View Document - A Living Archives
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View Document - A Living Archives
I-'^J m^l±\ By Adele TownsKend A crew of workmen pose for the camera aboard the Turret Bell during one of the salvage attempts. Prelude: The Ugly Duckling A s ships go, the Turret Bell was an ugly duckling. Her unattractiveness did not lay so much in her dimensions (2211 gross tons, with a length of 237 feet, and a beam of 40 feet), as in her appearance. She was, in fact, a freak of naval architecture, something called a whaleback steamer. The whaleback design had evolved on the Great Lakes in the 1890s. As the English marine magazine, Shipping Wonders of the World observes, the whaleback "was an extremely ugly ship, and looked as if she really were a whale as she lifted her almost cylindrical hull, with its blunt snout bow, out of the water. It was claimed that this hull would save forty per cent in fuel costs and sixty per cent in fuel, but at sea it was a failure and was scarcely more successful on the Great Lakes." The Turret Bell had shared in that failure. Launched from Newcastle-on-Tyne in 1894, she had been relegated by 1906 to coastal trading. Ironically, the Turret Bell's design, so disappointing to her builders, would save the lives of her captain, his wife, and twenty seamen. The vessel would endure a disastrous November gale and three winters of pounding seas on the north shore of Prince Edward Island. The Turret Bell may have been an ugly ship, but she was a survivor. She would sail again. Hard Aground The Turret Bell's ordeal began quietly in the late autumn of 1906. As her mas- ter, Captain Murcassen, directed her out of the port of Montreal and down the St. Lawrence out into the Gulf, he was expecting just another routine voyage, possibly his last of the season before the River froze over. His ship was en route to Port Hastings, Cape Breton, for a load of coal. The weather was good, the barometer steady. There was nothing to indicate trouble ahead, but trouble there was. As she entered the Gulf of St. Lawrence, the Turret Bell sailed straight into one of the worst storms in Island history. The high winds and strong current carried her far off her course, landing her bow foremost on a rocky ledge about 150 yards offshore at Cable Head, near St. Peter's. Fortunately, her whaleback hull kept her upright in the shallow water, despite the heavy seas. It was early Friday morning, November 2,1906. The Turret Bell was not alone in her plight. The Island newspapers of November 1906 carried serial accounts of the disasters at sea, beginning with the wreck of the Turret Bell, followed by the wrecks of the Orpheus on Saturday, November 3, the Olga on Monday, and the Sovinto, with the loss of ten seamen, on Tuesday, November 6.* In hindsight, there is something ominous about this storm that wrecked four ships on a 20-mile stretch of coastline from Cable Head to Priest Pond along the Island's North Shore. Both Captain Murcassen of the Turret Bell and Captain Wiglund of the Sovinto would testify at the inquiries into the wreck of their ships that the barometer gave no indication of a coming storm. The Guardian of November 5, states: "Even weather vanes were deceived. The barometer gave no warning; the weather possibilities conveyed no hint of more storms nor was the later outbreak preceded by the usual intimation sent here by the Weather Bureau in advance of every storm." Those who subscribed to the Daily Examiner must have been surprised as well. The weather report in the issue of the same date reads: "Fresh northwesterly winds, fair and cooler." In spite of weather reports, the storm lasted over two weeks, with high winds and a heavy rainfall of eight inches reported. *For more on this tragedy, see Mrs. Townshend's "The Wreck of the Sovinto" in Issue 4 (SpringSummer, 1978). A modern topographical map of Cable Head, where the Turret Bell came ashore. The Turret Bell Road (circled area) has been altered somewhat to accommodate modern cottage construction, but it still exists. 11 On the Rocks On that shipwreck morning of November 2, Earl MacEwen and his grandfather were pulling turnips on their farm in Greenwich, when they heard the repeated call of a ship's siren. Like their neighbours, they went to investigate. What they saw was described in that day's Daily Examiner, which ran this dramatic headline: "ASHORE AT CABLE HEAD. BIG LINER TURRET BELL ON ROCKS. DOUBTFUL IF SHE WILL BE ABLE TO GET OFF." The account continued: As a result of last night's storm, the large ocean steamship, Turret Bell of the Turret line ... is hard ashore off Cable Head. The steamer is firmly wedged upon a bottom of rock and is resting on an even keel. She is lying about 150 yards out from the shore and does not appear to be pounding. A very heavy sea is still running and, although there seems to be no danger of the steamer breaking up, yet the distance to which she has been driven in to the shore makes it look doubtful if she can be floated again. Owing to the heavy sea on, no communication has yet been made with the steamer from the shore and it has been impossible to launch a boat.... A large number of men went from Souris to Cable Head this morning but were unable to render assistance owing to the severity of the weather.... The next issue of the Daily Examiner carried the news that Hyndman and Company had asked the powerful tug, Douglas H. Thomas of Halifax to go to the