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The list of shipwrecks in 1912 includes ships sunk, foundered, grounded, or otherwise lost during 1912.(This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources.)

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  • The list of shipwrecks in 1912 includes ships sunk, foundered, grounded, or otherwise lost during 1912.(This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources.) (en)
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  • 1912-01-01 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-01-04 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-01-05 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-01-06 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-01-07 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-01-08 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-01-09 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-01-10 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-01-11 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-01-13 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-01-16 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-01-18 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-01-19 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-01-20 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-01-21 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-01-23 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-01-26 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-01-27 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-01-29 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-01-31 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-02-02 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-02-03 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-02-04 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-02-12 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-02-15 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-02-16 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-02-17 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-02-18 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-02-19 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-02-21 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-02-22 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-02-23 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-02-24 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-02-26 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-02-27 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-02-28 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-02-29 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-03-01 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-03-02 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-03-03 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-03-05 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-03-06 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-03-08 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-03-09 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-03-11 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-03-12 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-03-13 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-03-15 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-03-16 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-03-20 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-03-21 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-03-22 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-03-23 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-03-24 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-03-25 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-03-27 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-03-28 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-04-02 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-04-03 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-04-04 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-04-05 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-04-06 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-04-07 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-04-08 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-04-12 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-04-15 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-04-18 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-04-20 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-04-21 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-04-25 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-04-27 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-04-28 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-04-29 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-04-30 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-05-05 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-05-08 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-05-10 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-05-12 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-05-13 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-05-14 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-05-15 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-05-20 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-05-21 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-05-24 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-05-29 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-06-02 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-06-04 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-06-08 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-06-09 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-06-12 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-06-13 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-06-14 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-06-17 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-06-20 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-06-21 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-06-24 