Historical information
This Loch Ard ship's bell was kindly loaned by Heritage Victoria.
The Loch Ard was an 85-metre, three-masted square-rigged iron clipper that sank in bad weather after hitting Mutton Bird Island, near Port Campbell, on June 1, 1878, just days after completing its three-month journey from Britain. Loch Ard carried some of the finest items that 19th-century Europe had to offer, intended for display at Melbourne’s International Exhibition in 1880.
Before the modern age, a ship’s bell was one of the most important functional objects on a ship, used to regulate the daily routine of life, sound the time, and to signal watches and emergencies to everyone on board.
The Loch Ard Bell is made of lead, bronze and copper alloy, and weighs 33 kg. It is missing its clapper. The bell disappeared after being recovered from the wreck in the 1960s, and reappeared in November 2003 when it was soon returned to Heritage Victoria staff.
Ship bells are used for time-keeping, with codes to signify every half-hour and the fourth hour, to mark the time to change the watch or shift. They are also used in emergencies, to warn of fire and other danger, and to alert nearby vessels of their presence, especially in poor weather. Ship bells are usually cast or engraved with the ship’s name and often its launch date. If time allowed during an imminent disaster, seamen would save the ship’s bell, but if the ship sank, its bell would be searched for by those who discovered the wreck, as proof of the ship’s identification. Some ships, such as the famous luxury sailing ship Schomberg, had two bells: the main deck bell and a small bell used in the pilot house.
The location of another bell from the Loch Ard is currently unknown. Sometime after the initial salvaging of the wreckage of the Loch Ard, a ship's bell for the Loch Ard was washed up. It was used for several years to summon men to meals at Glenample homestead, where part-owner Hugh Gibson and his family had previously sheltered the Loch Ard survivors, Tom Pearce and Eva Carmichael, as they recovered. Gibson's business partner, Peter McArthur, purchased Gibson's share of the property in 1887.
In 1942, the Princetown A.R.P. (Air Raid Precautions, part of the World War 2 Air Raid Warden Service) and Observation group accepted the offer of the Loch Ard Bell from Mrs R.E. McArthur of Glenample homestead, for sounding an air raid alarm. Mrs McArthur was the daughter-in-law of Peter McArthur, and the mother of Colin McArthur, who had then inherited Glenample. Since then, the bell's whereabouts is unclear.
Physical description
Ship's bell: a cast bell of metal alloy - lead, bronze and copper. It has a square flat head with a central hole, a flat head, a band at the shoulder and waist, and a rounded sound bow.
It no longer has its clapper. The surface is uneven and discoloured, and a vertical split has been mended at some stage.
This ship's name has been cast into the bell's body.
The bell was recovered from the wreck of the sailing ship Loch Ard in 1967, and is on loan from Heritage Victoria.
Inscriptions & markings
"LOCH ARD"
Subjects
- flagstaff hill maritime museum and village,
- great ocean road,
- shipwreck coast,
- flagstaff hill,
- warrnambool,
- maritime museum,
- loch ard,
- loch ard gorge,
- victorian heritage register,
- ship bell,
- ship's bell,
- loch ard bell,
- marine equipment,
- signal,
- alarm,
- marinter's watch,
- shipwreck artefact,
- shipwreck discovery
References
- Dept. Climate Change, Energy, Environment and Water Famous shipwrecks in VIC, Loch Ard (1878)
- Shipwrecks … and more Shipwrecks, by Margaret E. Mackenzie, 4th Edition, 1974 ISBN/ISSN: 0 90947 13 8 the historic and authentic account of Shipwrecks along the Victorian Coast from Cape Otway to Discovery Bay 1835-1914
- Settlers Under Sail, by Don Charlwood, Burgewood Books, 4th Edition 2002 ISBN/ISSN: 9781876425548 Loch Ard wreck, and Glenample Homestead
- AUSTRALIAN HlSTORlCAL ARCHAEOLOGY, 9, 1991 Glass Bottles from the Loch Ard Shipwreck (1878): A Preliminary Study IAlN STUART, - discovery of the wreck
- Exploring Shipwrecks of Western Victoria, by Peter Ronald, published by The Osborne Group ISBN/ISSN: 0 7316 1922 6 The wreck of the Loch Ard and removal of objects
- Australasian Underwater Cultural Heritage Database LOCH ARD, Shipwreck ID 6368
- The Age, February 6, 2004 Diver returns historic wreck's missing bell
