GREAT DAMAGE AT DELAWARE
CAPES
Thursday, 17 September
1903 The Anaconda Standard, Anaconda, Montana :
Delaware Breakwater,
Delaware, September 16, 1903 :
A storm from the south
which has been coming up the Atlantic coast for several days struck
the Delaware Capes at 3 am and lasted until 7 pm with winds of
80 mph and torrents of rain, took at least six lives.
The schooner Harrie A.
Marsh, befell a most serious wreck in the afternoon yesterday,
and the Captain, J. B.
Mehaffey and his four man crew were drowned. The New London
schooner from Painters Point, Maine, for Philadelphia with a
cargo of paving stone got
caught in a windstorm
outside the new stone breakwater, the Captain tying to make the
harbor of refuge found he
had to drop anchor and ride out the winds but the anchors did not
hold and the schooner with her dead weight of stone washed on the
rocks of the harbor of refuge. The steam pilot boat Philadelphia
went for rescue but saved only Mate Norman Campbell and one other
seaman. The exhausted rescued men were landed at the Lewes Life
Saving Station and cared for.
In the harbor three
schooners dragged anchor and collided, the, Emilly Northam,
Adeline Townsend, and Seabird. The two mast Seabird sank with her
crew rescued and
landed on Cape Henlopen at
that Life Saving Station and cared for. The Northam, had her
jib boom carried away and
her yawl stove. The Townsend lost her headgear and jib boom.
Barges Elmwood,
Gilbertson and Kalmia, laden with coal from Philaelphia sank in
Delaware
Bay westward of the Brown
Shoal. Their crews were rescued by the tug Tamaquash which
had the barges in tow. The
tug Spartan towing three barges, Travorton, Hammond and one
unknown, sank near Bear Shoal, while at anchor. No records of the
tugs crew. Three more
coal barges off Cape
Henlopen sank in the ocean and crews missing.
A bark unknown t anchor
off Ocean City with distress signal brought the Philadelphia
out to rescue and assist.
Another Philadelphia barge, Marcus Hook, was adrift and picked
up by tugs and towed to safe anchorage.
Much damage was done to
the breakwater, east end light, washed away, the Reporting
Station damaged and the telegraph line down all day. Lewes also
felt damage, trees uprooted
and chimneys damaged.
Abstract: Thursday 17
September, 1903, Anaconda Standard, Anaconda, Montana.
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