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-06-25 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-06-26 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-06-27 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-06-28 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-06-29 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-07-11 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-07-13 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-07-17 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-07-18 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-07-21 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-07-24 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-08-07 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-08-08 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-08-12 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-08-17 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-08-19 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-08-21 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-08-23 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-08-26 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-08-29 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-08-31 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-09-01 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-09-03 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-09-05 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-09-10 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-09-13 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-09-14 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-09-21 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-09-26 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-09-28 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-10-04 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-10-05 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-10-07 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-10-12 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-10-13 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-10-16 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-10-19 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-10-22 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-10-23 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-10-24 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-10-29 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-10-31 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-11-01 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-11-06 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-11-07 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-11-08 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-11-10 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-11-12 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-11-13 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-11-15 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-11-21 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-11-23 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-11-24 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-11-25 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-11-28 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-12-03 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-12-06 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-12-07 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-12-08 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-12-15 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-12-20 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-12-21 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-12-23 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-12-24 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-12-26 (xsd:date)
  • 1912-12-30 (xsd:date)
  • Unknown date 1912 (en)
  • Unknown date April 1912 (en)
  • Unknown date August 1912 (en)
  • Unknown date December 1912 (en)
  • Unknown date February 1912 (en)
  • Unknown date May 1912 (en)
  • Unknown date November 1912 (en)
  • Unknown date October 1912 (en)
dbp:desc
  • 0001-04-14 (xsd:gMonthDay)
  • 0001-05-15 (xsd:gMonthDay)
  • 0001-05-16 (xsd:gMonthDay)
  • 0001-05-17 (xsd:gMonthDay)
  • 0001-06-25 (xsd:gMonthDay)
  • 0001-07-18 (xsd:gMonthDay)
  • 0001-07-31 (xsd:gMonthDay)
  • 0001-08-17 (xsd:gMonthDay)
  • 0001-10-25 (xsd:gMonthDay)
  • 0001-11-16 (xsd:gMonthDay)
  • 0001-11-23 (xsd:gMonthDay)
  • 0001-12-12 (xsd:gMonthDay)
  • Shortly after departing Dry Bay in Southeast Alaska bound for Seattle, Washington, with a cargo of 25 tons of canned salmon and supplies and a deck load of empty oil drums, the 146-gross register ton, steamer was wrecked at the entrance of Dry Bay in a gale and snowstorm. Her entire crew of 11 survived. (en)
  • The 519-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Barrier Island, British Columbia, Canada. All nine people on board survived. (en)
  • The 7-gross register ton sloop foundered in Galveston Bay off the coast of Texas. The only person on board survived. (en)
  • The barge was sunk by ice on the west side of the channel at New Haven, Connecticut. (en)
  • The 1,385-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Pickles Reef off the coast of Florida. All 10 people on board survived. (en)
  • The 929-gross register ton schooner barge was stranded in Nantucket Sound at Great Point on the coast of Massachusetts. All five people on board survived. (en)
  • The 33-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer foundered in the Mississippi River at New Orleans, Louisiana. All seven people on board survived. (en)
  • Italo-Turkish War: Battle of Beirut: thumb|AnkaraThe was sunk by gunfire in Beirut harbour by the armored cruisers and . (en)
  • The schooner capsized in the Bristol Channel. Her five crew and the ship's dog were rescued by the trawler Picton Castle . Esperance was on a voyage from Boulogne, Pas-de-Calais to Swansea, Glamorgan, United Kingdom. (en)
  • The decommissioned torpedo boat was sunk as a target in ordnance tests. (en)
