The sad tale of Sam Lord and Christina Debora in Barbados

Bajansailor

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Some of you are probably familiar with the tale of Sam Lord - he was an infamous pirate who according to legend would hang lanterns in the coconut trees on the beach and cliff tops where he lived on the south east coast of Barbados - sailing vessels approaching Barbados at night would think that the lights were those of Bridgetown and head towards them, only to find themselves piling up on the barrier reef that extends a fair ways offshore.
It is a popular story, although I am a bit dubious as to how true it is - however Sam did build a very splendid castle for himself, so maybe his wrecking business was profitable.
Samuel Hall Lord - Wikipedia

The local folk group The Merrymen even wrote a song about him -

The reefs off the east and south east coast here do extend a fair ways offshore though, and they can be very deceptive - a yacht ran aground at night on the reef off Sam Lord's Castle in the first ARC Rally in 1986, and the crew literally had to swim ashore when the yacht started to break up.
The participants in the next ARC the following year were all warned about these reefs - and another yacht piled up on Sam Lord's reef again in 1987 despite these warnings, and despite the powerful East Point (aka Ragged Point) Lighthouse still working, and most ARC boats then already had basic sat navs.
Here is an account of how the square rigged tall ship 'Countess of Ripon' ran aground on Sam's reef in 1866 -
The Wreck of the SV Countess of Ripon

Fast forward now to June last year, and the offshore support / guard ship Christina Debora was abandoned off St Helena after suffering a complete failure of her main engine gearbox clutch. It was reported on in the St Helena Times here -
South Atlantic Ordeal: MV Christina Debora Crew Rescued After Weeks Adrift - St Helena Online

Marinetraffic last heard from her a year ago, when she was in Cape Town -
MarineTraffic: Global Ship Tracking Intelligence | AIS Marine Traffic

She appears to be a former North Sea trawler in a previous life?

Six months later, the MRCC in Martinique were posting bulletins about Christina, noting that she was heading our way, and they were asking for ships seeing her to report her position to them...........
The local dive shop Barbados Blue (Home ) were on a dive trip off the east coast a couple of months ago, and they saw Christina approaching Sam Lord's reef - they posted this video on their Facebook page, and it even shows when she hit the reef.
3.3K views · 406 reactions | Not sure all details. While diving east point today Chad saw…. this is happening now. Barbados is getting a new ship wreck off Sam Lords Beach/ Wyhdam. Drifting with no power. No one to rescue, we think. You can see when she hits the reef that claimed sooooo many schooners over centuries. #barbados @shipwrecks @eco_dive_grenada @hiltonbarbadosresort @wyndhamgrandbarbados @paditravel @paditv @divefestbarbados | Barbados Blue

Ooops. Their dive boat would not really have been capable of holding her off the reef, and they only saw her literally just before she ran aground, so there was no time to call for assistance.
One of our harbour tugs tried to pull her off the reef a few days later, but I heard on the grapevine that the tow rope broke, and they retreated back to the harbour, and no further attempts were subsequently made to pull her off.
Here are a couple of photos of her that were posted on FB soon after she piled up on the reef.
In the first photo you can see her on the reef in the far distance, with Harrismith beach in the foreground.

Christina Debora and Harrissmith beach.jpg

This photo below was taken with a drone on the 20th February, and it shows that she has made significant progress across the reef already.

Christina Debora drone aerial view 20 Feb.jpg

This photo was taken a week later. I am surprised to see that modern day Sam Lord pirates have not yet been to visit the wreck to plunder her, although the winds were fairly strong and the seas pretty rough up until then. Christina Debora 28 Feb.jpg

In contrast, one of the Barbados Coastguard vessels (a 65' patrol vessel built by Halmatics in Havant) ran up on the Worlds End Reef in the Tobago Cays in the Grenadines one night in the early 80's, and within a couple of days the local salvors had stripped her clean - they apparently even got the engines out of her.

I love this photo of Christina (also found on Facebook)

Christina Debora and a fisherman 1.jpg

And here is a photo taken on the 26th March - she is now aground on a sand bar inside the reef, and I have a feeling that this will be her final resting place now. Around this time there were reports that her diesel tanks were leaking, as there was a strong smell of diesel downwind - she probably also still has a considerable amount of lube oil in a tank or two, and this will have a much more dramatic effect when it eventually escapes.

Christina Debora 26 March - 1.jpg

Sam Lord's Castle used to be a relatively small hotel - it went through various owners, and then a few years ago I think it was bought out by the Wyndham Hotel Group, and it is now a huge resort.

Sam's old castle suffered a fire about 15 years ago, and only the shell of it remains (off to the left of the banner photo in the link below) - I don't think there is even a photo of it on the Wyndham webpage.
All-Inclusive Beach Resort in Barbados | Sam Lord’s Castle
 
Great post (y) Take the name off her side and add the Gallows and big working lights, and still with that turtle back shelter deck she could be straight out of number 1 Fish Dock Grimsby, in days of old.
 
Great post (y) Take the name off her side and add the Gallows and big working lights, and still with that turtle back shelter deck she could be straight out of number 1 Fish Dock Grimsby, in days of old.
That was a beam trawler in a previous life and would never have had gallows.
Beam trawling by the Dutch and Belgians was detested on the English side of the North Sea in the seventies because, quite rightly it was seen as very destructive to seabed habitats but of course money talks and as beneficial ownership of licences became muddled, these vessels started to appear in harbours sometime in the eighties.
 
Good story Martin.

What a shame it wasn’t spotted in good time, before it parked itself on the reef.

Aye, there are a lot of 'if onlys' here - if only somebody with a vessel powerful enough to hold her off, and take her in tow downwind to Bridgetown / Carlisle Bay had put a line on her before she hit the reef it would be a very different story.
I get the impression that her Owners probably 'washed their hands' of Christina a long time ago, and I doubt that they would have entertained any claims for salvage if somebody had towed her in to Carlisle Bay and anchored her there - and it would have then probably been a long process with local authorities to claim salvage on her.
I am sure that a lot of useful equipment could have been salvaged off her, like that neat HIAB crane seen in the photos - and once she had been stripped of anything useful, and the oil and diesel removed from her tanks, then she could have been sunk properly in Carlisle Bay to provide another wreck for divers - there are quite a few there now, some intentional, others accidental........
 
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