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The Malpas Belle was a wooden schooner, a brigantine (179 tons) built in 1872 by Nicholas Scoble Truro. The boat became stranded on Seaton beach on 3 February 1922 during a voyage from Antwerp to Penarth with a cargo of bog ore on board.
On 28 October 1908, a 321 GRT steamer on a passage from Cherbourg for Poole with a cargo of stone ran into heavy seas mid-English Channel which shifted her cargo. The vessel had to be abandoned and she foundered around 04:30. The crew was saved by the schooner Malpas Belle and landed in Falmouth.[1]
On 25 April 1916 she was rescued by the Ramsey Life-boat.[2]
References
edit- ^ "Disaster and Marine Notes". London Standard. 29 October 1908. p. 3.
- ^ 1 The Life-boat magazine 1917
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