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List of shipwrecks of Tasmania

Shipwrecks of Tasmania are shipwrecks which have occurred in and around the island state of Tasmania, Australia.

Geographical and historical background edit

Tasmania is an island and since the time of European colonisation by the British, the population had been entirely reliant upon the sea for all physical contact with the outside world, until the development of links by air.

Since European discovery in 1642 by the Dutch navigator Abel Tasman, many explorers and many vessels visited Tasmania, or Tasmania's waters. Following the establishment of a British settlement in 1803 at Hobart, a local boat-building industry began almost immediately. Since that time Tasmania has had a very strong connection to the sea, and both commercial and recreational sailing has been a constant feature of Tasmania's history.

Tasmania's geographical position latitude 42° south, longitude 147° east, is along the line of latitude that places it in the path of the powerful winds known as the roaring forties, a band of westerly winds which blow across the Southern Ocean. Mariners of the 18th and 19th centuries utilised these winds to shorten the time it took them to reach Australia after rounding the Cape of Good Hope on their way from Europe. However, these same winds also led to the destruction of many vessels in raging seas and fierce storms. Over 1,000 vessels are thought to have been wrecked in Tasmanian waters,[1] including the eighth oldest known wreck in Australia, the ship Sydney Cove.

The Tasmanian coastline also posed several risks for mariners in the age of sail. It is regularly interspersed with jagged cliffs and submerged off-shore rocks. Also many of the inlets and bays which do provide shelter have dangerous entrances. The weather which affects Tasmania has also contributed to many wrecks. Tasmania can be susceptible to violent storms, such as the one which sank five boats competing in the 1998 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race.

Many of the wrecks in Tasmanian waters have claimed lives, and the waters surrounding the island remain a watery grave for them. This list includes many vessels marked (X) that were lost with all hands in the so-called Bass Strait Triangle.

