SS Valencia

SS Valencia

The SS "Valencia" was an iron-hulled passenger steamer wrecked off the coast of Vancouver Island, British Columbia in 1906. Built in 1882 by William Cramp and Sons, she was 252 feet (77 m) in length and weighed 1,598 tons.cite web
last = McClary
first = Daryl C.
title = Wreck of the SS Valencia
date = 2005-07-29
url = http://www.historylink.org/essays/output.cfm?file_id=7382
accessdate = 2006-08-26
] Some consider the wreck of the "Valencia" to be the worst maritime disaster on the southwest coast of Vancouver Island, an area so treacherous it was known to mariners as the Graveyard of the Pacific.cite book
last = Paterson
first = T. W.
title = British Columbia Shipwrecks
url = http://collections.ic.gc.ca/folklore/ocean/wreck/valencia.htm
accessdate = 2006-08-26
year = 1967
publisher = Stagecoach Publishing
location = Langley, BC
pages = 72-76
] cite web
last = Scott
first = R. Bruce
coauthors = A.G. Brown
title = The History of the Sinking of the Valencia
work = Breakers Ahead
url = http://www.bamfieldarts.com/pages/6/index.htm
accessdate = 2006-08-26
]

Final Voyage

The "Valencia" normally served the CaliforniaAlaska route. She was not equipped with a double bottom and like other early iron steamers, her hull compartmentalization was primitive. [Newell, Gordon R., "H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest", at page 124, Superior Publishing, Seattle, WA 1966] In January 1906, however, she was temporarily diverted to the San Francisco–Seattle route to take over from the SS "City of Puebla", which was undergoing repairs in San Francisco. The weather in San Francisco was clear, and the "Valencia" set off on January 20 at 11:20 AM with nine officers, 56 crew members and at least 108 passengers aboard. ] As she passed by Cape Mendocino in the early morning hours of January 21, the weather took a turn for the worse. Visibility was low and a strong wind started to blow from the southeast.

Unable to make celestial observations, the ship's crew was forced to rely on dead reckoning to determine their position. ] Out of sight of land, and with strong winds and currents, the "Valencia" overshot the entrance to the Strait of Juan de Fuca by more than 20 miles (30 km). Shortly before midnight on January 22, she struck a reef near Pachena Point on the southwest coast of Vancouver Island.

Collision and Disaster

Immediately after the collision, the captain ordered her engines reversed. As soon as she was clear of the rocks, crew members reported a large gash in the hull into which water was pouring rapidly. To prevent her from sinking, the captain ordered her run aground, and she was driven into the rocks again. She was left stranded in sight of the shore, separated from it by 50 metres of heavy surf. ]

In the ensuing confusion, six of the ship's seven lifeboats were lowered into the water against the captain's orders, all of them improperly manned. Three flipped while being lowered, spilling their occupants into the ocean; of the three that were successfully launched, two capsized and one disappeared. The scene at the wreck was horrific, as one of the few survivors, Chief Freight Clerk Frank Lehn recounted:

Only 12 men made it to shore, and of those three were washed away by the waves after landing. The remaining nine men scaled the cliffs and found a telegraph line strung between the trees. They followed the line through thick forest until they came upon a lineman's cabin, from which they were able to summon help. ]

Meanwhile, the ship's boatswain and a crew of volunteers had been lowered in the last remaining lifeboat with instructions to find a safe landing place and return to the cliffs to receive a lifeline from the ship. Upon landing, they discovered a trail and a sign reading "Three miles to Cape Beale." Abandoning the original plan, they decided to head toward the lighthouse on the cape, where they arrived after 2 ½ hours of hiking. The lighthouse keeper phoned Bamfield to report the wreck, but the news had already arrived and been passed on to Victoria. ] This last group of survivors was "well-nigh crazed" by their last sight of the remaining stranded passengers cquote|the brave faces looking at them over the broken rail of a wreck and of the echo of that great hymn sung by the women who, looking death smilingly in the face, were able in the fog and mist and flying spray to remember: "Nearer, My God, to thee". [Clarence H Baily, "The Wreck of the Valencia", in Pacific Monthly, March 1906, pp 281, quoted by Richard Howells "The Myth of the Titanic", ISBN 0333725972]

