List of shipwrecks in 1910#7 November

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The list of shipwrecks in 1910 includes ships sunk, foundered, grounded, or otherwise lost during 1910.

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January

=1 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=1 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Katie Darling

|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The ketch foundered off Cardigan. Two crew were rescued by Elizabeth Austin (File:Flag of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution.svg Royal National Lifeboat Institution).{{cite web |url=http://www.glen-johnson.co.uk/cardigan-district-shipwrecks-and-lifeboat-service/ |title=Cardigan & District Shipwrecks and Lifeboat Service |date=23 July 2013 |publisher=Glen Johnson |access-date=1 February 2015}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Mill Boy||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was sunk by ice in the Missouri River {{convert|2|mi|spell=in|0}} east of Washington, Missouri.{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KxlRAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA358 |title=Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general |year=1911 |access-date=25 May 2019}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=3 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=3 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|New Haven||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was destroyed by ice at Uniontown, Kentucky.{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KxlRAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA358 |title=Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general |year=1911 |access-date=23 May 2019}} }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=4 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=4 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Emily||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The laid up steamer was sunk by ice at Portsmouth, Ohio. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=5 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=5 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Farallon

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=During a voyage from Valdez, District of Alaska, to Unalaska in the Aleutian Islands and way ports with eight passengers, a crew of 30, and a cargo of 30 tons of general merchandise aboard, the 749-gross register ton, {{convert|158.5|ft|m|1|adj=on}} passenger steamer was wrecked without loss of life on a reef in Cook Inlet on the south-central coast of the District of Alaska. Her passengers and crew survived for 29 days on an island until rescued by the steamer Victoria (flag unknown) on 3 February 1910.{{cite web|title=John E. Thwaites Photographs Collection|url=http://content.lib.washington.edu/thwaitesweb/index.html|publisher=University of Washington Libraries|access-date=19 May 2011}}[https://alaskashipwreck.com/shipwrecks-a-z/alaska-shipwrecks-f/ alaskashipwreck.com Alaska Shipwrecks (F)]

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=6 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=6 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Dallas||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The U. S. Government steamer burned in the Trinity River just south of Dallas, Texas.{{cite web |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=chi.103308961&view=1up&seq=95 |title=American Marine Engineer February, 1910 |publisher=National Marine Engineers Beneficial Association of the United States |via=Haithi Trust |access-date=22 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Edwin Terry||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer ran aground in heavy fog on Man of War Rock in the East River off 42nd Street, New York City, New York, and sank.{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KxlRAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA271 |title=Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general |year=1911 |access-date=14 January 2025}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=7 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=7 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|J. C. Mallonee||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned at Darien, Georgia.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=8 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=8 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=American

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tow steamer was sunk in a collision in the Delaware River off the League Island Navy Yard with {{SS|Chicago||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}). Raised and proceeded in the direction of Camden, New Jersey, and sank again (date unclear).{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KxlRAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA358 |title=Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general |year=1911 |access-date=2 June 2019}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=9 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=9 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|New Haven||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer struck a heavy drift and sank in the Tombigbee River just below Demopolis, Alabama.{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KxlRAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA358 |title=Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general |year=1911 |access-date=30 May 2019}}{{cite web |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=chi.103308961&view=1up&seq=94 |title=American Marine Engineer February, 1910 |publisher=National Marine Engineers Beneficial Association of the United States |via=Haithi Trust |access-date=22 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=10 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=10 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Edna||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The towing steamer, tied up at Pier 15 in the North River off 42nd Street, New York City, was holed by ice and sank. Later raised and repaired.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Leader||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was sunk by ice at Brandenburg, Kentucky, on the Ohio River.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=11 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=11 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Hadrian

|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The steamer was anchored in the Humber off Grimsby when she was struck by the German mail steamer Mecklenburg and sank within twenty minutes. One crew member drowned.{{cite news | url = https://www.newspapers.com/image/258346782/ | title = Steamer run down and sunk | newspaper = The Guardian| page = 3| date = 1910-01-12| access-date = 2022-01-16}}{{subscription required|via=newspapers.com}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=12 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=12 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Czarina||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The collier foundered in heavy seas crossing the Coos Bay Bar. 23 crewmen and 1 passenger killed. One crewman was the sole survivor.[https://www.newspapers.com/image/995447915/?match=1&terms=czarina "Czarina Wrecked, Thirty-One Lives Lost; Gale Drives Steamer on Coos Bay Spit— Perish in Sight of Crowded Beach"], San Francisco Chronicle, January 13, 1910, p.1{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KxlRAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA358 |title=Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general |year=1911 |access-date=7 June 2019}} }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=14 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=14 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Chatham

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The cargo ship sank partially submerged at the entrance to the St. Johns River, Florida, after striking the North Jerry.{{cite book|title=Florida's Shipwrecks|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=E9rCexEYazUC&q=dexter&pg=PA93 |last=Barnette |first=Michael |series=Images of America |year=2008 |publisher=Arcadia Publishing |location=Charleston, South Carolina |isbn=978-0-7385-5413-6 |pages=94–95}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|City of Providence||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was pushed on to the river bank by ice in the Mississippi River just outside the city limits of St. Louis, Missouri. During an attempt to refloat her on 20 January she suddenly slipped off the bank and sank.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Florence||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The ferry steamer was pushed on to the river bank and wrecked by ice in the Mississippi River at St. Louis, Missouri.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=15 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=15 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Annie O'Donnell

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The coal boat was sunk by ice off Barren Island, Brooklyn, in New York Bay.{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KxlRAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA358 |title=Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general |year=1911 |access-date=6 June 2019}} }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=16 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=16 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Tourist||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer filled with water and sank at her dock on the Calumet River.{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KxlRAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA358 |title=Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general |year=1911 |access-date=22 May 2019}} }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=17 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=17 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Estelle Randall||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned at Norfolk, Virginia. One crewman killed.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Florence Belle||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The laid up tow steamer was sunk by ice at Creighton, Pennsylvania, on the Allegheny River.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=18 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=18 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SV|Daylight||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The schooner was sunk in a collision with {{SS|Anna W.||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) in New York Bay near the Quickstep bell buoy.{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KxlRAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA358 |title=Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general |year=1911 |access-date=14 May 2019}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Willard||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steam tug was sunk by ice at Ambridge, Pennsylvania, on the Ohio River. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=19 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=19 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|H. P. Dilworth||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The laid up tow steamer burned at Rices Landing, Pennsylvania.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Unknown scow

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=A scow had to be beached after a collision with {{SS|W. N. Bavier||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) in the North River at the 79th street pier.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=22 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=22 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Indefatigable

|flag={{Flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=Under tow from Falmouth, Cornwall to Cardiff by the tug Challenge, they hit heavy weather at Land's End and returned to Falmouth. During the night Indefatigable dragged her anchors and drifted ashore under St Mawes Castle. She was pulled off the rocks by tugs Briton, Dragon and Marian, towed to Falmouth Docks and sold for scrap.{{cite book|last1=Pollard|first1=Chris|title=The Book of St Mawes|date=2007|publisher=Halsgrove|location=Wellington, Somerset|isbn=978-1-84114-631-7}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|James Moren||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tow steamer collided with the wall of lock No. 5 at Freedom, Pennsylvania, and sank. Raised and repaired. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=23 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=23 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SV|Mertie B. Crowley||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=Carrying a cargo of coal, the {{convert|297|ft|adj=on}}, 2,824-gross register ton six-masted schooner was wrecked on Wasque Shoal off Wasque Point, or on Skiffs Island Shoal off Chappaquiddick, Martha's Vineyard off the coast of Massachusetts. She broke up 2 February. Her captain, his wife and the rest of the crew were rescued from her masts.{{Cite web| url=http://wreckhunter.net/DataPages/mertiebcrowley-dat.htm |title=Mertie B. Crowley | publisher=Hunting New England Shipwrecks |accessdate=13 February 2021 }}{{cite web |url=https://www.vineyardgazette.com/news/2019/09/26/rescue |title=To the Rescue |publisher=vineyardgazette.com |access-date=23 March 2021 |archive-date=27 September 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190927131453/https://vineyardgazette.com/news/2019/09/26/rescue |url-status=dead }}{{cite web |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?217589 |title=Mertie B. Crowley (+1910) |publisher=Wrecksite |access-date=23 March 2021}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SV|Newburgh||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The barge was sunk in a collision with a lighter in the East River at Pier 52 in New York City.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=24 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=24 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SV|Archibald Watt||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The towing steamer was sunk in a collision with the propeller of {{SS|Re D' Italia||2}} ({{flagcountry|Kingdom of Italy}}) at Pier B Jersey City, New Jersey. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=25 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=25 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{MV|Lloyd||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The motor vessel was crushed by ice in Carroll County, Missouri {{convert|1|mi|km|spell=in}} above Miami, Missouri.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=26 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=26 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Unknown canal boat

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=A canal boat, one of nine being towed by {{SS|John Rugge||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}), was carried by a flood tide into piers 48 and 49 on the East River causing her to sink. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=29 January=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=29 January 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{MV|Echo||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The vessel struck a snag and sank at the entrance to the Trinity River. Raised on 2 February.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Southport||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The passenger steamer sank in a collision with {{SS|Mercur||2}} ({{army|United States}}) in the Cape Fear River off Orton, North Carolina.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

