This is a blog about the Bronte Sisters, Charlotte, Emily and Anne. And their father Patrick, their mother Maria and their brother Branwell. About their pets, their friends, the parsonage (their house), Haworth the town in which they lived, the moors they loved so much, the Victorian era in which they lived.
zondag 2 augustus 2020
Haworth's Titanic Disaster.
SS London
Foundered in the Bay of Biscay with about 230 souls, 11 January 1866.
Image from the John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland
Image from the John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland
This interesting story I received of J W Hartley who is living in Haworth
Next
to the parsonage garden wall there is a tabletop gravestone that can only
provide a memorial to one of the family members inscribed who remains missing
but not forgotten. William Hartley was Haworth’s postmaster who sat on the
committee of the Haworth Operative Conservative Society with Branwell Bronte
and John Brown the church sexton. They were also friends and enjoyed a drink
together, in fact William Hartley and his family are buried next to John Brown
and his family. Reading the inscription on Willian Hartley’s gravestone gives
an insight into a harrowing story of the time.
His daughter Elizabeth Hartley worked as a maid for the Thomas family from Huddersfield. Her job as a maid offered up new and exciting opportunities as her employers the Thomas family were going to Australia and Elizabeth was invited to join them to continue her duties as maid or possibly for a holiday. She accepted the offer and on the 13th of December 1865 they boarded the Steam Ship London at the Gravesend Thames Estuary in Kent destined for Melbourne Australia and a new life.
The Steam Ship
London was a vessel of its time when technology moved in nautical engineering
from wind power to engine power. This is evident in the ships design as it was
a hybrid of both steam power and wind power combining three masts rigged with
sails and a two hundred horsepower steam engine that alone could propel the
ship at 9 knots. This made the ship fuel efficient as well as more reliable.
The ship delayed by bad weather left England late on the 5th of
January 1866 with 345 tons of iron for the railways, 263 passengers and crew
onboard including six stowaways, with the experienced Australian navigator
Captain Martin at the helm.
For
the next two days the SS London encountered heavy seas and bad weather, so bad
that on the 7th of January divine service was cancelled. For the
next couple of days, the SS London ploughed into a gale under the power of
steam at two knots in the Bay Of Biscay. On January the 9th the ship taking
crashing seas over the bows and had a lifeboat washed away forcing the captain
to turn around and return to England.
Captain Martin was now unknowingly
heading into the eye of a storm and on January the 10th still in the
Bay of Biscay the sea carried away another lifeboat, the jib-boom, the fore
topmast, all the rigs and gear leaving the SS London with steam power only. On
January the 11th an immense wave crashed on deck leaving water
pouring down the hatches and extinguishing the fires. The ship was now rolling
badly and wallowing helplessly, and the captain made the decision to abandon
ship. The remaining lifeboats launched were immediately swamped bar one saved for
crew members. Their efforts to cover up the engine room hatches with anything
they could and bail the water with pumps failed and as the water level in the
engine compartment was still rising. Captain Martin told his men “boys, you may
say your prayers”. Soon the SS London was sinking rapidly, and Captain Martin
ordered Mr Greenhill the ships engineer and eighteen others into the last
lifeboat telling him “your duty is done, mine is to remain here”. The captain
was asked again to board the lifeboat, but he replied “NO! I will go down with
the passengers, but I wish you God speed” he then threw a compass into the boat
and shouted their course “North North East To Brest!”.
The lifeboat drew away from the SS London as the passengers stood on deck singing the hymn Rock Of Ages and when the lifeboat got about 70 metres away the stern (back) of the SS London went under and the bows (front) rose high until the ships keel was visible throwing the passengers on deck into the water to be dragged down with the ship by the vortex. Greenhill and the eighteen others onboard the lifeboat were finally rescued by an Italian vessel, the Marianopole and taken to back to England.
The lifeboat drew away from the SS London as the passengers stood on deck singing the hymn Rock Of Ages and when the lifeboat got about 70 metres away the stern (back) of the SS London went under and the bows (front) rose high until the ships keel was visible throwing the passengers on deck into the water to be dragged down with the ship by the vortex. Greenhill and the eighteen others onboard the lifeboat were finally rescued by an Italian vessel, the Marianopole and taken to back to England.
There were just 19 survivors from the 263 passengers onboard with a
death toll of 244 including Mr James Thomas, Mrs Sarah Anne Thomas, their two
children Annie Mary Thomas and William Bradbury Thomas and their maid Elizabeth
Hartley of Haworth. Other passengers onboard included Gustavus Vaughan Brooke a
famous Irish Actor, John Debenham the son of the founder of Debenham department
stores, the wife and three children of Henry Brewer Chapman an attorney general
who introduced the secret ballot and John Woolley the first principal of the
University of Sydney Australia. Frederick Chapman whose mother, brother and
sisters were onboard the SS London when it sank to the depths in the Bay of
Biscay wrote of his mother having just inherited “a mass of diamonds” from his
Great Aunt Fanny that were with her on that fateful day.
An
inquest found that the SS London was overloaded and with heavy cargo that
blocked the scupper holes preventing drainage of seawater and made the ship too
low in the water. The disaster received global publicity in its time with
numerous accounts, survivor testaments, newspaper articles, a poem by William
Mcgonagll and some artistic interpretations. The case drew the attention of
Samuel Plimsoll who campaigned for compulsory standards in marine safety and in
1876 had the Plimsoll Line (a marking on the ships side specifying the maximum
load) made compulsory for British ships. Samuel Plimsoll’s campaigning for the
compulsory provision of lifeboats however was not introduced until the Titanic
catastrophe of 1912 after Samuel Plimsoll’s death in 1898.
The
newspaper Liverpool Mercury printed the following obituary on Tuesday the 25th
of January 1866
THOMAS,
HARTLEY, Jan 11th, lost at sea on board the steam ship London, James
Thomas Esq, late of London, formally of Huddersfield, Yorkshire, together with
Sarah Anne his wife and two children Annie Mary and William Bradbury, also
Elizabeth Hartley, for many years a most faithful and devoted servant of the
above.
Elizabeth
Hartley’s memorial inscription on her family’s gravestone next to the Parsonage
garden wall in St Michael And All Angels graveyard Haworth reads
Also
the memory of Elizabeth their daughter who was lost in the Steamship London
which was bound from London to Australia and foundered in the Bay of Biscay
January 11th 1866 aged 37 years.