Sailing from
Salina Cruz,
Mexico, on or about September 26, 1906,
Peter Iredale was bound for
Portland, Oregon with 1,000 tons of ballast and a crew of 27, including two
stowaways. The voyage up the coast was unremarkable until the night of 25 October, when Captain H. Lawrence sighted the
Tillamook Rock Lighthouse at 3:20 a.m. local time. The crew altered course first east-northeast and then northeast to enter the mouth of the Columbia River in thick mist and a rising tide. Under strong winds out of the west, an attempt was made to
wear the ship away from shore, but a heavy northwest squall grounded
Peter Iredale on Clatsop Sands (now called
Clatsop Spit). High seas and wind drove the ship ashore. A lifeboat was dispatched from
Hammond, Oregon and assisted in evacuating the sailors, who were tended to at
Fort Stevens. No casualties occurred in the accident. A Naval Court inquiry was held in
Astoria on November 12 and 13, 1906, by the British Vice-Consulate to determine the cause of the wreck. After investigating, no blame was placed on Lawrence and the crew for the loss, and he and his officers were commended for their attempts to save the ship. There was little damage to the hull and plans were made to tow the ship back to sea, but after several weeks waiting for favorable weather and ocean conditions, the ship had listed to port (left) and become embedded in the sands. The salvage rights to the ship were sold in 1917, though the wreck was never actually broken up. All that remains is the bow, a few ribs, and a couple of masts. Captain Lawrence's final toast to his ship was: "May God bless you, and may your bones bleach in the sands." ==World War II==