February

=1 February=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=1 February 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Betty Owen||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was damaged by grounding at Brookport, Illinois, but continued down stream. She was found later to be badly leaking and sank in shallow water and then caught fire and burned.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|J. Henry Edmunds||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The schooner was sunk by a run away mud scow in the South Channel of New York Bay. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=2 February=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=2 February 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Jewel||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned at the mouth of the Green River. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=3 February=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=3 February 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Diamond||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The passenger steamer grounded in the Ohio River near Elmsworth, Pennsylvania, she flooded and sank. Raised and repaired. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=4 February=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=4 February 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Kentucky|1897|2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer foundered off Hatteras, North Carolina, or over {{convert|200|mi}} off Savanna, Georgia. All on board rescued by {{SS|Alamo||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}).{{cite web |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?217489 |title=Kentucky cargo ship (+1910) |publisher=wrecksite.eu |access-date=10 May 2019}}{{cite web |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=chi.103308610&view=1up&seq=78 |title=American Marine Engineer February, 1911 |publisher=National Marine Engineers Beneficial Association of the United States |via=Haithi Trust |access-date=21 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Rowena||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer struck an obstruction at Ford's Island in the Cumberland River {{convert|9|mi|km|spell=in}} below Burnside, Kentucky. She was beached on a sand bar and sank in shallow water. Raised, repaired and returned to service on 8 February. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=5 February=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=5 February 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Tom Rees No. 2||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tow steamer sprung a leak in the Ohio River above Clusters Islands, she flooded and sank in {{convert|20|ft|m}} of water. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=6 February=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=6 February 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Martha Helen||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The towing steamer burned at Jacksonville, Florida. One crewman killed.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{USS|Nina}}

|flag={{navy|United States|1908}}

|desc=The submarine tender, a former tugboat, sank in a gale in {{convert|90|ft}} of water on Fenwick Island Shoals {{convert|11|mi}} north north east of Ocean City, Maryland. Lost with all 31 crew.{{cite web |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=chi.103308961&view=1up&seq=147 |title=American Marine Engineer March, 1910 |publisher=National Marine Engineers Beneficial Association of the United States |via=Haithi Trust |access-date=22 December 2020}}{{cite web |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?15902 |title=USS Nina (+1910) |publisher=Wrecksite |access-date=22 December 2020}}{{cite web |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/1978/10/08/divers-find-the-nina-at-15-fathoms/744cd573-4f90-4491-bd0d-8210fc8c3e96/ |title=Divers Find The Nina at 15 Fathoms |publisher=washingtonpost |access-date=22 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=8 February=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=8 February 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Margaret Irving||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The canal boat was sunk by ice in Newark Bay between the Newark Bay Light and the Bell Buoy. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=9 February=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=9 February 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Unknown barge

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=A barge was sunk in a collision with {{SS|A. C. Rose||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) off Pier 1 in the East River. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=10 February=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 10 February 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Belle of the Bends||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer either sank in a snowstorm, or ran aground in a snowstorm and sank after leaving Fitler's Landing, {{convert|20|mi}} below Lake Providence, or after leaving Hayes Landing in the Mississippi River. Raised, repaired and returned to service.{{cite web |url=https://search.library.wisc.edu/digital/AQTQXC2KAUNQ4V8I |title=Belle of the Bends (Packet, 1898-1918) |publisher= University of Wisconsin-Madison Library |access-date=22 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Kentucky||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was abandoned in heavy seas in sinking conditions.{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KxlRAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA358 |title=Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general |publisher=U.S. Government Printing Office |year=1911 |pages=358–362 |access-date=10 May 2019}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Restless

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The 9-gross register ton, {{convert|31|ft|m|1|adj=on}} yawl was wrecked off the northern end of Prince of Wales Island in the Alexander Archipelago in Southeast Alaska. Her captain fell overboard and was lost about six hours before Restless was wrecked; the only other person aboard survived the wreck.{{Cite web|url=https://alaskashipwreck.com/shipwrecks-a-z/alaska-shipwrecks-r/|title=Alaska Shipwrecks (R) – Alaska Shipwrecks|website=alaskashipwreck.com}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=14 February=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=14 February 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Unknown barge

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=A barge was damaged in a collision with {{SS|City of Fall River||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) off Halletts Point in the East River causing the barge to be beached. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=16 February=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=16 February 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Magic City||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was sunk in a collision with {{SS|Parthian||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) between the No. 2 and No. 4 buoys in the St. Johns River near Mayport, Florida.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Yucatan|1890|2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1907}}

|desc=Sources differ on the details of the wreck of Yucatan. According to one source, during a voyage in the District of Alaska from Cordova to Juneau with 60 passengers and a crew of 84 aboard, the 3,525-gross register ton, {{convert|336|ft|m|1|adj=on}} schooner-rigged steamer was beached without loss of life to prevent her from sinking after an iceberg struck her bow and holed her hull while she was stopped off Mud Bay in Icy Strait in the Alexander Archipelago in the District of Alaska. Passengers were transferred to the steamer Georgia ({{flag|United States|1907}}). Declared a constructive total loss, Yucatan was refloated, repaired, and returned to service as Shinkai Maru ({{flagcountry|Empire of Japan}}).{{Cite web|url=https://alaskashipwreck.com/shipwrecks-a-z/alaska-shipwrecks-y/|title=Alaska Shipwrecks (Y) – Alaska Shipwrecks|website=alaskashipwreck.com}} According to another source, Yucatan struck an iceberg between Goose Island and Gull Cove while underway in Icy Strait in the Alexander Archipelago in the District if Alaska in a snowstorm. After striking the iceberg she struck a reef and bounced off of it. She sank {{convert|1|mi|spell=in}} from the collision site in {{convert|35|ft}} of water with her upper works above water. She was heavily damaged by storms from the time of her sinking until raised in June 1910. Repaired in 1911 at Hall Brothers Shipyard in Eagle Harbor, Washington.{{cite web |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?233330 |title=Yucatan (+1910) |publisher=Wrecksite |access-date=24 August 2020}}{{cite web |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=chi.103308610&view=1up&seq=323 |title=American Marine Engineer July 1911 |publisher=National Marine Engineers Beneficial Association of the United States |via=Haithi Trust |access-date=10 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=17 February=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=17 February 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Columbia

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The laid up passenger steamer burned at Camden, Pennsylvania, on the Monongahela River.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Minnie Georges||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tug burned to the waterline in Sweet Bay Lake, Louisiana.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Queen City||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sank in the Chattahoochee River at a wharf at Columbus, Georgia. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=19 February=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=19 February 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Arthur D. Bissell||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The canal boat was sunk by ice in the harbor at New Haven, Connecticut. Later raised.{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KxlRAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA358 |title=Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general |year=1911 |access-date=28 May 2019}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=21 February=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=21 February 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|C. H. Hugo||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sank at Memphis, Tennessee, from unknown causes. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=23 February=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=23 February 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Champion||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sunk at her berth at Ironton, Ohio, due to a broke plank.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=La Boulonaisse

|flag={{flag|France}}

|desc=The 67-ton ship carrying cement from Boulogne to Saint Malo sank on a reef of the Chausey Islands Channel Islands. Five men were saved.{{cite book |title=Dictionnaire des naufrages dans la Manche |year=2008 |first=Yves |last=Dufiel |language=fr}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=24 February=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=24 February 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Columbia

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned at dock at Moss Side near Camden, Ohio.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=25 February=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=25 February 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Orville A. Crandall||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The freighter was sunk by ice in the Branford River in {{convert|8|ft|m|spell=in}} of water. Raised later.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Wisconsin||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The passenger-freighter burned to the waterline in the Chicago River.{{cite web |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=chi.103308961&view=1up&seq=148 |title=American Marine Engineer March, 1910 |publisher=National Marine Engineers Beneficial Association of the United States |via=Haithi Trust |access-date=22 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=26 February=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=26 February 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Columbia

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer struck a snag and sank at Bayou Sara, Louisiana.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Unknown barges

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=Three barges broke lose from their tow in Hell Gate and struck rocks causing one to sink near Hunt's Point and two of the barges to be beached.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=27 February=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=27 February 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Earnest Rudolph||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The freighter burned and sank at the foot of 22nd Street, Bath Beach, New York.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Hugh J. Derby

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The barge foundered in heavy seas in Long Island Sound {{convert|1+1/4|mi|0}} southeast of Bridgeport Light. Raised later.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Mamie||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sank at Memphis, Tennessee, from unknown causes. Raised 16 June. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=28 February=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=28 February 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Nordenskjold

|flag={{flagcountry|Russian Empire|civil}}

|desc=The Russian wooden brigantine, on voyage from La Rochelle to Llanelly with a cargo of pit props, was wrecked in Belgrave Bay (Belle Grève), Guernsey Channel Islands.{{cite web |url=http://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?217614 |title=SV Nordenskjold (Rus.) (+1910) |publisher=wrecksite.eu |access-date= 26 August 2015}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

