Ithaca (ship)

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Ithaca, aground near Churchill, Manitoba.

The Ithaca was a small freighter that ran aground in Bird Cove 12 or 15 kilometres distant from Churchill, Manitoba -- the only port in North America on the Arctic Ocean.[1] She was built in 1922, and ran aground during a storm on September 14, 1960. She was built in Trois Riviere, Quebec.

in 1960 she was a Greek-flagged vessel, when she was hired to transport ore from a nickel mine in Rankin Inlet in what is now Nunavut.[2] She had delivered her first shipment of 3,000 tons of ore to Churchill, and had loaded a small amount of mining equipment and a building supplies, for a return trip, but she encountered a storm with 80 mile per hour winds. The captain turned back to the safety of the port. But the weather was so bad that he decided to drop anchor. The anchor chain broke and her rudder was beaten off. Completely out of control the vessel was driven onto a shallow gravel-bank 750 metres off shore.

Lloyds of London wrote off the vessel as a complete loss.[3] The water was shallow enough that individuals could walk to the wreck, at low tide.

Tourists occasionally visit the wreck.[3]

specifications[3]
built
1922
builder
Frazer Brace Ltd, of Trois Rivieres, Quebec
gross tonnage
2057
complement
37
length
260 feet
previous names
Frank A Augsbury
Granby
Parita 2
Valbruna
Lawrence Cliffe Hall
Federal Explorer

References

  1. "Historic Sites of Manitoba: MV Ithaca (Churchill)". The Manitoba Histrical Society. 2013. Archived from the original on 2013-04-19. http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.mhs.mb.ca%2Fdocs%2Fsites%2Fithaca.shtml&date=2013-04-19. 
  2. "The Ithaca Shipwreck". 2009-10-07. http://www.travelblog.org/Oceans-and-Seas/Arctic/blog-434457.html. Retrieved 2013-04-15. 
  3. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Travel