The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

War wreck still a Mearns mystery 100 years on

All 25 crew perished at sea in 1916

- RICHARD WATT

A wartime mystery that saw a munitions ship wash up on the Mearns coast, 500 miles away from its last known location, has been remembered a century on.

The British steel cargo ship SS Reindeer left the French port of Dieppe bound for Middlesbro­ugh in ballast on November 14 1916, and was last seen off the South Downs a day later.

She was not seen or heard from until November 19 when the first fragments of her wreckage, including her nameplate, were found by lighthouse keepers at Todhead, between Inverbervi­e and Stonehaven.

It is thought the 2,142-tonne steamer was set to retrieve ammunition for the Western Front.

All 25 crew drowned and most bodies were never recovered, apart from a few that washed ashore between Aberdeen and Montrose, along with the ship’s foredeck and other wreckage.

Police retrieved the body of one man that was washed up at Inverbervi­e but he had no clothing or identifyin­g features apart from a gold ring on his hand.

The Reindeer was built in 1896 by the shipping magnate John Priestman.

Some of her remains are still below the waterline at Sheildhill, and there is one record of the Reindeer at Gourdon, the grave of first officer Richard Trey.

Some of the surviving details of the shipwreck were recorded by the late Roy Souter from Stonehaven, whose book, A Wild and Rocky Coast, collected his area’s maritime heritage from 1588 to 1985.

He wrote: “Being wartime, reports on this disaster are a bit sketchy.

“Some locals believed that the ammunition ship blew up on striking the Muckle Shield, the promontory from which the hamlet of Shieldhill takes its name.

“Another story was that there was a collision at sea and that two ships were lost.”

Dave Ramsay, the director of Mearns Heritage Services, said: “This is just another example of the dangers which

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 ??  ?? Wreckage from SS Reindeer, above, was found by lighthouse keepers at Todhead, top, between Inverbervi­e and Stonehaven. the wild and rocky coast of Kincardine­shire presented to sailors and shipping, and amazingly happened within the range of the beam...
Wreckage from SS Reindeer, above, was found by lighthouse keepers at Todhead, top, between Inverbervi­e and Stonehaven. the wild and rocky coast of Kincardine­shire presented to sailors and shipping, and amazingly happened within the range of the beam...

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