Mary Toovey
Thanks again for some great video Mat
SS Mary Toovey sailed from Guernsey for London with a cargo of stone and was reported missing presumed sunk on the 10th November 1899. Ships life boat washed ashore at Stourville near Cherbourg on the 13th She was owned by W. H. Poole of Newcastle, UK.
Name: | MARY TOOVEY |
Type: | Cargo Ship |
Launched: | 31/05/1894 |
Completed: | 06/1894 |
Builder: | Wood, Skinner & Co Ltd |
Yard: | Bill Quay |
Yard | 52 |
Dimensions: | 226grt, 133nrt, 120.2 x 21.2 x 9.0ft |
Engines: | C2cyl (16 & 32 x 22ins), 45rhp |
Engines by: | North-Eastern Marine Engineering Co Ltd, Sunderland |
Propulsion: | 1 x Screw |
Construction: | Steel |
Reg Number: | 104254 |
History: | Alfred F Toovey (WH Poole), |
06/1894 | Newcastle |
10/11/1899 | Missing |
Divers..
Mat
Moley
Paul
Phil
| |
Whilst descending down the line, we were rewarded by excellent under water visibility, with the line clearly visible plunging away down into the depths. Dropped to around 40 meters and there was nothing (no wreck). I was just about to abort the dive after a quick scout around when a discarded crab pot caught my eye in the distance. As I got closer I could see the defined line of a structure about 10 meters away. As I got to it, it was obvious that it was the stern section of the Mary T. Soon the hazy outline of wreckage festooned with pout rose up from the bottom. The shot indeed had plunged into a low lying reef which this wreck has made her last resting place. It was time to go to work and get the shot tied in by the vessels boiler. The wreck itself has clearly been the subject to time, tide and it's impact with sea floor. Today, much of the deck plating lies collapsed on the rocky seabed. It is however still possible to swim along the line of the wreckage and peer down and make out the curve of the underside of the hull as it sinks down into the bottom. The remains of the boiler and propeller shaft can easily be followed back to the stern area of this vessel. Propeller are still in place with its three blades at the end of the shaft along with the ships rudder. Drifting back along the wreckage one soon comes across the remains of the steam compound engine still standing proud from the hull bottom, close by are the remains of a sizable ships boilers. Continuing forward the wreckage continues for a short distance but seems to be much more broken up and dispersed than the rear end of the vessel. Nevertheless this area of the site still provides an interesting area to rummage around its cargo of granite chippings. The bow section must of sustained some heavy damage as it hit the sea bed on sinking as its cargo of stone has spilling out of the hold on impact and spread out over the sea floor. A few minutes later, a large shadow loomed up ahead. On approach it was evident that it was a windlass, and a large one. It rose off the bottom 4-5ft. A quick inspection for lobster came up blank. After a complete loop around spending 20 minutes on the bottom I headed back home and started the long slow ascent to the surface. With everyone safely aboard, Silvia K headed home back through the pier heads with the last rays of the afternoon sun dramatically illuminating the remains of Castle Cornet that overlooks St Peter Port . A picturesque end to an afternoons diving, which to begin with had looked unpromising.
Wood, Skinner and Co. Shipyard, Bill Quay, 1907 |
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