The steamer was launched on 30 June 1852 and named for
John Bowes, a mine owner, business partner of Charles Palmer and the then
High Sheriff of Durham. Her
steam engine was built by Messrs. R. Stephenson & Co., Newcastle upon Tyne. During a voyage from
Rosedale,
Yorkshire to the
River Tyne on 16 July 1860, she was run aground on the Insand, off the coast of
County Durham on the
North Sea. Despite the mishap, a long and prosperous career followed. New engines were installed in 1864 and 1883 as the technology improved. A second grounding happened on the
Heligoland on 9 June 1864, and although refloated, had to be beached for repairs before continuing to
Hamburg. In 1873,
John Bowes was sold to Benjamin Barnett and registered at London, and in 1896, to James Mackenzie ('John Bowes' Steamship Co Ltd) of Dublin. In 1898, it was sold to Scandinavian owners as
Spec and later
Transit. In 1908, she was sold on to Spain, where she traded for a further twenty five years as the
Carolina,
Valentin Fierro and finally as the
Villa Selgas. ==Loss==