Caedes

  The Shipwreck  

Click here to view at full resolution.
Uploaded: 09/18/21 6:20 PM GMT
The Shipwreck
Views: 292
Dlds: 105
Status: active

Here lies the The Frances or what is left of it, not so much to see. What is interesting is that it went down in a gale one December off the Head of the Meadow Beach (Truro MA, USA) in 1872, and reemerges from time to time at low tide. The captain and crew were saved by men in a whaleboat, though the captain died of exposure a few days later, the sole causality. It was a German boat made primarily of metal, and bearing tea to bring to Boston. That tea must have lost its flavor long ago. Henry Thoreau wrote in his book on Cape Cod that scavenging cargo washed ashore from shipwrecks one of the major occupations of inhabitants of the Cape as there were so many. "Finders keepers" was written into the law.

Comments

Post a Comment  -  Subscribe to this discussion
.casechaser
09/18/21 9:00 PM GMT
Ah, the good old days. Unlike the British, our government would surely figure out many ways to tax the "finders keepers."
3∈ [?]
::corngrowth
09/19/21 9:53 AM GMT
Paul, due to its dangerously hidden and constantly moving shoals located just off-shore, Cape Cod's coastline from Chatham to Provincetown has been called an 'Ocean Graveyard', containing over 3,000 shipwrecks. One of the was the German bark 'Frances'. She (as ships are female) sunk in a gale at October 13th, 1872 at the head of the Meadow Beach at North Truro.
3∈ [?]
If you think you can't accept something, try to change it. But if this doesn't work, don't be frustrated, but give it later another try. The one who perseveres wins! Please CLICK HERE to see my journal! Feel free to save my images or to add them to your favorites.
.bfrank
09/24/21 4:52 PM GMT
Very little left to mark the passing of this ship. The telling of the story is the salutation to it in passing history. Thanks for the retelling of it, and also the image, Paul!
4∈ [?]
When fear comes to me I will stubbornly choose Faith Instead!!!!

Leave a comment (registration required):

Subject: