Year |
Name |
Owner |
|
---|---|---|---|
1905 | Serbury | Horsley Line Ltd. |
On a voyage from Baltimore to Copenhagen with a cargo of wheat she lost the blades of her propeller & was taken into Lerwick where it was decided to tow her to her destination. While in tow she went ashore & was wrecked at Homborsund, near Christiansand, on 29 October 1906. No lives lost. Her cargo had an estimated value of between £35,000 & £40,000. The ship was in command of Captain Eno.
George Horsley was born on 22 June 1836, the eldest of three sons of Matthew Horsley. On leaving school he was apprenticed to E.S. Jobson and later became a partner in the company. The third partner was Ludwig August Stahle. George became an Alderman and was Mayor in 1875 and 1876. He was also Swedish Consul and a member of the Hartlepool's Shipowner Society along with William Maclean.
George married Alethia Ann Berry in 1866 and Matthew Henry, who became known as Harry, was born in June 1867.
On the death of Ebenezer Jobson in April 1877 at his home in Cliff Terrace George took over the company and it became George Horsley & Co. His son, Harry, eventually became a partner in his father’s company and by 1889 it had become George Horsley & Son. George died suddenly at his residence, Claremont House, in December 1895 leaving effects of £83,157.
Harry married Clara Maclean in April 1893. He died on 17 February 1925 at Sidmouth, Devon leaving effects of £274,009. Harry was interred at Stranton Grange Cemetery.
By 1900 the company had become the Horsley Line Ltd., with Harry as managing director. The company ceased trading in 1915.
The following information was compiled by Bert Spaldin and appeared in the 'Tees Packet' No.89, November 1986:
George Horsley was the son of Mathew Horsley, a local pilot who bought shares in sailing vessels and then branched out becoming a steamship owner, firstly in a partnership and then on his own. The company were also timber merchants, shipbrokers and coal exporters, and branches were opened at Hull, Manchester and Gothenburg.
Belfast News-Letter, Tuesday, October 30th, 1906:
WEST HARTLEPOOL STEAMER ASHORE. Lloyd’s agent telegraphs in reference the British steamer Serbury, Baltimore for Copenhagen, loaded with wheat, while being towed from Lerwick the tug’s hawser parted and the Serbury went ashore at Homborgsund in a bad position. The crew were saved in their own boats.
According the Mercantile Navy List, the Serbury is a steel steamer with a net tonnage of 2,469. She was built at Sunderland in 1905, and is owned in West Hartlepool.