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The Northern Belle

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The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
The Northern Belle
Phone:
+44 7810 088347

Hours:
Sunday12pm - 10:30pm
Monday11am - 11pm
Tuesday11am - 11pm
Wednesday11am - 11pm
Thursday11am - 11pm
Friday11am - 11pm
Saturday11am - 11pm


The Northern Belle was an American transatlantic ship which ran aground near Thanet, England, on 5 January 1857. No lives on her were lost, thanks to heroic rescue efforts, in blizzard conditions. However, another ship sank, en route to the scene, the Margate lugger Victory which was lost along with her crew.The Belle built in 1853, under the ownership of J. P. Whitney and Co. of New Orleans, was a new vessel only three years old, her common routes were New Orleans to Liverpool and Le Havre, carrying wheat on the outbound run. A barque of 1,150 tons burden with a crew of 23, she was on a voyage from New York to London, with a cargo of wheat, flour, and linseed cake, when as a result of an unusually heavy gale had to put into Kingsgate, Kent. She anchored 3/4 of a mile from the shore, however by 6 am she was riding heavily, the sea occasionally breaking completely over her. The storm was so ferocious that the main and mizzen masts were cut away by the crew at 6.30am. The Margate lugger Victory'', along with the Ocean, and the Eclipse attempted a rescue and possible salvage. The Victory was lost along with her crew at 11.30 am. The storm raged all day without respite. The storm would not allow the local lifeboats to launch. The Belle parted from her anchors at midnight, and was driven onto the rocks beneath nearby cliffs, at Foreness Point. All rescue attempts that day had been unsuccessful. The crew had lashed themselves to the one remaining mast, and were, to shocked onlookers surprise, spotted from the beach at dawn. Two lifeboats, the Mary White and the Culmer White made three trips to rescue them, despite the imminent peril they were in, from the boiling surf. The lifeboats and crew were from Broadstairs and Margate. Their Mary White had to be hauled and dragged two miles over fields of snow by man and horse before it could be launched the next day from a place that would allow it. Captain Tate and all his crew were thus saved; thanks to the Mary White in particular. On 15 January 1857 the Illustrated Times of London advertise that they will print 5 engravings of the tragedy and portraits of the crew on Saturday.It was reported on 22 January in a letter to the Standard in London, that the ship and cargo were still on the reef, in good condition, and were salvageable. It was hoped to get her off the reef with comparatively little damage.News of the disaster was broadcast world-wide, as far as the Sydney Morning Herald who picked up the story from the New York Times. A benefit by gentlemen amateurs was held at the St James's Theatre, in London, on 7 February; one of the pieces they performed was the comedy Still waters run deep.On the 23 February 1857 3,340 barrels of damaged American flour, a part of the cargo, was auctioned off at the New Corn Exchange Coffee House, Mark Lane, London.On the 2 March, another 450 barrels of damaged American flour, and 20 barrels damaged Linseed cake was auctioned at the New Corn Exchange Coffee House. The Times on 5 March, reports the vessel is a shipping hazard, and all her cargo has been salvaged except forty to fifty logs of Mahogany. Only two barrels of dynamite would be required to destroy the wreck. The Liverpool Echo pointed out in 9 March 1857 that the wreck in foggy weather was an obstacle to navigation, A few days ago a ship had a narrow escape by striking it.April 1857, the U.S. president Franklin Pierce had 21 silver medals struck and issued for the rescuers an award of £270 sterling for sharing amongst them; proportionate to the risks taken, of between £10 to £30 each.The London Morning Chronicle of 9 October 1857 reported that after 9 months the wreck was to be raised as she was a shipping hazard, chains had been fitted with a view of floating her with the aid of buoys at the next spring tides. Some Whitstable people had bought the hull for £260.Reports on 21 November 1857 were, that after nearly 10 months in the water, efforts made by her salvors to raise her, proved unsuccessful, despite employing four pontoons and successfully raising the stern out of the water, one of the chains around the hull broke, aborting the attempt... Her masts disappeared from view in early December, and a green buoy marked wreck had to be put in place 10 fathoms eastward from the stern.In June 1858 Canterbury Town Council, put on display a piece of the wreck taken from the recently raised hull, which was completely riddled with Teredo worm.A Margate beer shop in 1858 is named the Northern Belle.
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