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36.43.457n 74.44.643w

Year Built 1884

Date Sunk 6 May 1888

Depth 115 feet

Gross Tonnage 3,531

Dimensions
351’ x 42’ x 32’

Vessel Type Freighter

Power Coal-fired Steam

Builder Wm. Cramp & Sons

Owner
Southern Development

Location 26875.5 41243.8 50 miles offshore

Home Port New York City

Cause of Sinking
Collision w/SS Benison

In Brief; Along with it’s cargo this wreck was worth "in excess of a million dollars" and after salvage and demolition was forgotten for 100 years when Michael Boring, anchored on an unidentified wreck in 1990.

Captain Boring, after anchoring his diveboat "Sea Hunter", found the capstand of the wreck on his first dive and identified the wreck as the remains of the Eureka.

The wreck is upright with the with relief provided by the engine, boilers, and the bow which is completely intact.

Local divers have recovered hundreds of pieces of the china dolls that the ship was transporting, as well as portholes, dental cream, inkwells buttons and hinges.

Source "Shipwrecks of Virginia" Gary Gentile 1992

Traveling in a thick fog from New York to New Orleans with a cargo of general
merchandise, the Eureka collided with the Benison. The
Eureka was equipped with steamer’s engines as well as rigged with four
masts for the use of sails. The damage from the collision was too great, and
soon the Eureka lay upright on the bottom with her mast exposed. The
wreck was further disgraced by demolition from the USS Despatch, as she
presented a hazzard to navigation. Divers from the Baker Salvage Company first
descended on the wreck in August, contracted to recover the cargo that still
remained with the wreck. After work was completed, the wreck was abandoned.

YouTube; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7oUzOzIJDhs