The Wreck of the Peter Iredale

Loading...

Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon
Upgrade to the latest Flash Player for improved playback performance. Upgrade now or more info.
1,190
Loading...
Alert icon
Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon

Uploaded by on Jul 19, 2010

Twas the twenty fifth of October,
In the year of Nineteen O Six,
As a Lad just learning to know her,
Mine experience needing a fix,
She ran aground with Captain an Crew,
Peter Iredale were my first love,
Her fine men the best that I knew,
I prayed as her sails screamed above,
Sailing confident from Salina Cruz,
Liberty bound for fair Portland,
Our scuttlebutt were but old news,
Daring not look to the sand,
One thousand tons of ballast,
Twenty and Seven brave Crew,
Two castaways treated callous,
In the gale the ensign flew,
by Captain, Lighthouse were sighted,
In thick mist and a rising tide,
Our course first east-northeast was righted,
Hoping God were at our side,
And then northeast to the Columbia,
Under strong winds out of the west,
Tore sails like petals of euphoria,
Ashamed my courage failed this test,
We fought to wear the ship from shore,
On Clatsop Sands a northwest squall,
High seas an wind drove her ashore,
Sure of death nigh our spirits fall,
Grounded the Peter Iredale on the Spit,
Where She lay forlorn forever more
Decades later my shame is fit,
And for those not there only lore,
A Hammond lifeboat spirited us away,
Good Captain Lawrence's final toast,
In tribute of this fateful day,
Doing our best to make the most,
"May God bless you, Peter Iredale,
and may your bones bleach in the sands."
Hearing the words our souls did wail,
Sweet ship now lay in Neptune's hands...

PappyStu
07/19/2010



The Peter Iredale was a four-masted steel barque sailing vessel that ran ashore October 25, 1906, on the Oregon coast en route to the Columbia River. It was abandoned on Clatsop Spit near Fort Stevens in Warrenton about four miles (6 km) south of the Columbia River channel. Wreckage is still visible, making it a popular tourist attraction as one of the most accessible shipwrecks of the Graveyard of the Pacific.

Nu Flute - Incompetech.com

Category:

Travel & Events

Tags:

License:

Standard YouTube License

  • likes, 0 dislikes

Link to this comment:

Share to:

Uploader Comments (PappyStu)

  • Well written, well done. Very cool.

  • @kenrg Thanks my Friend

  • That was beautiful, Pappy xxx

  • @IXGertXI Thanks Lass... hope you are all caught up...

see all

All Comments (43)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • @jvforever72 Well I'm going out on the water for some salmon so maybe I freeze some in case VBG

  • @PappyStu The further ahead I go, the further behind I get.

  • @PappyStu

    When we can't drive somewhere, communicate on a global scale in almost real time, enjoy the wonders of refrigeration, bask in the brilliance of air conditioning, rely on fossil fuels to maintain our electricity, then maybe we will know what it was like.

    A crisis now is someone having to wait an extra 2 seconds to get served at a restaurant. At the 5 second mark, it's a catastrophe.

    Go hunt for your own food you fat bastard( in reference to that guy, not you )

  • @phekwig Yea its an obscure bit of history...

  • @Ishkiia Thank you tickled you like it...

  • @jvforever72 Our "hard Times" don't match up yet but they might eventually...

  • Another excellent video Mr Pappy.

    I can't imagine how difficult it was back then, now people run to the safety of air conditioning at the first sign of a bead of sweat on their forehead

  • this is just wonderful.... alive and well is history in the present... very touching and so.. big and full of life

Loading...
Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more