The U.S.S. Conastoga left San Francisco for a trek to Hawaii and then her berth in American Samoa in 1923. She never reached either destination, and despite an incredibly large air search near Hawaii (for that period) was never found. Eventually a lifeboat and some minor items washed ashore near Mexico. The ship and it's 58 man crew were lost in one of the largest missing ship mysteries of our Navy.
Today it was confirmed that in 2009 wreckage of a ship found off some island near California and San Francisco were those of the Conastoga. The reason it took some seven years to confirm this was that there was a misconception as to where Conastoga met whatever fate she did. She was supposed to report to Pearl Harbor, and it was thought she had no problem crossing the Pacific until she approached the Hawaiian Islands (where that air search occurred). The fact that the wreckage was found on the Mexican coast meant nothing because the sea currents can cause wreckage to float thousands of miles away from a wreck site. The researchers (after the discovery of the wreck) looked for some local tug boat (the Conastoga was a larger ocean going tug boat - hence it's large crew) that was missing from the local California ports and was used in home waters. Only gradually did they realize that the Conastoga fit the physical descriptions of the wreck.
Apparently the ship hit a storm while near these islands, and tried to make for a safe anchorage but the heavy seas washed over the deck and swamped the ship.
Photos of the wreck posted on the internet show that it has (since the tragedy occurred) become a sea life sanctuary, as many wrecks have, with small animals and sea growths on it's frame. As such it is now under Federal Government protection.
There is an up-dated article on Wikipedia on the Conastoga with the latest articles regarding it's discovery. Like the discovery nearly two years back of H.M.S. Erebus of the ill-fated Franklin Arctic Expedition (1845-1850?) this kind of news suggests that in time more of these old missing ship cases may be cleared up. We may yet find the U.S.S. Cyclops, the Waratah, etc.
Jeff
Today it was confirmed that in 2009 wreckage of a ship found off some island near California and San Francisco were those of the Conastoga. The reason it took some seven years to confirm this was that there was a misconception as to where Conastoga met whatever fate she did. She was supposed to report to Pearl Harbor, and it was thought she had no problem crossing the Pacific until she approached the Hawaiian Islands (where that air search occurred). The fact that the wreckage was found on the Mexican coast meant nothing because the sea currents can cause wreckage to float thousands of miles away from a wreck site. The researchers (after the discovery of the wreck) looked for some local tug boat (the Conastoga was a larger ocean going tug boat - hence it's large crew) that was missing from the local California ports and was used in home waters. Only gradually did they realize that the Conastoga fit the physical descriptions of the wreck.
Apparently the ship hit a storm while near these islands, and tried to make for a safe anchorage but the heavy seas washed over the deck and swamped the ship.
Photos of the wreck posted on the internet show that it has (since the tragedy occurred) become a sea life sanctuary, as many wrecks have, with small animals and sea growths on it's frame. As such it is now under Federal Government protection.
There is an up-dated article on Wikipedia on the Conastoga with the latest articles regarding it's discovery. Like the discovery nearly two years back of H.M.S. Erebus of the ill-fated Franklin Arctic Expedition (1845-1850?) this kind of news suggests that in time more of these old missing ship cases may be cleared up. We may yet find the U.S.S. Cyclops, the Waratah, etc.
Jeff
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