March

=2 March=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=2 March 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|M. Tuttle||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The laid up steam sand dredge was crushed by ice and sank at Perrysburg, Ohio, in the Maumee River.{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KxlRAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA358 |title=Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general |year=1911 |access-date=20 May 2019}} }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=3 March=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=3 March 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|No. 21||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The canal boat was sunk in a collision with New York City Fire Department fireboat {{ship||The New Yorker|fireboat|2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) in the North River, her tow vessel was tied up to Pier 1.{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KxlRAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA358 |title=Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general |year=1911 |access-date=15 May 2019}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Tinsley Brothers||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The canal boat was sunk in a collision with New York City Fire Department Fireboat {{ship||The New Yorker|fireboat|2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) in the North River, her tow vessel was tied up to Pier 1.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=5 March=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=5 March 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Dove

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The motor boat caught fire and was scuttled at Enterprise, South Carolina.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=6 March=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=6 March 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Geraldine||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was holed by a log in the Big Sandy River and was beached to prevent sinking. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=7 March=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=7 March 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Hunter No. 2||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned in the Monongahela River above Dravosburg, Pennsylvania, due to a failure in the boiler.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Manhattan

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer caught fire at Portland, Maine. She was towed away from dock and beached at South Portland where she burned to below the main deck. One crewman killed.{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KxlRAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA358 |title=Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general |year=1911 |access-date=29 May 2019}} }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=8 March=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=8 March 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Ann Arbor No. 1||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The car ferry burned to the waterline while moored at Manitowoc, Wisconsin.{{cite web |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=chi.103308961&view=1up&seq=192 |title=American Marine Engineer April, 1910 |publisher=National Marine Engineers Beneficial Association of the United States |via=Haithi Trust |access-date=23 December 2020}}{{Cite web|url=https://www.wisconsinshipwrecks.org/Vessel/Details/28?region=Index|title=Ann Arbor #1 (1892) - WI Shipwrecks|website=www.wisconsinshipwrecks.org}} To extinguish the flames, she was scuttled in {{convert|15|ft}} of water. Deemed a hazard to navigation, she was refloated on 9 June 1911 and rebuilt as a sandsucker barge.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=11 March=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=11 March 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{MV|Garrison||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The motor vessel was sunk by ice at Big Bend, North Dakota.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=13 March=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=13 March 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Expansion||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was sunk by ice at Bismarck, North Dakota, on the Missouri River.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Harry

|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The Brixham trawler was stranded at Porthcurno, Cornwall and taken in tow by the Sennen Cove lifeboat Ann Newbon (25px Royal National Lifeboat Institution).{{cite book|last=Leach|first=Nicholas|title=Sennen Cove Lifeboats: 150 years of lifesaving |year=2003|publisher=Tempus Publishing Ltd|location=Stroud|isbn=0-7524-3111-0 }}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=15 March=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=15 March 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|R. L. Aubrey||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was sunk in the Ohio River when her boilers exploded off Arctic Springs, Indiana. One or 3 killed, and 3 or 5 injured.{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tNk2AQAAMAAJ&q=Ship%3A++R.+L.+Aubrey%2C+1910&pg=PA352 |title=Engineering News Vol. 65 |year=1910 |publisher=Engineering News Publishing Company |via=Google books |access-date=23 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=21 March=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=21 March 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|William Fletcher||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tow steamer's hull was holed by an unknown object causing her to sink in shallow water off Governor's Island. Later raised, repaired and returned to service. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=25 March=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 25 March 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Frank||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The towing steamer sank at Jacksonville, Florida. Raised the next day.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=28 March=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 28 March 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Stanley

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=Carrying a cargo of 150 tons of salt, lumber, and provisions, the 355-gross register ton, {{convert|143.3|ft|m|adj=on}} schooner was wrecked at the entrance to Pavlof Harbor on Sanak Island in the Fox Islands in the eastern Aleutian Islands. Four of her eight crew members were lost.{{Cite web|url=https://alaskashipwreck.com/shipwrecks-a-z/alaska-shipwrecks-s/|title=Alaska Shipwrecks (S) – Alaska Shipwrecks|website=alaskashipwreck.com}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=30 March=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=30 March 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Iceland||2}}

|flag={{flag|United Kingdom|civil}}

|desc=The sealer was crushed by ice off Newfoundland. As the crew abandoned her she was set on fire.{{cite web |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?217508 |title=Iceland (+1905) |publisher=Wrecksite |access-date=24 December 2020}}{{cite web |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=chi.103308961&view=1up&seq=265 |title=American Marine Engineer June, 1910 |publisher=National Marine Engineers Beneficial Association of the United States |via=Haithi Trust |access-date=24 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=31 March=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=31 March 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Pericles||2}}

|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The ocean liner struck an uncharted rock near Cape Leeuwin, Western Australia, and sank. All 238 passengers and 163 crew members abandoned ship safely.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

April

=4 April=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=4 April 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Kensington||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tow steamer was swept by a flood tide in Hell Gate into a dredge and scow at Mill Rock in the East River causing her to capsize and sink. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=7 April=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=7 April 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|E. W. Edwards||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer flooded and sank at Reedville, Virginia, due to water coming through the siphons. Refloated the next day

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Estelle

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The motor launch was sunk in a collision with {{MV|Pearl||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) in the Madmalaw River in South Carolina.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=11 April=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=11 April 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|D. D. Calvin|1868|2}}

|flag={{flag|Canada|1868}}

|desc=The steamer was destroyed by fire at Garden Island, Ontario.{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RH7VAAAAMAAJ&dq=Ship:++Goodyear,+1910&pg=PA103 |title=Beeson's Directory of the Northwest Lakes |publisher=Harvey C. Beeson |via=Google books |access-date=24 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=12 April=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=12 April 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Unknown float

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=A float sank in the East River at the foot of Grand Street, New York City from a hole in her hull. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=15 April=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=15 April 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Notre Dame de Lourdes

|flag={{flag|France}}

|desc=The ketch was driven ashore at Rhosilli, Glamorgan, United Kingdom. Her crew survived but the vessel subsequently broke up.{{cite web |url=http://www.swanseadocks.co.uk/Gower%20wrecks%20Rons%20write-up%20site.pdf |title=A Chronology of Bristol Channel Shipwrecks |first=Ron |last=Tovey |publisher=Swansea Docks |access-date=22 December 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141222065415/http://www.swanseadocks.co.uk/Gower%20wrecks%20Rons%20write-up%20site.pdf |archive-date=22 December 2014 }}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{ship|Japanese submarine|No. 6||2}}

|flag={{navy|Empire of Japan}}

|desc= The Type 6 submarine sank in {{convert|10|fathom|lk=in}} of water in Hiroshima Bay off Kure due to a faulty ventilator valve. Lost with all 16 crew. Raised the next day, repaired and returned to service.{{cite book |last1=Jentschura |first1=Hansgeorg |title=Warships of the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1869-1945 |date=1977 |publisher=Arms & Armour Press |location=London |isbn=0-85368-151-1 |page=160}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=17 April=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=17 April 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Defiance||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tow steamer, laid up at the foot of Court Street, Brooklyn, New York, was sunk when {{SS|Henry Lee||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) capsized on her and sank.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Henry Lee||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tow steamer, laid up at the foot of Court Street, Brooklyn, New York, capsized on {{SS|Defiance||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) and sank.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=18 April=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=18 April 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Brabo|1904|2}}

|flag={{flag|Belgium}}

|desc=The steamer ran aground on Hoburger, off the coast of Sweden.{{csr|register=MSI|id=1084895|shipname=Brabo |accessdate=12 February 2020}} }}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Minnehaha||2}}

|flag={{Flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The ocean liner ran aground on rocks in the Isles of Scilly. Refloated on 13 May and returned to service after repairs were made.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=19 April=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=19 April 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Gypsum||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer struck rocks in the East River at Hell Gate and sank.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Reliable||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tug ran aground in the harbor of East New Rochelle. She was then hit by three scows she was towing, causing her to over turn. This caused a stove to overturn and the resulting fire destroyed the tug.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Sonoma||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sank in {{convert|6|ft|m}} of water below Luke Chute on the Muskingum River. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=22 April=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=22 April 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Unknown motor boat

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=A motor boat capsized and sank in a collision with a barge in the Cuyahoga River. One of five on board was killed.{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KxlRAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA358 |title=Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general |year=1911 |access-date=16 May 2019}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=25 April=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=25 April 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Kate|1899|2}}

|flag={{flag|Canada|1868}}

|desc=The tug burned above the Soo Rapids.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=29 April=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=29 April 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Bob Dudley||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sank at Nashville, Tennessee. Later raised and repaired. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

May

=3 May=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 3 May 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Santuree||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer collided with {{SS|Ligonier||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) in thick fog {{convert|10|mi|km|spell=in}} southeast of the Highland Light off Cape Cod in the Atlantic Ocean. She was beached at Provincetown to avoid sinking.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=11 May=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 11 May 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|City of Saltillo||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer struck rocks on the Missouri side of the Mississippi River near Glen Cove, Missouri, and sank. 7 passengers and 5 crewmen killed.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=10 May=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 10 May 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Ford City||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer rolled over and sank while being hauled out for dry docking at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Raised and repaired.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Lizzie S. Sorenson

