Lyrics for the song “March 14” by Drake
#Drake #March14
https://daletra.com/drake/lyrics/march-14.html

RMS Forth: the thread about the unusual end of a Leith-built ship on a Mexican reef

Today’s auction house artefact is this print of the launch of the Royal Mail Steamship (RMS) Forth in Leith in 1841, by the shipbuilders Robert Menzies & Sons.

The Launch of the Steam Ship Forth by Thomas Freebody, 1842.

Forth was launched on May 22nd “in the presence of 60,000 Spectators”. The Scotsman newspaper reported it was “a glorious thing to see… streams of people gaily attired, moving towards one point, and animated by one feeling of joyous anticipation” and The Sun of London declared it to be the largest crowd assembled in the city since the visit of King George IV in 1822. At 1,940 tons burthen (that’s an estimate of her carrying capacity or “tonnage”), she was “without a doubt” and “incomparably” the largest ship ever built at Leith up to that time. Her overall length was 245 feet, her breadth was 60 feet across the paddle boxes and her draught was 30 feet. The engines, to be fitted by Mr Barry in Liverpool, would produce 225 horsepower each and she had cabins for 100 passengers.

Closer view of the Launch of the Forth, © 2022 Royal Museums Greenwich PAH8902

The ceremony was officiated by Mr Menzies, the builder, and Miss Colville – daughter of the deputy chairman of the owners – performed the honours at 2PM by smashing a bottle of wine against the hull to bless and commence the launch. The builders had built a special gallery for which admission was charged to view the launch up close, the surplus from this being donated to the Leith Dispensary and the local Humane Society. Fourteen years earlier, Menzies had launched the little Sirius, of just 412 tons burthen, which in 1838 became the first steam ship to complete an east-to-west Transatlantic passage.

SS Sirius in 1842 by Samuel Walters, from the collection of the Royal Museums Greenwich

The newly established West India Royal Mail Steam Packet Co. was funded by a government subsidy and had a contract to provide a fleet of not fewer than 14 ships for carrying all Her Majesty’s mails to the West Indies; “to sail twice every month to Barbados in the West Indies from Southampton or Falmouth” . These new steamers were all named after British rivers, with Thames, Medway, Trent, and Isis (built at Northfleet); Severn and Avon (Bristol); Tweed, Clyde, Teviot, Dee, and Solway (Greenock); Tay (Dumbarton); Medina (Cowes) and finally Forth at Leith.

A colour print for a Royal Mail Line advertising poster showing RMS Forth

The Forth did not have a long life however and was wrecked in January 1849 on only her seventeenth mail run from Southampton to the West Indies. She departed the former port on September 2nd 1848 under the command of Captain Sturdee. In January she ran aground on Scorpion Reef off the north coast of Yucatán, Mexico. All her passengers and crew, 126 souls in total, were fortuitously landed on the reef and were saved. It took many months for news of her loss to be confirmed back in the UK, in early March the papers were still speculating on her fate.

The Forth from the London Illustrated News, March 1849

When the account of her loss finally made it across the Atlantic, it was found that Forth had arrived in Havana from Jamaica on January 11th, from where she was to go to the following day to New Orleans and thence onwards to Vera Cruz. She left Havana on the Friday 12th as expected, and at daybreak on Sunday 14th she hit the Scorpion Reef. It was stressed at this point that:

Captain Sturdee, the commander, was wholly free from blame, one of those inexplicable currents peculiar to the Gulf of Mexico, having negatived all his calculations, and that his subsequent conduct was in every way remarkable for firmness and self-devotion“.

Sturdee and his crew calmly embarked the passengers onto the lifeboats. While the best course of subsequent action was being decided, a sailing ship was spotted and some of the crew under the command of a Royal Navy officer who was on board as a passenger volunteered to row out of the reef and sail to their potential saviour. With the assistance of this ship, the passengers and crew were landed on the island of Perez. Captain Sturdee lead a salvage party back to the wreck to recover supplies and the passengers’ personal effects, and they were rescued from Perez by a passing Yucatan brigantine on Wednesday 17th January.

