It is my pleasure to welcome Willow C Winsham to the salon today. A blogger on the witch, the weird and the wonderful, Willow is my much-valued writing partner in crime and brings us a spooky tale of ghost ships, treasure and tragedy.
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Everyone loves a good ghost
story, especially with the approach of Halloween. It is with great delight that
I make my first visit to the salon with the sad and chilling story of the
ill-fated Lady Lovibond, a three masted schooner that met her end on the treacherous
Goodwin Sands off the coast of Deal, Kent.
The Lovibond, so the legend goes,
left harbour of Friday 13th February, 1748. Her captain, Simon Peel (or Reed as
he is sometimes known) was young, handsome, and very much in love with his beautiful
new wife. Unable to bear the thought of leaving her behind and wishing to
celebrate his recent marriage, he brought her aboard with several guests on the
voyage bound for Oporto, Portugal, the hold filled with flour, meat, wine and
gold.
What should have been a joyous
occasion, however, soon turned to tragedy. Unbeknownst to the captain, his
first mate, John Rivers, was deeply in love with the lovely Mrs Peel. Driven
out of his mind with jealousy and unrequited desire, Rivers made a terrible
decision. While the happy couple were celebrating below decks, in a bitter rage
Rivers knocked the man at the wheel senseless. With the ship under his control
he steered her straight onto the Goodwin Sands where she ran aground, sinking
into the perilous sandbank and taking everyone with her.
A terrible tragedy in its own
right, but the story does not, however, end there. Every fifty years, on the
date of the disaster the Lady Lovibond is said to sail again, appearing on the
site of her sinking. With several accounts up until 1948, she failed to keep
her appointment in 1998, but is still one of the most popular British ghost
ships on record. The spine-chilling
story is repeated in countless books and websites, in many cases virtually
verbatim, the story taken as established fact.
What truth, if any, is there in
the story of the Lovibond? A cursory glance at the records brings up no
evidence of a Captain Simon Peel or Reed, much less his much-coveted wife.
Whether there was any such couple and the details have been lost to time is
impossible to tell. There is also no record of a ship named The Lady Lovibond
or similar in the eighteenth century or any other. Reports that the tragedy was
declared a case of misadventure at a subsequent inquest appear to have
materialised from nowhere, or were borrowed from the tale of another wreck in
the area.
One thing we can be
certain of is the location of the tragedy. There is little surprise that the
Goodwin Sands is the setting for such an enduring story. The sandbank, which lies approximately seven
miles off the coast of Deal, Kent, has been claiming ships since records began,
with an estimated 50,000 people having lost their lives there. Ten miles in
length, the sand is solid enough at low tide that funfairs and cricket matches
have been held there, but once the tide turns, it is a different story. The
mass of shifting, sinking sand can suck a whole ship down to the depths in
minutes, leaving no trace. Many 18th
Century vessels met their fate here but could one of them have been the
inspiration for The Lovibond?
A 1736 Map of the Downs, showing the position of the Goodwin Sands in relation to the shore |
The Rooswijk, a ship of the Dutch
East India Company, is one possible contender. Built in the Company's Amsterdam
yard and Launched in 1737, she met her end on the Goodwins on 19th December
1739, one day out of Texel. Captained by
Daniel Ronzieres, she was on her second voyage east, the purpose of her journey
to purchase spices, textiles, porcelain, pepper and tea. Caught in a violent
storm that also claimed several other ships that night, she was lost on the
Sands with no survivors.
The sinking of the Rooswijk and the fateful
legendary voyage of the Lovibond were less than a decade apart. The hold was
indeed filled with treasures, as proven when the Rooswijk's wreck was
discovered by a diver in 2004 in Kellett Gut, a natural channel that runs
through the Goodwin Sands. In 2005 the Dutch government carried out
surveillance and dives and it is believed that at least 10,000 finds, including
over 900 coins, may have been found at this time. Further investigations were
completed in 2007. There are at least two concentrations of 18th Century
material, including a cast iron muzzle loading gun.
Another wreck contemporaneous to The Lovibond
is that of a French Privateer that grounded on The Sands in 1747. In pursuit of
the Britsh ship, Fanny, she was lured over the sandbank, sticking fast
while Fanny escaped to safety. The captain of the Fanny followed the
code of the sea however and went to rescue survivors, discovering, or so the
tale goes, his own wife who had been captured from a collier by the Frenchman a
few days previous. Thirteen men out of one hundred and twenty were saved. Fanny
herself was eventually lost herself on September 25th 1860 after a storm
pressed her onto Northern Gogland Reef.
Was the Lovibond inspired by a
mixture of these and other such tales? As with any legend, the fact blends
seamlessly with fiction, until it is almost impossible to tell where one ends
and the other begins. One thing is certain, there will be many gathered waiting
in 2048 to see if she sails again and perhaps the question as to her identity
may at last be answered.
Cricket on the Goodwin Sands by J.M.W Turner c. 1828-30 |
About the author:
Willow is an author and blogger, currently working on her first series, The Virginia Dewhurst Trilogy. Visit her witchy blog at http://winsham.blogspot.co.uk/.
Written content of this post copyright © Willow C Winsham, 2014.
4 comments:
Fascinating! Very strange though that there should have been all those reported sightings of a ship that never existed.Maybe by 1998, technology would have exposed any attempt to fake something.
I wonder what will happen in 2048!
I love a good story and this one really hits the spot. But ... with my writer's hat on there is a hole in the re-telling..... if everyone perished how do we know that Rivers steered the ship to its doom? Perhaps he came back to someone in a dream and told them all about it! Thank you for this wonderful tale, I will certainly visit your blog, WCW!
Oh, good point! Let's say it was a dream...
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