List of known Tasmanian wrecks accompanied by loss of life, and others edit

  • 1797: Sydney Cove, full-rigged ship, beached at Preservation Island after springing a leak at sea, no lives lost in the immediate wreck, but many in subsequent boat voyage to Sydney or on the island as castaways.
  • 1804: Hebe (1803 ship), a 250-ton full-rigged ship, launched at Chittagong that ran onto reef approaching the entrance of the Tamar River; one life lost.
  • 1812: Campbell Macquarie, a 248-ton full-rigged ship captained by Richard Siddins shipwrecked in Hasselborough Bay in Tasmania on 11 June 1812 with at least four lives lost as castaways.
  • 1814: Argo, a 4-gun barque, was stolen by convict bolters who took it to sea, to be never heard from again; 13 or 14 presumed lost.
  • 1822: Actaeon full-rigged ship hit reef in D'Entrecasteaux Channel, no lives lost off ship, but one salvage boat capsized, 2 lives lost.
  • 1826: Sally, a schooner wrecked near Cape Portland, 13 lives lost.
  • 1827: Dotterel, brig, wrecked near Tamar Heads, one crewman drowned.
  • 1833: Portland, full-rigged ship, wrecked east of Tamar Heads, 2 lives lost.
  • 1834: Jane, schooner, St. Helens Bar, East Coast, three or four lives lost.
  • 1835: George III, convict transport, wrecked on rocks off Southport. 133 lives lost.
  • 1835: Neva, convict transport, wrecked off King Island, 225 lives lost.
  • 1835: Enchantress, a barque, hit rocks and sank off south-west coast of Bruny Island, seventeen lives lost.
  • 1836: Louisa, schooner, sank off Bruny Island, several lives lost.
  • 1837: Mars, schooner, foundered in Storm Bay, four lives lost.
  • 1838: Lady Franklin, schooner, missing in Bass Strait, about 20 lives lost.(?X)
  • 1838: Port Phillip Packet, missing in Bass Strait, 6 lives lost. (X)
  • 1838: Yarra Yarra, schooner, missing in Bass Strait, about 25 lives lost. (X)
  • 1839: Agnes, schooner, foundered in Bass Strait, all hands (about 6) lives lost. (X)
  • 1839: Britomart, barque, foundered in the Furneaux Group, all hands (about 30) lost. (X)
  • 1840: Echo, schooner, wrecked in gale off the west coast of Tasman Peninsula, all hands (about 8) lost.
  • 1841: Humber, schooner, missing between Port Arthur, Tasmania and Hobart, all hands (about 6) lost.
  • 1842: Edward, schooner, Missing between Circular Head and Launceston, Tasmania, all hands (about 15) lost. (X)
  • 1843: Charlotte, cutter, wrecked at Falmouth, 2 lives lost.
  • 1843: Rebecca barque, grounded on King Island, 5 lives lost. Salvaged & wrecked again in 1853.
  • 1845: Cataraqui, full-rigged ship, wrecked on King Island, 400 lives lost.
  • 1845: Mary, barque, hit rocks and broke up north-west of Flinders Island, 17 lives lost.
  • 1846: Maria Orr, barque, whaler wrecked at Recherche Bay, one life lost.
  • 1848: John Pirie, schooner, wrecked off the Furneaux Group in Bass Strait, all hands (about 10) lost. (X)
  • 1848: Governor Phillip, Government brig, on Gull island in Bass Strait, 16 lives lost.
  • 1848: Harriett, schooner, missing in Bass Strait, all hands (about 7) lost. (X)
  • 1850: Lady Denison, barque, foundered off far north-west coast, all hands (40) lost. (X)
  • 1850: Albert, schooner, foundered in Bass Strait, all hands (about 6) lost. (X)
  • 1850: Resolution, cutter, wrecked off Bicheno, six lives lost.
  • 1851: Fairy, schooner, sank off Tamar Heads, three loves lost.
  • 1852: Zephyr, schooner, wrecked near Bream Creak, eight lives lost.
  • 1853: Antares, schooner, wrecked in the Furneaux Group, eight lives lost.
  • 1853: Rebecca, barque, on the west coast near Arthur River, eight lives lost.
  • 1854: Lioness, schooner, at Clarke Island on the Furneaux Group, four lives lost.
  • 1854: Brahmin, full-rigged ship, off King Island, 16 lives lost.
  • 1854: Dolphin, cutter, wrecked in Louisa Bay, 11 lives lost.
  • 1855: Whistler, American full-rigged ship, on the northern end of King Island, two lives lost.
  • 1855: Maypo, brig, on the northern end of King Island, four lives lost.
  • 1857: Viola, brig, on Friendlies Beach, no lives lost.
  • 1858: Blanch, cutter, last seen of Tasmania's east coast before disappearing at sea, 5 crew presumed lost.
  • 1861: Tyne, schooner, near Cape Pillar, four lives lost.
  • 1862: Reindeer, schooner, foundered in Bass Strait, all hands (about 10) lost. (X)
  • 1863: Red Jacket, schooner, missing in Bass Strait, about 8 lives lost. (X)
  • 1863: Creole, brig, foundered off Swan Island, 29 lives lost. Dead and wreckage illegally plundered. (X)
  • 1863: Grecian Queen, 378 ton brig, missing in Bass Strait, wreckage found at Swan Island, all hands lost (unknown, about 10). (X)
  • 1864: Sea Breeze, barque, at Circular Head (Stanley), one life lost.
