The Noonday
completed four passages from eastern ports to San Francisco, being
lost on the fourth when about to take a pilot near the Farallon
Islands. On January 1, 1863, the Noonday was approaching
the entrance to San Francisco harbor, 139 days out of Boston,
weather clear, sea smooth but with a long swell on, the ship under
all sail to main skysail and topgallant studdingsails and making
9 to 10 knots. When about eight miles west of the North Farallon,
she struck a rock but glided clear. The shock was not sufficient
to carry away of the of the spars or rigging. However, her bottom
had been stove and she immediately started to fill. Capt. Henry
and his crew had only time to save a portion of their effects
and take to the boats before the ship sunk in 40 fathoms. The
pilot boat Relief, some two miles distant, picked up all
hands. It appears that the rock that caused the disaster was covered
by 18 feet of water; its existence was known to pilots but it
had not been charted; it subsequently received the name of Noonday
Rock. In spite of the depth, there were apparently some attempts
made to salvage her cargo, in some reports valued as high as $600,000.
The steamer Active sailed from sailed from San Francisco
on January 3, 1863, with the intent of grappling for the hulk
and attaching hawsers. The results of that attempt are unknown.
Delgado & Huller [2]
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The
disaster of the sinking of the "Noon Day" was recalled
yesterday in an extraordinary fashion when Capt. John Tarantino,
master of the fishing trawler "Junta" came into Pier 45
-- with the ship's bell of the Noon Day. After the crew of the
"Junta" drew in their nets as they were fishing north of
the Farallones, they found in one of them the bell which had been
at the bottom of the ocean for nearly three-quarters of a century.
Brighton
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