Princess Alice disaster: The Thames' 650 forgotten dead (2024)

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Princess Alice disaster: The Thames' 650 forgotten dead (1)Image source, Illustrated London News Ltd/Mary Evans

By Alice Evans

BBC News

The Princess Alice sank in the River Thames on 3 September 1878, killing hundreds of ordinary Londoners returning home from a day trip to the seaside. The tragedy, now largely forgotten, dominated newspaper headlines and led to changes to the shipping industry.

A boatman hooks another body out of the foul-smelling Thames, a grisly prize that will earn him five shillings.

A few days before, the Princess Alice had been smashed in two as it returned to London packed with men, women and children who had been on a trip to Kent.

About 650 lives were lost and for weeks bodies decayed in the polluted water or washed up on the riverbank.

Image source, © National Maritime Museum, London

On the morning of the disaster, the weather was bright and the passengers were excited as the pleasure steamer set off from London and headed out to catch the end of the summer sun and the fresh sea air of Sheerness.

It was an inexpensive trip - tickets were about two shillings, depending on which stop passengers travelled to.

Most of the approximately 700 people on board were upper working-class or lower middle-class families.

The children were tired but happy after their day at the famous Rosherville Pleasure Gardens in Northfleet, playing on the promenade at Sheerness or wandering around the popular resort of Gravesend.

As the evening drew in, many families took the decision to retreat inside the saloon or to their cabins below.

It was a move that sealed their fates.

Image source, Phil Merryman

Alfred Thomas Merryman, a chef, had been asked at the last minute to work on the ship.

The 30-year-old father of four from Bow, east London, was no doubt grateful for the extra cash, as well as the rare opportunity to escape the dirty streets of the capital.

At about 7:40pm, as the Princess Alice neared North Woolwich Pier, he was standing on the deck by the saloon door.

Just as he was saying how "splendid" the voyage had been, he saw a huge collier (a coal-carrying ship) bearing down on the smaller vessel.

Image source, Mary Evans Picture Library

The Bywell Castle ploughed straight into the starboard side of the Princess Alice, which weighed less than a third of the 890-ton collier.

The vessel sliced the Princess Alice in two with a sickening crash.

"The panic on board was terrible, the women and children screaming and rushing to the bridge for safety," Merryman's witness account reads.

"I at once rushed to the captain and asked what was to be done and he exclaimed: 'We are sinking fast, do your best.'

"Those were the last words he said. At that moment, down she went."

Image source, © National Maritime Museum, London

As a model held by the National Maritime Museum shows, the ends of the ship rose into the air as the middle sank, sending people on deck hurtling into the watery chasm between.

Merryman and others on deck were pitched into the churning river, while the unfortunate passengers below deck were trapped.

Tons of untreated sewage spewed from outlets near where the boats collided.

The water bubbled with raw detritus, giving out a stench strong enough to leave even the hardiest boatman gagging.

Image source, Illustrated London News Ltd/Mary Evans

The men, women and children thrashing about in the water breathed in lungfuls of toxic waste.

Despite crew members of the Bywell Castle throwing down planks of wood, lifebuoys and even chicken coops for people to cling to, the heavy Victorian clothes of those in the water dragged them down. For many, death was inevitable.

Deafened by the screams of his doomed fellow passengers, Merryman clung to a piece of wreckage to stay afloat.

But when about 20 desperate people grabbed hold too, it sank.

He started swimming - one of the lucky few who could - and lunged for a rope hanging over the side of the Bywell Castle. He was hauled to safety along with four others.

Other survivors described being overwhelmed by an instinct for survival.

One man told the Illustrated Police News - a somewhat sensationalist tabloid - how he had to push drowning people off him to reach safety.

Claude Hamilton Wiele said: "I found my brother swimming about. We are both good swimmers, and we made for the screw steamer."

The 20-year-old clerk added: "The water was full of people... we had great difficulty in avoiding them.

"A woman clutched me, but I got away, and I saw her go down like a stone."

Image source, Jim Miles, descendant of AT Merryman

Image source, Illustrated London News Ltd/Mary Evans

Merryman was taken to South Woolwich Pier after he was retrieved from the water.

"There were others also rescued but few recovered," he said.

"One boy died on my lap."

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The chef was one of about 130 people pulled from the river alive - several of whom died in the following days and weeks, in part from complications from swallowing the putrid water, The Times reported.

Robert Haines, a musician in the Princess Alice band, was also saved.