  • 1865: Glimpse, cutter, on a voyage from Wynyard to Launceston, lost with all hands (including 5 passengers). (X)
  • 1873: City of Hobart, fishing boat, lost between Hobart and Blackmans Bay, 1 life lost.
  • 1874: British Admiral steamer, wrecked on reef off King Island 79 lives lost
  • 1874: Albion, ketch, disappeared off north-west coast, 2 lives presumed lost. (X)
  • 1874: Eclipse, schooner, near Hobart, 2 lives lost.
  • 1875: Comet was a barque lost between New Zealand and Hobart; 13 lives lost.
  • 1883: Beryl cutter, capsized off Tamar Heads, 2 lives lost.
  • 1884: Farningham Composite barque, collided with iron barque Vanguard, and the order was given to abandon ship. Crew was transferred to Vanguard but three were trapped in forecastle; 3 lives lost.
  • 1898: Annie Ward, ketch sank in storm off South Arm, 3 lives lost.
  • 1898: SS Grafton sank at Macquarie Head, west coast[2]
  • 1903: Chris, fishing boat, unregistered, lost between Hobart and Adventure Bay, 3 lives lost.
  • 1904: Acacia, cargo barque, broke up without trace after hitting "Acacia Rocks", West Coast north of Port Davey, 9 lives lost.
  • 1904: Brier Holme, barque, sank off southwest Tasmania after striking a reef and having cargo of dynamite explode onboard, 17 lives lost.
  • 1907: Alfhild, iron barque, smashed against cliffs in wild seas off Port Davey, 4 lives lost, 13 men made it to boats, but 7 were lost at sea, presumed dead.
  • 1908: Orion, steamship, foundered in Bass Strait, all hands (27) lost. (X)
  • 1909: Kawatiri, steamship, wrecked after hitting breakwater at Macquarie Harbour Heads, six lives lost.
  • 1920: Southern Cross, schooner, caught fire and sank in Bass Strait, all hands (9) lost. (X)
  • 1920: Amelia J., schooner, lost at sea in Bass Strait crew of 12 presumed lost. A biplane used in the search was also lost without trace off the Furneaux Group. (?X)
  • 1925: Clyde, fishing boat, sank in huge seas off Recherche Bay, 3 lives lost.
  • 1958: Willwatch Auxiliary ketch, 96/64 tons. # 101141. Built Blackwall, Brisbane Water, NSW, 1895; reg. Melbourne 5/1947. Lbd 84 ft × 21.5 ft × 7.3 ft. Master George McCarthy. From Ulverstone for King Island with general cargo, lost in a gale off the far north-west coast Tasmania, between the Hunter Group and King Island, 17 December 1958. Despite radio distress messages that allowed would-be rescuers to follow the vessel's death-throws in graphic detail for nearly two hours, the appalling weather conditions then prevailing prevented any effective rescue operations. Crew of five lost. Only the large trawlers Olympic and V.S.P. working off King Island were in a position to head for the stricken vessel. By the time they arrived the Will Watch had been sunk for at least an hour, and despite extensive air and sea searches extending over several days, no trace of the missing men was ever found.[citation needed]
  • 1959: Blythe Star, 138-ton cargo ship, engine room exploded and ensuing fire burned her to the water, before she sank. Explosion killed engineer instantly, 10 crew survived.
  • 1961: Flying Scud, fishing boat, entangled in heavy kelp off Fluted Cape and smashed onto the rocks in the swell. 1 life lost.
  • 1962: Gondwana, fishing ketch, foundered off Maatsuyker Island, 2 lives lost.
  • 1973: Blythe Star (2), 144-ton cargo ship, just 14 years after her predecessor sank, the second Blythe Star became overdue after leaving Hobart for King Island, and despite the most extensive air search ever conducted in Australia at the time, the vessel could not be located. Seven of the 10 crew were found 11 days later on the Tasman Peninsula, having escaped to the liferaft when she suddenly capsized and sank off South West Cape, Tasmania. One man died on the raft and two on land. The boat was located by a CSIRO research team nearly 50 years later, in April 2023, with just one survivor still alive at the time.[3][4]
  • 1975: Bunyip, sloop-rigged yacht, swamped in Bass Strait, 1 life lost.
  • 1975: Lake Illawarra, bulk carrier, sunk in the River Derwent, after colliding with the Tasman Bridge, 12 lives lost.
  • 1979: Charleston (Yacht) disappeared in Bass Strait, 5 lives lost.
  • 1990: Great Expectations, sloop, returning to Melbourne following a successful completion of the Melbourne to Devonport Yacht Race, she disappeared somewhere in the vicinity of Cape Portland without trace. It was believed she was swamped by a giant wave. Personal effects were all that was recovered. 6 lives lost. (X)
  • 1997: Eastern Star, fishing boat, swamped by freak 15 metre wave whilst at anchor, in mouth of Pieman River, 3 lives lost and never recovered.
  • 1997: Helen J., fishing boat, broke up in heavy weather off the Pieman River, 2 lives lost.

