THE
WRECK OF THE METROPOLIS
JANUARY
31, 1878
At
Currituck, North Carolina, 100 yard out, halfway between two
life
saving
stations, on January 31, 1878 the vessel Metropolis struck shoals
at
6:45 am. Alarms went off but heroic efforts to save her failed. 85
of the
246
passengers on board were lost.
The
“ Metropolis “ , built in 1861 as the “Stars and Stripes”
for the
1862
Civil War Navy. She saw action at the Battle of Roanoke Island in
1862.
After
the Civil War the vessel was refitted for freight and passenger
service,
renamed
Metropolis, but eventually fell into disrepair which rendered her
inadequate for lengthy sea trips. Nonetheless a Philadelphia
construction company chartered her to transport workmen, supplies
and iron rails, to Brazil to build a railroad in 1878. By the time
she reached the Chesapeake Bay out of Philadelphia her cargo had
broke lose and was shifting dangerously causing hull seams to leak.
Next, off the North Carolina
coast,
she ran upon Currituck Shoals during a heavy nor'east storm.
Source:
North Carolina Department of Natural and Culture Resources.
The
Tuesday, February 5, 1878 Wilmington New Journal reported
“The
Wreck of the Metropolis” , how the graves of victims are marked,
that more bodies were recovered, and survivors were on their way
back to Philadelphia. The recovered bodies have been buried on the
beach from the
scene
of the wreck to ten miles north, by life saving crews and citizens
living
along the shore, without being identified.
There
was reported that a woman’s body had washed ashore five miles
north,
had been taken by a citizen, Thomas Piner. This body is thought
to
be Mrs. Myer. It is thought that the body of Joe Newton, cabin boy,
has
also
been found ashore and buried five mile north.
The
Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania Time Leader & Evening News, First
Edition,
Friday February 1, 1878 reported that more than 200 lives
had
been lost when the steamboat “Metropolis” wrecked off Currituck
Island,
they being Philadelphia workmen seeking railroad work in Brazil.
The
Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, signal service, reports at 6:50 am,
the”Metropolis”
stranded on Currituck beach, three miles south of the
light
house and was a total loss. The site is twenty miles north of
Kitty
Hawk
station. 50 of the survivors swam or were washed ashore out of 248
on board. Kitty . Hawk thinks there are still some aboard.
Survivor
reports say the vessel was in heavy southeast gales the past
24
hours and they were headed south southwest when they struck shoals.
The
life saving stations sent no assistance except for a Signal Service
messenger
on horseback.
Source:
Newspaper's by Ancestry, newspapers.com.
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