|
|||||||
3 score & 10; How big was Grimsby Town? DigiTrad: THREE SCORE AND TEN Related threads: 3 Score and 10 -Grave found in Hull (24) (origins) Origins: Three Score and Ten (79) (origins) Origins: Threescore and Ten (55) A note to Three Score and Ten (73) Chord Req: Three Score and Ten (7) Three Score and Ten - What event? (13) |
Share Thread
|
Subject: RE: 3 score & 10; How big was Grimsby Town? From: Rozza Date: 03 Nov 04 - 02:09 PM 56,000 in 1891 according to Gillett's History of Grimsby. |
Subject: RE: 3 score & 10; How big was Grimsby Town? From: Wolfgang Date: 06 May 03 - 02:54 PM One Russian dead according to this site Wolfgang |
Subject: RE: 3 score & 10; How big was Grimsby Town? From: Willa Date: 06 May 03 - 02:36 PM My grandfather was one of the skippers involved in what was locally called 'The Russian Outrage'. He gave evidence at the subsequent inquiry. I've never heard of any Russian lives being lost, though that could have happened. |
Subject: RE: 3 score & 10; How big was Grimsby Town? From: Les from Hull Date: 06 May 03 - 10:46 AM There's a statue commemorating the incident at the corner of Boulevard in Hull (in the heart of the fishing community) depicting Skipper Smith of the Crane. There's also a piece of companionway with a Russian shell hole in it in our excellent Maritime Museum. There were possibly more lives lost aboard Russian vessels, as in the confusion they not only shelled our trawlers, but each other. Les |
Subject: RE: 3 score & 10; How big was Grimsby Town? From: Wolfgang Date: 06 May 03 - 07:14 AM Two lives lost (Dogger Bank incident) according to this BBC page Wolfgang |
Subject: RE: 3 score & 10; How big was Grimsby Town? From: Dead Horse Date: 06 May 03 - 05:05 AM Seeing this has prompted me to ask if any lives were lost when the Russian Fleet opened fire on the Dogger Bank fishermen? This was during the Russo-Japanese War of 1904, and they were acting in "self defence" believing that the fishing fleet were Japanese torpedo boats The Russian navy was en-route to Vladivostok, and met their complete destruction at Tsushima. |
Subject: RE: 3 score & 10; How big was Grimsby Town? From: GUEST,Jon Date: 06 May 03 - 04:27 AM In our thread on the song (here), Dave/dmcg gives the following information regarding missing/drowned people: It was reported like this: |
Subject: RE: 3 score & 10; How big was Grimsby Town? From: fiddler Date: 06 May 03 - 04:03 AM Hundreds at sea as always plying their trade with the pots and nets thing - noty all form Grimsby town. I don't think many land lubbers realise how many folk put to sea each day to (these days as ever) scrape a living from the sea! A |
Subject: RE: 3 score & 10; How big was Grimsby Town? From: John Routledge Date: 05 May 03 - 08:17 PM As the song continues ".......many hundreds more were drowned" |
Subject: RE: 3 score & 10; How big was Grimsby Town? From: Gareth Date: 05 May 03 - 07:12 PM Mmmm ! I think I underguessed on size, but my comments on communities stand - unless some catter can refute them ! Click 'Ere Gareth |
Subject: RE: 3 score & 10; How big was Grimsby Town? From: Gareth Date: 05 May 03 - 06:50 PM Uncle DaveO - Not that big, and not that small, but remember in the East Coast Fishing Towns and Villages, the Seafolk were a small close knit community, all interelated. 70 dead was massive loss to that community. Folk memory, and I no longer live in Whitstable, suggest that about something like 30 souls were lost from there in the Great Storm. Whitstable then had a population of about 5/6000. Best guess, and it is only a guess would have been about 7/8000 for Grimsby. I will research. BTW On similar lines --- "Oh youv'e heard of the Gresford Disaster, Of the terrible price that was paid, 245 Colliers were lost, And three men of the Rescue Brigade." And after the second Senghenydd Explosion 1913 (400 +/-) dead acording to the "Western Mail" "There was not a house in that village that did not have grieving parents, widows or orphens" Gareth |
Subject: 3 score & 10; How big was Grimsby Town? From: Uncle_DaveO Date: 05 May 03 - 05:08 PM The subject line more or less says it. In the great song "Three Score and Ten" is told the story of the loss, in the 1890s, I think, of seventy seamen in a great October sea storm, just counting the ones from the Grimbsy area, while there were great losses from other towns up and down the coast. Now, that's got to be a terrible blow to any city, but what was the size of Grimsby at that time? Just to have an idea of the relative impact. Dave Oesterreich |
Share Thread: |
Subject: | Help |
From: | |
Preview Automatic Linebreaks Make a link ("blue clicky") |