Sunday, April 20, 2014

Sailors lost at sea

From Mike Hackett Youghal.
>
>    Over one-hundred sailors and fishermen from the Ardmore-Youghal area
> were lost to the water since 1882.  Almost all have been listed now
> and the boats and vessels involved are recorded.  The places of the
> different tragedies and the dates of the happenings are also listed,
> where known.
>
> Sailors and Seamen of the Youghal area who lost their lives to the water.
>    Mary Lincoln of Monatrea was drowned in Youghal Harbour on the 30th
> of September 1876.  She was one of fourteen people lost to the water
> when the local ferryboat foundered on its way across to the
> Ferrypoint.  A Swedish barque was docked at Green’s Quay at the time
> -  and the crew went to the rescue and managed to save a big number of
> the ferryboat passengers.
>    Captain Fleming of Youghal died on the schooner ‘Hertford’ when it
> shipwrecked on the Wexford coast in 1882.  It was owned by local
> merchants Flemings and the captain was one of the family.
> James Butler of Windmill Hill also died on the schooner ‘Hertford’.
> James was actually a baker by trade and this was his first voyage.
> Patrick McCarthy and Seaman Bennett, both of Youghal, were also lost
> in that incident.
>
>
> Walter William Burke of Hanover Street contracted Yellow Fever on the
> Tall-Ship ‘Melanope’ in 1894.  He died at sea and the vessel brought
> the body into Rio-De-Janeiro, Brazil, where he is buried.
>
>    The ‘Charmaine’, owned by Farrells, was on a North Atlantic passage
> in 1899 when James Meade of Youghal was lost overboard.  James was
> twenty-two years of age.  The vessel was under the command of Captain
> John Mattis and was going to collect a cargo to bring back to Fenit in
> County Kerry.
>
>
>
>    Tom Loughlin of the Mall captained the sailing ship ‘Perfect’, a boat
> that left Youghal every Spring in the mid-eighteen-hundreds to sail to
> the Americas.  Cargo outwards would be dairy produce and on the return
> voyage, timber like mahogany was imported. Tom had four sons named
> Tommy, Michael, Jack and Jim.  Tommy was sailing with his father (at
> just nineteen) when he was washed overboard off the Lizard.  Captain
> Tom had to be forcibly restrained from jumping overboard in what would
> have been a hopeless attempt to save his son.
>    Another son of Captain Tom, Miko Loughlin of the Mall, died on the
> schooner William S. Green, shipwrecked on the Devon Coast in 1904.
>    Move on to 1917, when Jack Loughlin, then himself a captain, was
> drowned with all his crew on the ‘S.S. Ballater’ (Liverpool).  It was
> during the First-World-War, in September 1917, that a submarine attack
> caused that loss.  Jack was then fifty-two years of age.
>    And so of the original four Loughlin sons, who sailed out with their
> father, only Jim (also now a captain) remained.  He was affectionatey
> known as Jimo and it was his belief that ‘Davy Jones Locker’ had taken
> enough of the Loughlin family.  So Jimo retired from seafaring,
> settled down ashore and lived to a ripe old age.
>
>
>
>
>
>    Danny Coakley of North Main Street and Tommy Walsh of Mary Street
> also died then on the William S. Green.
>
> Jack Smyth of Flemimgs Court, Tallow Street, died on the ‘Annette’
> when she went onto the rocks below Youghal Lighthouse in 1905.
> Captain Kirby of Dungarvan died on the same occasion.
>
> Patrick McCarthy of Mouse Street caught a disease on a brigantine,
> died and was buried in Archangel in Russia.  He was grandfather of the
> late Noel Donoghue of Cross Lane.
>
> Paddy O’Brien of Ballyvergan was lost overboard from the destroyer
> ‘Cossack’ at Ayr in Scotland, in 1919.  He slipped on a steep gangway
> and hit his head on the quay-wall.
>
> Captain Patrick O’Brien of Strand Street, died of blood poisoning on
> the ‘B.I.’ at Runcorn, Merseyside in 1914, at the age of 32.