Some significant wrecks without loss of life edit

Legends edit

The George III convict ship wreck is one example of a story which changed completely due to verbal history.[6]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "The 'burial ground' where 14 ships were deliberately sent to their watery graves". ABC News. 31 January 2021. Retrieved 19 February 2024.
  2. ^ "WRECK OF THE S.S. GRAFTON". The Mercury. Hobart, Tasmania. 14 June 1898. p. 2. Retrieved 7 December 2013 – via National Library of Australia.
  3. ^ Gwynn, Liz (15 May 2023). "Blythe Star shipwreck located, 50 years after sinking off Tasmanian coast in 1973". ABC News. Retrieved 15 May 2023.
  4. ^ Australian Associated Press (15 May 2023). "Shipwreck found off Tasmanian coast brings closure to 50-year mystery". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 May 2023.
  5. ^ Shine, Rhiannon (17 May 2018). "CSIRO probe reveals Bass Strait shipwreck after 'chance encounter'". ABC News. Retrieved 17 May 2018.
  6. ^ "Tasmanian Shipwreck Legend". Google. 9 October 1998. Retrieved 7 July 2012.

References edit

  • Broxam, Graeme; Nash, Michael (1998). Tasmanian Shipwrecks (1797–1899). Canberra: Navarine Publishing. ISBN 978-0-958-65615-3.
  • Broxam, Graeme; Nash, Michael (2000). Tasmanian Shipwrecks (1899–1999). Canberra: Navarine Publishing. ISBN 978-0-958-65616-0.

External links edit

  • Maritime Museum of Tasmania
  • Shipwrecks of Tasmania. Parks & Wildlife Service, Tasmania.
  • Shipwrecks of Tasmania. Encyclopedia of Australian Shipwrecks.
  • Australian National Shipwreck Database