  • First Balkan War: The Taskopru-class gunboat was sunk by a Greek torpedo boat at Avila, north of Smyrna. (en)
  • The 188-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Apple River, Nova Scotia. All five people on board survived. (en)
  • thumb|Bayardo The refrigerated cargo ship ran aground on the Middle Sand, in the Humber and was wrecked. (en)
  • The decommissioned screw steamer was burned and sunk in San Francisco Bay off Hunter's Point, San Francisco, California, by the United States Navy in early May as a means of disposal. (en)
  • The 48-gross register ton screw steamer burned on the Atchafalaya River at Berwick, Louisiana. All three people on board survived. (en)
  • The barge sank near the Wilkes-Barre Pier, Providence, Rhode Island. Raised and broken up. (en)
  • The 1,874-gross register ton schooner barge was stranded on Cobb Island on the coast of Virginia. All five people on board survived. (en)
  • The 12-gross register ton, motor passenger vessel sank west of Guard Island in Southeast Alaska. (en)
  • Carrying a crew of two and a 14-ton cargo of general wares, the 15.74-ton, steamer ran aground during a gale at Point Martin near Katalla, Territory of Alaska, and was destroyed by a subsequent fire. Her captain survived; her engineer perished. (en)
  • The 24-gross register ton, steamer was wrecked in the harbor at Seward, Territory of Alaska. No one was aboard her at the time. (en)
  • The barquentine struck rocks at Gurnard's Head, Cornwall in dense fog and sank with her sails set. No lives lost. (en)
  • The 2,364-gross register ton schooner barge foundered off Block Island off the coast of Rhode Island. All six people on board survived. (en)
  • The tugboat was sunk by ice at the wharf of the Stone Express Company, in Lynn, Massachusetts. (en)
  • The barge sank in the Thames River off Allyns Point, Connecticut. (en)
  • Italo-Turkish War: Battle of Kunfuda Bay: The Kastamonu-class gunboat was sunk by and near Al Qunfudhah, Ottoman Arabia. (en)
  • The 452-gross register ton schooner was stranded on the coast of Tahiti. All nine people on board survived. (en)
  • The full-rigged ship was abandoned whilst on a voyage from Leith, Lothian, United Kingdom to Coquimbo, Chile. (en)
  • The 13-gross register ton schooner foundered off Maunabo, Puerto Rico. All three people on board survived. (en)
  • The 120-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Cape Elizabeth, Maine. All four people on board survived. (en)
  • The Truro-registered three-masted schooner was forced to shelter in Newquay Bay, Cornwall in a strong north wind and drifted ashore when her anchor fouled. Two of the crew were saved by breeches buoy, the others clambered up the cliff on the cliff ladder. She was on a voyage from Ballincurragh, County Cork to Penryn. (en)
  • With no one on board, the 12-gross register ton motor vessel foundered at Ketchikan, Territory of Alaska. (en)
  • The 30-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Cordory, Newfoundland. All four people on board survived. (en)
  • The steamer was lost on rocks known as Old Bess, within the Isles of Scilly, United Kingdom. Her crew was lost and the wreck went unnoticed for three days when thousands of oranges were washed up on St Agnes along with wreckage. (en)
  • Ran aground in a storm at Ouddorp, Netherlands. Thirty-two people killed. (en)
  • The 14-gross register ton motor paddle vessel foundered in the Arkansas River in Arkansas. Both people on board survived. (en)
  • The 827-gross register ton schooner barge foundered in the Atlantic Ocean southwest of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. All four people on board survived. (en)
  • The 145-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Punta Maria on the Baja California Peninsula in Mexico. All eight people on board survived. (en)
  • The 61-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Rocky Harbour on the coast of Newfoundland. All six people on board survived. (en)
  • The coal storage hulk was burned out by a several-day-long fire at Townsville, Australia. (en)
  • The scow sank in Canal Channel near Onset, Massachusetts. (en)
  • The 12-gross register ton motor vessel burned on the Mississippi River at New Orleans, Louisiana. All four people on board survived. (en)
  • The 874-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Itaparica Island on the coast of Brazil. All nine people on board survived. (en)
  • The 23-gross register ton motor yacht was lost when she struck a dock at Charleston, South Carolina. All seven people on board survived. (en)
  • The vessel was wrecked on Loe Bar, near Porthleven, Cornwall in winds. Nearly all the crew were saved but the ship was a total loss. (en)
  • The 49-gross register ton schooner was stranded in Hereford Inlet on the coast of New Jersey. All three people on board lost their lives. (en)
  • The canal boat, under tow of the canal boat , was wrecked on Bartletts Reef near New London, Connecticut and went to pieces. (en)
  • The 172-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer was lost when she struck a bridge on the Columbia River at Pasco, Washington. All 13 people on board survived. (en)
  • The 11-gross register ton motor paddle vessel was crushed by ice at Paris Landing, Indiana. Both people on board survived. (en)
  • The North Shields ship in ballast from St Nazaire to the Tyne for coal went ashore in thick fog, to the south of Mousehole, Cornwall. The salvage steamer Lady of the Isles hauled her clear and she resumed her journey undamaged. (en)
  • The was sunk in a collision with in the North Sea. Seven crewmen killed. (en)
  • The 204-gross register ton trawler was stranded north of Mogador, Morocco while fishing. (en)
  • The 24-gross register ton schooner foundered in Vineyard Sound off Gay Head, Massachusetts. All 10 people on board survived. (en)
  • The 15-gross register ton screw steamer was lost in a collision with the screw steamer at Milwaukee, Wisconsin. All four people on board survived. (en)
  • The tug struck a rock off Napatree Point, Rhode Island. Refloated and returned to service. (en)
