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Town of Clark's
Harbour : The Hungarian
The
most devastating shipwreck to occur off Cape Sable Island was that of
the Hungarian. The Hungarian was a passenger freighter that was
owned by the Montreal Ocean Steamship Company and was bound for
Portland from Queenstown, Ireland. Aboard, she carried valuable
dry foods and over two hundred passengers and crew.
It was late
on the night of February 19, 1860 when the Hungarian hit the
treacherous ledges off Cape Sable. A terrible storm made it
impossible to rescue the sinking ship which was only two miles
offshore. From the shore, the locals could see and hear the
passengers and crew, but nothing could be done due to the stormy
weather. The Hungarian sank early the next morning, taking all
the passengers and crew with it, including many women and
children. Many of the bodies were found on the beaches and were
buried in local cemeteries. Very few bodies were identified and
claimed by their relatives.
After the wreck, it was decided that
a lighthouse would be built to warn ships of the dangerous ledges that
occupy the edge of Cape Sable Island, so that nothing this tragic would
happen again. That lighthouse was the Cape Sable Lighthouse,
which still remains there today.
A memorial has been erected in
the memory of the over two hundred people lost that night, so we can
remember those taken by the sea and finally let them rest in peace.
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