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The 76.1-gross register ton, {{convert|84.2|ft|m|1|adj=on}} motor whaling schooner sank in Iphigenia Bay ({{coord|55|26|15|N|133|24|15|W|name=Iphigenia Bay}}) in Southeast Alaska {{convert|8|nmi|km|0}} southwest of Cape Addington ({{coord|55|26|28.1|N|133|49|03|W|name=Cape Addington}}) after a whale her crew had harpooned rammed her and stove in her hull. Her crew of seven reached shore in a ship's boat, and the tug Fearless ({{flag|United States|1896}}) rescued all crew on 12 May.{{Cite web|url=https://alaskashipwreck.com/shipwrecks-a-z/alaska-shipwrecks-l/|title=Alaska Shipwrecks (L) – Alaska Shipwrecks|website=alaskashipwreck.com}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=13 May=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 13 May 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SV|Eddie A. Minot||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The fishing schooner sank in a collision with {{SS|J. S. T. Stranahan||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) off 24th Street, Brooklyn, New York. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=14 May=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 14 May 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Reliable||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sank at her dock in the Milwaukee River.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Saint Michael #6

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The 240-ton barge was destroyed by ice on the Tanana River in the central part of the District of Alaska.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=15 May=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=15 May 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Brittania

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc= The barge was stranded on Block Island, Rhode Island, after colliding with her tow, the Tug {{SS|Bay City||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}).{{cite web |url=https://research.mysticseaport.org/coll/coll001/ |title=Records of the T. A. Scott co. |publisher=mysticseaport.org |access-date=14 March 2021}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Wear||2}}

|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The British steel cargo ship Wear, built in 1905 by Austin S. P. & Son Ltd. and owned at the time of her loss by Witherington & Everett SS Co., on voyage from Sunderland to Saint-Servan with a cargo of coal, was wrecked on the west coast of Guernsey Channel Islands. There were no casualties.{{cite web |url=http://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?83005 |title=SS Wear [+1910] |publisher=wrecksite.eu |access-date=26 August 2015}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=17 May=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=17 May 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Faustin||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sank in heavy weather in {{convert|14|ft|m}} of water in Lake Erie off Barr Point {{convert|1|mi|km|spell=in}} east of the Barr Point Lightship. Ship was raised.{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KxlRAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA358 |title=Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general |year=1911 |access-date=21 May 2019}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{ship|Russian submarine|Forel||2}}

|flag={{nowrap begin}}{{navy|Russian Empire|1910}}{{nowrap end}}

|desc=The submarine sank accidentally. All crew members escaped. Forel later was salvaged and scrapped. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=18 May=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 18 May 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|J. Marhoffer||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned {{convert|14|mi|km}} north of the Yaquina Lighthouse on the Oregon coast. One crewman killed.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Uncle Sam||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The passenger steamer was beached and sank after a collision with a dredge and scow at Kansas City, Missouri.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=19 May=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=19 May 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Cisco||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The fishing tug caught fire {{convert|10|mi|spell=in}} west of Sleeping Bear Point, Lake Michigan. Her crew was unable to put out the fire and the vessel was run aground {{convert|1/2|mi|spell=in|1}} offshore.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|C. M. Johnston||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sank at the mouth of the White River.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=20 May=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 20 May 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Union||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned in Hood's Canal, Thorndyke Bay. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=21 May=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 21 May 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|John B. Ketchum No.2||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer struck the east crib of the Neebish Cut in the St. Marys River and sank. Raised and taken to Bay City, Michigan, for repairs. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=23 May=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 23 May 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Frank H. Goodyear||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer broke in two and sunk in a collision in thick fog with {{SS|James B. Wood||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) in Lake Huron {{convert|40|mi|km}} below Thunder Bay Island. 18 crewmen were killed, along with the wife and 3-year-old son of the cook, who survived.{{cite web |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=chi.103308961&view=1up&seq=269 |title=American Marine Engineer June, 1910 |publisher=National Marine Engineers Beneficial Association of the United States |via=Haithi Trust |access-date=24 December 2020}}{{cite web |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=chi.103308961&view=1up&seq=366 |title=American Marine Engineer August, 1910 |publisher=National Marine Engineers Beneficial Association of the United States |via=Haithi Trust |access-date=24 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|James S. T. Stranahan||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer caught fire in the East River, and was abandoned. She drifted near Clasons Point, Bronx and sank.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=24 May=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 24 May 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{USS|Dewey|YFD-1|6}}

|flag={{navy|United States|1908}}

|desc= The drydock sank at the U.S. Naval Base Subic Bay, Philippines, while filled to receive a Torpedo Boat. Refloated on 29 June undamaged.{{cite web |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=chi.103308961&view=1up&seq=280 |title=American Marine Engineer June, 1910 |publisher=National Marine Engineers Beneficial Association of the United States |via=Haithi Trust |access-date=29 December 2020}}{{cite web |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=chi.103308961&view=1up&seq=314 |title=American Marine Engineer July, 1910 |publisher=National Marine Engineers Beneficial Association of the United States |via=Haithi Trust |access-date=29 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=25 May=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 25 May 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|James T. Morse||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was sunk in a collision by {{SS|Belfast||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) at Rockland, Maine.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Mizpah

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The 64-gross register ton, {{convert|70|ft|m|1|adj=on}} motor schooner was destroyed by an explosion and fire at Kvichak ({{coord|58|58|N|156|56|W|name=Kvichak}}) on the Bristol Bay coast of the District of Alaska.{{Cite web|url=https://alaskashipwreck.com/shipwrecks-a-z/alaska-shipwrecks-m/|title=Alaska Shipwrecks (M) – Alaska Shipwrecks|website=alaskashipwreck.com}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=26 May=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 26 May 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{ship|French submarine|Pluviôse||2}}

|flag={{navy|France}}

|desc=The submarine sank with the loss of her entire crew of 27 after colliding with the packet boat Pas de Calais ({{flag|France}}) in the Strait of Dover off Calais, France. She was refloated, repaired, and returned to service.}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=28 May=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 28 May 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Paul L||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sank at a dock at Oshkosh, Wisconsin. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=30 May=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=30 May 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SV|Forward|1884|2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The schooner foundered in Kewaunee Bay, Lake Michigan.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Olivia

|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The fishing trawler was hit by the torpedo boat destroyer {{HMS|Quail|1895|6}} ({{Navy|United Kingdom}}) off Porthallow, Cornwall. Four men from the village of Flushing died.{{cite news|url=http://www.falmouthpacket.co.uk/in_port/717176.Bad_day_for_trio_of_destroyers/ |newspaper=Falmouth Packet |date=29 March 2006 |title=Bad day for trio of destroyers|access-date=4 February 2012}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

June

=1 June=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=1 June 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Evergreen||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sank with {{convert|4|ft|m}} of water on her deck at Buffalo, West Virginia. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=4 June=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=4 June 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Lucy V.||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The inland passenger steamer burned at Bucksport, South Carolina. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=7 June=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=7 June 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Bertha

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The 13-gross register ton motor schooner was crushed in ice in the Bering Sea {{convert|22|nmi|km}} west of Carter ({{coord|59|17|N|161|56|W|name=Carter}}) on the west-central coast of the District of Alaska. Her crew of three survived. She drifted ashore on 20 June and her gasoline engine was salvaged, but otherwise she was a total loss.{{Cite web|url=https://alaskashipwreck.com/shipwrecks-a-z/alaska-shipwrecks-b/|title=Alaska Shipwrecks (B) – Alaska Shipwrecks|website=alaskashipwreck.com}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Biscayne||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sank in {{convert|3+1/2|ft|m|0}} of water. Location unknown.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Felix de Abasolo|1899|2}}

|flag={{flagcountry|Spain}}

|desc=Carrying a cargo of coal, she ran aground in dense fog on Les Boufresses reef just north of Île de Raz Alderney Channel Islands and broke her back.{{cite web |url=http://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?2663 |title=SS Felix de Abasolo [+1910]}}{{cite web |url=http://www.judnick.com/judnick/ShipwrecksNearAlderney.htm |title=SHIPWRECKS NEAR ALDERNEY |author=John Elsbury |access-date=3 September 2015 |archive-date=4 March 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304064202/http://www.judnick.com/judnick/ShipwrecksNearAlderney.htm |url-status=dead }} }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=8 June=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=8 June 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Rover||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was rolled and wrecked by a tow towed by {{SS|Henry Lourey||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) at Pennsylvania Lock No. 2 on the Ohio River.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Unknown scow

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=A scow was sunk by an obstruction off Round Rock, Branford, Connecticut.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=9 June=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=9 June 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Apache||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steam yacht sank in shallow water after hitting the breakwater while leaving Cleveland, Ohio. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=10 June=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=10 June 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Black Prince

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer struck a snag in the Skagit River and sank. Later raised and repaired.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Majestic

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The barge sank {{convert|14|mi|km}} south southeast of the Highland Light, New Jersey. The barge's captain was killed when her lifeboat capsized, everyone else was rescued by the barge's tow steamer {{SS|Harold||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}). }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=11 June=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=11 June 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Cape Girardeau

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer struck an obstruction in the Mississippi River near Turkey Island. She was beached, but sank.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Rap||2}}

|flag={{flag|Norway}}

|desc=The Norwegian cargo ship was on a voyage from Newcastle to Gibraltar with a cargo of coal, when she was wrecked, off Alderney, Channel Islands.{{cite web |url=http://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?2866 |title=SS Rap [+1910] |publisher=wrecksite.eu |access-date=27 August 2015}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Terra|1888|2}}

|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=En route from the Port of Tyne to Genoa with a cargo of coal. She ran aground in fog at Chateau Letoc, Alderney Channel Islands{{cite web |url=http://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?2923 |title=SS Terra [+1910]}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Unknown barge

