Shipwrecks & Lost Treasures of the Seven Seas

The collision and foundering of La Bourgogne




"La Bourgogne"

- by Pascal Kainic -



A Titanic before the Titanic ?

The French passenger liner La Bourgogne, from the Compagnie Generale Transatlantique, sank after a collision with the British ship Cromartyshire, in dense fog, 60 miles south of Sable Island near Nova Scotia, in the Atlantic, on 4th July 1898.

Of 711 passengers and crewmen, only 165 survived, thus recording a terrible death toll of 546 lives !

There are no deaths on the British sailing craft when it struck the speeding French liner on the starboard side. Although the Cromartyshire had her bow ripped off, she somehow remained afloat, but lost sight of the colliding vessel. Quick investigation indicated that the sailboat was in no imminent danger and Captain Henderson ordered his life-boats lowered.

At this point, several rockets were observed from another vessel in the fog, after which all was quiet. The collision had taken place at 5.00 in the morning and half an hour later, Captain Henderson, in the lifting fog, noted the approach of two life-boats filled with survivors.

It was soon determined that the other vessel was the French liner La Bourgogne. The Cromartyshire then jettisoned thirty tons of her cargo to lighten the ship, and took the survivors from the French vessel aboard. Further lifting of the fog revealed a dreadful disaster with people foundering in the water. All were taken aboard the Cromartyshire, and it was learned that La Bourgogne had gone to the bottom about forty minutes after the collision.

Discussions with the survivors revealed many strange stories concerning the collision of the two ships. For one thing, only one woman of about three hundred female passengers had survived the calamity; moreover, the only ones saved were steerage passengers and sailors. It soon was apparent that there had been considerable foul play and that the crew of the French ship had breached all discipline and regulations by forcibly and brutally taking possession of available life-boats and rafts to the exclusion of most passengers.

The passengers were seized with panic, the Italians and Austrians using their knives and revolvers in a mad attempt to rush the boats. Captain Deloncle and his officers were powerless to control the disorderly elements. However, it did appear that Captain Deloncle and fifteen of eighteen officers had remained at their posts and had gone down with the French vessel. Details relating to the disaster and the ship involved were later reconstructed.

The Cromartyshire, a full rigged three-masted iron ship of 1.462 tons, sailed from Dunkirk for Philadelphia on June 8th, 1898, with a cargo of coal. The schooner was 248 feet long and was cruising about sixty miles south of Sable Island, off Nova Scotia, on the 4th of July, on a port tack, heading west northwest under reduced sail. In dense fog, she kept blowing her foghorn every minute.

At 5.00 am, with the momentary sounding of a ship’s whistle, a huge vessel suddenly and rapidly loomed out of the fog on the port bow, and a collision ensued.

The French passenger liner La Bourgogne had sailed from New York on July 2nd, bound to Le Havre, France, carrying 725 people and 1.000 tons of cargo valued at $ 600.000, and 170 bags of mail. The vessel had been constructed in Toulon in 1886 for $ 1.6 million; it grossed at 7.395 tons and was 480 feet long. The liner was operated by the Compagnie Generale Transatlantique and was part of the French Naval Reserve.

The passengers lost everything they had on board luggage, money and property; a diamonds merchant lost more than $10.000 and other rich passengers going to Paris for purchasing good or for pleasure.

It was widely held, based on the tales of rampant brutality aboard the foundering of La Bourgogne, that a strict and impartial investigation of the disaster would be held by the United States authorities in New York City. Instead the French Consulate issued statements defending the French officers and crewmen.

In some haste, on July 9th, the surviving crews, secured by the French officials as prisoners, were secretly interviewed; depositions were recorded, and all sailed from France on the liner La Touraine. The French government indicated an inquiry and possibly a trial would be held in France.

Subsequently, it appeared, the whole matter was white-washed, and responsibility for the alleged brutality was attributed to a dozen or so foreign sailors who had been travelling on the French ship in steerage. American editorial comment at the time of the disaster decried the continuing peril of ships colliding in fog on the ocean. Science apparently had been unable to devise any means of averting these tragedies. Common sense dictated that ships under conditions of reduced visibility should proceed with infinite care and at greatly decreased speeds. Ship construction utilising systems of watertight compartments should be such as to insure that stricken vessel could remain afloat long enough to allow passengers and crew to escape to safety quickly.

There were also many newspaper observations about the horrible scene of savagery that followed the collision of the two vessels. Reliable evidence attested that ignorant, undisciplined, and unfeeling crewmen had taken possession of the ship’s life-boats and rafts, to the exclusion of the passenger’s rights. In addition, it was felt that in the forty minutes interval between the collision and the sinking of the French liner, more lives should have been saved.

The outcome of the disaster was considered a disgrace to the officers of the ship, her owners and the French merchant marine in general.

Very deep... Possibly like the Titanic !
Any candidate for salvage ?



 




Comments (18)

18. Michael The 21 Feb. 2010 at 18:39

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One of my relatives died with his wife, two daughters and a maid. Such a sad story. Do you know where all the official papers on the tradgedy are kept?
Michael
Cheshire, England

17. Glenn Dandoy The 31 Jan. 2010 at 23:24

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My Great Great Grandfather Oscar Dandoy emigrated to America on La Bourgogne, arriving in New York on August 28, 1893. Less than five years later the ship was on the
bottom of the North Atlantic. The stories of the collision of La Bourgogne with the Cromartyshire are
terrifying. If anyone has more information on this tragedy, I would welcome the opportunity to view it.
G. R. Dandoy
Pittsburgh

16. Jeff Domenick The 02 Jan. 2010 at 02:36

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My Great Great grandmother Kathryn Bresch was on that ship. She had left behind my great grandfather Jacob Aigeldinger while she went back to France to settle her business affairs.

