On this Day (March 23) – Efforts Are Being Made To Save Vessels

 

Three Schooner and a Sailing Ship . Lay on Virginia and North Carolina Coasts

 

NORFOLK. Va., March 23, 1906 — Four Failing vessels lay wrecked on the Virginia and. North Carolina coasts today. These vessels are the three-masted schooner Raymond T. Maull, Captain Higbee, from Georgia to Philadelphia, which lies beached on Gull Shoals, N.C., near Hatteras; the three-masted schooner Harlan W. House, Captain Gaskins, from New York to Beaufort, N.C, which lies waterlogged, at Hatteras Inlet: the British sailing ship Clyde, Captain Evans, from the South, for New York and Calcutta, which is stranded south of Cape Hatteras; and the four-masted schooner Harriet Hayward, Captain Concord, which was beached inside of Cape Henry, following her collision last night with the German steamer San Miguel. Efforts are being made to save all of the vessels, but no favorable reports have been received from any but the Clyde.

* Noteworthy

1848 – The ship John Wickliffe arrives at Port Chalmers carrying the first Scottish settlers for Dunedin, New Zealand. Otago province is founded.

1857 – Elisha Otis’s first elevator is installed at 488 Broadway New York City.

1868 – The University of California is founded in Oakland, California when the Organic Act is signed into law.

1909 – Theodore Roosevelt leaves New York for a post-presidency safari in Africa. The trip is sponsored by the Smithsonian Institution and National Geographic Society.

1977 – The first of The Nixon Interviews (12 will be recorded over four weeks) are videotaped with British journalist David Frost interviewing former United States President Richard Nixon about the Watergate scandal and the Nixon tapes.

2001 – The Russian Mir space station is disposed of, breaking up in the atmosphere before falling into the southern Pacific Ocean near Fiji.

 

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