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For other ships of the same name, see SS Princess Alice. SS Princess Alice was a Thames river paddle steamer which sank after a collision with the Bywell Castle off Tripcock Point in 1878 with the loss of at least 600 lives.[1]
[edit] Early serviceThe Princess Alice was first launched in 1865. Originally known as the Bute, she was bought by the London Steamboat Company in 1866. They renamed her the Princess Alice, and put her into service on the Thames excursion route. [edit] The disasterOn September 3, 1878, she was making what was billed as a "Moonlight Trip" to Gravesend and back. This was a routine trip from Swan Pier near London Bridge to Gravesend and Sheerness. Tickets were sold for two shillings. Hundreds of Londoners paid the fare; many were visiting Rosherville Gardens in Gravesend. The trip out was uneventful, and most of the return was also. By 7:40 PM, she was within sight of the North Woolwich Pier, where many passengers were to disembark. This is when she sighted the Newcastle bound Bywell Castle. The Bywell Castle displaced 890 long tons (904 t), much more than the Princess Alice. She usually hauled coal to Africa. At the time, she held no cargo; she had just been repainted at a dry dock and was on her way to pick up a load of coal. She was skippered by Captain Harrison, who was accompanied by an experienced Thames river pilot. Harrison was following the traditional routes used on the Thames instead of the 1872 rule about passing oncoming vessels on the port side.[1] Captain Harrison, on the bridge of the Bywell Castle, observed the Princess Alice coming across his bow, making for the north side of the river. The Bywell Castle set a course to pass astern of her. The captain of the Princess Alice, 47-year-old William R. H. Grinstead, however, was confused by this and altered her own course. This brought the Princess Alice into the path of the Bywell Castle. Upon realizing this, the Bywell Castle's captain ordered her engines reversed, but it was too late. The Bywell Castle struck the Princess Alice on the starboard side. The Princess Alice split in two and sank in four minutes. The passengers were either trapped in the sinking craft, or thrown into the river. The Thames in Victorian times was not a clean river. The area where the collision occurred was heavily polluted from industrial plants. Raw sewage was also directly dumped into the river at nearby Beckton. Somewhere between 69 and 170 people were rescued from the river. However the vast majority perished. When the two halves of the Princess Alice were raised, hundreds of passengers were found piled near the exits to the saloon. Many of the victims were never identified. One hundred and twenty of the estimated five hundred and fifty people drowned that day were buried in a mass grave at Woolwich Old Cemetery, Kings Highway, Plumstead. A memorial cross was erected to mark the spot, "paid for by national sixpenny subscription to which more than 23,000 persons contributed". The log of the Bywell Castle told it this way:
At this time there was no official body responsible for marine safety in the Thames, the subsequent enquiry resolved that the Marine Police Force, based at Wapping be equipped with steam launches, to replace their rowing boats and be better able to perform rescues.[3] Two months later, Princess Alice of the United Kingdom, daughter of Queen Victoria, died of diphtheria. Six ensigns of the 30th Regiment of Foot, including Charles O'Brien, later a prominent colonial administrator, missed the Princess Alice (and likely death) by a matter of seconds.[4] In the years to come there was a rumour (never verified from the records) that one of the victims of Jack the Ripper, Elizabeth Stride, claimed her husband and two children were drowned in the disaster although she survived it. Six years after the sinking of the Princess Alice her owners were bankrupt. [edit] See also[edit] References
[edit] External links
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