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=A barge sank in a collision with {{SS|Bornu||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) in Hell Gate. The barge's captain was killed. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=15 June=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=15 June 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SV|J. Dallas Marviel||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The sailing vessel was sunk in a collision with {{SS|Everett||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) off Sandy Point in the Chesapeake Bay. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=16 June=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=16 June 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Norumbega

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The schooner collided with {{SS|Mills||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) in thick fog {{convert|30|mi}} from the Fire Island Lightship off Cape Cod in the Atlantic Ocean. She was abandoned due to heavy damage.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=18 June=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=18 June 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Cheapside|1901|2}}

|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The collier collided with the armoured cruiser {{HMS|King Alfred|1901|6}} off Start Point and sank. King Alfred received little damage.{{cite magazine|title=Naval Matters – Past and Prospective: Devonport Dockyard|magazine=The Marine Engineer and Naval Architect |volume=33| date=August 1910|page=11}}{{cite web|url=http://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?37217|title=SS Cheapside [+1910]|publisher=Wrecksite|access-date=13 May 2017}}{{cite web|url=http://www.clydeships.co.uk/view.php?year_built=&builder=&ref=12360&vessel=CHEAPSIDE|title=Cheapside|work=Clyde Built Ships|publisher=Caledonian Maritime Research Trust|access-date=13 May 2017}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Linn O-Dee

|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The iron cargo ship, on voyage from Portsmouth to Guernsey in ballast, ran aground in fog and was wrecked at La Lague on Burhou Island, close to Alderney, Channel Islands.{{cite web |url=http://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?2728 |title=SS Linn O-Dee [+1910] |publisher=wrecksite.eu |access-date= 26 August 2015}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=19 June=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=19 June 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Lola||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer filled with water after hitting bottom in Calumet Lake and sank in {{convert|3+1/2|ft|m}} of water. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=20 June=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 20 June 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|William C. Redfield||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned at Athens, New York. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=21 June=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 21 June 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Joe Mathews

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=During a voyage from Nome to Golovin, District of Alaska, with 19 passengers, a crew of three, and a cargo of 15 tons of lumber on board, the 31-gross register ton, {{convert|45.8|ft|1|adj=on}} motor vessel was destroyed by ice in Norton Sound {{convert|3|nmi|km|0}} northwest of Cape Darby ({{coord|64|19|N|162|47|W|name=Cape Darby}}). All on board survived.{{Cite web|url=https://alaskashipwreck.com/shipwrecks-a-z/alaska-shipwrecks-j/|title=Alaska Shipwrecks (J) – Alaska Shipwrecks|website=alaskashipwreck.com}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=23 June=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=23 June 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Zelandia|1890|2}}

|flag={{flag|Belgium}}

|desc=The vessel sprang a leak and foundered in the North Sea {{convert|100|nmi|km}} off the Danish coast.{{cite web |title=SS Zelandia (Zealandia) (+1910) |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?142975 |website=wrecksite.eu |access-date=12 February 2020}} }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=24 June=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=24 June 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|C. W. Elphicke||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tugboat was sunk at Michigan City when United States ({{flag|United States|1908}}) collided with a bridge causing it to collapse onto the tugboat. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=25 June=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=25 June 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|J. S.||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned in the Mississippi River at Victory, Wisconsin. Two passengers killed.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=26 June=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 26 June 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Poughkeepsie ||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned at Highland, New York. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=27 June=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=27 June 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{MV|Albania||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tugboat burned in the Sabine-Neches Canal. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=Unknown date=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=Unknown date June 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Bob

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The 8-ton, {{convert|33.9|ft|m|1|adj=on}} schooner sank at Juneau, District of Alaska, and became a total loss.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Raymond||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc= The Tug sank in the Connecticut River near Middlehaddam, Connecticut, probably in June.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

July

=9 July=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 9 July 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Annie E. Smale

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The schooner was wrecked in dense fog at Point Reyes, California. Everyone on board was rescued from their lifeboat by {{SS|F. M. Plant||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}).

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=10 July=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 10 July 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Charles Castle||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sank at her dock at the foot of Eighth Street, Detroit, Michigan.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=11 July=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 11 July 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{USS|Castine|PG-6|6}}

|flag={{navy|United States|1908}}

|desc= The submarine tender was beached near North Truro, Massachusetts, after a collision with USS Bonita ({{navy|United States|1908}}). Later refloated, repaired and returned to service.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=13 July=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 13 July 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Helen Blair||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer struck an obstruction in the Mississippi River {{convert|3+1/2|mi|km}} below Davenport, Iowa, and sank in {{convert|7|ft|m}} of water. She was raised and repaired.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=14 July=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 14 July 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|D. F. Skinner||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tug caught fire {{convert|1|mi|km|spell=in}} off Hart's Island and was beached there, and was destroyed.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=17 July=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 17 July 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{MV|Beatrice||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The motor boat was sunk in a collision with {{MV|Sadie||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) in Canarsie Bay.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=KSL Co. Barge No. 7

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=While under tow from Cape Blossom to Kiwalik, District of Alaska, the 23-ton barge flooded, parted her hawser, and sank in Kotzebue Sound {{convert|5|nmi|km|0|spell=in}} south of Chamisso Island.{{Cite web|url=https://alaskashipwreck.com/shipwrecks-a-z/alaska-shipwrecks-k/|title=Alaska Shipwrecks (K) – Alaska Shipwrecks|website=alaskashipwreck.com}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=19 July=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 19 July 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Admiral Clark

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The barge struck a sunken log in the Delaware River near the Bordentown Bar and sank.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{MV|C. F. Roe||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tow steamer burned off Sewaren, New Jersey. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=20 July=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=20 July 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{ship||Dode|steamboat|2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=File:Dode wrecked 1910.jpgThe steamboat struck a rock and sank off Marrowstone Island, Washington. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=21 July=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=21 July 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Trude R. Wiehe||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer ran aground on Parker's Reef in heavy smoke. Burned the next day. Crew rescued by {{SS|Field||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}).

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=22 July=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=22 July 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Mollie||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tow steamer, laid up for repairs, burned in the Delaware River at Cramer Hill, New Jersey, from an exploding lamp.{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KxlRAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA358 |title=Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general |year=1911 |access-date=1 June 2019}} }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=25 July=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=25 July 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|San Joaquin No. 3||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned, probably in the San Francisco, California, area. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=26 July=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=26 July 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{MV|Johnstown||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The laid up tow steamer sank at her dock at 10th Street, Hoboken, New Jersey. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=27 July=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=27 July 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{MV|Arthur W. Palmer||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tow steamer sank at her dock at Pacific Street, Brooklyn, New York.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{USRC|Commodore Perry|1884|6}}

|flag=22px United States Revenue Cutter Service

|desc=The revenue cutter ran aground during dense fog off Tonki Point on St. Paul Island in the Pribilof Islands. All crew were rescued.{{cite web|title=Perry (Commodore Perry), 1884|url=https://www.uscg.mil/history/webcutters/Perry1884.pdf|website=U.S. Coast Guard History Program|publisher=U.S. Department of Homeland Security|access-date=18 April 2017}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|H. F. Bucs||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tug sprang a leak in heavy weather on Lake Erie off Point Pelee and sank. Crew made it to shore in her yawl.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=28 July=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=28 July 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=William H. McCleve

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The barge foundered {{convert|5|mi|km}} off Noves Point, Rhode Island. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=29 July=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=29 July 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Helen Johnson

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The 39-ton, {{convert|58|ft|m|1|adj=on}} fishing vessel sank in the Chukchi Sea {{convert|7|nmi|km|0|spell=in}} east of Point Hope, District of Alaska, after being ground to pieces over the course of five days by ice she was trapped in during a gale. The revenue cutter {{USRC|Bear}} (22px United States Revenue Cutter Service) rescued her crew of 10.{{Cite web|url=https://alaskashipwreck.com/shipwrecks-a-z/alaska-shipwrecks-h/|title=Alaska Shipwrecks (H) – Alaska Shipwrecks|website=alaskashipwreck.com}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=30 July=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=30 July 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SV|Grace Whitney||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The barge was sunk in a collision with {{SS|Ogdensburg||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) {{convert|3|mi|km|0|spell=in}} east of Bar Point, Lake Erie. Wreck later blown up as a hazard to navigation. The captain's wife and son drowned trying to enter the lifeboat.{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RH7VAAAAMAAJ&dq=Ship:++Goodyear,+1910&pg=PA103 |title=Beeson's Directory of the Northwest Lakes |publisher=Harvey C. Beeson |via=Google books |access-date=26 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|William Marvel||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The lighter was engaged in launching fireworks off the Manhattan Beach Hotel, New York that impaired visibility to the extent that she struck a rock and sank.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

August

=1 August=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=1 August 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Albion||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The freighter was damaged in a collision with {{SS|Chippewa||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) in the Puget Sound {{convert|2|mi|0|spell=in}} off West Point, Washington. She was beached to prevent sinking. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=2 August=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=2 August 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{ship||James Rolph|ship|2}}

|flag={{Flag|United States|1896}}

|desc=The four-masted schooner ran aground in San Pablo Bay, near San Francisco. No lives lost and the ship was later stripped of salvageable components and abandoned. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=3 August=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=3 August 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Sea Gannett||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The yacht burned {{convert|22|mi}} off Barnegat, New Jersey. All aboard rescued by {{SS|Joseph A. Fordney||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}).

