Hull triple trawler tragedy (1968)
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The Hull triple trawler tragedy was the sinking of three trawlers from the British fishing port of
Kingston upon Hull Kingston upon Hull, usually abbreviated to Hull, is a port city and unitary authority in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. It lies upon the River Hull at its confluence with the Humber Estuary, inland from the North Sea and south-east ...
during January and February 1968. A total of 58 crew members died, with just one survivor. The three sinkings brought widespread national publicity to the conditions in which fishermen worked, and triggered an official inquiry which led to major changes to employment and working practices within the British fishing industry.


The sinkings


''St Romanus''

The ''St Romanus'' sailed from Hull on 10 January 1968 and the last firm contact with the vessel was a radio telephone call the same evening. However, despite a company policy that ships should report their position and catch details daily, the alarm was not raised until 26 January, after a number of failed attempts by the owners to contact the ship by radio. It was then discovered that a
liferaft A lifeboat or liferaft is a small, rigid or inflatable boat carried for emergency evacuation in the event of a disaster aboard a ship. Lifeboat drills are required by law on larger commercial ships. Rafts ( liferafts) are also used. In the m ...
found on 13 January by another vessel had come from the ''St Romanus''. A search began, but by 30 January the families were told that there was little hope for the vessel and her crew of 20. Later, at the official enquiry, it was stated that a mayday call from the ship had been heard on 11 January by another ship, but had not been passed on.


''Kingston Peridot''

The ''Kingston Peridot'' had also sailed from Hull on 10 January with a crew of 20, and by 26 January she was fishing off north-east Iceland in foul weather. She told another trawler by radio that she was having difficulties with ice build-up on the ship, and arranged to move east to join them, but no further contact was established and on 29 January one of her liferafts was washed ashore. This, with debris found subsequently, indicated that the vessel had sunk on 27 January. News of her loss was received in Hull on 30 January, just as hope was fading for the crew of ''St. Romanus''.


''Ross Cleveland''

''Ross Cleveland'' sailed on 20 January, before the loss of the first two trawlers became known. She was bound for the north coast of Iceland with a full crew, but one man, Colin Ireland, was put ashore for medical treatment, leaving 19 on board. Conditions were very poor and on 3 February, following a weather warning, she made for Grænahlíð, a narrow and relatively sheltered inlet on Iceland's north-west coast. A number of other ships were there to wait out what became a long and exceptionally severe storm, with hurricane-force winds and blizzards, causing dangerous amounts of ice to form on the vessels' superstructure and radar. The ''Ross Clevelands captain attempted to move her from a dangerous position to a safer one during the evening of 4 February, but the ship was overwhelmed by the wind and sea, capsized and sank. The last radio message received by the other ships was from the captain, and ran: Other ships attempted to assist the ''Ross Cleveland'' but were defeated by the storm, and two more vessels, the ''Notts. County'' and the ''Heiðrún II'', were wrecked in Ísafjörður that night, the latter lost with all hands. News of the sinking reached Hull on 5 February, six days after that of the ''Kingston Peridot''. At first it was believed all aboard ''Ross Cleveland'' had died, but on 6 February Harry Eddom, the
mate Mate may refer to: Science * Mate, one of a pair of animals involved in: ** Mate choice, intersexual selection ** Mating * Multi-antimicrobial extrusion protein, or MATE, an efflux transporter family of proteins Person or title * Friendship ...
, was discovered alive, having been washed ashore in a liferaft the previous day. Two other men had been with him in the raft, but both had died of exposure before reaching the shore.


Safety campaign

The trawlermen and their families formed a close-knit community in Hull, and the first two losses were a devastating blow. A safety campaign led by fisherman's wife
Lillian Bilocca Lillian Bilocca (née Marshall; 26 May 1929 – 3 August 1988) was a British fisheries worker and campaigner for improved safety in the fishing fleet as leader of the "headscarf revolutionaries" – a group of fishermen's family members. Spurred ...
began; meetings were arranged between trawlermen's wives and trawler owners, and also with government ministers, and some wives picketed the dock to ensure all departing ships carried radio operators, attracting much national media attention. The national newspapers called it 'The Headscarf Campaign', as headscarves were popular with working women in the 1960s. As the wives' deputation arrived at the dock in front of TV cameras and journalists on 5 February for the meeting with the trawler owners, news broke of the loss of ''Ross Cleveland''. The following day the women travelled to London, again with massive media coverage, and met ministers to discuss a variety of reforms to the fishing industry. The same day, trawler owners were instructed to implement new safety arrangements based on the outcome of the meeting, with immediate effect.


Inquiries

There were official inquiries into the sinking of each ship. These concluded that ''St. Romanus'' had probably been lost on 11 January for reasons unknown; that ''Kingston Peridot'' had probably capsized on either 26 or 27 January due to instability in the extreme weather conditions; and that ''Ross Cleveland'' had been insufficiently stable to cope with the weather and the build-up of ice at the time. Various recommendations were made, and these were considered in greater detail by a government Committee of Inquiry, led by Admiral Sir Deric Holland-Martin, into safety in the British fishing industry. Its report, published in May 1969, brought about wide-reaching changes. These included tighter regulation of trawler design and construction; more and better safety equipment; legal standards for radio equipment, operators and reporting procedures; and a mass of improvements to employment, training and working practices and industrial relations. The tragedy continued to influence subsequent UK legislation on
maritime safety Maritime safety as part of and overlapping with water safety is concerned with the protection of life (search and rescue) and property through regulation, management and technology development of all forms of waterborne transportation. The execut ...
: Harry Eddom's survival was cited in Parliamentary debates in 1986 over improvements in the provision of lifejackets and of emergency clothing in liferafts (Safety at Sea Bill 1986).


Aftermath

In 2002 the wreckage of the ''Ross Cleveland'' was located in
Ísafjörður Ísafjörður (pronounced , meaning ''ice fjord'', literally ''fjord of ices'') is a town in the northwest of Iceland. The oldest part of Ísafjörður with the town centre is located on a spit of sand, or ''eyri'', in Skutulsfjörður, a fjord ...
by a BBC team, and filmed via mini submarine. The pictures appeared to confirm the belief that a build-up of ice on the superstructure had contributed to the sinking. In January and February 2008, the 40th anniversary of the tragedy was commemorated at a series of events in Hull. The 50th anniversary was marked on 4 March 2018 with a service at
Hull Minster Hull Minster is the Anglican minster and the parish church of Kingston upon Hull in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. The church was called Holy Trinity Church until 13 May 2017 when it became Hull Minster. History It is the largest pa ...
mirroring the 1968 service.


Notes


Further reading

* Svensson, Ottar, ''Doom in the Deep: An Extraordinary Storm, a Miraculous Survival''. Lyons Press, 2004,


External links


St. Romanus photoKingston Peridot photoBBC video news report on the sinkingsVideo montage of BBC coverage of the trawlermen's wives' protestSo many lives lost to the cruel sea. John Woodcock, ''Yorkshire Post'', 2 February 2008
{{1968 shipwrecks Shipwrecks 1968 in the United Kingdom Maritime incidents in 1968 History of Kingston upon Hull 1960s in the East Riding of Yorkshire 1960s in Yorkshire 20th century in the East Riding of Yorkshire 20th century in Kingston upon Hull