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  • Texas | Columns | "Texas Tales"

    Steamship Concho

    by Mike Cox
    Mike Cox

    More than two years before the Titanic sank in the icy waters of the North Atlantic after hitting an iceberg, the Texas-based steamship Concho ran into something in the Gulf of Mexico on her way to Galveston.

    Fortunately, whatever the Concho struck that day in June 1909 did not tear a big enough hole in her hull to send the ship to the bottom. Even so, when the passenger ship reached port a few days later, the story made page-one news.

    “Fish Plugged Leak in Vessel,” read an article bearing a Galveston dateline published in the Austin Daily Statesman on June 6 that year.

    Fishy as it may sound, here’s what the first paragraph says:

    “A large fish was either sucked or swam into a hole two inches in diameter sprung in the bottom of the Mallory Line steamer Concho which arrived here last night from New York with passengers and cargo, thus stopping the leak after the forward compartment had filled four feet deep with water.”

    The sea water had badly damaged the cargo in the hold, the story noted.

    The ship’s crew stayed busy running the vessel’s pumps to keep the situation under control until the fish – its species went unreported – gave its life for the greater good and the leak stopped.

    Nor did company officials have any idea what the Concho had struck.

    “A submerged derelict probably caused the damage soon after the liner entered the gulf,” the article concluded.

    Built in 1891, the Concho measured 329 feet in length and 47 feet across at her broadest point. She drew 21 feet of water and displaced 3,724 gross tons. “[The] Concho was a fine example of the plumb-bowed classical steamship that incorporated sail and steam,” says a web site maintained by Key West artist David Harrison Wright, a 1968 University of Texas graduate who specializes in maritime paintings. One of his paintings, commissioned by the Key West Maritime Historical Society, depicts the Concho steaming across the Gulf in her heyday. (To see the painting go to http://www.davidharrisonwright.com/concho.html )

    The Concho, which carried both passengers and freight, connected Galveston with New York via Key West. During the Spanish-American war the U.S. government chartered her to carry troops to Cuba, but after the war she returned to her regular service on the Mallory Line.

    While the unexplained damage sustained in 1909 could have had serious consequences if her pumps had failed and the fish had not appeared in a timely manner, the Concho’s closest brush with disaster had come nine years before. She had steamed out of Galveston on Sept. 5, 1900, only three days before a devastating, unnamed hurricane swept across the island city, then Texas’ largest. The storm leveled much of the community and claimed six to eight thousand lives in what still stands as the nation’s worst natural disaster.

    Fortunately for the Concho, when Capt. Samuel Rick observed that the ship’s barometer showed the atmospheric pressure falling alarmingly – a sure sign of a tropical cyclone – he ordered a change of course hoping to avoid the storm. Or, as an account in the New York Times put it after the ship finally made port on the east coast on Sept. 12, Rick “sought safety in running.”

    Despite the captain’s efforts, the Concho still encountered the southwestern edge of the swirling storm. The vessel and her nervous passengers, likely many of them seasick, endured gale force winds that churned up towering waves.

    “All that day,” the newspaper continued, “with the rain coming down in torrents, the vessel kept away from the worst of the storm.” But the following day, “the Concho was caught in the back current. Its fury was worse than the storm itself, but the rain helped to keep the waves down.”

    Once the battered ship made it to Key West, the newspaper concluded, she had smooth sailing to New York.

    “After a long and successful career,” the artist’s web site concluded, “Concho was sold to German interests, and scrapped in 1928.”

    Mallory Line, which first began serving Galveston in 1866 and continued under that corporate identity until 1932, named many of its ships after Texas rivers. The oldest ship in the Mallory fleet when the Concho got a little help from a fish was the San Marcos, a vessel that slid down the ways in 1881. Other river-named ships operating out of Galveston at various times during the life of the steamship company were the Brazos, Colorado, Comal, Guadalupe, Lampasas, Medina, Nueces, Pecos, Rio Grande, Sabine, San Marcos, San Saba and San Jacinto.

    None of the Mallory Line vessels have survived. All ended up either sunk or salvaged, but so far as is known, only the Concho ever got a little help from a fish.

    © Mike Cox -
    December 15 , 2011 column
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