Gypsy Heart
Gold Member
600-ton Mexican steamer "Nicaragua' Sinks at Devils Elbow
The 600-ton Mexican steamer "Nicaragua" was the first ship to enter the new port of Beaumont in 1908. Four years later, on Oct. 16, 1912, during a storm that sank vessels all over the Gulf, the "Nicaragua" went aground on Padre Island, at Devil's Elbow.
The captain and some of the crew made it to Port Aransas in a small boat. The captain said the ship lost its rudder during the storm, which left it at the mercy of the raging sea. It was thrown against the breakers. Another group of the ship's survivors walked 54 miles down the island to Port Isabel.
Efforts to salvage the ship were unsuccessful. For decades, the wreck could be seen in shallow waters off the island. A reporter in 1922 wrote that a rope ladder still dangled from the doomed ship's side, a galley door swung on rusty hinges, and strips of moulding had worked loose and hung at odd angles - "like long accusing fingers."
The 600-ton Mexican steamer "Nicaragua" was the first ship to enter the new port of Beaumont in 1908. Four years later, on Oct. 16, 1912, during a storm that sank vessels all over the Gulf, the "Nicaragua" went aground on Padre Island, at Devil's Elbow.
The captain and some of the crew made it to Port Aransas in a small boat. The captain said the ship lost its rudder during the storm, which left it at the mercy of the raging sea. It was thrown against the breakers. Another group of the ship's survivors walked 54 miles down the island to Port Isabel.
Efforts to salvage the ship were unsuccessful. For decades, the wreck could be seen in shallow waters off the island. A reporter in 1922 wrote that a rope ladder still dangled from the doomed ship's side, a galley door swung on rusty hinges, and strips of moulding had worked loose and hung at odd angles - "like long accusing fingers."