27

The Ruby Wiscombe, after being rebuilt.
1950
Marystown, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada


28

The Ruby Wiscombe, after being rebuilt.

29

The Mary Elnora, Rita Florence, Blanch G, and Hilda G Reeves.
1945
Marystown, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada


30

More vessels owned by Wiscombe's: the Mary Elnora, Rita Florence, Blanch G, and Hilda G Reeves.

31

The J.T. Murley
1955
Marystown, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada


32

The J.T. Murley was built at Murley's Cove, Mortier Bay, in the 1940s, for T.F. Murley Ltd. The vessel carried freight around Newfoundland and from Nova Scotia.

33

The J.T. Murley shipwreck.
18 October 1958
Marystown, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada
AUDIO ATTACHMENT


34

Of the thousands of schooners built in Newfoundland to prosecute the fishing industry and freighting, not one schooner remains on the island today to remind us of our shipbuilding heritage.

Some were hauled up and abandoned, some were sold outside Newfoundland. But unfortunately, many were lost at sea.

One such example is the J.T. Murley. Built in Murley's Cove (Mortier Bay) in the 1940s by T.F. Murley Ltd. She was being used as a freighter when she was wrecked on Diamond Shoals, St. Pierre, October 18th, 1958.