Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
 

Topic: Masbrough Boat Disaster, 1841.

Page 1 of 1  sorted by
Vice-Captain
Status: Offline
Posts: 1200
Date:

Masbrough Boat Disaster, 1841.

Permalink  
 

See link.  Does anyone know where on the river Don the Chambers Boat Yard was?

http://www.rotherhamweb.co.uk/h/botdis.htm



__________________
Reserve Team
Status: Offline
Posts: 123
Date:
Permalink  
 

Not entirely sure Ridgeway, but the Don is not navigable past the weir by Forge Island, so must have  happened upstream from there, my guess would be in the Holmes area



__________________
Reserve Team
Status: Offline
Posts: 123
Date:
Permalink  
 
I've since discovered the boat yard was on Forge Lane, apparently everyone on board rushed to the water side of the boat to see the splash but the weight of the mass of people rolled the boat over into the water

__________________
ian
Club Legend
Status: Offline
Posts: 6218
Date:
Permalink  
 
Oh dear god!

How awful.

That's a thankfully rare tragedy, with all those young boys.

Heartbreaking.

Some of those poor parents can't ever have smiled again.

__________________
Testimonial
Status: Offline
Posts: 4501
Date:
Permalink  
 
I vaguely knew about this disaster at the back of my mind somewhere, but hadn't appreciated quite what the scale of it was. It is chilling to think what the impact must have been like in what then was quite a small and tight knit community. We owe it to the memory of those people to remember the disaster and record and mark it in the right way.

__________________
Moderator
Status: Offline
Posts: 2408
Date:
Permalink  
 
Nothing like local history and not enough is taught of it in our local schools. I remember to this day 30yrs ago doing the great Sheffield flood, bodies were carried as far as Kilnhurst and some victims are buried in the church there. A horrendous but largely unknown local tragedy. Ask anyone under the age of 25 about it and i'll bet they won't have the foggiest what you're talking about - a real shame

__________________

FA Licensed Coach & Referee

 

ian
Club Legend
Status: Offline
Posts: 6218
Date:
Permalink  
 
Im nearly a hundred and fifty and I cant remember it.

Makes your point Ex. I dont remember ever having a local history lesson.

__________________
Vice-Captain
Status: Offline
Posts: 1200
Date:
Permalink  
 

Thanks for the input on this.  Forge Lane, eh?  I remember 40 years ago being in the Bridge Inn and this came up and the landlord pointed upstream past the Odeon and said it occurred "just up there."  He was pretty vague but - and I tell no lies - he reckoned his beer cellar was haunted by some of the victims' ghosts.  I shall make further inquiries.



__________________
Vice-Captain
Status: Offline
Posts: 1200
Date:
Permalink  
 

Yes, it does seem to have been on Forge Lane.  It is also covered in detail in this book which seems ideal for some light reading.cry

http://priorieshistoricalsociety.blogspot.co.uk/2010/12/grim-almanac-of-south-yorkshire-new.html



__________________
Vice-Captain
Status: Offline
Posts: 1200
Date:
Permalink  
 

Thanks for all the help on this.  The landlord of the Bridge Inn was partly right, I think.  What threw me was thinking the accident took place on the river itself.  In fact the boat was being launched into the Don Navigation Canal which flows alongside the Don.  Forge Lane is just opposite Greasborough Road by the Bridge Inn and the site must have been close to being opposite Central Railway Station, perhaps where Tesco was built?



__________________
Vice-Captain
Status: Offline
Posts: 1200
Date:
Permalink  
 

As far as I can tell this is the spot or very close to it.  The canal branches from the Don and for half its length along Forge Lane it forms a wider basin which would have allowed boat launchings.

1245-rotherhamlockchris1.jpg



Attachments
__________________
Reserve Team
Status: Offline
Posts: 123
Date:
Permalink  
 

I think that must be the spot RK, at that point I suppose technically its still the R. Don with the navigation or canal starting the other side of the lock gates. Incidently, that recess in the wall on the right is where a small swing bridge was located that carried the railway into Don Forge. Perhaps it would be worth considering starting a small fund to a plaque in remembrance of these lost in the tragedy.



__________________
Vice-Captain
Status: Offline
Posts: 1200
Date:
Permalink  
 
Towdlad wrote:

I think that must be the spot RK, at that point I suppose technically its still the R. Don with the navigation or canal starting the other side of the lock gates. Incidently, that recess in the wall on the right is where a small swing bridge was located that carried the railway into Don Forge. Perhaps it would be worth considering starting a small fund to a plaque in remembrance of these lost in the tragedy.


 I'm pretty sure I read that there are two monuments in existence.  Will have to check but one is somewhere in Masbrough and the other in the Minster (I think?)



__________________
Vice-Captain
Status: Offline
Posts: 1200
Date:
Permalink  
 
ridgeway kid wrote:
Towdlad wrote:

I think that must be the spot RK, at that point I suppose technically its still the R. Don with the navigation or canal starting the other side of the lock gates. Incidently, that recess in the wall on the right is where a small swing bridge was located that carried the railway into Don Forge. Perhaps it would be worth considering starting a small fund to a plaque in remembrance of these lost in the tragedy.


 I'm pretty sure I read that there are two monuments in existence.  Will have to check but one is somewhere in Masbrough and the other in the Minster (I think?)


 Yes, according to Wikipedia there is a memorial tablet in the church and another (now in disrepair) next to the Walker mausoleum in Masbrough.



__________________
Vice-Captain
Status: Offline
Posts: 1200
Date:
Permalink  
 
ridgeway kid wrote:
ridgeway kid wrote:
Towdlad wrote:

I think that must be the spot RK, at that point I suppose technically its still the R. Don with the navigation or canal starting the other side of the lock gates. Incidently, that recess in the wall on the right is where a small swing bridge was located that carried the railway into Don Forge. Perhaps it would be worth considering starting a small fund to a plaque in remembrance of these lost in the tragedy.


 I'm pretty sure I read that there are two monuments in existence.  Will have to check but one is somewhere in Masbrough and the other in the Minster (I think?)


 Yes, according to Wikipedia there is a memorial tablet in the church and another (now in disrepair) next to the Walker mausoleum in Masbrough.


 Here's the memorial in the parish church.  If anyone comes across a plan showing the exact location of Chambers Boat Yard I would be most grateful.

boatd.jpg



Attachments
__________________
Vice-Captain
Status: Offline
Posts: 1200
Date:
Permalink  
 
Towdlad wrote:

I think that must be the spot RK, at that point I suppose technically its still the R. Don with the navigation or canal starting the other side of the lock gates. Incidently, that recess in the wall on the right is where a small swing bridge was located that carried the railway into Don Forge. Perhaps it would be worth considering starting a small fund to a plaque in remembrance of these lost in the tragedy.


 Accounts are a little confusing, some mention "river" but the inquest report states the boat "...was being launched on the canal at Forge Lane...sank in the 8ft cut."  The memorial at Masbrough Chapel by the Walker Mausoleum was completely different to the parish church one and seems to have been to several specific local children who died.  I fear it may have been destroyed in the 2012 Allied Carpets arson attack.



__________________
Reserve Team
Status: Offline
Posts: 123
Date:
Permalink  
 
Looks like quite a memorial too, cost a few bob in its day I shouldn't wonder, but good to know there is one. I cant imagine the terror those folks went through

__________________
Page 1 of 1  sorted by
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.