>
> Martin Bland of Church Street died on ship in 1920 and was buried in
> Aruba in the Dutch Carribean. He was father of the late George Bland
> of O’Rahilly Street.
>
> James Duggan of Church Lane, in an attempt to rescue a fellow sailor,
> was drowned while the schooner ‘Elizabeth Drew’ was berthed at New
> Ross in 1933.
>
>    William Perrott of Wales was drowned in 1933 while attempting to swim
> ashore from the ketch ‘Daisy’ while it was moored in Upper Youghal
> Harbour.  There is a memorial to William chiselled into the rock near
> Youghal Lighthouse and he is buried in Templemichael graveyard.
>
> Tommy Smyth of the Alms Houses was lost overboard at Rouen in france in 1933.
>
> William John Coleman of Quay Lane died aboard ship in 1936 on the way
> to Australia. He was buried at sea.
>
>
>
>    Captain Michael Duggan of Church Street was lost on the ‘Nellie
> Fleming’ which foundered without trace between the Bristol Channel and
> Youghal in February 1936.  Also lost on the same vessel were: Batty
> Glavin, on the way home to his daughter’s wedding; Eddie Sullivan of
> Raheen Road on his first voyage as cabin boy; Dan Kenneally of The
> Mall, father of a large family; and Declan Doyle of Penders Lane,
> eighteen years of age.
>
> William Ring of 135 North Main Street was lost overboard in Cardiff
> Docks in 1937.  Having managed to hold onto a rope all night, he died
> the following morning from exposure.
>
> John Doyle from Gallagher Terrace fell overboard while on a voyage to
> Australia in 1938.  He was a brother to Declan Doyle, lost on the
> ‘Nellie Fleming’ two years earlier.
>
> Connie Troy of Windmill Hill was electrocuted while repairing his
> fishing boat at Cobh in 1946.
>
> Michael O’Regan of South Cross Road was serving in the Irish Naval
> Service on the ‘L.E. Cliona’ in 1952.  He took ill on board, was
> brought to hospital but sadly died at just eighteen.
>
> Patrick Sullivan of South Cross Road, was lost overboard at
> Newcastle-upon-Tyne in 1962.
>
>
>
> Teddy Murphy of Kent Street, was struck down with appendicitis at sea
> in 1962 on the ship ‘Ordinance’.  He died in Dunkirk hospital.
>
> Tom Paul Ring of Sarsfield Terrace and Joey Gaule of Mall Lane died
> while asleep in their bunks on the ‘Irish Sycamore’ as it lay docked
> in New Orleans in 1965.  Smoke inhalation was the cause of death when
> a fire started in an empty cabin next door.
>
> Gerry Griffin of Brown Street, was lost overboard from the ‘Mossville’
> while berthed at Cork in 1967.  It was said that a plank gangway
> slipped.
>
> Noel O’Brien of De Valera Street died when he fell overboard from a
> dredger on the river Thames in 1968.
>
> Joe Higgins of Strand Street fell between vessel and quay at Greenock
> in Scotland in 1970 and was drowned.  The ship was the ‘M.V. St.
> William’.
>
>
> Timothy J. Harnedy from Inchiquin, Killeagh was drowned in 1982 while
> swimming at Bondi Beach in Australia.  Ted was the ship’s radio
> officer and was on leave, awaiting a plane home.
>
> James Jessie Collins of Raheen Road, died on the tanker ‘Rathcoyle’ in
> 1994.  Asleep in his bunk, while docked at Ellesmere Port near
> Chester, he died of a heart attack.
>
>
> Fishermen who died in River, Harbour and Bay tragedies.
>
> James Hannigan of Wesley Place, drowned when a salmon yawl overturned
> in Youghal Harbour in 1886.  Connie Glavin of Greens Quay was also
> lost in that disaster.
>
> Two Flaherty brothers and two Mulcahy brothers of Monatrea, were
> drowned when their salmon boat capsized at Mangans Cove in 1887.
>
>    Four men were drowned near the Metal Bridge in 1892 when their salmon
> yawl turned over.  They were Maurice Keogh, Maurice Fleming, William
> Keating and John White  --  all were from Ardsallagh.  They were using
> a dipping-lug sail at the time with which it was hard to change tack.
