Tuesday, January 23, 2007

SS Phyllis


S WIND 10 TO 20 KT.
WIND WAVES 3 FT.
W SWELL 11 FT AT 12 SECONDS.

The Wreck of the SS Phyllis
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On the night of March 9, 1936, Coast Guardsmen from the Port Orford Lifeboat Station rescued the crew of the steamship Phyllis. The SS Phyllis was a 215 feet long, 1266 tons displacement steam schooner built in 1917 at Aberdeen, Washington by the Aberdeen Shipbuilding Company. The ship plied the Portland-San Francisco route carrying general cargo as part of the Chamberlin Steamship Company.
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The Phyllis was en route to Portland from San Francisco when it encountered bad weather and began taking on water. By the time the vessel had reached the southern Oregon coast, it had taken over four feet of water in her hold, overwhelming the capacity of the pumps. The ship's master, Captain Victor Jacobsen, decided to run the ship ashore. In the grounding process in the fog, the ship's hull was torn by the rocky coastline one mile north of Humbug Mountain between Coal Point and the Redfish Rocks.
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After the vessel was wrecked, the 22-man crew took to their lifeboats and headed away from the rocky shore out to smoother waters of the open ocean, firing signal flares. The flares were seen by the Coast Guard Lifeboat Station at Port Orford. Crews from the station put to sea and brought the crewmen to safety.
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1 comments:

Chum said...

I can see the headlines now:

SSyphllis Takes Toll on Yet More Seamen.

Bad. I know.