SS Pacific (1849)
US ship which went missing with almost 200 passengers From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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US ship which went missing with almost 200 passengers From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
SS Pacific was a wooden-hulled, sidewheel steamer built in 1849 for transatlantic service with the American Collins Line. Designed to outclass their chief rivals from the British-owned Cunard Line, Pacific and her three sister ships (Atlantic, Arctic and Baltic) were the largest, fastest and most well-appointed transatlantic steamers of their day.
History | |
---|---|
United States | |
Name | Pacific |
Namesake | Pacific Ocean |
Operator | Collins Line |
Route | New York-Liverpool |
Builder | Brown & Bell, New York |
Cost | $700,000 |
Launched | 1 Feb 1849 |
Maiden voyage | 25 May 1850 |
Honors and awards | Blue Riband holder, 21 Sep 1850–16 Aug 1851 |
Fate | Lost with all aboard under unknown circumstances, possibly sunk by iceberg, January 1856 |
General characteristics | |
Type | Passenger ship |
Tonnage | 2,707 gross register tons |
Length | 281 ft (85.6 m) |
Beam | 45 ft (13.7 m) |
Propulsion | 2 × 95-inch cylinder (2.4 m), 9-foot stroke (2.7 m) side-lever engines, auxiliary sails |
Speed | 12.5 knots (23.2 km/h; 14.4 mph) |
Capacity | Passengers: 200 1st class, 80 2nd class |
Crew | 141 |
Pacific's career began on a high note when she set a new transatlantic speed record in her first year of service. However, after only five years in operation, the ship, with her entire complement of almost 200 passengers and crew, vanished without a trace during a voyage from Liverpool to New York City, which began on 23 January 1856. As of 2023[update] Pacific's fate is not known. A message in a bottle found on the remote island of Uist within the Hebrides in 1861 declared her sunk by icebergs.[1]
For several decades prior to the 1840s, American sailing ships had dominated the transatlantic routes between Europe and the United States. With the advent of oceangoing steamships, however, the U.S. lost its dominance as British steamship companies, particularly the government-subsidized Cunard Line, established regular and reliable steam packet services between the U.S. and the United Kingdom.[2]
In 1847, Congress granted a large subsidy to the New York and Liverpool United States Mail Steamship Company (S.S.C.) for the establishment of an American steam-packet service to compete with the Cunard Line.[3] With this generous subsidy in hand, the New York and Liverpool S.S.C. ordered four new ships from New York shipyards and established a new shipping line, the Collins Line, to manage them. The Collins Line ships were specifically designed to be larger and faster, and offer a greater degree of passenger comfort, than their Cunard Line counterparts.[2] Design of the ships was entrusted to a noted New York marine architect, George Steers.[4]
Pacific's 281-foot (85.6 m) wooden hull was built from yellow pine, with keel and frames of white oak and chestnut. Like her three sister ships, she had straight stems, a single smokestack, three square-rigged masts for auxiliary power, and a flat main deck with two single-story cabins, one fore and one aft.[3] The ships were painted in Collins Line colors: black hull with a dark-red stripe running the length of the ship,[5] and a black stack with a dark-red top.
Pacific was powered by two side-lever engines built by the Allaire Iron Works of New York, each of which had a 95-inch cylinder (2.4 m) and 9-foot stroke (2.7 m), delivering a speed of 12 to 13 knots (22 to 24 km/h; 14 to 15 mph). The running gear was designed in such a way that if one engine failed, the remaining engine could continue to supply power to both paddlewheels. Steam was supplied by four vertical tubular boilers, with a double row of furnaces designed by the Line's chief engineer, John Faron.[6] Fuel consumption was from about 75 to 85 short tons (68 to 77 t) of coal per day, and auxiliary sail power was provided by three full-rigged masts.