>
>    John Hogan of Ardsallagh went for a swim in 1916 at the High Rock
> near Fleming’s Ferry, between fishing the tides., and it cost him his
> life.  He had his passage booked to America and a tailor named Bride
> in Youghal was making a suit of clothes for him.
>
>    Tommy Smith of Primrose Lane, was drowned in Youghal Harbour in 1923
> when his salmon boat captized.  With him and also lost were Pats
> Murray of Monatrea and Tom Aher of Porters Lane.  Saved that day was
> Mike Hannigan, who was Cox of the local lifeboat for years.
>
> Bob Foley of Water treet was drowned when another salmon boat turned
> over in 1927.  Also lost then were Declan Kenure of Windmill Lane and
> Jim Boland of Water Street.
>
>    Then in 1933, yet another salmon yawl capsized on the river.  Drowned
> that day were Johnny Brennan of The Mall and Tommy Truxie Griffin of
> Mill Road.  Rescued were Tommy Muta Heaphy and Mike O’Neill.
>
> Mick O’Brien-Stokes of Sarsfield Terrace died of a heart attack in his
> boat while fishing down the harbour in 1949.
>
> Paddy Barry of Ceann a Bhotair (Redbarn)  received severe head
> injuries when his boat turned over off the beach at Redbarn in 1954.
> He died of his injuries in hospital.
>
> Declan Hannon of South Main Street was lost overboard from a fishing
> boat in Waterford Harbour in 1972.
>
>
>
>
> Danny Twohig of Blackwater Heights suffered a heart attack while
> hauling his nets on the river in 1992.  He died in the boat.
>
> Lost at War
>
> Richard Ahern of Youghal,  died when the ‘H.M.S. Goliah’ was sunk in 1915.
>
> William Patrick Nolan of Brown Street, died in the sinking of ‘H.M.S.
> Defence’ in 1916.
>
>
> Michael Mulcahy of Ardmore was killed when the ‘H.M.S. Indefatigable’
> was sunk in 1916.
>
> Maurice McGrath of the Clock Gate, died on the ‘H.M.S. Davis’ in 1917.
>
> John Hyde of the Ferrypoint, died when the ‘H.M.S. Cornwall’ went down in 1918.
>
>    When the ‘H.M.S. Laurentic’ hit a minefield in Lough Swilly on the
> river Foyle near Malin Head, Derry in 1917, it cost the lives of five
> Youghal sailors.  They were: Patrick Brennan and John Buckley, both of
> The Mall; William Lynch, Buckley’s Lane; Jacky O’Brien and James Gaule
> of Windmill Lane.
>
> William Glavin of Windmill Hill was lost when the minesweeper
> ‘Mignonette’ was torpedoed off the Cork coast in 1917.
>
> Tommy Stack of South Cross Road, Miley Long of Water Street and Jack
> Murphy of South Main Street died in 1940 when the aircraft carrier
> ‘H.M.S. Glorious’ was sunk by battle cruisers in the North Sea.
>
> Brendan Murphy of Market square and William Kirby of The Mall died on
> the cruiser ‘H.M.S. Gallatea’ when it was torpedoed and sunk off
> Alexandria in 1941.  It sank in ninety seconds.
>    Two more Youghal men died when the battleship ‘H.M.S. Barham’ was
> torpedoed and sunk off Alexandria in 1941.  They were Jerry Connolly
> of Cork Hill and Bobby Webster of Sarsfield Terrace.  The two men were
> stokers down below and had little chance of escape following the four
> torpedo hits.
>
> Tommy Roche of Water Street died when the armed trawler ‘Lincoln City’
> was sunk in the North Atlantic in 1941.  He is buried on the Faroe
> Islands.
>
>    Jimmy Walsh of Raheen Road lost his life early during the Second
> World War when his ship, a merchantman, was sunk by a torpedo.  It is
> said that in his house was a picture of a sailor returning home with
> his bag over his shoulder and his family running to greet him.  On the
> night that Jimmy died at sea, the picture fell off the wall for no
> apparent reason  --  the cord had not broken and the nail was still
> firmly stuck in the wall.