The double bass player was fond of ships and had noticed the Bywell Castle a couple of minutes before the collision.

Image source, Illustrated London News Ltd/Mary Evans

It looked to him as though the collier was heading straight for the smaller boat but he thought little of it, having faith the Bywell Castle would alter its path.

The musician was about to follow his fellow band members downstairs for a break.

He was only about 3ft from the bow of the Bywell Castle when it struck.

For a split second, Haines was frozen in his tracks, not knowing what to do with his bulky instrument.

But he then dropped the double bass and ran up on to the saloon deck.

"In one instant I might say, the fore part severed from the stern and I saw them all go down like a band box," he said.

"Everybody went down except myself."

Image source, Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Haines could not swim, but managed to grab hold of a lifebuoy. He was pulled on to a boat that had been launched from the Bywell Castle.

The men on board dragged a few more survivors from the water - as well as dead bodies - before rowing to safety.

Other small boats on the river came to the aid of drowning passengers, but the rescue mission soon became a morbid effort to recover as many bodies as possible.

In a matter of minutes children had been orphaned, husbands and wives widowed, and whole families wiped out.

Bodies washed up from Limehouse to Erith for days after the crash.

The dead were laid down in their hundreds in temporary mortuaries that popped up across east London - including at Beckton Gas Works, Woolwich Dockyard, the office of the London Steamboat Company and Woolwich Town Hall.

Image source, Illustrated London News Ltd/Mary Evans

As the terrible shock of the tragedy turned to anger, bereaved family members and local politicians demanded answers.

Why did the ships collide? Who was to blame? Was the Princess Alice overcrowded? Why were more people not saved by lifeboats? Is sewage deadly? Was it true that the captain of the Bywell Castle was drunk?

The day after the disaster, coroner Charles Carttar opened an inquest, while the Board of Trade launched a separate inquiry a few weeks later.

For two gruelling weeks, all the inquest jury could do was observe as a steady stream of bodies and thousands of worried family members filled the streets of Woolwich, gazing at the corpses with feelings of both dread and hope as they searched for a face they recognised.

The coroner eventually accepted that because there was no passenger list, the exact number of people on board the ship, and therefore a precise death toll, would never be known.

Over the next two months, the 19 men on the jury heard hours of evidence, the written version of which was about 5,000 pages long.

On 13 November, the coroner shut them in a room and refused to let them leave without returning a verdict.

At one point, a Times correspondent said 11 jury members wanted to bring a manslaughter charge for the lives lost against those in charge of the Bywell Castle, but 12 votes were needed for a verdict to be accepted.

The next morning, the men had finally made up their minds.

Their main findings were:

  • The Bywell Castle should have stopped and reversed its engines earlier

  • The Princess Alice should have stopped and should not have turned astern

  • All ships on the Thames would avoid collisions if more stringent navigation rules were enforced

  • The Princess Alice was seaworthy at the time of the crash, but was not sufficiently manned, had more passengers on board than "was prudent" and had insufficient life-saving equipment

However, the simultaneous Board of Trade inquiry came to different conclusions - despite many of the same witnesses giving evidence.

Instead of arguing that both vessels were to blame, it postulated that the Princess Alice had not followed waterway regulations and was entirely at fault.

Concerns were raised in Parliament for years after the disaster to ensure that positive change came out of the tragedy.

From who was responsible for paying for the burials of identified people, to how to clean up the river, Londoners were impassioned about what kind of legacy the sinking would have.

Improvements to the sewage system, the adoption of emergency signalling lights on boats across the globe and the new Royal Albert Dock, which helped to separate heavy goods traffic from the smaller boats, all came as a result of what happened.

Despite the huge loss of life and changes brought about as a result of the sinking of the Princess Alice, today there are few clues as to what happened on that fateful evening.

The bank near where the steamer met its end is quiet; the silence occasionally broken by gulls cawing as they wheel through the sky, and the grating clang of machinery from the scrap yards in Barking.

A memorial plaque was unveiled in Creekmouth after a community group secured a National Lottery grant, external in 2008.

Across the river, the only reminder at Tripco*ck Point, close to where the tragedy happened, is a faded and graffiti-marked information board.

Thanks to Joan Lock, author of The Princess Alice Disaster, for her help with this article.