  • With no one on board, the 145-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer burned at La Center, Washington. (en)
  • The 247-gross register ton, schooner was wrecked with the loss of one life on the northeast coast of Chirikof Island in the Gulf of Alaska. Her 35 survivors reached the island. Six of them sailed to Chignik Bay on the Alaska Peninsula in two dories with news of the wreck, and the steamer arrived at Chirikof Island soon thereafter to rescue the 29 survivors who remained there. (en)
  • The 84-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Shelburne, Nova Scotia, with the loss of one life. There were 13 survivors. (en)
  • With no one on board, the 42-gross register ton motor vessel was stranded on the Tillamook Bar off the coast of Oregon. (en)
  • The 283-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer burned at New Orleans, Louisiana. The only person on board survived. (en)
  • The cargo ship ran aground on a rocky islet in Georgian Bay near Beausoleil Island, Ontario, Canada. She was refloated and repaired, and she returned to service about two months later. (en)
  • The 346-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Ocean City, Maryland. All seven people on board survived. (en)
  • The 335-gross register ton schooner was abandoned in the Atlantic Ocean at . All seven people on board survived. (en)
  • The Glasgow sailing vessel struck the southernmost rock of the Seven Stones Reef while carrying grain from Plymouth, Devon. Three of the twenty-one crew lost their lives. She held the record for the fastest voyage between Newcastle and Valparaiso. (en)
  • The 2,220-gross register ton screw steamer burned on Green Bay northeast of Pensaukee, Wisconsin. All 15 people on board survived. (en)
  • The 9-gross register ton sloop foundered in the mouth of the Galveston Jetties on the coast of Texas. The only person on board survived. (en)
  • Italo-Turkish War: The passenger/cargo ship was sunk by a mine in the entrance to the Gulf of Smyrna. 65 passengers and crew were killed and 70 rescued. (en)
  • The scow sank in Massachusetts Bay sometime in October. (en)
  • The 18-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer foundered at Mudds Landing, Illinois. All three people on board survived. (en)
  • The 17-gross register ton schooner foundered off Bay Keys, Florida. All three people on board survived. (en)
  • The 98-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer burned in Bayou Natchez in Louisiana. All eight people on board survived. (en)
  • Under tow along with the scows P G #1 and P G #4 , the 7-ton scow was wrecked on rocks at Montague Island at the entrance to Prince William Sound on the south-central coast of the Territory of Alaska after her towing line parted in a gale. (en)
  • With no one on board, the 15-gross register ton barge was crushed by ice on the Ohio River at Wheeling, West Virginia. (en)
  • The 21-gross register ton screw steamer foundered in Baltimore Harbor off the coast of Maryland. All four people on board survived. (en)
  • The 623-gross register ton steel-hulled screw steamer was crushed by ice at Chicago, Illinois. All 30 people on board survived. (en)
  • thumb|upright|Gunvor wrecked Wrecked on the Pedn-Men-an-Mor rocks, Black Head, The Lizard, Cornwall, United Kingdom. Her crew scrambled to safety. (en)
  • The 79-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Cape Porpoise, Maine. All 10 people on board survived. (en)
  • The 64-gross register ton schooner foundered in the Gulf of Mexico. All 15 people on board survived. (en)
  • Italo-Turkish War: Battle of Kunfuda Bay: The armed yacht was sunk by and near Al Qunfudhah, Ottoman Arabia. (en)
  • The 187-gross register ton schooner was abandoned in the Pacific Ocean at . All seven people on board survived. (en)
  • The barge stranded near Point Judith, Rhode Island. The vessel broke up before salvage could take place. (en)
  • The foundered in the Baltic Sea whilst under tow to Germany for scrapping. (en)
  • With no one on board, the 23-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer burned on the Ohio River at Ripley, Ohio. (en)
  • The 1,442-gross register ton schooner barge was stranded on Cobb Island on the coast of Virginia. All four people on board survived. (en)
  • Struck uncharted rocks at Umba, Russia and wrecked. (en)
  • The schooner ran ashore on Cape Cod near Nauset, Massachusetts. (en)
  • The barge, under tow of , went ashore on Bartletts Reef, New London, Connecticut. (en)
  • The 592-gross register ton barge foundered in Mobjack Bay on the coast of Virginia. Both people on board survived. (en)
  • The Ouse Steamship Company passenger-cargo ship sank near Flushing after a collision with the steamer Viking . (en)
  • The 347-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Timber Island in Maine. All seven people on board survived. (en)
  • The 548-gross register ton schooner was lost in a collision with the screw steamer in the Pacific Ocean off Fort Bragg, California. All nine people on board survived. (en)
  • The 92-gross register ton motor vessel was stranded in Discovery Passage on the coast of British Columbia, Canada. All 15 people on board survived. (en)
  • The steam passenger ship sank off the coast of Japan during a typhoon with over 1,000 dead. (en)
  • The passenger, cargo, and mail steamer disappeared in a tropical cyclone in the Indian Ocean off the coast of Western Australia during a voyage from Port Hedland to Broome with the loss of all 150 people on board. (en)
  • The battleship was badly damaged in Fonduko Bay due to a navigational error. (en)
  • The tug foundered in the Bristol Channel with the loss of all five crew. (en)
  • The 672-gross register ton schooner foundered off Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, with the loss of two lives. There were five survivors. (en)
  • The 187-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Cape Henlopen, Delaware. All six people on board survived. (en)
  • The barge was sunk by ice near City Point, New Haven, Connecticut. (en)
  • The canal boat struck a rock and sank at Northport, New York. (en)
