The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #74823   Message #1309336
Posted By: DMcG
28-Oct-04 - 03:13 AM
Thread Name: Origins: Three Score and Ten
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Three Score and ten?
I am told that a copy of the original broadside is held at Grimsby Public Library. Perhaps someone from 'Ull can nip across and copy it for us.

I found this entry from the local newspaper some time ago, describing the storm (which was not in October):


As day after day passes and no tidings arrive of the missing Grimsby smacks, it is beginning to be realised that the gale of the 9th ult. will prove one of the most disastrous to the Grimsby fishing trade on record. Altogether nearly a dozen fishing vessels, carrying between 60 and 70 hands, are missing. Most of these vessels were only provisioned for eight or nine days, and many of them have been out over a month. Of the safety of seven of them all hope has now been abandoned. The vessels are:
    Sea Searcher, trawl smack, owner Mr Joseph Ward; five hands.
    John Wintringham, cod smack, master and owner Mr John Guitesen; eleven hands.
    Eton, iron steam trawl smack, owner Mr H. Smethurst, Jun.; eight hands.
    British Workman, cod smack, owner Mr Thomas Campbell; seven hands.
    Sir Frederick Roberts, trawl smack, master and owner Mr W. Walker; five hands.
    Kitten, trawl smack, owner James Meadows; five hands.
    Harold, trawl smack, master and owner Mr Blakeney; five hands.
Portions of wreckage from the Kitten have been picked up at sea and brought into port, and the British Workman was seen to be reduced to a mere wreck by a heavy sea on the morning of the gale. Many of the men who have been lost leave wives and families, and an immense amount of distress will be caused amongst the fishing population. The total number of vessels lost will, it is feared, be near 15, and of lives between 70 and 80.

Hull Times, 2 March 1889.