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=4 August=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=4 August 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Newark

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The motor schooner was sunk in a collision with Crowley Launch No. 5 ({{flag|United States|1908}}) at Shelby's Wharf, California. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=5 August=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=5 August 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{ship||Princess May|steamship|2}}

|flag={{flag|Canada|1868}}

|desc=File:SS Princess May 3c33388u.jpgThe passenger ship ran aground near the Sentinel Island Light, Alaska, United States. She later was refloated, repaired, and returned to service. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=9 August=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=9 August 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{USS|Marcellus|1879|6}}

|flag={{navy|United States|1908}}

|desc=The collier was rammed by the fruit steamer {{SS|Rosario di Giorgio||2}} ({{flag|Norway|civil}}) about {{convert|60|nmi}} off Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. She sank ten hours later with no loss of life. Deemed too expensive to salvage, Marcellus was struck from the Navy list on 22 September 1910.}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=13 August=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 13 August 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Martha Wilkes

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=During a voyage from Anadyr on the Siberian coast of the Russian Empire to Nome, District of Alaska, with a crew of three and a cargo of {{convert|1000|lb|kg}} of furs and hides on board, the 67-ton, {{convert|80|ft|m|1|adj=on}} schooner was wrecked in fog, high winds, and heavy seas on Cape Bering on the southwest coast of the Chukchi Peninsula in Siberia. Siberian natives rescued her crew on 14 August.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=14 August=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 14 August 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SV|Fidelio||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The yawl-rigged yacht sank in a collision with {{SS|Vigilant||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) off Point Judith, Rhode Island. All crew rescued by Vigilant. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=16 August=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 16 August 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Sesnon #6

|flag={{flag|United States|1907}}

|desc=While anchored off Nome, District of Alaska, with no cargo or crew aboard, the 16-ton barge broke loose from her moorings during a gale, was driven onto the beach {{convert|4|nmi|km|0|spell=in}} west of Nome, and was broken apart by waves.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Sesnon #7

|flag={{flag|United States|1907}}

|desc=While anchored off Nome, District of Alaska, with no cargo or crew aboard, the 21-ton barge broke loose from her moorings during a gale and was pounded to pieces by waves against a wharf on the Nome waterfront.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=17 August=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=17 August 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SMS|S32|1886|6}}

|flag={{nowrap begin}}{{navy|German Empire}}{{nowrap end}}

|desc=The torpedo boat sank after colliding with the torpedo boat {{SMS|S76}} ({{navy|German Empire|name=Imperial German Navy}}) in the Baltic Sea.Chesneau, Roger, and Eugene M. Kolesnik, Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905, New York: Mayflower Books, 1979, {{ISBN|0-8317-0302-4}}, p. 263.[https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?240513 wrecksite.eu S-32 (+1910)]

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SMS|S76}}

|flag={{nowrap begin}}{{navy|German Empire}}{{nowrap end}}

|desc=The torpedo boat sank after colliding with the torpedo boat {{SMS|S32|1886|6}} ({{navy|German Empire|name=Imperial German Navy}}) in the Baltic Sea. She was raised, repaired, and returned to service.Chesneau, Roger, and Eugene M. Kolesnik, Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905, New York: Mayflower Books, 1979, {{ISBN|0-8317-0302-4}}, p. 264.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=19 August=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=19 August 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Walter Needham||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sank in {{convert|12|ft|m}} of water at Metropolis, Illinois. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=20 August=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=20 August 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Geraldine||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned at the entrance to the Little Kanawha River at Petersburg, West Virginia.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Plymouth||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was holed by a log {{convert|4+1/2|mi|km|0}} from Greensboro, Maryland, and sank. Later raised. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=21 August=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=21 August 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{HMS|Bedford|1901|6}}

|flag={{navy|United Kingdom}}

|desc=The {{sclass|Monmouth|cruiser|0}} armoured cruiser was wrecked at Quelpart Island in the East China Sea with 18 men killed. The wreck was sold on 10 October for breaking up.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|C. G. Witbeck||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The laid up ferry burned in the canal basin in Watervliet, New York. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=24 August=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=24 August 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{MV|Sun Ray||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The motor launch was sunk in Newark Bay in a collision with Majestic ({{flag|United States|1908}}) at the Lehigh Valley Railroad bridge. One crewman and one passenger killed.{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KxlRAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA358 |title=Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general |year=1911 |access-date=5 June 2019}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=26 August=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=26 August 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Brazoria||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The freighter was struck by a large swell crossing the bar into Absecon Inlet resulting in the ship flooding and losing steerage. The ship hit a breakwater and broke in two after being abandoned by the crew.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Pearly Mae||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned in North West Creek, North Carolina. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=27 August=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=27 August 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Geo. Chambers||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The canal boat was sunk in a collision on the Stone House Bar. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=28 August=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=28 August 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Mars||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer struck an obstruction in the Mississippi River near St. Paul, Minnesota, and sank in {{convert|6|ft|m|spell=in}} of water. She was raised and repaired.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=29 August=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=29 August 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|West Point||2}}

|flag={{flag|United Kingdom|civil}}

|desc=The cargo steamship caught fire in the North Atlantic on 27 August, and her crew abandoned her in two lifeboats the next day. She sank on 29 August at position {{coord|42|20|N|44|10|W}} or {{coord|45|43|N|40|41|W}} (accounts differ). {{SS|Devonian|1900|2}} and {{RMS|Mauretania|1906|6}} rescued all of her crew.{{cite news |title=British ship burns; 16 saved, 20 lost |url-access=subscription |newspaper=The New York Times |date=4 September 1910 |page=1 |access-date=1 April 2024 |via=Times Machine |url= https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1910/09/04/105089162.html?pageNumber=1}}{{cite news |title=Mauretania saves men of burned ship |url-access=subscription |newspaper=The New York Times |date=5 September 1910 |page=1 |access-date=1 April 2024 |via=Times Machine |url= https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1910/09/05/105089715.html?pageNumber=1}}{{cite news |title=Wrecked, suffered much |url-access=subscription |newspaper=The New York Times |date=6 September 1910 |page=4 |access-date=1 April 2024 |via=Times Machine |url= https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1910/09/06/104949574.html?pageNumber=4}}{{cite news |title=Shipwrecked sailors picked up at sea. |newspaper=The Daily Kennebec Journal |place=Augusta, ME |date=5 September 1910 |page=1 |access-date=1 April 2024 |via=Library of Congress |url= https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn82014248/1910-09-05/ed-1/seq-1/}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=31 August=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=31 August 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Louie||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tug sprang a leak and sank at Baltimore, Maryland. Later raised.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Marie-Reine||2}}

|flag={{flag|Belgium}}

|desc=The ship caught fire at Thessalonika, Greece and sank.{{cite web |title=SS Marie Reine (+1910) |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?141796 |website=wrecksite.eu |access-date=12 February 2020}} }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

September

=1 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 1 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SV|Leif Erickson||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The fishing schooner was sunk in a collision with {{SS|Chesapeake||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) off the Fenwick Island Lightship. Three crewmen rescued by Chesapeake and eight by dories from the fishing schooner {{SV|Edith M. Prior||2}}. Four crewmen lost. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=2 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 2 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{MV|Breeze||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The passenger vessel sank in a collision with {{SS|North America||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) in the Providence River a {{convert|1/4|mi|km|1|spell=in}} off Fox Point Dock. Crew and 13 passengers rescued by North America.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Luella

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The 8-gross register ton motor vessel was driven ashore by a gale and ice and wrecked at North Head in Saint Lawrence Bay on the coast of Siberia.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=3 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=3 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Pauline||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sprung a leak off Fort Diamond, New York, and was beached.{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KxlRAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA358 |title=Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general |year=1911 |access-date=3 June 2019}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=4 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=4 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Bristol

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The barge sank in a collision in thick fog with {{SS|Dunneman||2}} ({{flagcountry|Kingdom of Italy}}) {{convert|18|mi|km}} east northeast of Barnegat, New Jersey, in the Atlantic Ocean. Her master and one crewman killed.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=5 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=5 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Pastime||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tow steamer sank at Pennsylvania Lock No. 5 in the Monongahela River, possibly from too much coal aboard. Raised immediately.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|William Cory||2}}

|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=File:SS William Cory aground.jpg

The cargo steamship, carrying a cargo of timber from Uleåborg (Oulu), Finland to Newport, South Wales was wrecked at the foot of Boscaswell Cliff, near Pendeen Lighthouse.{{cite web |url=http://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?136465 |title=SS William Cory (+1910) |website=wrecksite.eu |access-date=6 September 2021}} }}{{cite web |title=The Loss of the William Cory |url=https://www.penwithlocalhistorygroup.co.uk/on-this-day/?id=213 |website=Penwith Local History Group |access-date=6 September 2021}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=6 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=6 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Robert White||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The laid up steamer sprung a leak and sank at the Atlantic Dock, Brooklyn, New York.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=7 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=7 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Rosa

|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The submarine {{HMS|A11}} ({{navy|United Kingdom}}), departing from Portsmouth Harbour, England ran into the sailing barge, which sank. Its two-man crew was rescued.{{cite news |title=Sunk by a Submarine - Incident at Portsmouth |url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0001112/19100908/132/0010 |access-date=1 April 2024 |work=Daily Telegraph |issue=17277 |date=8 September 1910 |location=London |page=10|via=British Newspaper Archive}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=8 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=8 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Kellogg

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The scow foundered at Milwaukee, Wisconsin, {{convert|12|nmi|km}} north west of Little Point au Sable.{{cite web |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?297870 |title=Kellogg (+1910) |publisher=Wrecksite |access-date=24 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=9 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=9 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Pere Marquette 18||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=File:Sinking of Pere Marquette 18 1910.jpg The train ferry sank in Lake Michigan from unknown causes. Her Captain and 27 crewmen killed. 33 survivors rescued by {{SS|Pere Marquette 17||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}). During the rescue a lifeboat was smashed on the side of Pere Marquette No.17 by heavy seas killing two rescuers.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Protector||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tug inadvertently flooded and sank when a seacock was accidentally left open at Charleston, South Carolina.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=10 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=10 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|M. P. Howlett||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The canal boat foundered in Woodbury Creek.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=11 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=11 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Pilot||2}}

|flag={{flag|Canada|1868}}

|desc=The tug was destroyed by fire somewhere in the Great Lakes.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=12 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=12 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Joseph Peene Sr.

