- SS Georgia
The SS Georgia was a tanker lost off the coast of
Norfolk, England atHaisborough Sands in 1927.It began life as hull No 82 in the shipyard of the Newport News Ship Building and Dry Dock Company of Newport News,
Virginia in the United States of America. She was ordered in 1907 by the Texas Co Inc of Port Arthur,Texas , U.S.A.She was first given the name “Texas”. She was delivered on18 July 1908 and she successfully made her maiden voyage without incident. She was soon re-named and became the SS Georgia. In February 1918, while owned by the Texas Oil Company ofNew York City(Texaco ), the ship was inspected for possibleU.S. Navy service and assigned the registry ID 2316. Though the Navy ordered her acquisition, this action was cancelled shortly before11 November 1918 Armistice broughtWorld War I ’s fighting to an end, and she remained in commercial service. In 1922 it was reported that the ship's name had been changed to the SS Texaco. She then passed into new ownership and was again re-named back to the SS Georgia. Her new owners were the M.V. Dutch Tanker & Oil Company Ltd., ofAmsterdam , in theNetherlands . Her home port was nowRotterdam .Final Voyage
In September 1927 the Tanker SS Georgia was at the port of
Abadan in theKhuzestan province in south westernIran (Persia). Here she took on a cargo ofcrude oil and she set off on here voyage bound for the port ofGrangemouth ,Scotland , to the Oil Refinery located there. ByNovember 20 she was caught in a vicious gale in theNorth Sea with the consequence that the ships steering gear broke. With the crew having no control of her, just before midnight, she ran aground on Haisborough Sands and was stuck solid. So sudden and violent was the impact when she ran aground, theradio operator had been unable to send a distress call out on the radio as theaerial s had been carried away by the storm. For several hours she was bumped and pounded as the heavy sea battered her hull. Eventually the hull was ripped apart amidship. She was still sounding her siren as a distress signal, but the two halves slowly drifted apart and were soon out of sight of each other, the stern section being carried away by the force of thegale . The bow section remained stuck on the sand bank with huge seas washing over it. The bow section had the captain, Harry Kissing and fourteen of the crew all crouched in the Fo’c’s’le. The other sixteen members of the crew were in the adriftstern section. The next morning (21 November ) the steamer "Trent" spotted the drifting stern section and lifted the 16 crewmen to safety. The "Trent" then steamed on to the Bow section stuck on the sand bank. In the meantime the stern section had drifted North West and was spotted offCromer .Henry Blogg Coxswain of the Cromer Lifeboat H F Baily, attending to the stern reported at 3.15 p.m. that the ship had been abandoned although at this time they were unaware that the ship was in two halves as the stern was creeping higher and higher into the air. The Cromer lifeboat attended the stern section all that night warning shipping of the danger. Back at the Bow section theGreat Yarmouth coastguard had learned of the disaster at 9 p.m. and theGorleston Lifeboat had been called to assist. The ‘Trent’ had wirelessed a message to warn that it was to dangerous to approach the stricken stern and it made for Cromer to land the rescued men from the stern.On the morning of the 22nd of November the Gorleston lifeboat attempted to rescue the remain 15 crew, now taking shelter in the Chartroom, the highest point on the ship out of the water. Coxswain Fleming tried to use the Lee provided by the close by "Trent" but with the seas still heavy this proved to still be to dangerous, and she stood off to wait until conditions improved. Another attempt was made midday and on the fifth attempt managed to get a line to the stranded section. Hopes were dashed when a huge wave picked up the lifeboat and dropped her in a trough which snapped the line. The Gorleston boat then developed engine trouble and dropped away from the rescue. It wasn’t until around 4.30pm that the crew were finally rescued by the exhausted crew of the Cromer lifeboat. Blogg and his crew had stood by the stern all night and then after returning to Cromer, were immediately called back out to attend the bow section. The H F Bailey was considerably damaged in the rescue but safely got her crew and the rescued men back to Great Yarmouth by 7 pm. Both sections sank beneath the waves in the following days.Position of the wrecks today
Stern Section
*52° 58. 36 north, 001° 21. 37 east at a depth of 17 meters.Bow Section
*52° 52. 54 north, 001° 45. 76 east at a depth of 10 meters, on Haisborough Sands.References
*Jolly, Cyril (1981): "The Loss of the English Trader" Acorn Editions. ISBN 0-906554-06-3
*Jolly, Cyril "Henry Blogg, the Greatest of the Lifeboatmen", Pub: Poppyland Publishing, new edition 2002, ISBN 0-946148-59-7
*Leach, Nicholas & Russell, Paul,"Cromer Lifeboats 1804-2004", Pub: Tempus Publishing, 2004, ISBN 0-7524-3197-8
*Tikus, Ayer (2004): "The Ship-wrecks off North East Norfolk" Pub: Ayer Tikus Publications, ISBNExternal links
* [http://www.cromerlifeboats.org.uk/07/index.php The Cromer Lifeboat]
* [http://www.rnli.org.uk/rnli_near_you/east/stations/CromerNorfolk/ Cromer Lifeboat Station]
* [http://freespace.virgin.net/david.cragie/cromershed.html The Old Cromer Lifeboat Shed]
* [http://www.nationalhistoricships.org.uk/index.cfm/event/getVessel/vref/1446 H F Bailey Lifeboat]
* [http://www.cromerlifeboats.org.uk/Gallery/Imagegal/thumbnails.php?album=31 Lifeboat Museum Gallery]
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