Maritime record MDO18261 - Haytian 1910

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Summary

Coal Hulk rammed and sank in Portland Harbour by the cargo ship Nymphaea in 1910. This was the first time she sank.

Map

Type and Period (2)

Full Description

She had been originally built as a luxury liner for the West Indian run in 1875, by 1910 she had declined in importance and was being used as a coal hulk in Portland Harbour.
Early on the morning of the 18th July 1910 the cargo ship Nymphaea approached the Haytian to take on coal. Two things then went wrong, her engine jammed and could not be put into reverse, and then her anchor cable stuck. Unable to stop the Nymphaea hit the Haytian amidships. She rapidly took on water and sunk two hours later. The crews of the tugs that had gathered to try and tow the Haytian into shallow water, were horrified to see hundreds of rats pour out of her as she settled in the water, ‘like those which followed the Pied Piper of Hamelin”, as one newspaper reported.
A few weeks later the Haytian was raised and continued as a coal hulk for nearly thirty years, until the 18th February 1937 when she was rammed by HMS PC74 and sunk for the second time. This time she was raised several months later by a local salvage expert, George Louis Basso. Fortunately a member of his team took a series of photographs showing the raising of the Haytian.
The Haytian remained in the Harbour for a few more years, before finally being scuttled for the third and final time.


<1> Le Pard, G F, 2005, Shipwrecks of the Dorset Coast (Monograph). SDO9637.

Sources/Archives (1)

  • <1> Monograph: Le Pard, G F. 2005. Shipwrecks of the Dorset Coast.

Finds (0)

Related Monuments/Buildings (0)

Related Events/Activities (0)

Location

Grid reference SY 6761 7546 (point)
Map sheet SY67NE

Protected Status/Designation

  • None recorded

Other Statuses/References

  • Legacy UID: Dorset Sites and Monuments Record: 9 000 0197

Record last edited

Oct 1 2008 11:26AM

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