🧵Your Saturday afternoon historical matinee is the tale of the loss of the Aberdeen & Leith steam packet "Brilliant" and her master, Captain Wade.
The "Brilliant" was one of the earliest steamships in Scotland, being built by James Lang in Dumbarton way back in 1821, just 9 years after the pioneering "Comet", for the Leith & Aberdeen Steam Yacht Company of Leith.
She wasn't that different from a sailing coaster, with the addition of the steam mechanism. She was fairly small, displacing just 159 tons, being 120 feet long, 20.5 feet in the beam (wide) and with an 8 foot draught (depth). The crew was 10.
She was a successful and reliable vessel in service, and plied the east and north coast of Scotland over the next years, variously between Inverness, Aberdeen, Dundee, Leith and the ports and piers along the way. She was joined in service by the Sovereign and Velocity.
The success of the coastal steam packets saw a rapid expansion, speculative ventures and then consolidation of the industry. In 1826, the Brilliant's owners merged the rival Aberdeen & Leith Shipping co. to form the A & L Steam Packet Co.
By 1837, the A & L Steam Packet had merged with others to become the Aberdeen, Leith, Clyde & Tay Shipping Co.,usually shortened to Leith & Clyde Co, under whose ownership she is recorded in the fateful year 1839 in Lloyd's Register.
Because of the poor state of the port of Leith in the 1820s and 30s, she often sailed instead from the Trinity Chain Pier (pics, piers.co.uk and National Galleries of Scotland). Indeed she could be one of the small steam ships in either painting.
This 1839 engraving by W. H. Bartlett shows a pair of steamships, one each coming and going from the Port of Leith. Again, Brilliant could easily be either of them. (pic Edinburgh City Libraries)
By 1839, Brilliant sailed between Aberdeen and Leith thrice a week under her master Captain Cawfield Wade. You could have a cabin for 14/- or go steerage for 7/-. The journey too about 12 hours and called at intermediate piers along the Fife and Angus coast.
The schedule was well maintained, intermediate stops took only 5-10 minutes and were offshore, passengers joining or leaving being rowed out to and from those piers.
Of Captain Wade we know relatively little. He had been a mate (officer) in the Aberdeen and Leith steamships before being promoted to the Brilliant, which seems to have been his first command. He had married in Aberdeen in 1837 to Lillias Reid, a farmer's daughter from Alford.
We know he had a brother, William Wade, also "a mariner in Aberdeen", but neither show up in Scottish birth registers, and Wade is an uncommon Scottish name at the time, so they may have been from further away.
On the afternoon of 11th December, 1839, Captain Wade took the Brilliant out of Leith and headed north on what should have been just another one of her thrice-weekly scheduled runs.
She called in along the coast, but conditions worsened. Overnight, Captain Morrison, the Aberdeen harbour master and pilot was awoken by a terrible storm. Brilliant was overcome by this storm in the early morning (pic, unidentified steamer, Aberdeen Maritime Museum)
Almost within sight of Aberdeen disaster struck around 6AM while she was off Girdle Ness in heavy weather. Suddenly hit by an unexpected wave, Captain Wade in his place on the quarterdeck was swept overboard and disappeared into the keeping of Neptune.
The entrance to Aberdeen harbour had a fearsome reputation in Victorian times and it was well earned, and Brilliant, wallowing through the storm, was about to become its first steam-powered victim. (pic is Sovereign, her sister, Aberdeen Maritime Museum)
Brilliant was now without her master and with the sea rushing on from the beam as she approached the harbour entrance she was soon out of command and was driven side-on onto the harbour wall, just below the Footdee or "Fittie" light.
A general panic ensued aboard, and mercifully everyone aboard was able to scramble without too much difficulty onto the pier, at the cost of one broken leg and a lot of wet clothing. The engineer apparently lead the way.
In his haste to abandon ship, the engineer failed to draw the fires from Briliant's three boilers and they quickly ran dry, overheated and set the wooden ship ablaze. The artist J. Faddie captured the remarkable scene for us (pic Aberdeen Maritime Museum)
The ship was soon well ablaze and the Aberdeen fire engine was called out from Broad Street but to little avail.
Miraculously, all on board had been saved though, excepting the tragic Captain Wade, and parties were even organised to return to the burning ship and salvage most of her cargo
The bow of the ship was fast on pier, allowing the salvage parties in the painting to work in (relative) safety while the stern burnt out. The mainmast was cut down about 10 O Clock in the morning, and an hour later the funnel and mizzen (after) mast collapsed.
By noon she was consumed with fire from end to end and the spectacle had drawn the crowds to rubberneck. Soldiers from the city garrison had to be called to keep order. They too can be seen in the painting.
By sunset, the Brilliant had burned to her waterline, and the pounding of the seas would make short work of scattering her remains across the nearby seabed and shore. The body of Captain Cawfield Wade would never be found.
