Discovery The reefs were discovered in 1812 by the
Frederick. The reefs were described in the ship's log:
Shipwreck of Royal Charlotte On 29 April 1825,
Royal Charlotte arrived in Sydney from England with a load of convicts. The ship then took on detachments of the
20th,
46th, and
49th Regiments for transport to India by Batavia. On 11 June, the ship ran aground on Frederick Reefs; the masts were cut away to steady her while the crew and soldiers moved to shore with water and provisions before she sank. Only two lives were lost. A party took the surviving longboat and travelled to
Moreton Bay, arriving in July and causing the brig
Amity to be dispatched to collect survivors. The discovery of the wreck was announced in January 2012.
Grounding of USS Tiru On 2 November 1966, the United States submarine
USS Tiru departed from Brisbane for
Subic Bay. On 4 November, the submarine ran aground on Frederick Reef. For two days, the submarine attempted to back off the reef under her own power, but was unsuccessful. On 6 November, Australian destroyer
HMAS Vendetta and civilian tugboat
Carlock arrived to assist the salvage of
Tiru. The submarine was towed to Brisbane, where she was drydocked for emergency repairs and damage assessment. Following temporary repairs to her sonar dome, outer hull, and keel, the submarine gingerly made her way from Australia to the United States Naval Ship Repair Facility, Yokosuka, Japan. En route,
Tiru called at
Guam to provision alongside and pick up new crew members. Arriving at Yokosuka on 29 November, the submarine entered
drydock for restricted availability.
Grounding of Jhansi Ki Rani On 23 April 1986,
Jhansi Ki Rani, an India-flagged bulk carrier departed from
Newcastle, New South Wales for Japan with 74,000 tonnes of coal on board. The route for the voyage had been planned and plotted by the Second Officer, approved by the Master, and was to take the vessel east of Frederick Reef sometime on 26 April. During the Second Officer's watch, constant rain had reduced visibility from to . At 1515, an object was detected on radar, away to port. It was assumed that this was the Frederick Reefs Lighthouse, but was actually another ship, MV
Fort Resolution. Two hours later, another radar echo was picked up, away. While attempting to clarify the indistinct radar signal, it became obscured by
rain clutter, then vanished. Assumed to be a ship, the lookout was instructed to keep watch off the starboard bow. The ship's Master arrived on the bridge at 1725, to confirm the progress of the voyage and to prepare for the passing of Frederick Reefs. Shortly after this, the Chief Officer and lookout both reported a white line close ahead; waves breaking over the edge of the reef. The ship was ordered to swing hard to port, but did not swing far enough to clear the southern edge of the reef, running aground from the tower. The engines were stopped, and at 1736 were put full astern in an attempt to pull the ship off the reef. After almost two hours, the failed attempts ceased. Some oil pollution was observed after the grounding. This pollution was attributed to the forward oil fuel deep tank, which was damaged. All other fuel tanks were situated aft and were intact . The vessel was recovered and refloated on 4 May, and after being anchored for inspection, was towed to Singapore for repairs, then put up for auction with her cargo of coal. == See also ==