Eyemouth disaster

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File:Eyemouth memorial to the fishing disaster of 1881.jpg
The granite memorial in Eyemouth, depicting a broken sailing mast
File:The paired grave of members of the Stevenson family from Newhaven, drowned in the Eyemouth disaster and washed up the following spring.jpg
The paired grave of members of the Stevenson family from Newhaven, drowned in the Eyemouth disaster and washed up the following spring, Rosebank Cemetery in Edinburgh

The Eyemouth disaster was a severe European windstorm that struck the south-eastern coast of Scotland on 14 October 1881. One hundred and eighty-nine fishermen, most of whom were from Eyemouth, were drowned. Many citizens of Eyemouth call the day Black Friday.

Disaster

Following a period of poor weather, the morning of 14 October was calm. Though the storm was predicted (as the barometric pressure was very low), the fishing fleets put to sea through economic necessity.[1][2]

Many of the fishing boats were either capsized, or wrecked against the coastline.[3] John Doull, from the Fishery Office in Eyemouth, hypothesized that there were so many casualties because many ships could not see the land due to the storm, and they sailed too close to land and thus were smashed against the rocks without being able to safely make it back out to sea or into the port. Additionally, many of the ships did not have their ballast stowed properly, which exacerbated damage or sunk ships due to it being thrown around the hold during the storm.[4]

Casualties

Some boats that had not capsized were wrecked on the Hurkar Rocks. Many houses were also destroyed. Two days later, the Ariel Gazelle turned up in Eyemouth, having braved the storm instead of fleeing.[6]

Aftermath

File:Eyemouth Fishing Tragedy Memorial, St Abbs - from Flickr 1618699658.jpg
The bronze memorial at St Abbs - figures of women and children look out to sea. Similar memorials can be found at other towns effected.

A donation-led relief fund was established to provide financial security to families who had lost members to the storm. The response was significant, bringing in over £50,000 (£Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "[". in 2021).Template:Inflation-fn[7] Widows could collect 5 shillings a week unless they remarried, and an additional two shillings and sixpence for each child currently attending school.[4]

The disaster was the subject of a contemporary oil on canvas painting by Scottish artist J. Michael Brown.[4]

See also

Notes

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References

  • Peter Aitchison. Children of the Sea: The Story of the People of Eyemouth. Tuckwell Press Ltd, 2001.

Further reading

External links

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