There have been over a thousand lives lost from more than one hundred ships that have been wrecked on The Manacles. The reef lying on the eastern approach to the port of
Falmouth is one reason for the large number of wrecks, although some ships such as were many miles off course when they ploughed into the rocks. Many of the well-known wrecks are in the central group where depths are less than for an area of . These wrecks include: • , an 18-gun , sank on 22 January 1809, with only one of the 126 on board surviving. • The
John carrying 263 emigrants to
Canada, sank on the Maen Land in May 1855, only 86 survived. • , a Greek steamer carrying grain from
Novorossijsk to
Falmouth sank on 8 February 1890 with the loss of 14 of the 22 crew. •
SS Mohegan sank on 14 October 1898 with 106 fatalities. Imortalised by the
Dundonian poet
William McGonagall in his poem "The Wreck of the Steamer Mohegan." In 1885
Trinity House was
petitioned for a
lightship to be moored near the rocks. Over the previous ten years, sixteen vessels, with 693 crew and passengers had been wrecked and the value of the ships and their cargoes was estimated to be about £100,000. The Trinity House board decided, in May 1890, that they did not see any necessity for either the siting of a lightship, or building a lighthouse. ==References==