There were a total of nine shipwrecks leaving marooned castaways in the New Zealand subantarctic between 1833 and 1908. Some survivors' lives were saved by the existence of the castaway depots. The Auckland Islands alone had eight known shipwrecksincluding those with no survivorsbetween 1864 and 1907, at the cost of 121 lives; a number of these are buried at the historic Enderby cemetery.
Derry Castle The first castaways to make use of one of these depots were members of the crew of the , an iron
barque that was wrecked on
Enderby Island on 20 March 1887. Eight of the 23 crew made it ashore. A depot was in place at Sandy Bay, but looters had removed all supplies but a bottle of salt, so the castaways subsisted on shellfish and a small quantity of wheat recovered from the wreck. After 92 days they discovered an axe head in the sand and were able to use it to build a boat from the wreckage. Two of the men navigated the boat to nearby Erebus Cove, Port Ross, on
Auckland Island, where they obtained supplies from the government depot that had been established there. They then returned to collect the remaining men, and the group lived at Port Ross until they were rescued by the sealer
Awarua on 19 July, that took them to
Melbourne.
Compadre Four years later, on 19 March 1891, the barque was overwhelmed by fire on board. With seas too rough to launch boats, the barque was driven onto the rocks off the North Cape of Auckland Island. All of the 17 crew members made it ashore, although one of them later died. They obtained relief and sustenance from two nearby depots, supplemented by livestock that had been released onto the island, and survived in comparatively good health until rescued 122 days later by the sealing schooner
Janet Ramsay on 30 June, and carried to
Bluff.
Spirit of the Dawn In 1893, foundered on a reef off the Antipodes Islands. The 11 survivors attempted to find the castaway depot, failing due to exhaustion and the mountainous geography. Instead, they subsisted on raw
muttonbirds, mussels, and roots. After 87 days, they sighted , attracting its attention by waving a flag made from their sail.
Anjou The steel barque ran ashore on Auckland Island on 5 February 1905. The 22 crew members made it ashore in
Carnley Harbour on three of the ship's boats after rowing against strong currents. Ten days later they reached the depot at Camp Cove, that provided them with ample supplies as well as the shipping schedule of the so they knew how long they would have to wait for rescue. Captain Le Tellac commended the provisions that the government had left for the castaways, without which they would not have survived. Some of the supplies that should have been there were missing; these were later recovered from the house of a Mr. Fleming, a lessee of the island. Reaching Norman Inlet on 7 May, Captain
John Bollons of the
Hinemoa noticed signs that there were castaways, located them, and was able to pick them up from the island and carry them to
Dunedin. Sailors from the
Compadre and the
Anjou engraved their names on the walls of the Camp Cove depot.
Dundonald On 6 March 1907, the steel barque was wrecked on
Disappointment Island in the Auckland Islands. The island lacked a depot, and the 17 castaways from a crew of 28 subsisted on what water and food they could find, mainly
mollymawks and seals, and dug crude sand shelters. Using wood scavenged on the island and canvas from the ship's sails, they crafted a crude
coracle to bear four men across the seven-mile strait to Auckland Island in search of depots. After several attempts and the loss of two boats, they made a successful crossing to the island in October and journeyed across it to the depot. They found a boat at the depot along with the supplies, so after making sails from their clothing, the four men sailed back to Disappointment Island to retrieve their shipmates and return to the depot. With a gun and ammunition, the castaways were able to supplement their diet with wild cattle hunted on Rose and Enderby Islands. They were picked up by the
Hinemoa on 16 November, and once Captain Bollons had completed his steamship's survey of the Campbell and Antipodes Islands, were taken to Bluff.
President Félix Faure The last crew of castaways to obtain relief from the depots were the 22 crew members from the French barque
President Félix Faure that was wrecked off the North Cape of Antipodes Island on 13 March 1908. Their lifeboat was broken up by the waves and all their stores were lost, but the entire crew made it ashore not far from one of the depots. After they had used up the depot's supplies, they hunted albatrosses, penguins and a calf – the sole remnant of the cattle that had been set ashore earlier by the . They were rescued by the warship , which was alerted by the smoke from their fires. They reached
Lyttelton on 15 May, and then went on to
Sydney, from where they obtained passage back to France. ==In film==