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HMS Captain - Lost 1870 - Memorials

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Elizabeth

Elizabeth Report 1 Jul 2007 21:06

For information: Perhaps in one of the British Royal Navy’s greatest peacetime losses, HMS Captain, an experimental ship, capsized during her trials in the Bay of Biscay, on 7th September 1870, with only 18 survivors out of a crew of over 500. The capsizing occurred during a storm, described by those on traditional ships in the same fleet as unexceptional, and created a public outcry and nationwide sympathy for the bereaved. The most tangible memorial to the disaster today comprises two large plaques in St Paul’s Cathedral in London, one giving the official account of the disaster, with a list of the ship’s officers, and the other listing the seamen, Royal Marines and boys who died. Many descendants of survivors, relying on word-of-mouth family history stories, are interested in the details of the accident, and the records of both those lost and the very few who survived. Some have been in touch with each other, and exchanged information, and the primary purpose of this web-site is to make available to all existing and new investigators any information available. It may, of course, be of interest to naval historians as well.

Elizabeth

Elizabeth Report 1 Jul 2007 19:36

My great-great-grandfather James Purkis was a shipwright in the Royal Naval Dockyards in Portsmouth. His brother ALFRED PURKIS was one of the crew of HMS Captain who perished when the vessel was lost. The following website gives details of the loss and of the memorials. Navigate around the site to find other informaton. http://www(.)hmscaptain(.)co(.)uk/Listing%20of%20Memorials/listingofmemorials.htm I don't know if anyone here is interested, but there might be someone's forefathers listed.

Elizabeth

Elizabeth Report 1 Jul 2007 19:32

see below