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Princess Alice disaster: The Thames' 650 forgotten dead (2024)

FAQs

Princess Alice disaster: The Thames' 650 forgotten dead? ›

Their main findings were: The Bywell Castle should have stopped and reversed its engines earlier. The Princess Alice should have stopped and should not have turned astern. All ships on the Thames would avoid collisions if more stringent navigation rules were enforced.

Which boat sank in the Thames? ›

The exact number of passengers on board the Princess Alice during that fatal voyage is unknown, as is the number lost, but it is thought that around 640 people drowned, making this Britain's worst inland waterway disaster. Both an inquest and a Board of Trade inquiry were held.

How many people died on Princess Alice? ›

As no passenger list was kept on Princess Alice—or a record of the number of people on board—it was not possible to determine precisely the number of people who died: figures vary from 600 to 700. The Times reported that "the coroner believes that there are from 60 to 80 bodies unrecovered from the river.

Who died on the marchioness? ›

Within a matter of about 20 seconds the pleasure boat had totally disappeared underneath the water. Of the 130 people on board Marchioness, 79 survived and 51 died. The dead included de Vasconcellos and Faldo. No-one on Bowbelle was injured.

What was the worst boat sinking in history? ›

The wartime sinking of the German Wilhelm Gustloff in January 1945 in World War II by a Soviet Navy submarine, with an estimated loss of about 9,400 people, remains the deadliest isolated maritime disaster ever, excluding such events as the destruction of entire fleets like the 1274 and 1281 storms that are said to ...

Was there a shark found in the River Thames? ›

The Thames has seen at least five species of sharks in recorded times, with the most common being the Tope and Starry Smoothhound sharks. ZSL believes that the Greater Thames Estuary is somewhat used as a nursing ground for the sharks.

What disability did Princess Alice have? ›

Eventually, she was diagnosed with congenital deafness after her grandmother, the Princess of Battenberg, identified the problem and took her to see an ear specialist. With encouragement from her mother, Alice learned to both lip-read and speak in English and German.

How deep is Thames? ›

How long did Princess Alice live with the Queen? ›

This was all fictionalised, although Princess Alice did live at Buckingham Palace from 1967 until her death in December 1969.

Do Navy ships dump sewage in the ocean? ›

“The sewage produced on board the ship cannot be held on the ship for an extended time. For this reason it must be discharged into the sea.”

What happens to toilet waste on a yacht? ›

Boats that are equipped with a head (toilet) are required by law to have a holding tank. This tank is pumped out when in Port into a shore based sewage system. If the boat is not equipped with a head , a deck bucket is used and the waste is dumped overboard.

Is it still legal to dump raw sewage into the ocean in the United States? ›

Untreated sewage discharges are prohibited within three miles from shore. In order to discharge within three miles, sewage must be treated using a U.S. Coast Guard-approved Type I or Type II MSD. Alternatively, sewage may be stored onboard in a holding tank (Type III MSD).

How many bodies are in River Thames? ›

British police say around 30 bodies are recovered each year from the river. According to police statistics, 279 bodies were recovered from the Thames during the 10 years between 2012 and 2022. The Thames, which spans some 200 miles, runs through the heart of the city and is a key part of London's identity.

Who was to blame for the Marchioness disaster? ›

The Marchioness had been hired for a birthday party and was crammed with 131 partygoers, most of them in their 20s. But Captain Henderson did not offer any help. He failed to radio a mayday or use the Bowbelle's lifebuoys and liferaft. Lord Justice Clarke blamed the skippers and owners of both vessels for the tragedy.

Has anyone died in the River Thames? ›

According to emergency service data PLA data, at least 847 incidents were brought to the attention of the emergency services on the river in 2022. At least 109 people entered the water and survived, while 27 people died.

What happened to the man who jumped in the Thames? ›

A young man who jumped into the Thames to save a woman died following a "sheer act of bravery", an inquest has heard. Folajimi "Jimi" Olubunmi-Adewole, 20, was on his way home from work in April 2021 when at about midnight he went into the water with another would-be rescuer, Joaquim Garcia.

What is the most famous boat that sank? ›

Arguably the most famous ship in history, the RMS Titanic was known for its glamour and lavishness and was believed to be “unsinkable.” On April 10, 1912, Titanic departed the English city of Southampton on its maiden voyage heading to New York City.

Was Abdul Ezedi found? ›

A marine policing unit had been conducting low tide searches and recovered the body on Monday at Tower Pier, near Tower Bridge. The post-mortem examination was carried out at Poplar Mortuary on Wednesday and Ezedi's body was formally identified on Thursday, the Met added.

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