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History

College of the Holy Cross

England

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The Purple, November 1898 Nov 1898

The Purple, November 1898

The Purple

The Purple is a student publication offering news of the month, editorials, poetry, college news and alumni news. This issue contains the following:

  • Some Uses and Abuses of Novel-Reading
  • Villanelle
  • College Athletics-Are They Good or Bad?
  • A Dream of Football
  • Some Personal Experiences of a Surgeon in the Late War
  • The Happy Leaves
  • Was Gladstone's Attitude Toward the Church Honest and Consistent?
  • Rondeau
  • Campaigning With the 12th U.S. Infantry
  • Rondeau
  • The Snowflakes
  • Editorials
  • The College Chronicle
  • Alumni
  • College World
  • Athletics
  • From the Editor's Table
  • Photographs of Peter O'Shea '92, Thomas P. Conneff '96, Rev. James Healy '49,

Volume information appears …


Narrative Of The Loss Of The Earl Of Abergavenny, East Indiaman, Captain John Wordsworth, Which Drove On The Shambles, Off The Bill Of Portland, And Sunk In Twelve Fathoms Water, February 5, 1805, Archibald Duncan Jan 1805

Narrative Of The Loss Of The Earl Of Abergavenny, East Indiaman, Captain John Wordsworth, Which Drove On The Shambles, Off The Bill Of Portland, And Sunk In Twelve Fathoms Water, February 5, 1805, Archibald Duncan

Texts relating to the Earl of Abergavenny (ship)

The Earl of Abergevnny was an East Indiaman which was wrecked in 1805 off the Isle of Portland, England in Weymouth Bay. The sinking was a sensational event due to the high number of lives lost, the amount of high-value of cargo that sank and the controversial testimony of survivors. Captain John Wordsworth, brother of the Romantic poet William Wordsworth, perished in the wreck.

This excerpt is from the Mariner's Chronicle, Being a Collection of the Most Interesting Narratives of Shipwrecks, Fires, Famines, and Other Calamaties Incident to a Life of Maritime Enterprise by Archibald Duncan, 124-132. London: James Cundee,1805