The Wreck of the Forth, contemporary newspaper illustration

It was noted at the time that the Forth was the fifth large Royal Mail Steam Packet steamer lost since commencement of the steam mail ship service to the West Indies in 1841, the others being Medina, Isis and her sister ships Solway and Tweed. Tweed was lost on the Alacranes Rocks in the gulf of Mexico; which if you know your Spanish translates into English as the Scorpion Rocks; exactly the same that claimed the Forth two years later. Indeed one of Forth‘s passengers related to the newspaper men that he had read the account of the loss of the Tweed the night before the Forth was lost and on relaying his concerns to Captain Sturdee, was given an audience in the latter’s cabin to go over the charts and reassure him that they should not be within 18 miles of those rocks.

Captain Edwin Sturdee lived a long life, dying in 1897 at the age of 81. He was the uncle of Sir Frederick Charles Doveton Sturdee, the Admiral who avenged the Royal Navy’s loss at the Battle of Coronel in 1914 by winning the follow-up Battle of the Falkland Islands and sinking the German ships that had been victors of the former action.

Doveton Sturdee’s battlecruisers sailing out of Port Stanley in 1914 at the commencement of the Battle of the Falkland Islands. By William Lionel Wyllie, 1915. Collection of the Royal Museums Greenwich.

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#Lochend #Logan #Restalrig #StMargaret
Ver la letra de la canción “March 14” de Drake
#Drake #March14
https://daletra.net/drake/letras/march-14.html
Consulta la letra de la canción “March 14” de Drake
#Drake #March14
https://daletra.net/drake/letras/march-14.html

Happy Birthday #MON #Kano 2026 @joshobot_ 🎂💫

As you turn a new age today, I wish you the best
#mistersofnigeria 🥂🍿🍾
A𝒈𝒆 𝒊𝒔 𝒋𝒖𝒔𝒕 𝒂 𝒏𝒖𝒎𝒃𝒆𝒓🍷🍿🍬🎈🎉 #Celebrities
#Bahdlexbirthday #March14 #March14th #March2026 #bahdlexempire #HBD #bahdlexblog #bahdlex #March

Happy Birthday #MON #Kano 2026 @joshobot_ 🎂💫

As you turn a new age today, I wish you the best
#mistersofnigeria 🥂🍿🍾
A𝒈𝒆 𝒊𝒔 𝒋𝒖𝒔𝒕 𝒂 𝒏𝒖𝒎𝒃𝒆𝒓🍷🍿🍬🎈🎉 #Celebrities
#Bahdlexbirthday #March14 #March14th #March2026 #bahdlexempire #HBD #bahdlexblog #bahdlex #March

Happy Birthday #MON #Kano 2026 @joshobot_ 🎂💫

As you turn a new age today, I wish you the best
#mistersofnigeria 🥂🍿🍾
A𝒈𝒆 𝒊𝒔 𝒋𝒖𝒔𝒕 𝒂 𝒏𝒖𝒎𝒃𝒆𝒓🍷🍿🍬🎈🎉 #Celebrities
#Bahdlexbirthday #March14 #March14th #March2026 #bahdlexempire #HBD #bahdlexblog #bahdlex #March

🎶 3.1415926535… 🎶

For #PiDay, enjoy the first 50 digits of Pi, sung to the tune of the Battle Hymn of the Republic.

𝝅 It’s one of 56 delightfully nerdy readings of The First Fifty Digits of Pi by LibriVox volunteers, performed in styles & languages from Hebrew & Chinese to Gilbert & Sullivan to Cylon. Real Pi, served with a side of silliness.

🎧 Listen to the full collection ⤵️
https://archive.org/details/pi_0803_librivox

#HappyPiDay #March14 #3Point14

Happy day that krabs fries to those who celebrate!!!!!! #march14