- Yankee Gale
The Yankee Gale was a major storm in the
Gulf of St. Lawrence nearPrince Edward Island ,Canada , that began on the night ofOctober 3 1851 and continued for two days. In addition to local ships, the storm wrecked much of theNew England fishing fleet that was working in the waters, giving the gale its name. At least 74 ships were destroyed, and 150 crew were killed.General Description
A brassy appearance was witnessed in the northwest sky on the afternoon of
October 3 . Long swells start moving into theGulf of St. Lawrence from the southeast, as the wind begins to pick up out of the same quarter. The wind backed to the northeast that evening, increasing to gale force. Also, surface pressures across the region begin to fall rapidly, with one barometer on Nova Scotia falling 31 hPa or mb/neary 1 inch within 23 hours. The gales continued for nearly two days, according to one of the sea captain's logs from the area.Effects
On land, the cyclone had minimal effect. Out at sea, the storm was significantly more damaging. Ships at sea realized a storm was approaching, and tried to sail east of
Prince Edward Island . Northeast gales blocked their progress. Ships attempted to hold position, but their sails tore away in the wind and they drifted towards the island. Ships at anchor either sank at anchor or were capsized by other ships ramming them during the cyclone. Most of the American fishing fleet fell victim to the storm. At least 74 ships and 150 lives were lost. (Rousmaniere)References
World Wide Web
Printed Media
#John Rousmaniere. After the Storm: True Stories of Disaster and Recovery at Sea. McGraw-Hill Publishing, 2002.
External links
* [http://www.islandregister.com/yankeegale.html Contemporary accounts of the Yankee Gale]
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