  • First Balkan War: The accommodation hulk, a former coast defense vessel, was torpedoed and sunk in Thessaloniki harbour by . Seven crew members died in the sinking. (en)
  • The decommissioned sank in the English Channel off Beachy Head while under tow to the breaker's yard. (en)
  • The 18-gross register ton schooner was lost in a collision with the screw steamer in the Chesapeake Bay with the loss of one life. There was one survivor. (en)
  • The barge sank near Duck Island, Connecticut. (en)
  • The steamer was wrecked on the coast of Greenland. (en)
  • The 6-gross register ton schooner foundered off Jacaboa, Puerto Rico, with the loss of one life. There were three survivors. (en)
  • Collided with in the Crosby Channel. Beached but broke in two, a total loss. (en)
  • The 47-gross register ton schooner burned at Warm Springs Landing in California. Both people on board survived. (en)
  • The schooner was blown ashore on a mud flat near the mouth of the Yellow Mill Channel, Bridgeport, Connecticut sometime in December and abandoned by the owners. In July/August 1913 she was raised, moved out of the way of traffic and resunk. (en)
  • The 123-gross register ton schooner was stranded on the coast of Newfoundland. All eight people on board survived. (en)
  • The 401-gross register ton schooner foundered in the Atlantic Ocean off Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. All seven people on board lost their lives. (en)
  • The 13-gross register ton schooner burned on Lake Michigan. Both people on board survived. (en)
  • The 9-gross register ton sloop was abandoned in the Atlantic Ocean east of the North Carolina–Virginia border at . Both people on board survived. (en)
  • The 330-gross register ton barge was lost in a collision with the barge Carolina in the Chesapeake Bay off Poplar Island off the coast of Maryland. Both people on board survived. (en)
  • Italo-Turkish War: Battle of Kunfuda Bay: The Taskopru-class gunboat was sunk by and near Al Qunfudhah, Ottoman Arabia. (en)
  • The decommissioned foundered while under tow. She was salvaged for use as a gunnery target. (en)
  • The 19-gross register ton schooner burned in Choctawhatchee Bay on the coast of Florida. All four people on board survived. (en)
  • The fishing steamer stranded on Long Island, New York, near the Ditch Plain Life-Saving Station. (en)
  • The 13-gross register ton motor vessel burned at Rock Slough in California, killing one of the four people on board. (en)
  • The schooner went ashore in a gale on Goshen Point, Connecticut. (en)
  • With no one on board, the 12-gross register ton motor paddle vessel burned at Carrollton, Kentucky. (en)
  • The 64-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer burned on the Ohio River at Dekoven, Kentucky. All seven people on board survived. (en)
  • The ship was driven ashore at Breaksea Point, Glamorgan. Her seven crew were rescued. (en)
  • The schooner went ashore on Bonnet Point near Saunderstown, Rhode Island. Refloated and returned to service. (en)
  • The 60-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Isle au Haut, Maine. The only person on board survived. (en)
  • The passenger liner sank after a collision with off Beachy Head, Sussex. (en)
  • Italo-Turkish War: The No. 1-class motor gunboats were lost on this date. (en)
  • The cargo ship was wrecked on the Tein Reef, off Bornholm, Denmark. She was on a voyage from Riga, Russia to Belfast, County Antrim. (en)
  • The 217-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Cutler Head on the coast of Maine. All five people on board survived. (en)
  • Under tow along with the scows P G #1 and P G #5 , the 7-ton scow was wrecked on rocks at Montague Island at the entrance to Prince William Sound on the south-central coast of the Territory of Alaska after her towing line parted in a gale. (en)
  • The 395-gross register ton barge was abandoned in the Gulf of Mexico. The only person on board survived. (en)
  • The scow caught fire at dock in the East River near One hundred and seventh Street, New York City. Her mooring lines burned through and she drifted out into the river fully involved. Two men on board were forced overboard by the fire and were rescued from the water by two New York City Police Department officers who later received the United States Life Saving Service's Life saving Medal. (en)
  • The 10-gross register ton motor vessel was stranded at Stonington, Maine. Both people on board survived. (en)
  • The 376-gross register ton schooner foundered in Lake Michigan. All six people on board survived. (en)
  • The barge went ashore on Shelter Island, New York sometime in August. (en)
  • The 86-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer burned on Bayou Teche at Belle River, Louisiana. All 11 people on board survived. (en)
  • With no one on board, the 41-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer burned on the Ohio River at Proctorville, Ohio. (en)
  • The 93-gross register ton screw steamer burned at Cairo, Illinois. All five people on board survived. (en)
  • The wrecking lighter sank southwest of Shagwong Reef in Long Island Sound. (en)
  • The 10-gross register ton motor vessel burned at Stone Harbor, New Jersey. All 14 people on board survived. (en)
  • The 14-gross register ton screw steamer burned on Buffalo Bayou in Texas. All four people on board survived. (en)
  • The 401-gross register ton schooner was stranded in Northport Bay on the coast of Long Island, New York. All seven people on board survived. (en)
  • The 6-gross register ton motor vessel was stranded on the coast of Mexico at Point San Miguel. The only person on board survived. (en)
  • The dredge was sunk in a collision with an unknown steamer in the St. Croix River below Calais, Maine. Later raised. (en)
  • The lighthouse tender was wrecked on an uncharted rock while tending the Cape Hinchinbrook Light. She was declared a total loss and the wreck was sold. (en)
  • The 881-gross register ton schooner barge foundered in the Atlantic Ocean southwest of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. All four people on board lost their lives. (en)
  • The 7-gross register ton sloop burned in Palacios Bayou in Texas. Both people on board survived. (en)