>
> Bill Kelly of Market Square was killed when his vessel, the
> ‘Swiftpool’ was bombed while moored on the Thames river.
>
>
> Maurice Cooney of Kent Street, on another merchantman, was killed by U
> boat action in 1941.
>
>
> Tommy Mulcahy of Market Square died on the ‘Kingston Hill’ after it
> was torpedoed in 1941.  He was engaged to be married.
>
> John Ronayne of South Cross Road was in the merchant navy and was lost
> as a result of U boat action early in the war.
>
> Edward Fowkes of Ashe Street was on the ‘Shakespeare’ during an
> aircraft attack on the ship.  He was killed on deck.
>
> Peter Lynch of Church Street lost his life when ‘S.S. Milos’ was
> torpedoed and sunk in 1942.  His parents later lived in the house
> which had been the Fever Hospital at Raheen Road.
>
>    Alfie Hartnett of Barrys Lane was on the ‘Irish Pine’ when it was
> sunk by U-608 in the North Atlantic in 1942.  The ‘Irish Pine’ was
> clearly showing neutral markings and was lit up to show the Irish
> connection.  It was a bad decision on the part of the U boat captain.
>
> Connie Glavin of Cork Hill died when his vessel the ‘S.S. Miriam
> Thomas’ was run over by an American troop ship in the Irish Sea.
> There was no survivor from Connie’s ship after that calamity.
>
> Eddie Glavin of Cork Hill, Connie’s brother, died when his ship was
> torpedoed, just three days out of New Zealand, in 1943.
>
> Michael Lynch of Kent Street fell ill on board his ship ‘S.S. British
> Renown’ in 1944 and died.  He is buried on the Isle of Wight.
>
> Paddy McGrath of Strand Street died when the ‘S.S. Empire Heritage’
> was sunk by a mine in 1944.  He had earlier survived two sinkings by
> torpedo in the North Atlantic.
>
> More Youghal Seaman Lost
>
>    Captain William O’Brien of The Mall was drowned when he fell
> overboard at Greens Quay from the ‘Rob Roy’ in 1900.  It seems that he
> had been asleep in his bunk for awhile before he awoke to find the
> ship ranging (beginning to tug) at her ropes due to a build-up of sea
> swell.  A storm was imminent!  William got up to adjust the fenders of
> the vessel, ensuring that it would not damage itself against the quay
> wall.  Tragically, in the process, he fell overboard and was drowned.
>
>    Another Captain, William Jones of Friar Street, was lost from the
> ‘S.S.’ Athena’ as the vessel navigated the Majellan Straits in
> Southern Argentina.  It happened in 1904, ten years before the opening
> of the Panama Canal.  At that time, the only way from the Pacific
> Ocean to the Atlantic for large ships was around Cape Horn, or via the
> nearby Majellan Straits for smaller ones.
>
>
>
>
>    When the ‘Hiland Mar’ went onto the rocks at Ardo Head near Ardmore
> in 1894, it cost the lives of two Youghal sailors.  They were named as
> seamen Bennet and Fenton and both were from the Windmill Hill area.
> The ‘Hiland Mar’ was carrying steel for an extension to the Youghal
> Brickworks on that ill-fated voyage.  The skipper  --  Captain Nagle
> of The Mall  --  escaped by climbing the cliffs to reach the nearby
> house of the Terry family.
>
>
>    In the second half of the last century, two disasters in Ardmore cost
> the lives of four of their salmon fishermen.  On both occasions, the
> boats overturned.  Lost to the sea in 1982 were:  Liam Lincoln and Tom
> Morrissey of Ardmore.
> Then in 1995 cousins  Paul Dunne and Edmond Fitzgerald also died in
> similar circumstances when they drowned while salmon fishing at
> Ardmore.
>    God grant peace to all their souls.

Anna Haslam and the Quakers of Piltown and Youghal

My god friend Mike Hackett who resides this side of Youghal Bridge is Youghl's foremost Historian. Mike has several books behind him And...