadful tempest, both by sea and land (London: G Sawbridge)

[2] Royal Cornwall Gazette, 13 April 1899, No.4,994, p3

[3] Suffolk Chronicle, 20 October 1810, No.25, p4

[4] Shipwreck Index of the British Isles Vol.1: Isles of Scilly, Cornwall, Devon, Dorset Section 6, Dorset (AJ), based principally on Rasmussen, A H 1952 Sea Fever (London: Constable); a recording of Albert Henry Rasmussen singing sea shanties and mentioning the Patria in passing can be accessed via the British Library online

[5] Essex Standard, 22 January 1881, No.2,615, p8

[6] Dasent, J R (ed) 1897 Acts of the Privy Council of England Volume 16, 1588 (London: HMSO) p328-330 British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/acts-privy-council/vol16 [accessed 12 December 2022]; Knox Laughton, J 1894 State Papers relating to the defeat of the Spanish Armada Vol. II (London: Navy Records Society) p289-296

[7] Derby Mercury, Friday 23 February to Friday 1 March 1776, No.2,289

[8] Norfolk Chronicle, 2 March 1776, Vol.VII, No.361, p2

[9] Reception by the King: Northampton Mercury, 4 March 1776, Vol.LVI, No.51, p1; Hibernian Journal, 13 March 1776, Vol.3 No.33, p4; preferment: Kentish Gazette, Wednesday October 9 to Saturday October 12, 1776, No.880, p2

[10] Norfolk Chronicle, 8 December 1781, No.653

[11] I am grateful to my colleague Ken Hamilton for sharing his thoughts on this subject.

[12] 1752: Lloyd’s List, 14 November 1752, No.1,769; Norwich Mercury, 11 November to 18 November 1752; 1773: Lloyd’s List, 26 February 1773, No.410; Kentish Gazette, 27 February to 3 March 1773, No.501