History | |
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Name | Edmond |
Owner | John Arnott and George Cannock |
Port of registry | Saint John, New Brunswick |
Builder | Granville, Nova Scotia |
Launched | 1833 |
Fate | Wrecked off the Duggerna Rocks in Kilkee, County Clare 19 November 1850 |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | 3-masted barque |
Tonnage | 399 GRT[1] |
Length | 112 ft 8 in (34.34 m)[1] |
Beam | 28 ft (8.5 m)[2] |
The Edmond was a chartered passenger sailing vessel that sank off the coast of Kilkee, County Clare on 19 November 1850.[3] It was built in 1833 in Granville, Nova Scotia, a small community near Annapolis Royal, a town that became famous for wooden shipbuilding during the 1800s.[4] At the time of the disaster it was owned by John Arnott and George Cannock, who co-owned the Arnotts department store. Today there is a commemorative plaque engraved on the sea wall just beside the wreck site, in an area now known as Edmond Point.[5]