  • The fishing smack went ashore near Orient, New York. (en)
  • The barge sank at the wharf of the Sealshipt Oyster Company, East Providence, Rhode Island. Raised, repaired and returned to service. (en)
  • The 65-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer foundered in the Yazoo River in Mississippi. All 27 people on board survived. (en)
  • The launch was lost off Grassy Island between Galena Bay and Jack Bay on the south-central coast of the Territory of Alaska with the loss of two crewmen. Her captain survived. (en)
  • The 36-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Boston, Massachusetts. All four people on board survived. (en)
  • The B-class submarine collided with the passenger liner Amerika while surfacing in the North Sea northeast of Dover, England, and sank with the loss of 14 of her crew of 15. (en)
  • The schooner went ashore on Savin Rock near New Haven, Connecticut. (en)
  • The 42-gross register ton screw steamer was stranded at Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. All five people on board survived. (en)
  • The steamer stranded on Clarks Point, Southwest Harbor, Maine. (en)
  • The 11-gross register ton motor vessel burned in Puget Sound off Sandy Point, Washington. All three people on board survived. (en)
  • The schooner ran ashore on Fishers Island, New York after mistaking the beacon lights of the stranded schooner for those of Little Gull Island and Race Rock, New York. (en)
  • Italo-Turkish War: Battle of Beirut: Six lighters were sunk by a torpedo while tied up to the Mole in Beirut harbour by the armored cruiser Giuseppe Garibaldi . (en)
  • The longboat Teleorman sank in the Danube River. 44 soldiers died. (en)
  • The 565-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Agna Reef in the Fiji Islands with the loss of one life. There were eight survivors. (en)
  • The 683-gross register ton schooner was stranded on the Oregon bank of the Columbia River. All 12 people on board survived. (en)
  • The 6-gross register ton motor vessel burned on the Mississippi River at Thebes, Illinois. All three people aboard survived. (en)
  • The schooner was lost at Nushagak, Territory of Alaska. (en)
  • The 433-gross register ton schooner foundered off Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. All seven people on board survived. (en)
  • The 432-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer burned on the Mississippi River at Vicksburg, Mississippi. The only person on board survived. (en)
  • The 8-gross register ton motor vessel was stranded in Coos Bay on the coast of Oregon with the loss of all six people on board. (en)
  • The school ship sank at her berth at the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland. She was refloated six months later and was burned as a means of disposal and scrapping in 1913. (en)
  • The 36-gross register ton schooner was stranded in Delaware Bay. All four people on board survived. (en)
  • The barge sank at the entrance to the harbor at Lynn, Massachusetts. (en)
  • The 182-gross register ton barge was lost in a collision with the screw steamer on the Delaware River off New Castle, Delaware. Both people on board survived. (en)
  • The full-rigged ship was abandoned in the Atlantic Ocean with the loss of ten of her nineteen crew. She was on a voyage from Boston, Massachusetts, United States, to Buenos Aires, Argentina. (en)
  • The 400-gross register ton schooner was abandoned in the Atlantic Ocean at . All seven people on board survived. (en)
  • The refloated wreck of the was sunk as a gunnery target in the English Channel near Portland Bill. (en)
  • right|thumb|H. K. BedfordThe 139-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer was crushed by ice on the Ohio River at Waverly, West Virginia. All 29 people on board survived. (en)
  • The steam barge was stranded on rocks on the West Island Bar, Buzzard's Bay, Massachusetts. (en)
  • The 83-gross register ton schooner was stranded in Pigeon Hill Bay on the coast of the Maine. All three people on board survived. (en)
  • The canal boat was run ashore near Quonochontaug, Rhode Island to prevent her sinking. Her cargo of coal and her boiler were salvaged. (en)
  • thumb|Friendship aground in June 1912.The cargo ship ran aground at Tweed Heads, New South Wales, Australia. She was refloated, repaired, and returned to service. (en)
  • The 843-gross register ton schooner barge foundered in the Atlantic Ocean southeast of Shinnecock, Long Island, New York. All four people on board lost their lives. (en)
  • The was rammed near Cherbourg by the battleship and sank with the loss of twenty-five sailors. (en)
  • The 347-gross register ton, three-masted schooner was wrecked at Cape Chichagof near Egegik on the Bristol Bay coast of the Territory of Alaska. All 30 people aboard survived. (en)
  • The 439-gross register ton schooner foundered off Charleston, South Carolina. All seven people on board survived. (en)
  • With no one on board, the 138-gross register ton schooner foundered in the Providence River in Rhode Island, or in the harbor at Providence, Rhode Island. As the owners abandoned the vessel, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers office had to provide for her removal. The salvage company, the Scott Company, retained the schooner for its own use after raising her. (en)
  • The barge, under tow by Pioneer , was cut loose by the tug in a heavy gale off Cape St. Elias to save herself. The barge was driven ashore and seven of eight crew died. (en)
  • The 265-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer burned at Raccourei Landing, Louisiana. All 70 people on board survived. (en)
  • The schooner ran ashore on Fishers Island, New York. (en)
  • The barge sank near the dock of Pardie and Young, Fall River, Massachusetts. The vessel's cargo was salvaged. (en)
  • The 681-gross register ton screw steamer was stranded on the Brandywine Shoals off the coast of Delaware. All 14 people on board survived. (en)
  • She was wrecked on Burhou Island, Channel Islands when en route from Rotterdam for Bilbao. (en)