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The vessel was sunk by a broken sea valve at Yonkers, New York.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=16 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=16 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Unknown scow

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=A dump scow capsized and sank after being hit by a wake in Lake Erie off Buffalo, New York.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=18 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=18 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SV|Thomas Quayle||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The schooner was lost to fire at Cleveland, Ohio.{{cite web |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?296916 |title=Thomas Quayle (+1910) |publisher=Wrecksite |access-date=26 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=19 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=19 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Wildwood||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned at Leschi Park in Lake Washington. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=20 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 20 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=KSL Co. Barge No. 4

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=With no crew or cargo aboard, the 23-gross register ton barge parted her anchor line in strong winds and heavy seas and was stranded on the coast of the District of Alaska in Willow Bay ({{coord|66|05|N|162|21|W|name=Willow Bay}}) in Kotzebue Sound {{convert|12|nmi|km}} northeast of Deering. Ice destroyed her during the winter of 1910–1911, ending her owner's hope of salvaging her in the spring of 1911.{{Cite book|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.b3330075&view=1up&seq=430|title=Merchant vessels of the United States. 1911-12.|via=HathiTrust|series=1936/37-1939/41: Report series, no.[1], 4, 8, 11 }}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=22 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 22 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Dunbar||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sank in the Wolf River at Memphis, Tennessee. She was raised.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Duplin||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The inland passenger steamer sank at Sanderson's Mill, South Carolina, in the North East River, South Carolina.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Sallie Marmet||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sank in {{convert|9|ft|m|spell=in}} of water in the Ohio River at Gallipolis Island after hitting an obstruction. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=23 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 23 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Bethlehem||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer ran aground in rain and fog on the west side of South Manitou Island, Michigan. Refloated on 4 October and taken to Manitowoc, Wisconsin. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=24 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=24 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Brilliant||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sank at the Hunter's Point Bridge, Newtown Creek, when a water tank being filled overflowed and swamped the ship. Raised the next day.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=25 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=25 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Rosamand||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The yacht burned at Moose Hollow, New York. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=26 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 26 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Greenwood||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was holed by an obstruction and sank in {{convert|4+1/2|ft|m}} of water at Riverton, Kentucky. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=27 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 27 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|The Leader||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tow steamer burned in the Ohio River at Economy, Pennsylvania. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=28 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=28 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Chester|1884|2}}

|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The passenger-cargo ship was badly damaged in a collision in the River Elbe with a Swedish steamer and was beached to prevent her from sinking.{{cite news |author= |title=The Great Central Railway Company's steamer Chester… |url=http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000576/19100930/009/0002 |newspaper=Aberdeen Journal |location=Scotland |date=30 September 1910 |access-date=11 November 2015}} {{Subscription required |via = British Newspaper Archive}} However, she sank quickly into the soft moving sand and became a total wreck, the water having flooded her holds.{{cite news |author= |title=Grimsby Steamer wrecked in the Elbe |url=http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000687/19101003/202/0005 |newspaper=Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer |location=England |date=3 October 1910 |access-date=11 November 2015}} {{Subscription required |via = British Newspaper Archive}} }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=29 September=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 29 September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Catherine Davis||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sank in {{convert|7|ft|m|spell=in}} of water at the foot of Ninth Street, Huntington, West Virginia, after hitting an obstruction. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=Unknown date=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= Unknown date September 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Arctic

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The vessel was lost off Cape Douglas of the coast of the District of Alaska. The wreck report does not specify whether the incident occurred off Cape Douglas ({{coord|58|51|N|153|15|W|name=Cape Douglas}}) on the northeast coast of the Alaska Peninsula or Cape Douglas ({{coord|65|00|N|166|42|W|name=Cape Douglas}}) on the Bering Sea {{convert|51|nmi|km}} northwest of Nome.{{Cite web|url=https://alaskashipwreck.com/shipwrecks-a-z/alaska-shipwrecks-a/|title=Alaska Shipwrecks (A) – Alaska Shipwrecks|website=alaskashipwreck.com}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=California

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was wrecked in Ward Cove off the western coast of Revillagigedo Island in the Alexander Archipelago in Southeast Alaska.{{Cite web|url=https://alaskashipwreck.com/shipwrecks-a-z/alaska-shipwrecks-c/|title=Alaska Shipwrecks (C) – Alaska Shipwrecks|website=alaskashipwreck.com}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Luella

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The 115-gross register ton, {{convert|90|ft|m|1|adj=on}} sternwheel paddle steamer was lost on the Tanana River near Chena, District of Alaska.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

October

=1 October=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=1 October 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|L. L. Barth||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sprung a leak near Muskegon, Michigan. She put into harbor where she ran aground in {{convert|15|ft|m}} of water.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|New York|1879|2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer foundered in Lake Huron {{convert|20|mi}} off South Point, or Thunder Bay, Michigan, in Lake Huron. The crew was rescued by {{SS|Mataafa||2}} and the barge Alex Holley (both {{flag|United States|1908}}).{{cite web |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?297383 |title=new York (+1910) |publisher=Wrecksite |access-date=26 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=2 October=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=2 October 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=New York

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The laid up steamer burned at Berkley Dock.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Phenix||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sprang a leak and was beached at South Bay Point, Lake Ontario and was abandoned. Later refloated and towed to Ogdensburg, New York.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=4 October=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=4 October 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Frank L. Vance||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned on Lake Michigan off Ludington, Michigan.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=6 October=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=6 October 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Muskegon||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned at Michigan City, Indiana. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=7 October=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=7 October 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Teller

|flag={{flag|United States|1907}}

|desc=During a voyage in the District of Alaska from Teller to Mary's Igloo with two crewmen and a cargo of 30 tons of general merchandise, the 15-ton scow sprang a leak and sank in Grantley Harbor at the mouth of the Tuksuk River while at anchor and with no one aboard. She was a total loss.{{Cite web|url=https://alaskashipwreck.com/shipwrecks-a-z/alaska-shipwrecks-t/|title=Alaska Shipwrecks (T) – Alaska Shipwrecks|website=alaskashipwreck.com}} }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=10 October=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=10 October 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Diamond K

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The motor schooner sank off Cape Darby ({{coord|64|19|N|162|47|W|name=Cape Darby}}) near Nome, District of Alaska. The two people aboard survived.{{Cite web|url=https://alaskashipwreck.com/shipwrecks-a-z/alaska-shipwrecks-d/|title=Alaska Shipwrecks (D) – Alaska Shipwrecks|website=alaskashipwreck.com}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{MV|Huntress||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc= With no one on board, the 9-gross register ton sternwheel motor paddle vessel foundered in the Ohio River at Evansville, Indiana.{{Cite book|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.b3330075&view=1up&seq=433&size=125|title=Merchant vessels of the United States. 1911-12.|via=HathiTrust|series=1936/37-1939/41: Report series, no.[1], 4, 8, 11 }}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Olympe

|flag={{Flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The schooner was beached at Gunwalloe Church Cove, Cornwall.{{Cite journal |last=Leonard |first=Alan |title=Profiting from Shipwrecks |journal=Picture Postcard Annual |pages=14–16 |year=2008}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=12 October=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=12 October 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SV|Emory Bailey|1868|2}}

|flag={{flag|Canada|1868}}

|desc=The schooner was wrecked unknown location in the Great Lakes.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SV|W. W. Stewart||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The schooner burned at Buffalo, New York.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=14 October=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=14 October 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SV|Tacora||2}}

|flag={{flag|Norway}}

|desc= The Barkentine went ashore near Orient Point, New York. Refloated and returned to service.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=16 October=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=16 October 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Crown Prince|1904|2}}

