alias La Loire'', on display at the
Swiss Museum of Transport. , Ouro (New Caledonia). The leaders of the
Mokrani Revolt after their capture and trial in 1873 were either executed, subjected to forced labor, or deported and exiled to the Pacific and
New Caledonia. A convoy of 40
Kabyle insurrectional leaders was undertaken on the ship
La Loire on June 5, 1874, towards the
L'Île-des-Pins for deportation. They were the symbols of Algerian resistance against the French occupation. The specialist in history
Malika Ouennoughi drew up a list of these 40 deportees, whose names follow: •
Cheikh Boumerdassi, born in 1818 at
Ouled Boumerdès, was a
marabout, with the matricule: 1301. •
Ahmed ben Ali Seghir ben Mohamed Ouallal, born in 1854 at
Baghlia, was a
farmer, with the matricule: 852. •
Ahmed Kerbouchene, born in 1829 at
Larbaâ Nath Irathen, was a
farmer, with the matricule: 883. •
Ahmed ben Mohamed ben Barah, born in 1829 at
Dar El Beïda, was a
farmer, with the matricule: 859. •
Ahmed ben Belkacem ben Abdallah, born in 1822 at
Oued Djer, was an
indigene, with the matricule: 1306. •
Ahmed ben Ahmed Bokrari, born in 1838 at
Bou Saâda, was a
farmer, with the matricule: 857. •
Abdallah ben Ali ben Djebel, born in 1844 at
Guelma, was a
spahi, with the matricule: 803. •
Ahmed ben Salah ben Amar ben Belkacem, born in 1809 at
Souk Ahras, was a
caïd, with the matricule: 854. On May 18, 1874, the leaders of the Mokrani Revolt were embarked at the in the 9th convoy of deportees from the ship
La Loire placed under the orders of captain (1822–1892). They numbered 50 Algerian deportees, and were reinforced with 280 other French convicts from the jails of
Fort Quélern, and at their head the marabout
Cheikh Boumerdassi. This ship arrived on June 7, at the anchorage of the port of
Île-d'Aix, where it embarked 700 passengers, including 40 women, and 320 other French deportees. On June 9, he left for
Nouméa, and it was therefore the 9th convoy of deportees that left France to then stop on June 23, in
Santa Cruz de Tenerife, to arrive in
Nouméa on October 16, 1874. After a last stopover in
Santa Catarina Island,
La Loire arrives in Nouméa on October 16, 1874, after a journey of 133 days. There will be around 5 deaths at sea and on November 10, of the same year, the ship "La Loire" left Nouméa to return to France after having disembarked the convicts from
Kabylie. On the 40 or 50 Algerians mentioned, 39 were destined for simple deportation to the
L'Île-des-Pins, and only one of them for deportation to a fortified enclosure. On the 300 convoys in the convoy, 250 suffered from scurvy, and will die in the weeks following their arrival in
New Caledonia according to
Roger Pérennès. In ''Mémoires d'un Communard
, Jean Allemane evokes a deadly epidemic of dysentery which decimated the transported people that La Loire'' had just landed, and who were buried in large numbers. Begun at dawn, the burial of the corpses was a task which often did not end until nightfall, and the men who had died of dysentery presented a morbid spectacle. More than two hundred convicts who had come by the Loire died almost immediately after their disembarkation. However
Louis-José Barbançon reports that on the civil status registers of the ''Bagne of
L'Île-des-Pins'', which were very well kept, only 28 deaths of convicts who came by "La Loire" appeared in the 6 months after arrival of the ship. ==See also==