"Ships" feature in this week’s Sepia Saturday prompt photograph - a theme I featured earlier this year HERE. So this time I am taking a look at the lives of my husband's ancestors who were 19th century mariners, who sailed out of the River Tyne at South Shields, County Durham in north eat England.
Great Great Great Grandfather - Robert Donaldson, Master Mariner (1801-1878)
Mariner
records at the National Archives at Kew showed that Robert Donaldson
was registered as a mariner on 20th July 1852.
Tyne
and Wear Archives provided information on the sea-going life of Robert Donaldson and the ships he sailed
on, listed in "“A Dictionary of Tyne Sailing Ships: a record of
merchant sailing ships owned, registered and built at the Port of Tyne
1830-1930”, compiled by Richard Keys. This is
a complete A-Z of Ships, master mariners and owners, detailing ships,
voyages, disasters and share-ownerships, and much more - a must for
anyone with maritime ancestors in this region.
The
entries make fascinating reading, with all six ships on which Robert
Donaldson sailed, having an eventful history and coming to a sad end - though not under his charge.
- The Thetis became a wreck after sinking off the Yorkshire coast in 1869.
- The John was stranded in 1861 and became a wreck during a severe easterly gale. Twenty-eight other Tyne ships went ashore in the same area during the same gale.
- The Emerald, in December 1855, when on passage from the Tyne to London, foundered in five fathoms on the Dough Sand (Long Sand) Thames estuary. Three survivors were brought ashore by two Bridlington smacks. Eleven others were unaccounted for, including some of the crew of the rescuing smack who were in a small boat, which disappeared.
- The Hebe was wrecked in Robin Hood’s Bay, along with other vessels on 27 January 1861. The Ann & Elizabeth disappeared after leaving the Tyne in November 1863, with her captain leaving a wife and six children.
- The William Metcalfe was Robert Donaldson's largest ship. On her maiden voyage, it transported 240 male convicts from Portsmouth to Hobart,TAsmania on a passage that took 102 days. In January 1855 eight of her crew were sent to goal for three months each by the North Shields magistrates for refusing duty. In October 1858 her master and one man were washed overboard. Nine days later, the ship was abandoned, with the crew taken off.
These incidents were by no means unusual and bring home the hazards our mariner ancestors faced in their daily lives.
Great Great Grandfather John Robert Moffet (1814-1881)
John Robert Moffet in a Napoleonic pose - the only photograph I have of my husband's mariner ancestors - shared with me by internet contact who was also a descendant of John.
John's family originated from Tynmouuth, north of the river Tyne, with his father Robert and brother William both mariners. Two puzzles about the family remain unanswered. John was born in Chatham, the site of the Royal Navy dockyard on the River Medway on the south of England. What had brought his family there? John's wife Frances Dunn Thomas, daughter and widow of a mariner, had three children, with two born in the USA. It would be wonderful to find the background to that, but nigh impossible without any indication of which state. The family first settled in the London docklands area before returning to South Shields..
In the 1861 Census, John was listed as master of "The Brotherly Love" sailing off Flamborough Head in the North Sea. The crew of eight included three young apprentices, four seamen, and a mate, with most born in South Shields.
llustration supplied by a Moffet descendant.
In South Shields Museum and Art Gallery, there is a portrait " The Brig "Brotherly Love" and the Tug "William" painted by John Scott (1802-1885).
Other mariner ancestors of my husband included, on his mother's side:
"The Shields Gazette" on (FindMyPast Newspaper Archive) abounds with headlines and reports on disasters at sea, storms and gales; the lifeboat responses. and the ensuing work of the Mariners' benevolent societies in helping families in distress. Below is one typical example. Did you know the very first liifebist ,,…..

their family history and memories through photographs.
Click HERE to see more posts from Sepia Saturday bloggers.




No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank you for your comment which will appear on screen after moderation.