  • The Schooner was wrecked on Romer shoal, lower New York Bay. Masts fell in Winter of 1913/1914. Probably wreck removed in 1914. (en)
  • The yacht burned and sank near Manchester, Massachusetts. Items were salvaged from the wreck. (en)
  • The Barge went ashore on Middle Pond Island, Rhode Island. (en)
  • The 386-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer was lost in a collision with the screw steamer off Seattle, Washington. All 18 people on board survived. (en)
  • The 494-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer burned at New Orleans, Louisiana. The only person on board survived. (en)
  • Under tow along with the scows P G #4 and P G #5 , the 33-ton scow was wrecked on rocks at Montague Island at the entrance to Prince William Sound on the south-central coast of the Territory of Alaska after her towing line parted in a gale. (en)
  • The schooner sank in Broad Sound near Deer Island, Massachusetts. (en)
  • The motor boat sank at the wharf of the Sealshipt Oyster Company, Bridgeport, Connecticut. Raised, repaired and returned to service. (en)
  • The fishing steamer sank near Shovelful Shoal Lightship off Cape Cod, Massachusetts after colliding with the fishing steamer near Handkerchief Shoal, south of Chatham, Massachusetts. (en)
  • The 37-gross register ton motor vessel burned off Thacher Island off Cape Ann on the coast of Massachusetts. All eight people on board survived. (en)
  • The 91-gross register ton motor vessel was lost in a collision with the screw steamer on the Mississippi River off Poverty Point in Louisiana. All 13 people on board survived. (en)
  • The 1,470-gross register ton schooner was stranded on the Cape Charles Shoals off the coast of Virginia. All 11 people on board survived. (en)
  • The steamer was buried in a landslide in the Panama Canal. It took two months to dig her out, then she was repaired and returned to service. (en)
  • The 24-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Pensacola, Florida. All three people on board survived. (en)
  • With no one on board, the 19-gross register ton motor vessel burned at Mandarin, Florida. (en)
  • The 13-gross register ton schooner was lost in a collision with the schooner Bessie Reed in Baltimore Harbor off the coast of Maryland. Both people on board survived. (en)
  • The 242-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer burned at Belle River, Louisiana, killing 10 of the 45 people on board. (en)
  • Italo-Turkish War: Battle of Beirut: The hulked former Avnillah-class casemate ironclad coast defense vessel was damaged by gunfire by armoured cruisers and and then torpedoed and sunk with her decks awash in Beirut harbour by Giuseppe Garibaldi. 58 crewmen killed, 108 wounded. (en)
  • thumb|HMS WaterwitchThe Admiralty survey vessel sank after she was rammed by the governor's launch while anchored in Singapore Harbour. (en)
  • The 16-gross register ton schooner was stranded at New Orleans, Louisiana. All three people on board survived. (en)
  • The Fleetwood trawler drifted ashore at Kynance Cove, Cornwall, when her tow broke. (en)
  • The tug went ashore on Bartletts Reef, New London, Connecticut. (en)
  • The lighter sank at the wharf of the New England Coal and Coke Company, Everett, Massachusetts. Later raised. (en)
  • The schooner went ashore on Fishers Island, New York. (en)
  • The Barque was sunk in a collision with "Princess Anne" in a snowstorm off Sewall Point in Hampton Roads, sinking in 40 feet of water. (en)
  • The 754-gross register ton schooner was stranded in Nassau Inlet on the coast of Florida. All eight people on board survived. (en)
  • The three-masted schooner sank during a storm on Lake Michigan off Two Rivers, Wisconsin, with the loss of all hands. (en)
  • The 220-gross register ton Lumber schooner was wrecked on rocks south of Point Argello, California. 18 crew rescued; one seaman swept overboard managed to reach shore alive but badly cut and bruised. The J.J. Loggie was wrecked on the same place that the steamer Santa Rosa had been wrecked a year before. (en)
  • Italo-Turkish War: Battle of Kunfuda Bay: The gunboat was destroyed in action with Italian warships near Al Qunfudhah, Ottoman Arabia. (en)
  • The 85-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer burned at Cairo, Illinois. All four people on board survived. (en)
  • The steamer caught fire and ran ashore at Montauk Point, New York. 29 women and children passengers were taken off by the tug while the crew remained aboard to fight the fire. (en)
  • The 125-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Jordan Bay, Nova Scotia, Canada. Ten of the 20 people on board lost their lives. (en)
  • The 10-gross register ton motor vessel was lost in a collision with the screw steamer Columbia in Coos Bay off North Bend, Oregon. The only person on board survived. (en)
  • The 35-gross register ton motor vessel burned at Port Monmouth, New Jersey. All nine people on board survived. (en)
  • The 43-gross register ton motor vessel was stranded in Mosquito Inlet on the coast of Florida. All three people on board survived. (en)
  • The protected cruiser was wrecked on the coast of Uruppu in the Kurile Islands. (en)
  • With no one on board, the 17-gross register ton motor vessel foundered in Ocracoke Inlet on the coast of North Carolina. (en)
  • The 24-ton barge sank with no loss of life at Nome, Territory of Alaska. (en)
  • The motor launch sank at Port Wells in the Territory of Alaska. (en)
  • The schooner was sunk in a collision with , near Thomas Point in the Chesapeake Bay. Lost with four hands killed. (en)
  • Sunk in the Skaggerak, near Hanstholm in collision with German battleship Elsass (en)
  • The 38-gross register ton schooner was stranded in the Chesapeake Bay at Sandy Point on the coast of Maryland. All three people on board survived. (en)
  • The full-rigged ship was wrecked on Prime Seal Island, Tasmania with the loss of her captain. (en)
  • The barge stranded near Point Judith, Rhode Island. Refloated and returned to service. (en)
  • The motor schooner was wrecked in Dixon Entrance in Southeast Alaska. She became a total loss. (en)
  • The 103-gross register ton canal boat foundered in the Hudson River south of Poughkeepsie, New York. The only person on board survived. (en)
