The 16 August 1809 was the
Lammas Fair in Tain. This busy market day attracted men and women from the surrounding
parishes. Many were traders and craftsmen with all of their cash to bank in Tain. Some were tenants moving out of the area with cash from the sale of their flocks. More than a hundred people boarded the ferry. This was more than the boat could comfortably carry as there was little elbow room for the oarsmen. As many as forty people were turned away (partly at the suggestion of Sheriff Donald McCulloch of Dornoch) but this still left the boat overloaded. It was claimed that drunk ferrymen encouraged the overloading. The boat was sitting low in the water. Shortly after leaving the slipway, it came broadside to the tide. The waves swamped the boat and it began to take on water. The crowds on board panicked as the boat quickly overturned. Of the one hundred and eleven people on the boat, ninety-nine perished. Twelve people were pulled from the water. Initial newspaper accounts reported up to 156 people dead. Subsequent publications settle on ninety-nine deaths; forty three male and fifty six female. Of these twenty were unmarried men and thirty eight unmarried girls. Of the twelve people rescued, there were four men and eight women. Of the drowned, fifty six belonged to Dornoch, twenty four to
Creich, ten to
Golspie, seven to
Rogart and two to
Lairg. It took a number of days before all the bodies were recovered. Witnesses remarked on the horror of the scenes and the dangerous efforts some people made to retrieve the bodies of their loved ones. == Aftermath ==