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Holmglen [1959]
HOLMGLEN,
motor vessel: In a strong southerly wind and a moderate to rough
seaconditions not so bad as to prevent smaller craft from responding to
her distress signal-the Holmglen foundered at a point approximately 22
miles east-south-east of Timaru on the evening of November 24, 1959,
with the loss of her crew of 15 men.
The vessel left Dunedin about 9 a.m. on Monday, November 23, with 300
tons of general cargo. Additional cargo was loaded at Oamaru on Tuesday,
and at 3.45 p.m. the same day the Holmglen sailed from the North Otago
port, bound for Wanganui via Wellington.
The first intimation of impending disaster came at 9.12 p.m. on the
24th, when the "Mayday" signal (International distress call) was heard
at the Taiaroa Head Signal and Radio Station and the Wellington Radio
Station. Over the radio telephone a voice, believed to be that of the
master, identified the vessel calling as the Holmglen, and requested
assistance. The ship's position was given as latitude 44 degrees 35
minutes south and longitude 171 degrees 37 minutes east. Further
information given was, "Am heeling heavily to port .... accommodation
awash .... preparing to launch boat". Taiaroa Head acknowledged the
message, and was answered by another message from the Holmglen
requesting the station to stand by for further signals. Despite repeated
calls to her, nothing further was heard from the stricken vessel.
At 9.35 p.m. advice of the Holmglen's distress call was received by the
Timaru harbour-master, Captain F. J. Callan, who directed the Search and
Rescue operations. The first vessels to respond were the naval survey
launches Tarapunga and Takapau which cleared harbour at 10.30 p.m.,
followed about an hour later by the fishing vessels Seafarer and Moray
Rose. By early morning a further 17 fishing vessels had joined in the
search. They were the Craigewan, Norseman, Kaio,
Heather, Kelvin, Margaret, Rimu, Rambler, Stella, Dauntless, Nella,
Bar-K-Lyn, Souvenir, Miss Te Maru, Susan, Ajax and Sutton Mac. All
shipping in the vicinity was advised by radio that the Holmglen was in
distress and the motor vessel Holmburn, then off Akaroa en route to'
Timaru, proceeded with all possible speed to the position given but
owing to sea and weather conditions could not make better than seven
knots. The overseas freighter Cape Ortegal received advice of the
Holmglen's plight from Wellington Radio at 9.45 p.m. She was then 42
miles south of the sinking vessel's position and, turning about, reached
the search area at 2 a.m. Early on the afternoon the freighter Korowai
also joined the search. At daylight the search from the air began, three
Devon aircraft of the Royal New Zealand Air Force, the South Canterbury
Aero Club's Cessna 172 and two aircraft from the United States
"Deep-freeze" squadrons based at Christchurch taking part.
The Tarapunga and Takapau reached the position given by the Holmglen at
00.30 a.m. on the 25th and began searching with the aid of searchlights.
Green and white flares were fired in the hope of attracting the
attention of possible survivors. At 1.50 a.m. the Takapau sighted a
green Very light, distant approximately one to five miles, and altered
course to investigate but nothing was seen. At 4.15 a.m. the Holmburn
reached the search area and at 5.3Q a.m. those on board observed a large
oil slick, extending about half a mile across. This was circled for over
an hour when heavy oil was seen rising to the surface at the windward
limit of the oil slick. Using her echo-sounder, the Holmburn made
several runs to the southward and at 7.30 a.m. observed an irregularity
on the seabed. This was verified by the fishing vessel Rambler's
echo-sounder and the position of the sunken Holmglen was established and
marked by a red anchor buoy. She lay in 30 fathoms of water, about 22
miles east-south-east of Timaru, and about six or seven miles north-east
of the position indicated in the distress call.
At about 8.20 a.m. the Holmburn encountered floating wreckage,
consisting of cargo baskets, fenders, drums, dunnage and what appeared
to have been deck cargo. The rudder of the ill-fated vessel's starboard
lifeboat was found and taken on board. At 9 a.m. a body supported by
three lifebuoys lashed to a cargo tray, was sighted, and a quarter of an
hour later a second body was found, kept afloat by a kapoc life-jacket.
The bodies were recovered by the fishing vessels Nella and C raigewan
and taken to Timaru. Later, at an inquest, they were identified as those
of James McEwen and Sydney McKenzie.
At 10 a.m. Captain Callan ordered the fishing vessels back to port
because of rising seas, the last two, the Norseman and Seafarer reaching
harbour at 2.30 p.m. Because of poor visibility the search from the air
was abandoned at 2.30 p.m. and as a result of the The Court of Inquiry
was unable to find the cause of the sinking of the Holmglen. The report
of the court's finding stated, "The Court is deeply conscious of the
fact that, if the cause of the casualty could have been ascertained,
losses of life and ships might be avoided in the future." It found that
the cause of the tragedy arose with great rapidity and the vessel
foundered with great rapidity. It did not arise through an engine
explosion, the opening of plates, a collision or wreck such as striking
rocks. The hold cargo appeared to have been properly stowed and, in the
court's opinion, was unlikely to have materially shifted. It considered
the ship was not overloaded but very close to her marks.
It concluded that the weather experienced by the Holmglen at the time it
foundered would be no more than force 8 wind, with a tendency to
squalls, occasional light rain, and cloudy with clear periods.
There was nothing in the evidence to disclose a condition of exceptional
severity such as might result from hurricane or typhoon condition. Apart
from an affidavit by Captain Mallett, of the ship Cape Ortegal, all
evidence before the court waa to the effect that the weather and sea
conditions were not such as to give rise for apprehension about the
Holmglen's fate.