list, shipwrecks, tasmania, shipwrecks, tasmania, shipwrecks, which, have, occurred, around, island, state, tasmania, australia, contents, geographical, historical, background, list, known, tasmanian, wrecks, accompanied, loss, life, others, some, significant,. Shipwrecks of Tasmania are shipwrecks which have occurred in and around the island state of Tasmania Australia Contents 1 Geographical and historical background 2 List of known Tasmanian wrecks accompanied by loss of life and others 3 Some significant wrecks without loss of life 4 Legends 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksGeographical and historical background editTasmania is an island and since the time of European colonisation by the British the population had been entirely reliant upon the sea for all physical contact with the outside world until the development of links by air Since European discovery in 1642 by the Dutch navigator Abel Tasman many explorers and many vessels visited Tasmania or Tasmania s waters Following the establishment of a British settlement in 1803 at Hobart a local boat building industry began almost immediately Since that time Tasmania has had a very strong connection to the sea and both commercial and recreational sailing has been a constant feature of Tasmania s history Tasmania s geographical position latitude 42 south longitude 147 east is along the line of latitude that places it in the path of the powerful winds known as the roaring forties a band of westerly winds which blow across the Southern Ocean Mariners of the 18th and 19th centuries utilised these winds to shorten the time it took them to reach Australia after rounding the Cape of Good Hope on their way from Europe However these same winds also led to the destruction of many vessels in raging seas and fierce storms Over 1 000 vessels are thought to have been wrecked in Tasmanian waters 1 including the eighth oldest known wreck in Australia the ship Sydney Cove The Tasmanian coastline also posed several risks for mariners in the age of sail It is regularly interspersed with jagged cliffs and submerged off shore rocks Also many of the inlets and bays which do provide shelter have dangerous entrances The weather which affects Tasmania has also contributed to many wrecks Tasmania can be susceptible to violent storms such as the one which sank five boats competing in the 1998 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race Many of the wrecks in Tasmanian waters have claimed lives and the waters surrounding the island remain a watery grave for them This list includes many vessels marked X that were lost with all hands in the so called Bass Strait Triangle List of known Tasmanian wrecks accompanied by loss of life and others edit1797 Sydney Cove full rigged ship beached at Preservation Island after springing a leak at sea no lives lost in the immediate wreck but many in subsequent boat voyage to Sydney or on the island as castaways 1804 Hebe 1803 ship a 250 ton full rigged ship launched at Chittagong that ran onto reef approaching the entrance of the Tamar River one life lost 1812 Campbell Macquarie a 248 ton full rigged ship captained by Richard Siddins shipwrecked in Hasselborough Bay in Tasmania on 11 June 1812 with at least four lives lost as castaways 1814 Argo a 4 gun barque was stolen by convict bolters who took it to sea to be never heard from again 13 or 14 presumed lost 1822 Actaeon full rigged ship hit reef in D Entrecasteaux Channel no lives lost off ship but one salvage boat capsized 2 lives lost 1826 Sally a schooner wrecked near Cape Portland 13 lives lost 1827 Dotterel brig wrecked near Tamar Heads one crewman drowned 1833 Portland full rigged ship wrecked east of Tamar Heads 2 lives lost 1834 Jane schooner St Helens Bar East Coast three or four lives lost 1835 George III convict transport wrecked on rocks off Southport 133 lives lost 1835 Neva convict transport wrecked off King Island 225 lives lost 1835 Enchantress a barque hit rocks and sank off south west coast of Bruny Island seventeen lives lost 1836 Louisa schooner sank off Bruny Island several lives lost 1837 Mars schooner foundered in Storm Bay four lives lost 1838 Lady Franklin schooner missing in Bass Strait about 20 lives lost X 1838 Port Phillip Packet missing in Bass Strait 6 lives lost X 1838 Yarra Yarra schooner missing in Bass Strait about 25 lives lost X 1839 Agnes schooner foundered in Bass Strait all hands about 6 lives lost X 1839 Britomart barque foundered in the Furneaux Group all hands about 30 lost X 1840 Echo schooner wrecked in gale off the west coast of Tasman Peninsula all hands about 8 lost 1841 Humber schooner missing between Port Arthur Tasmania and Hobart all hands about 6 lost 1842 Edward schooner Missing between Circular Head and Launceston Tasmania all hands about 15 lost X 1843 Charlotte cutter wrecked at Falmouth 2 lives