The '
RMS ''Tayleur''' was a
fully-rigged iron clipper chartered by the
White Star Line and her fate would be a black mark on that company for years to come.
History
Construction
The ''Tayleur'' was designed by William Rennie of
Liverpool and built for owners Charles Moore & Company. When she was launched in
Warrington on the
River Mersey on
October 4,
1853 - it had taken just six months to build her - ''Tayleur'' was the largest merchant ship on the seas. She was 230 feet in length with a 40 foot
beam and displaced 1,750 tons, while 4,000 tons of cargo could be carried in holds 28 feet deep below three
decks. She was named after Charles Tayleur, founder of the Vulcan Engineering Works, Bank Quay, Warrington.
The new ship was chartered by White Star to serve the booming
Australian trade routes, as transport to and from the colony was in high demand due to the discovery of
gold there.
Disaster
''Tayleur'' left
Liverpool on
19 January 1854, on her maiden voyage, for
Melbourne,
Australia, with a complement of 652 passengers and
crew. Her crew of 71 had only 37 trained seamen amongst them, and of these ten could not speak
English (a number of the crew were accused in newspaper accounts of the time to be merely seeking free passage to Australia). However, most of the crew survived.
Her
compasses did not work properly because of the
iron hull. The crew believed that they were sailing south through the
Irish Sea, but were actually travelling west towards
Ireland. On
21 January 1854, within 48 hours of sailing ''Tayleur'' found in fog, in a storm and heading straight for land. The
rudder was undersized for her
tonnage, and when land was sighted through the mists, she was unable to tack around
Lambay Island. The rigging was also faulty, and the ropes had not been properly stretched. They became slack, making it nearly impossible to control the sails. Despite dropping both anchors as soon as rocks were sighted, she ran aground on the east
coast of Lambay Island, about five miles from
Dublin Bay.
Initially, attempts were made to lower the ship's
lifeboats, but when the first one was smashed on the rocks, launching further boats was deemed unsafe. ''Tayleur'' was so close to land that the crew was able to collapse a mast onto the shore, and some people aboard were able to jump onto land by clambering along the collapsed mast. Some that reached shore had carried ropes from the ship, allowing others to pull themselves to safety on the ropes. Captain Noble waited onboard ''Tayleur'' until the last minute, then jumped towards shore, being rescued by one of the passengers.
With the storm and high seas continuing, the ship was then washed into deeper water. She sank to the bottom with only the tops of her masts showing. One survivor, William Vivers, climbed to the tops of the rigging, spending 14 hours there until he was rescued. Out of the 652 people onboard, 380 lives - many of them immigrants - were lost. Out of over 100 women onboard, only three survived, possibly because of the difficulty with the clothing of that era. The survivors were then faced with having to get up an almost sheer 80 foot (24m) cliff to get to shelter. When word of the disaster reached the Irish mainland, the
City of Dublin Steam Packet Company sent the steamer ''Prince'' to look for survivors.
Although newspaper accounts at the time blamed the crew for negligence, the official
Coroner's Inquest absolved Captain Noble and placed the blame on the ship's owners, accusing them of neglect for allowing the ship to depart without its compasses being properly adjusted. The
Board of Trade, however, did fault the Captain for not taking soundings, a standard practice when sailing in low visibility.
The wreck currently lies in 18 metres of water.
The ''Tayleur'' has been compared with ''
RMS Titanic'' . Both were
RMS ships and
White Star Liners. Technically innovative like the ''Titanic'', both had a serious claim to being the largest ship of their time. Additionally, both vessels went down on their maiden voyages, and inadequate or faulty equipment contributed to both disasters (Faulty compasses and rigging for the ''Tayleur'', and an inadequate flooding control system and lifeboats for the ''Titanic'').
References
★
Contemporary newspaper accounts of the disaster
★
History of the wreck
★ Bourke, Edward J., ''Bound for Australia: The Loss of the Emigrant Ship "Tayleur" at Lambay on the Coast of Ireland'' (2003) ISBN 0-9523027-3-X
★ Starkey, H. F., ''Iron Clipper Tayleur - White Star Line's 'First Titanic', Avid Publications, 1999. ISBN 1-902964-00-4
External links
★
Book Review, ''Iron Clipper Tayleur''
★
The Tayleur Memorial, Portrane