A Liverpool bound ship sank off the coast of Cornwall in 1868, leading to the loss of nineteen lives including the captain and fifteen passengers.
On Thursday 21st May that year the 499 tonne steamer Garonne sailed from Bordeaux in France for Liverpool. The vessel belonged to Liverpool company James Moss & Co and was of modern design, being less than two years old and consisting of water tight compartments.
Commanded by forty five year old Captain Benjamin Drew, the ship was carrying a cargo of wine and brandy, as well as seventeen passengers who and twenty one other crew members. Amongst the passengers was Glaswegian gentleman James Muir, who was travelling with his wife, four young children and two nurses as he was in delicate health.
The Garonne was rounding the Cornish coast on the Friday night with the captain and lookouts anxiously trying to catch sight of Longships lighthouse, about a mile off Lands End. It was a breezy night and the ship ran aground on a reef, despite the best efforts of the engineer to turn and reverse when it was spotted.
With the exception of Mr Turner who was bedbound with consumption, all passengers were quickly gathered on deck as fire took hold in the engine rooms. Distress flares were set off but although two nearby vessels responded, it was too dangerous to get close to the Garonne due to the rocks. Crew members desperately tried to float dingys but struggled as the first they came across contained a cargo of peas. As they were clearing these out, waves were overwhelming the vessel and many of the passengers were swept away. It was for this reason that only two of the passengers, Mr Muir and one of his sons, were saved.
Eighteen of the crew were able to escape in lifeboats but Captain Drew refused to join them and remained on the quarter-deck. He was washed away and his body was recovered the following morning. Three other crew members also drowned including chief steward John Niblock whose wife was due to give birth at any time. A fund was set up for the widow of John Niblock, administered by the incumbent of St Stephen’s church in Byrom Street.
On 18th June Mrs Niblock gave birth to a son, a week before the Board of Trade enquiry concluded that Captain Drew was to blame for the disaster. Their report stated that he had been sailing too fast during the dark and then failed to give proper orders when the vessel floundered. However it was stressed that they were at pains to come to this conclusion, as he had always been a competent captain and had sailed the return route on twenty seven previous occasions. Praise was given to the second mate for his role in trying to save passengers and the state of the dingy was criticised, along with the lack of oars and rudders. The committee recommended that cork jackets be kept on ships in future and determined that the captain and first mate could have chosen to get into boats to save themselves but didn’t do so.
Not all the bodies were recovered and that of another steward William Moss, was not interred in Anfield cemetery until 24th July. At the end of August an auction took place at Penzance of all cargo that was salvaged, including 182 hogsheads of wine. What remains of the Garonne now lie a few metres below the surface of the Outer Bucks, a popular diving location off Cornwall.
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Clive Richardson says
Captain Drew is my great great grandfather so I am interested if you have any more information on him. He was buried in Mevagissey but shipwrecked off Penzance which is odd. I cannot find his birth record but there is a Benjamin Drew born in Mevagissey so maybe that is the answer.
Steven Horton says
Hi Clive according to the North Devon Journal of 25th May 1868 the captain of the vessel was Benjamim Drew who was about 50 years of age and a resident of Mevagissey. His body washed ashore at Gwithian on 4th July that year.
Clive Richardson says
Thanks Steven. All of his three children were born in Liverpool (Benjamin 1864, Henry 1866 and Joseph 1867) but, with your information, it seems 99% certain that he is the Benjamin Drew born in Mevagissey on 20/8/1822, baptised 12/1/1823 in Mevagissey. Do you have a link that I can look at the North Devon Journal report that you mention? Thanks.
Steven Horton says
It was the Royal Cornwall Gazette, I’ll email it to you.
Jean Milne says
The Thursday 28 May 1868 issue of “The Globe & Traveller” page 1 [newspaper online at FindMyPast]
“Further Information is reported respecting the wreck of the Garonne and the fate of the drowned. The bodies of Captain Benjamin Drew, Messrs. Alexander and William Turner, and of the Misses Mary Henderson McEwan and Jessie Ferguson McEwan, having been recovered at Lamorna; of Daniel and James McEwan, little boys, at Mousehole; and of Madeline, a French nurse, engaged by Mrs McEwan at Pau, off Penzance. Inquests have been held on the same before Mr. Roscorla. The jury returned a verdict of Accidentally Drowned. At the inquest on Tuesday on Madeline, Captain Nicholas Pentreath was foreman of the jury and the verdict was Found Drowned. On Tuesday there was picked up near Lamorna the body of a young man of about twenty, 5ft in or 10 in high, dressed in a white shirt and grey woollen trousers. He has a slight reddish moustache, and has tatooed in ink on his left arm two anchors reversed, and the letters “R.T.”…It is generally supposed that this is Taylor, the second steward.”