  • The fishing steamer sank at the Oneco Works Wharf in New London, Connecticut. Later raised. (en)
  • The barge, under tow of , sank east south east of the Cape Lookout Lighthouse. Lost with all four hands. (en)
  • The 268-gross register ton schooner was stranded in the Cape Verde Islands. All nine people on board survived. (en)
  • The 246-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Rockport, Massachusetts. All five people on board survived. (en)
  • Wrecked at Nanjizal on the west coast of Cornwall. All on board were rescued. (en)
  • The British steamer, laden with cotton from Galveston, Texas, for Hamburg, Germany, caught fire and sank approximately south of Cape Henry. All crew were rescued. (en)
  • The 57-gross register ton screw steamer burned at Port Jefferson, New York. All four people on board survived. (en)
  • The 1,271-gross register ton barge burned at Point Judith, Rhode Island. All four people on board survived. (en)
  • The 9-gross register ton sloop was stranded at Guánica, Puerto Rico. Both people on board survived. (en)
  • The scow sank at Belle Dock, New Haven, Connecticut. (en)
  • The 341-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Nepeague Beach on Long Island, New York. All six people on board survived. (en)
  • The 334-gross register ton barge was lost in a collision with the barge Ellen S. Jennings in the Chesapeake Bay off Poplar Island off the coast of Maryland. Both people on board survived. (en)
  • thumb|right|The wreck of SS Nicaragua on Padre Island in June 1913.The cargo ship was wrecked on Padre Island, Texas, during a storm in the Gulf of Mexico. (en)
  • An explosion destroyed the 30-gross register ton schooner at Southport, North Carolina. The only person on board died. (en)
  • The barge sank off the end of Arrietta Street, Staten Island. Raised in June 1914. (en)
  • The 228-gross register ton steel-hulled screw steamer was stranded in the Mississippi River in South Pass on the coast of Louisiana. All 16 people on board survived. (en)
  • The canal boat was sunk by ice at Northport, New York. (en)
  • The cargo ship ran aground and sank at the entrance to the Tweed River at Tweed Heads, New South Wales, Australia. There were no injuries or fatalities among her crew. (en)
  • The 26-gross register ton sloop foundered off Charleston, South Carolina. All three people on board survived. (en)
  • The 42-gross register ton screw steamer was lost when she struck a log in Currituck Sound off the coast of North Carolina. All 11 people on board survived. (en)
  • Italo-Turkish War: The minelaying naval tugboat was sunk by mines in the Dardanelles in the middle of the month. (en)
  • The 542-gross register ton schooner burned off Cape Romain, South Carolina. All six people on board survived. (en)
  • The cargo ship was wrecked on Cobbler's Reef, Barbados. She was on a voyage from Norfolk, Virginia, United States to Barbados. (en)
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  • 786 (xsd:integer)
  • 791 (xsd:integer)
  • dbr:United_States_lighthouse_tender_Armeria
  • Advent (en)
  • Alabama (en)
  • Andrew Johnson (en)
  • Augusta (en)
  • Carolina (en)
  • Florence (en)
  • Geneva (en)
  • Long Island City (en)
  • RMS Titanic (en)
  • Sterling (en)
  • Esperance (en)
  • Falcon (en)
  • and (en)
  • Hustler (en)
  • Oakland (en)
  • Pioneer (en)
  • Empress (en)
  • James Thomas (en)
  • John W. Hall (en)
  • Typhoon (en)
  • Unnamed (en)
  • Gaston (en)
  • Ranger (en)
  • West Point (en)
  • Lolo (en)
  • Gladys (en)
  • Arion (en)
  • Estelle (en)
  • Alianza (en)
  • Lena (en)
  • Blanche (en)
  • Henry May (en)
  • Seneca (en)
  • Golden Fleece (en)
  • Arrow (en)
  • Crown (en)
  • Emerald (en)
  • Helen Thomas (en)
  • Ebony (en)
  • Admiral (en)
  • Lottie (en)
  • Hayden Brown (en)
  • Illawarra (en)
  • Mildred (en)
  • Antonios (en)
  • Nashua (en)
  • Bessie (en)
  • Compeer (en)
  • K-8 (en)
  • Teleorman (en)
  • Corsair (en)
  • Josefina (en)
  • Balloon (en)
  • Nearchus (en)
  • Uncle Sam (en)
  • Vigilant (en)
  • Margery (en)
  • Charioteer (en)
  • James Duffield (en)
  • Endeavor (en)
  • Gunvor (en)
  • Patrician (en)
  • Haydn Brown (en)
  • Elm City (en)
  • Elzada (en)
  • Emily B (en)
  • G. W. Watson (en)
  • St. Leon (en)
  • Pocomoke (en)
  • Thaxter (en)
  • Hattie Wells (en)
  • Unknown scow (en)
  • Winnie Lawry (en)
  • "Julia M. Dempsey" (en)
  • Addie Fuller (en)
  • Addie M. Story (en)
  • Addie and Carrie (en)
  • Anna I. Gale (en)
  • Anna Kenney (en)
  • Annie F. Kimball (en)
  • Annie L. Russell (en)
  • Annie M. Nixon (en)
  • Bessie C. Beach (en)
  • Bob Blanks (en)
  • C. W. Seward (en)
  • Captain Ed Riley (en)
  • Carrie B. Schwing (en)
  • Charles K. Mulford (en)
  • Chief No. 2 (en)
  • De Mory Gray (en)
  • Dredge #4 (en)
  • E. K. Wood (en)
  • Ellen S. Jennings (en)
  • Emily F. Whitman (en)
  • Float No. 1 (en)
  • Frances Elizabeth (en)
  • Frank M. Low (en)
  • Fredericka Schepp (en)
  • Gertrude Summers (en)
  • Harry Prescott (en)
  • Hattie C. Luce (en)
  • Hattie F. Knowlton (en)
  • Henry Weiler (en)
  • Ida McKay (en)
  • J. C. Austin (en)
  • J. J. Loggie (en)
  • Jennie Thelin (en)
  • Jessie A. Bishop (en)
  • Jessie Lena (en)
  • Joseph Russ (en)
  • Josie M (en)
  • Judge Pennewill (en)
  • Laclabell (en)
  • Lawrence Redican (en)
  • Louisa R (en)
  • Machado 2° (en)
  • Marion E. Bulley (en)
  • Mildred V. Nunan (en)
  • New Boxer (en)
  • Number Sixteen (en)
  • P G #1 (en)
  • P G #4 (en)
  • P G #5 (en)
  • S. D. Carleton (en)
  • S. O. Co. No. 87 (en)
  • Scow #2 (en)
  • Sesnon #13 (en)
  • T. T. Co. No. 11 (en)
  • Unidentified lighters (en)
  • W. E. Morrissey (en)
  • Walter P. Goulart (en)
  • Warner Miller Co (en)
  • Wendur (en)
  • William R. Wilson (en)
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  • The list of shipwrecks in 1912 includes ships sunk, foundered, grounded, or otherwise lost during 1912.(This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources.) (en)
rdfs:label
  • List of shipwrecks in 1912 (en)
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