assistance of the disabled ship. It added: "But there is little hope that the tug can get within a quarter of a mile of the Turret Bell, [as she is] lying well within the sandbar." The stricken vessel appeared to be doomed. On Saturday, November 3, Fred W. Hyndman of Hyndman and Company, underwriters for Lloyd's of London, made the trip to St. Peters and out to Cable Head. He found that Captain Murcassen of the steamer had established communications with those on shore by sending dispatches in a bottle. Murcassen requested assistance at once and asked that the owners of the ship, railway moguls MacKenzie and Mann of Montreal, and the charter company, the Inverness Railway and Coal Company of Port Hastings, Cape Breton, be notified. He advised that the crew were dry and comfortable, and that they had sufficient provisions on board. 12 For a brief time that Saturday, it appeared the storm had blown itself out, but as evening came, the wind began increasing in fury once again. The storm that interfered with communications between ship and shore also disrupted communications across the Island. When telephone lines went down on Wednesday, A. E. (Sandy) Clark, the PEIR station agent at Souris, relayed messages to and from the disaster areas. There was need. On Sunday night, the wind shifted to the north and the storm grew even wilder. An exceptionally high tide caught the Turret Bell up, turned her broadside, and drove her in 20 yards from the shore. There she lay, within a stone's throw of the bank, with the waves washing over her. Deep water, and safety, was farther away than ever. Monday morning it was possible to bridge the 20 yards with a cable, and Captain Murcassen came ashore in a boatswain's chair. In a telephone interview later that day, he told the Charlottetown Patriot that he did not know why he was so far off course. He reported that the steamer was leaking but he did not know the extent of the damage. "She is lying on rock bottom," he said, "and will likely sustain further damage if [the] weather continues stormy.... She is lying so close to shore her bow is dry when the undertow leaves her." That evening, the Captain's wife (a sister of Charlottetow n engineer H. F. Lawrence) also came ashore, but the crew remained on board until after the survey of the wreck, which took place on Tuesday. The examination was conducted for Lloyd's by Pope Walsh, assisted by Captain Brown of the steam ferry Stanley and Captain Taylor of the Gulnare. The next day, November 7, the Charlottetown Herald summarized the results: "They condemned the steamer which will be abandoned by the owners to the underwriters who will pay the insurance ($75,000) and dispose of the vessel as they see fit." With the storm well past, a supplement to the Patriot supplied further particulars on November 29: The "Turret Bell" was condemned . . . as a total wreck although, as will be seen in the picture, she was standing upright; but after she had stranded, there was 5 feet of water in the hold. As she was carried so far in, all hope of floating her has been abandoned, especially for this season. A man has been placed in charge and will remain until the underwriters have decided how they will dispose of the steamer. Many observers may have felt the Patriot's story marked the end of the Turret Bell. In fact, her story was just beginning. Salvage-tion For three years, the Turret Bell was one of the greatest tourist attractions in Eastern Kings County. Anyone over the age of 85 in present-day St. Peters can recall being taken to see the big ship on the rocks. People came on foot and on horseback, by horse and carriage, and (a very few) by car. At first, they travelled north on the Greenwich Road to the dune area on the Gulf side of the St. Peters peninsula. Later, when efforts to re-float the ship got underway, a new road was cut through the woods on the Sutherland farm, at right angles to the Greenwich Road, to provide a more direct route to the site of the wreck. Besides conveying the curious, it was used to haul supplies and heavy equipment for the salvage effort. This clay road, which is still in use today, is known as the Turret Bell Road or, sometimes, the Haul Road. v i -f T &§&y'?.. IPtl fifi" T The Turret Bell became such a landmark that this photograph of salvers at work on the stranded steamer was turned into a postcard. Contemporary newspapers, which had reported the story of the Turret Bell's grounding, also chronicled the efforts to salvage her. During the summer of 1907, S. M. Brookfield of Halifax contracted to re-float the vessel. On July 19, the Charlottetown Watchman gave this account of the attempt: An effort is being made to float the Turret Bell. A gang of men started a few days ago to blast a channel 300 yards long, wide enough to let the steamer through and eight and a half feet deep. They having to dig through first two feet of rock, then one and a half feet of brick clay and rock again [sic]. It is also proposed to dig a trench around the steamer. She lies parallel and close to the bankf,] which is about twelve feet high[,] in a gully between two reefs. Her bow is dry at low tide and there is about one and a half feet of water at her stern at high tide. The salvage effort was a complete failure. The ship did not budge and again spent the winter on the rocks. The following summer, the James Reid Wrecking Company of Sarnia, Ontario, took on the task. Captain James Reid Sr. undertook to float