What began with the
discovery of two seafaring brothers who died on consecutive days in
September 1872 has developed into the story of the vessel that they
were serving on at the time of their deaths.
The Eureka
arrived at King William’s Dock, Dundee from St Petersburgh on 27
August 1872 with 494 bales and 1431 bobbins of flax weighing more
than 170 tons.* She was owned and sailed ‘In the General Coasting
Trade’ by Ewen Campbell of Scadabay, Harris but all 240 tons of
this brigantine had been built in 1870 across the Atlantic in Prince
Edward Island for John F Robertson.
A week before her
arrival in Dundee, on 20th August 1872, the Eureka
had collided near Elsinore with another vessel, the Mercurius
of Harlingen, and the latter ship appears to have suffered some
little damage in consequence.* This was not the last incident to
befall the vessel in the autumn of 1872 for on 27th
September the Eureka was being towed into Yarmouth having lost
her boat and sails when she struck the bar and began taking on water.*
Sandwiched in
between these unfortunate accidents were the tragic deaths from
smallpox of the brothers Angus and Neil Kerr on the 11th and 12th
of September.
It would be a quarter of a century before another link was forged between the Campbell’s of Scadabay and the Kerr’s of South Harris, this time in the form of the marriage in 1896 of my cousin Marion Kerr from Rodel to Ewen and Malcolm’s nephew, John Campbell, eldest son of Roderick Campbell of Rodel who also held the tack of Borve, Berneray before it was rightly recrofted in 190.
Note: I would like to
thank Seumas MacKinnon of Scadabay for alerting me to the fact that
the vessel my relatives were sailing in was not the one owned by
James Deas of St Andrew’s, and for supplying information used in
compiling this entry.
Sources:
Eureka Lloyd’s Shipping Register 1871-72 p197: http://www.archive.org/stream/lloydsregisters32unkngoog#page/n4/mode/2up
Ewen Campbell on Lloyd’s Captains List p19: http://www.history.ac.uk/gh/capsC.pdf
Euphemia, Eureka and Anna Dhubh: http://www.isleofharris.com/stories/euphemia-eureka-anna-dubh/
With thanks to The British Newspaper Archive (www.BritishNewspaperArchive.co.uk) the British Library Board