Thomson Shipwreck MemorialPrint Page
Belonging to one of the oldest towns in South Australia, some compelling tales lie buried beneath the hundreds of gravestones and towering memorials in the old cemetery. Among the graves of early settlers, Aboriginal people and children are a number of people who lost their lives in shipwrecks along the notorious coastline.
Perhaps one of the saddest stories belongs to the small plaque which reads: "Unknown drowned female, presumed from the wreck Thomson, 1849.'' In 1849, a woman was buried in the cemetery after sailors pulled her lifeless body from the shoreline, drifting among casks of wine and luggage. The woman was one of 21 people who drowned after the cutter Thomson ran aground in heavy seas.
She remained nameless and without a memorial until the Women in Black group raised enough money from their tours to put a plaque over her remains. "All the money from our tours went into the plaques. We put in 21 plaques on unnamed graves." Ms Snook said.
ABC South East SA, 24 August 2017.
Location
Address: | 14 O'Halloran Street, Robe Cemetery, Robe, 5276 |
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State: | SA |
Area: | AUS |
GPS Coordinates: | Lat: -37.167342 Long: 139.751349 Note: GPS Coordinates are approximate. |
Details
Monument Type: | Plaque |
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Monument Theme: | Disaster |
Sub-Theme: | Maritime |
Dedication
Plaque :
The Highlander`s Grave
10 - 9 - 1849
The cutter 'Thomson' was shipwrecked south of Guichen
All 21 lives were lost
6 or 7 men rest here now
Plaque :
Unnamed drowned female
Presumed for the wreck 'Thomson'
1849
Plaque :
Baxter family
Father, mother, daughter, belived to be on the cutter 'Thomson'
Wrecked in 1849