lost 1843 Rebecca barque grounded on King Island 5 lives lost Salvaged amp wrecked again in 1853 1845 Cataraqui full rigged ship wrecked on King Island 400 lives lost 1845 Mary barque hit rocks and broke up north west of Flinders Island 17 lives lost 1846 Maria Orr barque whaler wrecked at Recherche Bay one life lost 1848 John Pirie schooner wrecked off the Furneaux Group in Bass Strait all hands about 10 lost X 1848 Governor Phillip Government brig on Gull island in Bass Strait 16 lives lost 1848 Harriett schooner missing in Bass Strait all hands about 7 lost X 1850 Lady Denison barque foundered off far north west coast all hands 40 lost X 1850 Albert schooner foundered in Bass Strait all hands about 6 lost X 1850 Resolution cutter wrecked off Bicheno six lives lost 1851 Fairy schooner sank off Tamar Heads three loves lost 1852 Zephyr schooner wrecked near Bream Creak eight lives lost 1853 Antares schooner wrecked in the Furneaux Group eight lives lost 1853 Rebecca barque on the west coast near Arthur River eight lives lost 1854 Lioness schooner at Clarke Island on the Furneaux Group four lives lost 1854 Brahmin full rigged ship off King Island 16 lives lost 1854 Dolphin cutter wrecked in Louisa Bay 11 lives lost 1855 Whistler American full rigged ship on the northern end of King Island two lives lost 1855 Maypo brig on the northern end of King Island four lives lost 1857 Viola brig on Friendlies Beach no lives lost 1858 Blanch cutter last seen of Tasmania s east coast before disappearing at sea 5 crew presumed lost 1861 Tyne schooner near Cape Pillar four lives lost 1862 Reindeer schooner foundered in Bass Strait all hands about 10 lost X 1863 Red Jacket schooner missing in Bass Strait about 8 lives lost X 1863 Creole brig foundered off Swan Island 29 lives lost Dead and wreckage illegally plundered X 1863 Grecian Queen 378 ton brig missing in Bass Strait wreckage found at Swan Island all hands lost unknown about 10 X 1864 Sea Breeze barque at Circular Head Stanley one life lost 1865 Glimpse cutter on a voyage from Wynyard to Launceston lost with all hands including 5 passengers X 1873 City of Hobart fishing boat lost between Hobart and Blackmans Bay 1 life lost 1874 British Admiral steamer wrecked on reef off King Island 79 lives lost 1874 Albion ketch disappeared off north west coast 2 lives presumed lost X 1874 Eclipse schooner near Hobart 2 lives lost 1875 Comet was a barque lost between New Zealand and Hobart 13 lives lost 1883 Beryl cutter capsized off Tamar Heads 2 lives lost 1884 Farningham Composite barque collided with iron barque Vanguard and the order was given to abandon ship Crew was transferred to Vanguard but three were trapped in forecastle 3 lives lost 1898 Annie Ward ketch sank in storm off South Arm 3 lives lost 1898 SS Grafton sank at Macquarie Head west coast 2 1903 Chris fishing boat unregistered lost between Hobart and Adventure Bay 3 lives lost 1904 Acacia cargo barque broke up without trace after hitting Acacia Rocks West Coast north of Port Davey 9 lives lost 1904 Brier Holme barque sank off southwest Tasmania after striking a reef and having cargo of dynamite explode onboard 17 lives lost 1907 Alfhild iron barque smashed against cliffs in wild seas off Port Davey 4 lives lost 13 men made it to boats but 7 were lost at sea presumed dead 1908 Orion steamship foundered in Bass Strait all hands 27 lost X 1909 Kawatiri steamship wrecked after hitting breakwater at Macquarie Harbour Heads six lives lost 1920 Southern Cross schooner caught fire and sank in Bass Strait all hands 9 lost X 1920 Amelia J schooner lost at sea in Bass Strait crew of 12 presumed lost A biplane used in the search was also lost without trace off the Furneaux Group X 1925 Clyde fishing boat sank in huge seas off Recherche Bay 3 lives lost 1958 Willwatch Auxiliary ketch 96 64 tons 101141 Built Blackwall Brisbane Water NSW 1895 reg Melbourne 5 1947 Lbd 84 ft 21 5 ft 7 3 ft Master George McCarthy From Ulverstone for King Island with general cargo lost in a gale off the far north west coast Tasmania between the Hunter Group and King Island 17 December 1958 Despite radio distress messages that allowed would be rescuers to follow the vessel s death throws in graphic detail for nearly two hours the appalling weather conditions then prevailing prevented any effective rescue operations Crew of five lost Only the large trawlers Olympic and V S P working off King Island were in a position to head for the stricken vessel By the time they arrived the Will Watch had been sunk for at least an hour and despite extensive air and sea searches extending over several days no trace of the missing men was ever found citation needed 1959 Blythe Star 138 ton cargo ship engine room exploded and ensuing fire burned her to the water before she sank Explosion killed engineer instantly 10 crew survived 1961 Flying Scud fishing boat