SS Bannockburn

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OwnerMontreal Transportation Company of Montreal, Quebec
Port of registry Canada Montreal, Quebec, Canada
BuilderSir Raylton Dixon & Company, Middlesbrough, England
Yard number386
Bannockburn in drydock in Kingston, Ontario
History
Canada
OwnerMontreal Transportation Company of Montreal, Quebec
Port of registry Canada Montreal, Quebec, Canada
BuilderSir Raylton Dixon & Company, Middlesbrough, England
Yard number386
Launched1893
Out of serviceNovember 21, 1902
IdentificationC102093
FateLost 1902
General characteristics
TypeLake freighter
Tonnage
Length245 ft (75 m)
Beam40.1 ft (12.2 m)
Depth18.4 ft (5.6 m)
Installed powerTriple expansion three cylinder engine with two boilers, machinery aft
PropulsionOne propeller
Crew20
NotesOften towed the four-masted schooner barge Minnedosa

The SS Bannockburn was a Canadian registered steel-hulled freighter that disappeared on Lake Superior in snowy weather on November 21, 1902.[1] She was sighted by the captain of a passing vessel, the SS Algonquin, around noon of that day but minutes later disappeared. The wreck of the ship has never been found, with the exception of a life preserver, and no bodies were ever recovered. Within a year of her disappearance she acquired a reputation as a ghost ship and became known as "The Flying Dutchman of the Great Lakes".[2][3][4] Her fate remains an unsolved mystery.

Chronology of disappearance

References

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