SS Jebba

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

S.S. Jebba postcard 1907.jpg
SS Jebba aground
History
Name
  • SS Albertville (1896-1898)
  • SS Jebba (1898-1907)
Owner
Builder, Middlesbrough
Yard number421
Launched16 April 1896
CompletedJune 1896
FateWrecked on 18 March 1907
General characteristics
Tonnage
Length352 ft (107 m)
Beam44.2 ft (13.5 m)
Depth23.4 ft (7.1 m)
Installed power419 nhp
PropulsionT3cyl (27, 43, 72 x 48in), 1 screw

SS Jebba was a steam ship that ran aground near Bolt Tail, off the coast of Devon, in 1907.[1] Built by , Middlesbrough, she was launched in 1896 as the SS Albertville for the Cie. Belge-Maritime du Congo, Antwerp. They sold her in 1898 to Elder Dempster & Co, Liverpool, who renamed her Jebba.[1]

On 18 March 1907 she ran aground near Bolt Tail, while inbound from West Africa for Plymouth and Liverpool with a cargo of ivory, rubber, palm oil, pineapples, bananas and the mail from Nigeria and the Gold Coast. Her 76 crew and 79 passengers were taken off by bosun's chair, with the two fishermen who had organised the rescue, Isaac Jarvis and John Argeat, being awarded the Albert Medal for Lifesaving. The cargo was salvaged after her loss, with the mail she was carrying later the subject of philatelic study. Some salvage of valuable materials and components from the wreck was carried out, but most of the ship was gradually broken up by the waves, and now there are only traces of the ship on the seabed.[1]

By coincidence, another larger liner SS Suevic of the White Star Line had also run aground earlier the same night along the same coastline, almost within sight of Jebba, with its crew and passengers also requiring rescue. Unlike Jebba, the Suevic was salvaged.[2]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c "SS Jebba 1907". Marine Archaeology & Shipwreck Research. Retrieved 29 March 2019.
  2. ^ "News from 1907: Suevic's Grounding". Encyclopedia Titanica. Retrieved 30 December 2020.

External links[]

Media related to Jebba (ship, 1896) at Wikimedia Commons


Retrieved from ""