Year |
Name |
Owner |
|
---|---|---|---|
1867 | Ardross | Andrew Black | |
1868 | Ardross | George Black | |
1877 | Ardross | Henry Crundall | |
1892 | Ardross | Dixon Taylor Sharper |
Ardross left Hartlepool on 9 January 1899 bound for London with a cargo of coal & a crew of six. She was sighted off the coast on 12 January & then disappeared. At the time there were severe storms at sea & it was assumed that she had foundered.
Built at Inverness; Official No. 48604: Code Letters VTLF.
Owners: by 1867 Andrew Black (Andrew Street) Inverness; by 1868 George Black, Inverness; by 1877 Henry Crundall, Dover; by 1890 Henry Crundall junior, Dover; by 1892-99 Dixon Taylor Sharper (West Hartlepool) Dover.
Masters: 1870 Taylor; 1873 William Darmon; 1878 Paramor; 1878-1891 Minter; 1891-93 Francis Nossiter; 1894-99 Child.
October 1868 advertised for sale at Inverness while berthed at Ipswich.
The Ardross had sailed from Portsmouth on 5 November 1893 bound for Hartlepool with a cargo of chalk. The crew consisted of the Master, mate, one ordinary seaman & five apprentices. On 17 November 1893 she was in a collision with the fishing vessel Confidence of Hull in which the latter received considerable damage. In February 1894 an inquiry was held at Hull regarding the collision The outcome was that the mate, Robert W. Northey, Francis Nossiter, was found to be alone in default & was fined 15/-. Grave blame was also laid against the Master for taking the vessel to sea & the owner Dixon Sharper for allowing the vessel to sail with an inexperienced & inefficient crew of which only two had previous experience at sea. The Master had been told by the owner ‘to man the ship as reasonably as he could’. Sharper was ordered to pay 50/- to the Board of Trade toward the cost of the inquiry.
The crew consisted of apprentices John Wedgewood Harrison, Alfred Ernest Wright, John George Cotes, George Swailes & Edgar Williams.
Crew 1893:
Cotes, John George, apprentice, 20
Harrison, John Wedgewood, apprentice, 20 (entered on the articles as aged 17)
Mearills, Frederick, ordinary seaman, 18, Hartlepool
Northey, Robert W, mate
Nossiter, Francis, master, Hartlepool
Swailes, George, apprentice, 20 (entered on the articles as aged 17)
Williams, Edgar, apprentice 15
Wright, Alfred Ernest, apprentice, 19
Ardross left Hartlepool on 9 January 1899 bound for London with a cargo of coal & a crew of six. She was sighted off the coast on 12 January & then disappeared. At the time there were severe storms at sea & it was assumed that she had foundered. She was posted as missing on 16 February 1899. All the crew had been shipped at London. A subscription was set up for the widows & orphans of the master & the mate.
Lives lost 1899:
Child, master, London
Sadler, George, mate
More detail »Dixon Taylor Sharper, and his son of the same name, owned a number of small sailing ships, all of which were pre-owned. Very few of these vessels were re-registered at Hartlepool and many came to grief under their ownership. Dixon senior had shares in ships from about 1869 and owned his first ship in about 1879.
The list of the vessels below are those currently known to have been owned at some time by Dixon Taylor Sharper senior and junior.
Family History:
Dixon Taylor Sharper (Senior), was born at South Shields in 1825 to parents John and Mary Ann. He became a sail maker. He married Barbara Ridley Allen on 23 August 1847 at St Hilda’s Church.
The Durham County Advertiser of November 30th, 1849, records the death (on the 24th), in Shadwell Street, South Shields, of Andrew Allen (aged 4 months), infant son of Mr. Dixon Taylor Sharper, mariner.
By 1861 Dixon and Barbara had moved to Hartlepool and were living at Harbour Terrace with their son and three daughters. By 1871 they were living at Tower Street, West Hartlepool with their son and two daughters. Barbara died in 1880 aged 55. Dixon was remarried in 1881 to Susannah Fox and by the time of the 1881 census they were living at 17 Thornton Street. On the 1891 census they were visitors at Doncaster.
Dixon died aged 69 at Doncaster on 18 March 1895 leaving effects of £1,409.
Dixon and Susannah’s son, John Henry Sharper, joined the Royal Garrison Artillery and was killed in France on 22 March 1917 aged 31.
Dixon Taylor Sharper (Junior), was born on 19th April, 1855, at West Hartlepool to parents Dixon and Barbara. Following the trade of his father he became a sail maker. He married Mary Alice Burgess at Hartlepool in 1874. In 1881 they were living at Brunswick Street, Stranton with their daughter. By 1901 the family were living at ‘Ardrossan’ No. 40. Clifton Avenue.
Dixon died at Hartlepool aged 58 on 16 April 1913 leaving effects of £7349.