| Language of origin |
English language
|
| Feature Type: | Provincial Historic Site - Property, whether a site of nature or a work of man, that is of interest for its architectural, historical, cultural, environmental, aesthetic, or scientific value. |
| Status: |
Official
|
| Name Authority: |
BC Register of Historic Places |
| Tags: |
BC Register of Historic Places
|
| Latitude-Longitude: |
48°39'46"N, 123°23'02"W at the approximate centre of this feature. |
| Datum: |
WGS84 |
| NTS Map: |
92B/11 |
Origin Notes and History:
|
Borden number: DdRu-92. A Borden number is a unique identifier code that is assigned to an archaeological or historic site on the basis of its location.
Source: BC Heritage Branch files
|
|
Designation; OIC 183; 27 January 1978.
Source: BC Heritage Branch files
|
|
The Iroquois Shipwreck consists of the remains of the Iroquois, a shelter-deck steamship built in 1900 that foundered off Sidney, Vancouver Island on April 10, 1911. The wreck scatter covers an area 7 meters wide and 34 meters long and lies in some 30 meters of water off Roberts Point, just north of Sidney, British Columbia.
Source: BC Heritage Branch files
|
|
The wreck of the Iroquois is of particular social and historical value as both a gravesite and a memorial of the nautical disaster which occurred on April 10, 1911. The ship, which typically carried passengers, mail, and freight between Vancouver Island and Gulf Island communities, was overloaded with cargo; it quickly filled with water and sank within minutes of leaving the dock at Sidney. At least eighteen men, women, and children lost their lives within sight of the shore. (The Department of Marine Annual Report records the official loss as 18 people.) Today, the wreck site is known as a memorial to the passengers and crew who lost their lives when the vessel sank. The propeller from the Iroquois has been recovered and is now located at Iroquois Park in nearby Sidney.
Although the wood of the Iroquois has deteriorated, what remains of the vessel and her cargo serves as a time capsule of British Columbia's regional transportation history. The vessel's surviving machinery (such as the rudder, compound steam engine, Scotch marine boiler and propeller shaft) is important as the remains of what was once an integral link in a water transportation network that connected the Gulf Islands with the urban centers of Victoria and Nanaimo on Vancouver Island. Before the province's modern ferry system was created, small coastal steamers such as the Iroquois acted as a lifeline between island communities. They played a key role in the economic development and early settlement of the west coast of British Columbia in the first half of the twentieth century.
The wreck of the Iroquois is also important as a unique example of a small shelter-deck steamer, a type of vessel which was distinctive in British Columbia's coastal waters in the early twentieth century.
Source: BC Heritage Branch files
|
|
The character-defining elements of the Iroquois Shipwreck include:
- The remains which identify it as a shelter-deck steamer - The context of the Iroquois wreck: on the bottom close to its point of departure, Sidney, Vancouver Island
- The remains of the vessel's machinery including its compound steam engine, Scotch marine boiler, propeller shaft, rudder, dynamo and foredeck winch - Examples of the vessel's cargo remaining on site, including a 1910-11 era outboard motor, railway steel, a propeller, small-gauge railway wheels, bottles of pickled pigs' feet, and pieces of dining china
Source: BC Heritage Branch files
|
|
To learn more about Iroquois Shipwreck, visit the Canadian Register of Historic Places website: www.historicplaces.ca.
Source: BC Heritage Branch files
|
|