Letter from the Meteorological Office to Captain Belding with reference to the Excellent Classing of the captain's log
Maker
Meteorological Office
Date20 April 1892
Object number00017742
NameLetter
MediumInk on paper
DimensionsOverall: 197 x 187 mm, 0.003 kg
ClassificationsEphemera
Credit LineANMM Collection
DescriptionA handwritten letter from C.W Bailee of the Meteorological Office in London to Captain Belding. 1892.
The letter is written on letterhead from the Meteorological Office and dated 20th April, 1892. Bailee refers to the Captain Belding's recent submitted log as being "Excellent' and invites him to visit the London office when next in town.
HistoryAlthough little is known about the British Captain Raustin Belding personally, he had a successful career as a sea captain and became known in maritime circles as captain of the popular vessel THOMAS STEPHENS which became one the fastest and most admired passenger vessels of its day. Belding does not appear to have captained the vessel until the early 1890s and became most renowned for saving the ship not once, but twice.
On 24 December 1894 the THOMAS STEPHENS sailing from Barry for Esquimalt, was dismasted off Cape Horn but managed to arrive at the Falkland Islands. But Captain Belding, outraged at the estimated cost of repairing the vessel at Port Stanley, decided instead to make towards Cape Town under jury rig and indignation only. After successfully arriving and undertaking by now urgent repairs, Belding sailed for Esquimalt, British Colombia, and arrived 271 days after departing Barry Harbour in Britain.
After being sold to the Portuguese Government in 1896, Captain Belding was requested to sail the THOMAS STEPHENS to Portugal. En route the ship caught fire and witnesses claim the vessel was only saved by Captain Belding’s actions. Portugal was so relieved their latest investment had arrived safely that they gave Captain Belding a service of plate and a Portuguese Order.
SignificanceWhile a ship's log typically recorded events on board and the navigation of a ship, they had a wider use in the early decades of meteorology. Logged information on tides, weather conditions and astronomical readings from all parts of the globe could be then be compiled together. This information provided meteorologists with a wider and more accurate picture of the world’s seasonal weather, assisting countless sailors and navigators.
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20 April 1892