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THE LOST CANASTOTA

TWENTY-TWO DAYS OUT AND NO SIGN “PROBABLY BLOWN UP” Ordinarily the steamer Canastota (Captain Lockie) would have compassed the journey from Sydney to Wellington in fiv*. days, so that having left that port, in continuation of her voyage from New York, on June 14, she should have arrived here before June 20. As nothing has been heard of her since her departure from Port Jackson, the conclusion arrived at by most people on the waterfront is that she has been blown up at sea, and lias sunk without leaving a trace. Since mid-June several steamers, with special instructions to search for boats or wreckage of any kind, have sailed over the course between Sydney and Wellington without seeing a vestige of the missing vessel. The only apparent reason for the disappearance of such a big cargo carrier (of nearly 5000 tons gross register, and fitted with wireless telegraphy), is to be found in the nature of her cargo, which consisted in the main of 00,000 cases of American benzine, shipped at New York. Wireless telegraphy is only of service as long as the plant itself is intact and there is power available to flash out an "5.0.5." signal, but if by any mischance an open flame were to come in contact with the fumes from spilt benzine and the flash were communicated to the benzine cargo in the hold, an explosion would occur that would probably blow the deck off or the side of the ship out. In that case the force of the explosion would probably disrupt the machinery or plant on which the wireless depends, thus depriving all on board of the means of making their dire plight known. , . On the Sydney-Wellington trip ft vessel is never more than two days away from assistance, and the probability is that a steamer in distress would be always within measurable distance of relief if the case was not too desperate. Tn the case of the missing Canastota, therefore, it can only be concluded that there was some sudden and complete catastrophe. After twenty-two days !t is considered to be scarcely likely that the Canastota is afloat, or that any of her officers or crew are alive.. There hare been 80 me fearful experiences of the vagaries of benzine cargoes in small quantities on little coastal craft to guide the imagination as to what could happen under certain circumstances, on a vessel carrying 60,000 cases. The Canastota was a Entish-hinlt sh p, lint a unit of the American U.b. and A. Line, end was manned by Am . er , lc “ S ; She ’is a steel screw stea ” lB £ tons deck of 4904 tons gross and 31JJ tone net’ She was built in 1907 by Messrs ”lpto Mill-.. W- “f was originally known as the Tails Orchv She was classed 100 Al at Lloyd’s. Her pri» ci P a ’ Tand Length, 405 feet; breadth, 52.3 feet,, an depth, 18.5 feet.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19210707.2.68

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Dominion, Volume 14, Issue 242, 7 July 1921, Page 6

Word count
Tapeke kupu
490

THE LOST CANASTOTA Dominion, Volume 14, Issue 242, 7 July 1921, Page 6

THE LOST CANASTOTA Dominion, Volume 14, Issue 242, 7 July 1921, Page 6

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