entangled in heavy kelp off Fluted Cape and smashed onto the rocks in the swell 1 life lost 1962 Gondwana fishing ketch foundered off Maatsuyker Island 2 lives lost 1973 Blythe Star 2 144 ton cargo ship just 14 years after her predecessor sank the second Blythe Star became overdue after leaving Hobart for King Island and despite the most extensive air search ever conducted in Australia at the time the vessel could not be located Seven of the 10 crew were found 11 days later on the Tasman Peninsula having escaped to the liferaft when she suddenly capsized and sank off South West Cape Tasmania One man died on the raft and two on land The boat was located by a CSIRO research team nearly 50 years later in April 2023 with just one survivor still alive at the time 3 4 1975 Bunyip sloop rigged yacht swamped in Bass Strait 1 life lost 1975 Lake Illawarra bulk carrier sunk in the River Derwent after colliding with the Tasman Bridge 12 lives lost 1979 Charleston Yacht disappeared in Bass Strait 5 lives lost 1990 Great Expectations sloop returning to Melbourne following a successful completion of the Melbourne to Devonport Yacht Race she disappeared somewhere in the vicinity of Cape Portland without trace It was believed she was swamped by a giant wave Personal effects were all that was recovered 6 lives lost X 1997 Eastern Star fishing boat swamped by freak 15 metre wave whilst at anchor in mouth of Pieman River 3 lives lost and never recovered 1997 Helen J fishing boat broke up in heavy weather off the Pieman River 2 lives lost Some significant wrecks without loss of life edit1848 Abeona whaler broke up New Harbour 1853 Litherland square rig whaler hit rocks off Clarke Island 1854 Alert schooner ran aground at Arthur River in violent storm Remains of vessel exposed by storm 2005 1860 Annott Lyle brigantine drifted onto rocks Swan Island 1862 George Marshall Flinders Island 1866 Netherby King Island 504 persons on board saved 1877 Bulli collier steamship struck rocks off Erith Island Bass Strait 1877 City of Hobart collier steamship sank off Wilsons Promontory 1883 Tasman steamer struck Hippolyte Rocks off the Tasman Peninsula and sank Wreck rediscovered about 2004 1883 Asterope 500 ton barque ran onto Hebe Reef before sinking at Tamar Heads 1890 Carlisle iron barque hit rocks off Wilson s Promontory but in Tasmanian waters and sank quickly no lives lost Wreck identified 2018 5 1891 Circe brigantine wrecked upon a sand bar at Macquarie Harbour 1898 Annie McDougall schooner and Grafton Steamer both struck the same north spit of Hell s Gates within two months of each other no lives lost on either vessel 1907 Derwent Hunter hulk formerly a whaling barque alongside laid up steamship Beautiful Star both destroyed in fire at Hobart slipyards 1914 Svenor iron barque abandoned at sea after being dismasted went ashore at Wreck Bay on the west coast remains still visible 1915 Nord cargo steamer struck Hippolyte Rocks off the Tasman Peninsula A popular dive wreck 1929 TSS Kanowna steamer one of Tasmania s largest shipwrecks found in 2005 in Bass Strait 1937 Otago hulk formerly iron barque beached in the River Derwent at the end of her useful career 1980 Aqua Enterprise Trawler began taking on water before sinking 100 km south of Hobart Legends editThe George III convict ship wreck is one example of a story which changed completely due to verbal history 6 See also editList of shipwrecks of AustraliaNotes edit The burial ground where 14 ships were deliberately sent to their watery graves ABC News 31 January 2021 Retrieved 19 February 2024 WRECK OF THE S S GRAFTON The Mercury Hobart Tasmania 14 June 1898 p 2 Retrieved 7 December 2013 via National Library of Australia Gwynn Liz 15 May 2023 Blythe Star shipwreck located 50 years after sinking off Tasmanian coast in 1973 ABC News Retrieved 15 May 2023 Australian Associated Press 15 May 2023 Shipwreck found off Tasmanian coast brings closure to 50 year mystery The Guardian Retrieved 15 May 2023 Shine Rhiannon 17 May 2018 CSIRO probe reveals Bass Strait shipwreck after chance encounter ABC News Retrieved 17 May 2018 Tasmanian Shipwreck Legend Google 9 October 1998 Retrieved 7 July 2012 References editBroxam Graeme Nash Michael 1998 Tasmanian Shipwrecks 1797 1899 Canberra Navarine Publishing ISBN 978 0 958 65615 3 Broxam Graeme Nash Michael 2000 Tasmanian Shipwrecks 1899 1999 Canberra Navarine Publishing ISBN 978 0 958 65616 0 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shipwrecks of Tasmania Maritime Museum of Tasmania Shipwrecks of Tasmania Parks amp Wildlife Service Tasmania Shipwrecks of Tasmania Encyclopedia of Australian Shipwrecks Australian National Shipwreck Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of shipwrecks of Tasmania amp oldid 1223591903, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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