 |
| An
artists impression of the 'Kent' on fire. |
“This
was a noble Battalion saved to the country by its own good soldiership”
Sir John Fortesque
On the 7th of February, 1825 the 31st (Huntingdonshire) Regiment
marched to Gravesend to embark for Calcutta: the headquarters
and right wing on board the Honourable East India Company’s
ship Kent, under Major Tovey. The two ships sailed at
the end of February and parted company off Portsmouth. The Scaleby
Castle, after a trouble free voyage, arrived at Sangor on
the 7th June.
The voyage of the right wing of the regiment was the subject of
a catastrophe by fire during a storm in the Bay of Biscay. On
board were some 640 people. The ships company was 146 including
officers, the remainder were officers and men of the 31st together
with their families. The ship was crowded and uncomfortable and
was loaded with 100 tons of shot and shell as well as the victuals
and equipment for the voyage.
 |
| A
Private of the Battalion Company. |
During a routine inspection of the after hold at 10 am a cask
of rum spirit burst in a sudden lurch of the ship and a ship’s
officer dropped his lantern. The flame ignited the spirit and
within minutes the hold was ablaze. For some time it was thought
the fire could be contained but it spread rapidly to the cabins
and leaped through the hatchways.
The soldiers, with great fortitude and discipline under the direction
of Colonel Fearon and the ship’s Captain, Henry Cobb used
wet blankets, greatcoats and water to try and quell the blaze
but it was soon evident that the fire was out of control. It became
imperative that as many people as possible could be saved and
the ship’s boats and some hastily built rafts were hoisted
out. As many women and children as could be assembled wee put
into the boats.
 |
| A
Private of the Grenadier Company. |
Providently the brigantine Cambria of 200 tons en route
for Mexico, under the command of Captain William Cobb with a crew
of 11 appeared. Seeing the distress signal at the masthead the
captain soon realised the plight of the stricken ship and immediately
set about organising the help of every man aboard. He was also
carrying 36 passengers who rendered invaluable aid. The rescue
began between 2 and 3 pm with the women and children being lowered
into the surviving boats, some already having been destroyed.
Each trip took three quarters of an hour in the heaving swell.
As each boat reached the Cambria, so the passengers and
crew hauled everyone on board But not all went smoothly. The first
boat, filled with women and children, were safely aboard when
the sailors of the Kent tried to follow them. Roused
by this cowardly act the passengers declared that until they had
brought every individual from the Kent not one of them would enter
Cambria. Thus compelled they returned to the Kent
and the whole afternoon was spent in the effort to save those
on board.
Captain
Cook was fearful that the Kent would blow up at anytime
and he had to be careful as to where he positioned himself for
any burning debris could start a fire in the Cumbria.
All the guns on the Kent were loaded as was the custom
and these were likely to fire off at random as the flames reached
them.
The loss of life that occurred was mainly caused by the impossibility
of reaching all parts of the ship and the rufusal of some men,
at the end, to jump into the sea, doubtless because they could
not swim. several drowned while swimming from the ship to the
Cambria and others were crushed between the boats and
the ships.
Captain Cobb and Colonel Fearon were the last men to leave the
Kent when it was realised that no amount of persuasion
could induce those seamen remaining to risk the now hazardous
transfer to the boats. The only escape route left was to crawl
along a spanker boom from the stern and slide down a rope into
the small boat waiting below. With the ship still heaving and
rolling the drop was as much as forty feet and it was no easy
task. Colonel Fearon was not very fortunate for, after swinging
some time and being repeatedly struck against the side of the
boat and at one time drawn completely under it, he was so exhausted
that he would have let go his rope had it not been for someone
in the boat seizing his hair and dragging him aboard. He was terribly
bruised and almost senseless.
The Kent blew up at 2am the following morning.
The conditions on the Cumbria must have been terrible
in the extreme; the decks were crowded with people, many poorly
clothed, some naked, standing ankle deep in water whilst down
below eighty people, including most of the women, were packed
into a cabin intended for ten. The foul air extinguished the candle
and the hatches had to be opened between the rolling of the ship
to let in air and not the sea. Amid all this horror a soldier’s
wife gave birth to a daughter who not only survived but was named
Cambria.
The loss of life was further reduced by the fact that fourteen
survivors of the men who remained on the Kent were plucked
from the sea, clinging to wreckage, by the Caroline bound
for Liverpool from the Mediterranean.
Of the 640 on board the Kent 76 lives were lost including
one woman and 21 children. It has to be said that Captain Cobb,
Colonel Fearon and the officers and men of the 31st showed exceptional
courage and discipline and without the humanity of Captain Cook
and the courage of his crew and passengers of the tiny Cambria
many more lives would have bee lost. |