Captain Wade's will shows he left an estate of £50 (about £5,000 today), not that big a sum at the time, about a year's pay for someone in his position. To his Wife he left their household goods worth around £40.
To his brother, William, mariner in Aberdeen, he left his "suit of coloured clothes", his best jacket and watch. To a man described as a brother in law, he left his "suit of black clothes". It is likely one suit of clothes and his watch followed him to his watery grave.
These bequests were made on the condition forbidding his "nearest in kin from troubling or molesting" his wife, Lilias.
Lilias appears to have lived out a long life as the "Widow of the Late Captain Wade", running various lodging houses in Aberdeen. Realistically there was probably little other option open to her beyond remarrying.
William Wade is never heard of again, although a woman Martha Wade and a child, William Wade, are in the 1841 Aberdeen census. They may have been a wife and child or sister and nephew. William Wade junior would become a seaman and get a master's ticket in later life.
Lilias dies at the age of 87 in Old Machar parish in Aberdeen, her last address a respectable granite house in Margaret Street.
11 years later, Brilliant's sister the Velocity would be wrecked in almost exactly the same spot and circumstances, driven onto the Fittie wall by heavy seas. Again all aboard were saved but the ship and all cargo were demolished within an hour and scattered along the Torry side
he Aberdeen, Leith, Clyde & Tay Shipping Co would go on to prosper, becoming the North of Scotland, Orkney & Shetland Steam Navigation Company, the "North Company". connecting the ports of Orkney, Shetland and the north of Scotland with Leith.
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The first patents for a fax machine were by Alexander Bain, an Edinburgh Clockmaker, in 1843. Bain also invented electric clocks, synchronised clocks and various improvements to the electric telegraph.
Bain was the son of a Caithness crofter. He learned clockmaking as a trade but was largely self educated. Sir Charles Wheatstone tried to steal his ideas, but Bain persisted and won in the House of Lords
The Bainfield student housing in Fountainbridge is *not* named after him, but the Wetherspoons in Wick is.
🧵Today's 18th century historical thread starts with a chance photo of a gravestone in South Leith Kirkyard, taken because of the touching eulogy on it, and the remarkable yarn that a mistake on it unravelled.
Isabella Lawson (1700-1783) was the daughter of Janet Wilson and James Lawson of Cairnmuir. The Cairnmuirs were minor Borders gentry, their seat was Cairnmuir - or Baddinsgill - House near West Linton.
My eye was caught by the eulogy. Someone else's (@DunsPitcus) was caught by "Battle of Preston 1715" and whether "in the Royal Cause" meant they were on the side of Stuart or Hanover. So I tried to find out.
This isn't even 4 weeks of headlines. Imagine the collective outrage there would be if schoolchildren were being hospitalised at a rate of 1 or 2 a week by anything other than drivers and their cars.
And two more. Nothing to see here.
Every school should have a 20mph limit on any roads passing it, reducing to 10mph during gate times. There should be proper, convenient crossings. Zero-tolerance "just dropping off" zones. School streets where needed. Camera enforcement. Punitive fines. etc.
It's been a while since I made a #nowandthen image transition, so have yourselves one showing the "new" (old) Gaelic Chapel at the top of what was Horse Wynd, now slap bang in the middle of Chambers Street (original image nationalgalleries.org/art-and-artist…)
This is one of a pair of images in the National Galleries of Scotland collection made by Archibald Burns about 1868 or 9. The other is here and is taken looking along what is now Chamber's Street, with Horse Wynd running downhill to the right nationalgalleries.org/art-and-artist…
We can see that the church was a relatively plain and roughly finished 2-storey, 5 bay building, with its better face to the front and Horse Wynd.
Today's Auction House Artefact is very topical given it's the 31st October. No, it's nothing to do with Halowe'en, sorry. It's a Communion Token and of course today is also Reformation Day.
It's just a small, roughly cast pewter token. But what is it, and what does it have to do with my usual subjects of interest. Well, obviously it's marked LEITH, so that's a start.
Starting on what communion tokens are (and I'm no expert here, so do wade in if I'm wrong). They are peculiar to Reformed churches and the concept dates all the way back to John Calvin in the 16th Century.
What better way to round off a Sunday evening than talking once again about sewage. Specifically, part 3 of the Edinburgh sewer story - the great untold engineering feat of the 1970s Interceptor Sewer Scheme.
To recap, in the 1950s, Edinburgh's sewage scheme was to collect all the effluent and then pipe out to sea and hope for the best. After the big Victorian schemes to intercept the waste going into the Water of Leith, the system had progressed along these lines as the city grew
The system basically prevented raw sewage entering the major rivers and burns and conducted the waste, sewage and runoff from the natural drainage catchments of the city towards the Forth.