The passenger accommodations were generous and spacious, and the cabins and saloons were elaborately decorated.[6] The ship could initially accommodate 200 first-class passengers; in 1851, accommodations for an additional 80 second-class passengers were added.[7] Customer service innovations on the Collins Line ships included steam heating in the passenger berths, a barber's shop, and a French maître de cuisine.[5] The ships' high freeboard and straight stems also contributed to passenger comfort by providing added protection from spray and a steadier motion through the waves than typical passenger ships of the period.[8]
Pacific was launched on 1 February 1849 and made her maiden voyage from New York to Liverpool on 25 May 1850. She would retain service on the New York-Liverpool route for her entire career.[7]
Between 11 and 21 September, Pacific made a record passage from Liverpool to New York with an average speed of 12.46 knots (23.08 km/h; 14.34 mph), breaking the previous record of 12.25 knots (22.69 km/h; 14.10 mph) held by the Cunard Line's Asia, and thus winning the coveted Blue Riband for fastest transatlantic crossing. Pacific would hold the record for less than a year however, as her sister ship Baltic would set a new record the following August with a new record speed of 12.91 knots (23.91 km/h; 14.86 mph). Between 10 and 20 May 1851, Pacific also set a new eastbound record with an average speed of 13.03 knots (24.13 km/h; 14.99 mph), beating the previous record of 12.38 knots (22.93 km/h; 14.25 mph) set by the Cunard Line's Canada. Again however, the record would stand for only nine months before being broken again by Pacific's slightly more-powerful sister ship, Arctic.[7]
In 1851, Pacific's passenger accommodations were increased to include an additional 80 second-class passengers.[7] In March 1853, she rescued the crew of the barque Jesse Stevens, which had foundered in the Atlantic Ocean.[9][10] In May 1853, while the Pacific was passing under an open swing bridge near Norwalk, Connecticut, a train crashed disastrously into the water nearby after its engineer missed the bridge signal; the ship's crew helped rescue many of the survivors.[11] Also in 1853, Pacific's mizzen mast was removed,[7] presumably in order to reduce drag.
Between 8:00 PM and 10:00 PM on August 16, 1851, Pacific's crew saw the mast light of the sailing brig Alfaretta off the starboard side at full sail towards their direction. The officer in charge ordered the Quartermaster to pull her hard-to-starboard and keep the ship at full sail to avoid collision. The brig turned towards Pacific, and rammed Pacific's starboard bow. Alfaretta's forward mast were stuck in the bow of Pacific before the brig sank. An inquiry put the blame on the crew of Alfaretta after it was determined that their last-minute decision to change course put both ships in danger of collision. Pacific suffered damages adding up to $2,000 ($82,000 today).
On 23 January 1856, Pacific departed Liverpool for her usual destination of New York, carrying 45 passengers (a typically small number for a winter voyage) and 141 crew. Her commander was Captain Asa Eldridge, a Yarmouth skipper and navigator of worldwide reputation; in 1854 he had set a transatlantic speed record on the clipper Red Jacket from New York to Liverpool.
After Pacific failed to arrive at New York, other ships were sent to conduct a search, but no trace of the vessel was found. Contemporaries concluded that she had probably hit an iceberg off Newfoundland, as the ice had been particularly bad that year.[12] Captain Eldridge and his chief engineer, Samuel Matthews, were both still new to Pacific, making only their second roundtrip voyage on her, and some comments blamed the disaster on their inexperience. But as a more recent account explains, both had considerable relevant experience: Pacific was actually the fourth steamer Eldridge had commanded, while Matthews had a long career on other steamships, including another Collins liner whose engines and boilers were identical to Pacific's.[13]
Wyn Craig Wade mentions the missing ship in his 1979 book, The Titanic: End of a Dream. Wade wrote, "The only clue in this instance had been a note in a bottle, washed ashore on the west coast of the Hebrides" reading:
Author Jim Coogan mentions the missing vessel in his article "A Message from the Sea" published in The Barnstable Patriot, writing that after the bottle was found, "on the remote Hebrides island of Uist... in the summer of 1861", the passenger list was thoroughly checked by the London Shipping & Mercantile Gazette, "and when the passenger list of the ill-fated steamer was examined, it contained the name of William Graham, a British sea captain headed for New York as a passenger to take command there of another vessel.[14]
Coogan's article goes on to relate that Stephen Fox wrote:
Supporting the sceptical view, a later book argued that in the absence of further information about that wreck, the note in the bottle that washed ashore in the Hebrides still represented the best explanation of the steamer's disappearance.[16][17] Later dives found items dated years after 1856. The Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales concluded that the wreck is unlikely to be that of Pacific.[18]
Among those lost was Bernard O'Reilly, Bishop of Hartford (Connecticut), who was returning to his diocese after an 1855 trip to Europe.
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