Rescue Efforts

Once word of the disaster reached Victoria, three ships were dispatched to rescue the survivors. The largest was the passenger liner SS "Queen"; accompanying her were the salvage steamer "Salvor" and the tug "Czar". Another steamship, the SS "City of Topeka", was later sent from Seattle with a doctor, nurses, medical supplies, members of the press, and a group of experienced seamen. On the morning of January 24, the "Queen" arrived at the site of the wreck, but was unable to approach due to the severity of the weather and lack of depth charts. Seeing that it would not be possible to approach the wreck from the sea, the "Salvor" and "Czar" set off to Bamfield to arrange for an overland rescue party. ]

Upon seeing the "Queen", the "Valencia"'s crew launched the ship's two remaining life rafts, but the majority of the passengers decided to remain on the ship, presumably believing that a rescue party would soon arrive. Approximately one hour later, the "City of Topeka" arrived and, like the "Queen", was unable to approach the wreck. The "Topeka" cruised the waters off the coast for several hours searching for survivors, and eventually came upon one of the life rafts carrying 18 men. No other survivors were found, and at dark the captain of the "Topeka" called off the search. The second life raft eventually drifted ashore on an island in Barkley Sound, where the four survivors were found by the island's First Nations and taken to a village near Ucluelet. ]

When the overland party arrived at the cliffs above the site of the wreck, they found dozens of passengers clinging to the rigging and the few unsubmerged parts of the "Valencia"'s hull. Without any remaining lifelines, however, they could do nothing to help the survivors, and within hours a large wave washed the wreckage off the rocks and into the ocean. Every remaining passenger drowned. ]

Investigation and Aftermath

Within days of the disaster, the US Marine Inspection Service launched an investigation into the incident. A second investigation was launched by President Theodore Roosevelt. Its purpose was twofold: one, to determine the causes of the disaster; and two, to recommend how to avoid such loss of life in the future. The investigation ran from February 14 to March 1, 1906, and the final report was published on April 14, 1906. The reports agreed on the causes of the disaster – navigational mistakes and poor weather. Safety equipment was, for the most part, in working order, but lifeboat drills had not been carried out. According to the report, the crew of the rescuing vessels did as much to help the "Valencia" as could be expected under the circumstances. ]

The loss of life was attributed to a series of unfortunate coincidences, aggravated by a lack of lifesaving infrastructure along Vancouver Island's coast. The federal report called for the construction of a lighthouse between Cape Beale and Carmanah Point, and the creation of a coastal lifesaving trail with regularly spaced shelters for shipwrecked sailors. It also recommended that surfboats be stationed at Tofino and Ucluelet and that a well-equipped steamboat be stationed at Bamfield. The Canadian government immediately set to work building a lighthouse and trail; in 1908, the Pachena Point Lighthouse was lit, and in 1911 work on the trail – later known as the West Coast Trail – was completed. ] cite news
last = Sykes
first = Karen
title = A walk on the wild side
publisher = Seattle Post-Intelligencer
date = 1997-07-17
url = http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/getaways/071797/west17.html
accessdate = 2006-08-26
]

Estimates of the number of lives lost in the disaster vary widely; some sources list it at 117, while others claim it was as high as 181. ] cite press release
publisher = Oregon State University
date = 2002-07-24
url = http://oregonstate.edu/dept/ncs/newsarch/2002/Jul02/maritime.htm
title = New OSU Press Book Looks at Northwest Maritime Disasters
accessdate = 2006-08-26
] According to the federal report, the official death toll was 136 persons. Only 37 men survived, and every woman and child on the "Valencia" died in the disaster.

In 1933, 27 years after the disaster, the "Valencia"'s lifeboat #5 was found floating in Barkley Sound. Remarkably, it was in good condition, with much of the original paint remaining. ] cite news
last = Brodeur
first = Nicole
title = Maritime safety owes debt to Valencia victims
publisher = Seattle Times
date = 2006-01-10
url = http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nicolebrodeur/2002730479_brodeur10m.html
accessdate = 2006-08-26
] The boat's nameplate is now on display in the Maritime Museum of British Columbia. ]

The "Valencia"'s dramatic end has made it the subject of several local rumours and ghost stories. Five months after the incident, a local fisherman claimed to have seen a lifeboat with eight skeletons in a nearby sea cave, but the party dispatched to investigate was unable to locate the cave. In 1910, the Seattle Times reported that sailors claimed to have seen a phantom ship resembling the "Valencia" near Pachena Point. ]

ee also

* Shipwreck
* Pacific Rim National Park Reserve
* The Flying Dutchman
* Ghost ship

References


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