"This conclusion does not imply that the Holmglen did not experience
unusually higher than average seas which might have caused some damage
to her", the court added.
Evidence of the state of
weather and sea did not justify the conclusion that the ship foundered
as the result of these alone-even if some damage to the vessel was
accepted as being the result of these. The court felt that if the ship's
condition had been caused by any known cause such as weather, sea or
cargo shifting, the Holmglen's "mayday" message-heeling hard to port,
accommodation awash-would have said so.
A heavy heeling could have been caused by her shipping water through her
openings, her deck cargo moving, the weight of water in the poop deck as
a result of a following sea, or instability. The court accepted the
evidence of those who sailed in the Holmglen that she was a bad steering
ship and that her sail was used to prevent her yawing and keep her
steady on her course and to steady her from rolling.
The court said the need for inflatable life rafts, in addition to one or
both of the Holmglen's boats, became apparent throughout the hearing.
The court said lives might have been saved if these type of rafts had
been carried, and recom
mended to the Minister of Marine that the shipping life-saving
appliances rules should be amended to provide that inflatable life rafts
be made compulsory for cargo vessels.
The Holmglen, No. 187,358, was a steel, motor vessel of 485 tons gross
and 219 tons net register, built at Martenshoeck, Hoogezand, Holland, in
1956 by Bodewed Scheepswerven and her dimensions were : length 148.5
ft., beam 28.3 ft., depth 10 ft. Her foul-cylinder oil engine was built
in 1954 by M.A.K., of Kiel, Germany, and gave her a service speed of
about nine knots. She was owned by the Holm Shipping Company, Ltd., and
was commanded by Captain E. J. E. Regnaud. The other members of her crew
were : Chief Officer, K. D. Billinghurst; Second Officer, K. L. Barker;
Chief Engineer, R. A. McC. Foster; Second Engineer, A. J. Wolgast; Third
Engineer, W. H. Harding; Able Seamen S. McKenzie, J. Cleary, D. Wharlow,
H. Weasterley, A. Pemberton; Ordinary Seaman G. J. Boyce; Cook, J.
Anson; Steward, A. S. McClellan; Wiper, J. McEwan. (See plate 120.)
weather and visibility deteriorating the search was abandoned and the
Holmburn and Korowai were recalled.
Despite the fatigue of their crews, the fishing vessels continued the
search on the days succeeding the foundering but nothing further was
found until about 7.30 p.m. on Friday, November 27, the motor vessel
Karu, which had left Timaru at 4 p.m. for Wellington, picked up the
overturned lifeboat from the Holmglen, 26 miles north-east of Timaru.
There were no occupants in the lifeboat and after searching the area for
some time, the Karu returned to Timaru with the lifeboat.
On Saturday, following the finding of the lifeboat, the Minister of
Marine ordered a full-scale air-sea search which covered 1,200 square
miles of sea off the Canterbury coast. The search was abandoned at 4.30
p.m. and an hour later, when returning to port, the fishing vessel
Norseman found a body about four miles south-east of where the lifeboat
was found by the Karu. This was later identified at that of Wilfred
Henry Harding.
Subsequently, an examination of the sunken Holmglen was made by divers
of the Royal New Zealand Navy and by underwater television camera. The
vessel was found to be on an even keel, but nothing was seen that would
give any indication as to the cause of the disaster, despite an
examination as thorough as possible, considering the restricted
visibility which prevailed throughout.
- end(New Zealand
Shipwrecks, Beckett Books Ltd, 1990)
DISASTERS AND MISHAPS –
SHIPWRECKS
Holmglen
A marine disaster of
unusual character, the cause and manner of which was never definitely
determined, occurred on 24 November 1959 when the m.v. Holmglen,
of 485 tons, owned by the Holm Shipping Co. Ltd., Wellington, foundered
22 miles south-east of Timaru with the loss of all hands, 15 officers
and crew. The Holmglen had left Oamaru for Timaru late in the
afternoon, and at 9.24p.m. shore stations at Dunedin and Wellington
received the international May Day distress signal over the
radiotelephone from Captain E. J. E. Regnaud requesting assistance. His
message was “Am heeling heavily to port … accommodation awash …
preparing to launch boat”. He asked Taiaroa Head (Otago Harbour) to
stand by for further messages, but nothing more was ever heard from the
stricken vessel. There was a strong southerly wind at the time with a
moderate to rough sea, but nothing which would normally worry such a
craft. By dawn two naval launches and 17 fishing craft began a search
and, later, three freighters and six aircraft joined in. The
Holmburn, another of the company's ships, discovered an oil slick
at 5.30 a.m. on 25 November. The Holmglen was eventually
discovered by echo sounders in 30 fathoms of water about 6 miles from
the position from which she sent out her distress call. Wreckage and two
bodies were later picked up. Close examination by divers using
television cameras disclosed nothing that could account for the sudden
foundering of the vessel, and the Marine Court of Inquiry was unable to
establish any cause of the tragedy. The ship was found to be resting on
an even keel and there was no sign of a boiler explosion. The cargo
appeared to be properly stowed; there was no evidence of its having
shifted and, though the vessel was very close to her marks, she was not
overloaded. The disaster remains a mystery to this day.
MV HOLMGLEN
LOST AT SEA
23/24 NOVEMBER 1959
The MV Holmglen was
a coastal trader operating around New Zealand and was owned by the Holm
Shipping Company. On the 23 November 1959 it left Dunedin for Wanganui
and was last heard of with a "may-day" call at 9.15pm. A search and
rescue mission was launched immediately in deteriorating weather. At
5.30am a large oil slick was found 35 kilometres east-south-east of
Timaru. A reason for the loss of the Holmglen was never found and it
remains one of New Zealand's maritime mysteries.
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