Sunday, November 20, 2022

MYSTERY OF MARY CELESTE

 20 November 2022: Almost the end of November - my how the time does fly! 2022 is getting thin and 2023 looms. Let's hope the next one is better - across the board! We might have written about the Mary Celeste one time before, but not sure if or when that was. In any case, here is the tale (maybe again?), from History Hits.

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On 4 December 1872, an American-registered merchant brigantine called the Mary Celeste was spotted adrift near to the Azores Islands, off the coast of Portugal. Originally intended for Genoa, the ship had set off from New York carrying the captain, Benjamin S. Briggs, his wife Sarah, their 2-year-old daughter Sophia and eight crew members.

The perplexed crew of a nearby ship boarded the Mary Celeste. There, they encountered a mystery that still confounds sleuths today: everyone on board had vanished, seemingly without a trace.

Insurance fraud and foul play were immediately theorised. Equally popular was a theory that the crew had abandoned the ship hastily, believing it about to blow up or sink. In the time after, everything from murder, pirates and sea creatures have been suggested as possible explanations, all to no avail.

So what happened to the ill-fated Mary Celeste?

Mary Celeste was built in 1861 in Nova Scotia, Canada. Originally it was named the Amazon. [ed: maybe because it was delivering products? - Sorry - couldn't resist!] Upon being launched in 1861, it experienced a number of issues: the captain on her maiden voyage caught pneumonia and died, and the ship was later damaged multiple times.

In 1868, it was sold and renamed the Mary Celeste. Over coming years, it underwent many significant structural changes and was eventually sold to a group that included Captain Benjamin S. Briggs.

The Mary Celeste set sail from New York on 7 November 1872. It was laden with more than 1,700 barrels of alcohol, and was destined for Genoa. The log book indicates that the ten people on board experienced harsh weather for the next two weeks. On 4 December of the same year, the ship was spotted by the crew of British ship Dei Gratia.

Upon boarding the ship, the crew discovered that it was entirely abandoned. Upon closer inspection, it was discovered that the ship contained six months’ worth of food and water, and the belongings of the crew and passengers were almost entirely unmoved. Aside from water in the hold and a missing lifeboat, there were very few clues as to what could have caused them all to disappear.

Yet more mysteriously, the last entry of the captain’s logbook, dated 25 November, stated that the ship was around 11km from the Azores. However, the crew of Dei Gratia discovered Mary Celeste some 500 miles from there. With no sign of the crew of the Mary Celeste, the crew of the Dei Gratia sailed the ship to Gibraltar, some 800 miles away.

Gibraltar, a British vice admiralty court convened a salvage hearing, which normally entailed determining whether the salvagers – the Dei Gratia crewmen – were entitled to money from the Mary Celeste’s insurers.

However, Frederick Solly-Flood, Attorney General of Gibraltar suspected that the crew may have been involved with the disappearance, even suggesting that the crew had murdered the Captain and his family. However, this theory was largely disproven when stains around the ship were discovered to not be blood, and it was re-emphasised that nothing valuable had been taken.

However, after three months of deliberation, the court found no evidence of foul play. Nonetheless, though the salvagers did receive a payment, they only received a sixth of what the ship and its cargo had been insured for, which suggests the authorities still suspected that they were somehow involved.

A number of theories immediately began to circulate about what could have happened to the ship. A popular theory is that Captain Briggs ordered everyone on board to abandon ship.

This could have been for various reasons. The first belief is that he perhaps believed that the ship was taking on too much water, and was going to sink. Indeed, a sounding rod, which is used to measure how much water is in the hold, was discovered on the deck, suggesting it had been recently used. Additionally, one of the ship’s pumps showed signs of issues, since it had been disassembled. It is therefore possible that a faulty sounding rod combined with a non-working pump proved enough for Briggs to order the crew to leave in the lifeboat immediately.

Another theory points to alcohol vapours from the barrels in the ship’s hold, which could have been powerful enough to blow off the ship’s main hatch, prompting those on board to fear an imminent explosion and abandon ship accordingly. Indeed, the log makes note of many rumbling and explosive sounds from the hold. However, the hatch was described as secure, and no fume smells were reported.

Finally, the lifeboat appeared to have been used in a hurry since the rope tying it to the boat was cut rather than untied.

Despite being perceived as unlucky, the Mary Celeste remained in service and was passed through a number of owners before being acquired by Captain Parker.

In 1885, he deliberately sailed it into a reef near Haiti as a means of claiming insurance on it; however, it failed to sink, and the authorities discovered his scheme. The ship was damaged beyond repair, so was left on the reef to deteriorate. 

Discovery of Mary Celeste wreck

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And still, no one knows why she was left adrift some 800 miles from Gibraltar; doubtful it will ever be known, but it has given rise to a plethora of both fanciful and potentially accurate theories. Make up your own mind!

Until next time, and a happy Thanksgiving to those of you who participate!

                               Fair Winds,

                                       Old Salt

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