15. Patricia Pinner The 14 Dec. 2009 at 16:57

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The wrestler's name from Turkey is Ismail Yousouf and yes he toured the US fighting everyone who would fight and beat them all! Undeated! I am writing a story about La Bourgogne and including him.

I would LOVE to have any pictures/paintings/copies of pictures or paintings of La Bourgogne. Please send directly to me at mtbikernuts@yahoo.com
Thank you.

14. Michael O'Neill The 22 Nov. 2009 at 01:36

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My Great Uncle - the artist De Scott Evans - and his three daughters were drowned in the shipwreck. They were in route to Paris where he comisioned to do a portrait.

13. Wystan The 17 Nov. 2009 at 00:50

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There is a small memorial stained glass window in the University of Michigan Library for Professor Edward Lorraine Walter, who drowned in this tragedy. Prof. Walter had published a book on Rousseau.

12. ozqur The 23 Sep. 2009 at 17:42

Crackers hi,
I'm searching for more information about that circus performer. He was actually a wrestler from Ottoman Empire and went to the US to wrestle some of the most famous figures in wrestling at that time. Do you have any more information about him. I'd really appreciate if you share it with me if you have them of course.

feel free to contact me from ozqur@hotmail.com

Thanks in advance,
Ozgur



9. crackers 08/01/2009 at 07:46

My grandmother, Christina Nicoleti from the Northern Italian city of Turino, emigrated to America aboard the La Bourgogne in 1896. As a child, she told me that one of the passangers that drowned, a Turkish man who was returning back to his native Turkey after retiring as a circus performer, drowned because he could not swim due to the weight of the gold he stached in his pockets.

11. Patricia Pinner The 26 Jul. 2009 at 14:17

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My Great Grandmother, Victoire Lacasse was the only female survivor. I have a copy of my Great Grandfather's "Copy of Statement" of the incident, dated July 11, 1898. Adrian Lacasse was his name. His Granddaughter, my aunt Hertha is still alive. She gave me the copy.

10. Jacques MALET The 26 Jun. 2009 at 17:55

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I belong and old painting (1901 ?)showing the collision between the Cromartyshire and La Bourgogne. I found it in a garret, in the house of my grand-father, who was the captain of several sail ships of french merchant marine, in the years 1897-1905. He was the captain of the brick Fernand Marguerite on 9/08/1898, which used to sail from Europe to New Found Land, since this date and his name as captain, are written in a painting of this ship. Moreover, the brick Fernand Marguerite wrecked next year 1999 in St-Pierre et Miquelon,not far from the location of the collision.

The picture was painted by Temple West, actually the name of a company located in New-Castle (Australia), who drawed portraits (paintings and photographs)of ships, crews .... My cousin belongs another painting showing the Cromartyshire, alone like a portrait, also from Temple West. I belong another painting and photographs from Temple West, ordered by my grand-father, showing his following ship .
I don't know the exact relation between my grand-father and this collision.
But I suppose he and his ship Fernand Marguerite were concerned by this disaster, maybe as rescuers, since he ordered two paintings three years later. I don't see how to join a photograph of the painting to this message. If possible, tell me (by mail) how to do. I can also join the photograph to mails for interested people.

crackers

9. crackers The 08 Jan. 2009 at 07:46

My grandmother, Christina Nicoleti from the Northern Italian city of Turino, emigrated to America aboard the La Bourgogne in 1896. As a child, she told me that one of the passangers that drowned, a Turkish man who was returning back to his native Turkey after retiring as a circus performer, drowned because he could not swim due to the weight of the gold he stached in his pockets.

8. DS The 16 Dec. 2008 at 21:31

My great-grandfather was a survivor.

I would love to find more information about what happened.

7. Kül Tegin The 13 Dec. 2008 at 04:03

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I read about 20 died body from La bourgogne find on one of the Azores islan (Acores) after weeks of colussion.

6. TP The 30 Nov. 2008 at 12:32

From The Counterfeiters, by Andre Gide:
[/quote]There were about forty of us in the boat, all crowded together, for a number of swimmers had been picked up at the last gasp, like me. The water was almost on a level with the edge of the boat. I was in the stern, and I was holding the little girl I had just saved tightly pressed against me to warm her, and to prevent her from seeing what I couldn’t help seeing myself—two sailors, one armed with a hatchet and the other with a kitchen chopper. And what do you think they were doing?...They were hacking off the fingers and hands of the swimmers who were trying to get into the boat. One of these two sailors...turned to me, as I sat there, my teeth chattering with cold and fright and horror, and said “If another single one gets in we shall be bloody well done for. The boat’s full.” And he added that it was a thing that had to be done in all shipwrecks, but that naturally one didn’t mention it.[quote]

5. jody The 13 Oct. 2008 at 06:55

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I would suggest e mailing the Sable Island Ship Wreck Society...I think that is what it is called but not sure. They have the original papers and will make copies of them and they will snail mail them to you.

Jody

4. Jennifer The 12 Oct. 2008 at 23:46

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I suspect my great-great grandfather may have died in this sinking. Any ideas how to get a list of those who died?

3. Jody Czapla The 23 Aug. 2008 at 07:04

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My Great Great Grandfather was on the La Bourgogne when it went down. There are newspaper reports with quotes from him in them. He was taking his fiance home to meet his family. She was killed when the ship dragged her under.

Jody

2. John Walters The 17 Aug. 2008 at 23:38

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Craig,

Hi, How is the research going? John

1. Craig Rosenthal The 21 Jul. 2008 at 21:56

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I have been studying this wreck for years. Looking for descendants of passengers/crew?
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