the ship on a percentage of the value on delivery, the amount to be determined by the salvers and the insurers, Lloyd's of London. Freeman Leslie of St. Peters Bay worked with the Reid Company crew to free the Turret Bell. Six decades later, he described the salvage operation for Guardian columnist Neil A. Matheson. Jacks were employed, Leslie remembered: "The ship was lifted up to the limit of the height of the jacks, and then a powerful tug would pull the ship in the direction of the water until she was back on the ground again. Then the operation of jacking her up would start all over again." Progress was slow. By September 18, the steamship had been moved seaward 13 feet. By October 31, she was out 100 feet and into a depth of 7 feet of water. The Guardian for November 13, 1908 noted, "She is now in good water but as she is on a sandstone ledge the greatest care has to be used in any efforts that are made to float her into deep water." As autumn gave way to winter, the salvage attempt became a race with time, weather, and tides. Lolly ice was forming around Island wharves when the Guardian published this update on December 7: "The Turret Bell' has not moved her position in the last ten days, as it was too rough for the tug to get around the north side with coal. Now that the weather has moderated, the prospects for floating her are more favourable/' Eleven days later, the Guardian carried the good news that the Turret Bell had been successfully jacked off the rocks and was 700 feet from shore in seven and a half feet of water at low tide. Her bow, which had been pointing southwest, was now swung around to the northeast — the direction she would take when towed around East Point to Charlottetown. But the final step would have to wait until spring. It was too late in the season to risk the voyage. So, the Turret Bell was pumped full of water to anchor her in place, and a man was assigned to live onboard over the winter. The Turret Bell's rescue was now a matter of time. The winter passed without incident. As early as May 17, 1909, Captain Reid of the Reid Wrecking Company was in the province to supervise the Turret Bell's removal to Charlottetown. However, fate kept to her own timetable. On May 26, the Guardian reported that the wrecking tug James Reid had met with an accident to her machinery at Mulgrave. She had to be towed to Pictou for what proved time-consuming repairs. Finally, on Sunday, July 31,1909, at 3 a.m., the Turret Bell left Cable Head in tow of the James Reid. Despite her long entrapment, the whaleback steamer had steam up in her boilers and was able to operate her donkey engines and steer herself. After a brief stop in Souris, tug and tow arrived in Charlottetown that evening at 8 o'clock. Epilog: "A Matter of General Comment" Among the crowd on the Marine Wharf waiting for the Turret Bell's arrival that July evening was the Lloyd's agent, Fred Hyndman, and his young grandson, Walter. As his grandfather inspected the ship, Walter remembers peeling large flakes of rust off her hull. Amazingly enough, except for being badly rusted, the Turret Bell was in sound condition after her three years at Cable Head. It was a great day for both the insurers and the salvers: Lloyd's would eventually recoup a large portion of their loss, and Captain Reid stood to receive a profitable percentage of the ship's value. Reid was the man of the hour in Charlottetown during the week that Bruce Stewart and Company made temporary repairs to the Turret Bell. On August 5, the Guardian remarked, "The Turret Bell' is the only vessel that has ever been salved after stranding on the North Shore of the Province and the successful achievement by Captain Reid who got her off last week * t ••BE S9 il_ Freeman Leslie of St. Peters Bay, shown here during the 1960s, was one of the crew hired by the Reid Wrecking Company to help float the Turret Bell. is a matter of general comment." Meanwhile, Stewart and Company reported the ship "to be salved in remarkably Good condition." On August 13, the Turret Bell, again under tow, left Charlottetown for Quebec. After further repairs, she would return to the shipping lanes — none the worse for having been "wrecked." The ugly duckling had survived. Sources Many stories about the wreck and salving of the Turret Bell have been handed down by word of mouth. Over the years, some of these have become vague and distorted — none more so than the version I grew up with: that the ship had been hauled overland to Souris for some reason. I realize now that this misconception grew out of the name "Haul Road" and the fact that the ship, in tow, made a stop at Souris Harbour en route to Charlottetown. Fortunately, period n e w s p a p e r s at the Public Archives of Prince Edward Island and the Confederation Centre Library contain numerous references to the wreck and salving of this unusual ship. I have enjoyed talking with many people in the Morell-St. Peters area and wish to thank the following for their assistance: Fred MacEwen, Alexie MacLaine, Harold Lewis, Roddy Pratt, and J. F. W. Sutherland, as well as Miles Matheson and Allie Maclsaac of the Department of Fisheries in Morell, where a large, framed picture of the Turret Bell (taken from a Morley Acorn postcard) hangs in the office. I also want to thank Walter and Fred Hyndman for the use of the pictures of the Turret Bell and Mrs. Mickey Burge for the use of the picture of her grandfather, Freeman Leslie. iSi 13