Pacific was
launched on 1 February 1849 and made her maiden voyage from New York to
Liverpool on 25 May 1850. She would retain service on the New York-Liverpool route for her entire career. In 1851,
Pacifics passenger accommodations were increased to include an additional 80 second-class passengers. In May 1853, while the
Pacific was passing under an open
swing bridge near
Norwalk, Connecticut, a train
crashed disastrously into the water nearby after its engineer missed the bridge signal; the ship's crew helped rescue many of the survivors. Also in 1853,
Pacifics
mizzen mast was removed,
Loss On 23 January 1856,
Pacific departed Liverpool for her usual destination of New York, carrying 45 passengers (a typically small number for a winter voyage) and 141 crew. Her commander was Captain
Asa Eldridge, a
Yarmouth skipper and navigator of worldwide reputation; in 1854 he had set a transatlantic speed record on the
clipper Red Jacket from New York to Liverpool. After
Pacific failed to arrive at New York, other ships were sent to conduct a search, but no trace of the vessel was found. Contemporaries concluded that she had probably hit an
iceberg off
Newfoundland, as the ice had been particularly bad that year. Captain Eldridge and his chief engineer, Samuel Matthews, were both still new to
Pacific, making only their second roundtrip voyage on her, and some comments blamed the disaster on their inexperience. But as a more recent account explains, both had considerable relevant experience:
Pacific was actually the fourth steamer Eldridge had commanded, while Matthews had a long career on other steamships, including another Collins liner whose engines and boilers were identical to
Pacifics. Wyn Craig Wade mentions the missing ship in his 1979 book,
The Titanic: End of a Dream. Wade wrote, "The only clue in this instance had been a
note in a bottle, washed ashore on the west coast of the Hebrides" reading: :
On board the Pacific from Liverpool to N.Y. - Ship going down. Confusion on board - icebergs around us on every side. I know I cannot escape. I write the cause of our loss that friends may not live in suspense. The finder will please get it published. W.M. GRAHAM. Author Jim Coogan mentions the missing vessel in his article "A Message from the Sea" published in
The Barnstable Patriot, writing that after the bottle was found, "on the remote
Hebrides island of
Uist... in the summer of 1861", the passenger list was thoroughly checked by the London Shipping & Mercantile Gazette, "and when the passenger list of the ill-fated steamer was examined, it contained the name of William Graham, a British sea captain headed for New York as a passenger to take command there of another vessel. Coogan's article goes on to relate that Stephen Fox wrote: : "...in 1991, divers [claimed to have] found the bow section of the SS
Pacific in the Irish Sea only from Liverpool. Other than the claim, there is no other confirmation of the find, nor is it found in any other book... That no wreckage from the lost ship came ashore along the coast of Wales in the aftermath of her disappearance would also make it unlikely that the ship foundered so close to Liverpool." Supporting the sceptical view, a later book argued that in the absence of further information about that wreck, the note in the bottle that washed ashore in the Hebrides still represented the best explanation of the steamer's disappearance. Later dives found items dated years after 1856. The Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales concluded that the wreck is unlikely to be that of
Pacific. Among those lost was
Bernard O'Reilly,
Bishop of Hartford (
Connecticut), who was returning to his diocese after an 1855 trip to Europe. ==Footnotes==