|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=1910 Cuba hurricane: The cargo ship was wrecked {{convert|200|yd}} offshore of Punta del Holendes, Cuba in a hurricane, a total loss. One crewman killed. The crew removed from beach on 24 October by the schooner {{SS|Joven Quillen||2}} ({{flag|Cuba}}) arriving at Havana, Cuba on 28 October.{{cite web |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?139891 |title=Crown Prince (II) (+1910)|access-date=8 May 2019}}{{cite web |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=chi.103308610&view=1up&seq=26 |title=American Marine Engineer January, 1911 |publisher=National Marine Engineers Beneficial Association of the United States |via=Haithi Trust |access-date=2 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Levi H. Pelton||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=1910 Cuba hurricane: The towing steamer sank at Moser Channel, Florida, during a hurricane.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=17 October=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=17 October 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Mistletoe ||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=1910 Cuba hurricane: The steamer capsized at Tampa, Florida, when a hurricane blew the water out of the bay. She flooded when the water returned. Raised before the end of the year.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Unknown schooner

|flag=

|desc=1910 Cuba hurricane: A schooner burned and sank in the Gulf of Mexico during the hurricane {{convert|130|mi}} north west of Cape Stanton. A few hours earlier {{SS|Glanton||2}} ({{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}) sighted a lifeboat with six people in it, but it sank before they could be rescued.{{cite web |url=http://progress-is-fine.blogspot.com/2014/02/schooner-l-herbert-taft.html |title=Schooner L. Herbert Taft |date=2 February 2014 |publisher=progress-is-fine |access-date=25 May 2019}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Virginia||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=1910 Cuba hurricane: The towing steamer broke up during a hurricane, location unknown.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=18 October=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=178 October 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|William C. Moreland|1890|2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1912}}

|desc=The cargo ship was wrecked on Sawtooth Reef, Lake Superior off Eagle River. Her bow broke off and sank in deep water. Her stern section was salvaged, towed to Detroit, Michigan, and declared beyond repair and resunk off Port Huron, Michigan, in Lake Huron. The stern was raised again in 1916 and used to build Sir Trevor Dawson, and machinery salvaged.{{cite web |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=chi.103308911&view=1up&seq=353 |title=American Marine Engineer July, 1916 |publisher=National Marine Engineers Beneficial Association of the United States |via=Haithi Trust |access-date=2 November 2020}}{{cite web|url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?159007 |title=William C. Moreland (bow) (+1910) |publisher=Wrecksite |access-date=2 November 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=19 October=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=19 October 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=James and Agness

|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The schooner was lost in the Bristol Channel off Lundy Island, Devon with the loss of all five crew.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Tacoma Maru||2}}

|flag={{flagcountry|Empire of Japan|civil}}

|desc= The cargo ship (6,178 GRT) ran aground off Fort Lawson Lighthouse when entering Seattle, Washington, in heavy fog. Refloated and returned to service.{{cite web |url=http://www.combinedfleet.com/Tacoma_t.htm |title=Japanese Army Auxiliary transports |publisher=Combinedfleet.com |access-date=3 November 2022}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=20 October=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=20 October 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{MV|Vesta||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc= With no one on board, the 6-gross register ton motor vessel burned at Keokuk, Iowa.{{Cite book|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.b3330075&view=1up&seq=434&size=150|title=Merchant vessels of the United States. 1911-12.|via=HathiTrust|series=1936/37-1939/41: Report series, no.[1], 4, 8, 11 }}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=22 October=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 22 October 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Lycoming|1880|2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer struck a dock at Rondeau, Ontario, caught fire, burned to the waterline and sank, a total loss. Raised and beached in May 1911, probably scrapped. Crew rescued by another steamer.{{cite web |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?173000 |title=Lycoming (+1910) |publisher=Wrecksite |access-date=26 December 2020}}{{cite web |url=https://images.maritimehistoryofthegreatlakes.ca/details.asp?ID=43591 |title=Lycoming (Propeller), U140416, burnt, 22 Oct 1910 |publisher=maritimehistoryofthegreatlakes |access-date=26 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Salem||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The laid up steamer foundered at Wilmington, Delaware. Raised the next day.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=23 October=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 23 October 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Langham||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned at anchor off Keeweenaw Point in Bete Grise Bay, Lake Superior.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|R. J. Moran||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tow steamer sank at the foot of Warren Street, Brooklyn, New York.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=26 October=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 26 October 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Nevermind

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The 8-gross register ton, {{convert|41.4|ft|m|1|adj=on}} fishing schooner was driven ashore in a snowstorm and wrecked on Horse Island ({{coord|58|15|15|N|134|43|30|W|name=Horse Island}}) in Lynn Canal near Douglas Island in Southeast Alaska. Her crew of two survived.{{Cite web|url=https://alaskashipwreck.com/shipwrecks-a-z/alaska-shipwrecks-n/|title=Alaska Shipwrecks (N) – Alaska Shipwrecks|website=alaskashipwreck.com}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=27 October=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 27 October 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Canal Boat No.241||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The canal boat foundered in Frankford Creek. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=28 October=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 28 October 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{ship||Eugene H. Cathrall|schooner|2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The schooner was sunk in a collision with Scow No. 57 in the Delaware River between League Island and Sanitarium Wharf. Subsequently raised. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=29 October=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 29 October 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Unknown canal boat

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=A canal boat was sunk in a collision with {{SS|North Land||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) in the area of New York City. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=31 October=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=31 October 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Paca Nova

|flag=unknown

|desc=The cattle lighter, converted from {{PS|Brodick Castle||}}, sank in a gale off Portland Bill in {{coord|50|30|N|02|20|W}} after the tow rope broke; she was on a voyage from Hellevoetsluis to Argentina or Brazil in tow of tug MARIA HENDRIKA III ({{flag|Netherlands}}). The riding crew of two were saved by the tug.{{cite book |last1=Clammer |first1=Richard |title=Cosens of Weymouth, 1848 to 1918 : a history of the Bournemouth, Swanage and Weymouth paddle steamers |date=2005 |publisher=Black Dwarf Publications |location=Witney |isbn=1-903599-14-8 |pages=258–259}}{{cite news |title=Maritime Intelligence |url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0001941/19101102/167/0014 |access-date=18 February 2023 |work=Lloyd's List |issue=22809 |date=2 November 1910 |location=London |page=14|via=British Newspaper Archive}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Raritan||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The freighter sank in the No. 4 Lock of the Delaware and Raritan Canal.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Wasp||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned at Gulfport, Mississippi. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=Unknown date=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=Unknown date October 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Arkadia|1895|2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=1910 Cuba hurricane: The cargo steamship departed New Orleans, Louisiana on 11 October for San Juan, Puerto Rico, and was never heard from again. Probably lost in a hurricane on 14 October. Lost with all 33 crew and 4 passengers. One of her lifeboats was found on the coast of Pinar Del Rio Provence, Cuba.{{cite web |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?140856 |title=SS Arkadia (+1910) |website=wrecksite.eu |access-date=8 May 2019}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{ship|Cuban gunboat|Céspedes||2}}

|flag={{flagcountry|Republic of Cuba (1902–1959)}}

|desc=1910 Cuba hurricane: The gunboat was sunk in the hurricane near Arroyos de Mantua, Pinar del Río, Cuba around 16 October. The captain, engineer, and some crewmen died.{{cite web |url=https://www.histarmar.com.ar/ArmadasExtranjeras/Cuba/FormerSpanishGunboats.htm |title=Former Spanish Gunboats in Cuban Service |publisher=histarmar.com.ar |access-date=2 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=H. D. Tupper

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc= The 116-gross register ton canal boat was lost in a collision with an unidentified vessel on the Saint Lawrence River off Chambly, Quebec. The only person on board survived.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.b3330075&view=1up&seq=430 Department of Commerce and Labor Bureau of Navigation Forty-Fourth Annual List of Merchant Vessels of the United States for the Year Ending June 30, 1912, Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1912, p. 421.]

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Silverdale|1893|2}}

|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=1910 Cuba hurricane: The cargo steamship departed New York City on 7 October for Havana, Cuba and was never heard from again. Possibly lost in a hurricane in the area of Cuba on 14 October. Lost with all 24 crew.{{cite web |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?142764 |title=SS Silverdale (+1910) |website=wrecksite.eu |access-date=8 May 2019}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

November

=1 November=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 1 November 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Winona

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was found to be leaking badly just after leaving Pontoosac, Illinois. She was beached, but sank in the Mississippi River in {{convert|5|ft|m|spell=in}} of water. Raised and repaired.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=2 November=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 2 November 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=America

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tow steamer burned in the Delaware River off Centerton, New Jersey. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=3 November=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 3 November 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Eclipse

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned in the Merremic River at Morschels, Missouri.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=F. Bontecou

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The barge was sunk in a collision with {{SS|M. Martin||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) at Parrs Island, New York.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|John H. Jeffery Jr.||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned at Duluth, Minnesota.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Lycoming|1880|2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned in Rondeau Harbour, Canada. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=4 November=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 4 November 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Capitol City||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The dredge sank in the channel into Black Rock Harbor, Connecticut, in a gale. The vessel was raised by end of the year.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|John A. Patten||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The laid up steamer burned at Bridgeport, Alabama.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Louise

|flag={{flag|United States|1912}}

|desc=The wreck of the 8-gross register ton, {{convert|34|ft|m|1|adj=on}} motor cargo vessel, crushed by ice, was found on the coast of the District of Alaska {{convert|1|nmi|km}} northeast of Cape Prince of Wales. She had departed Anadyr, Siberia, on 1 November bound for Nome, District of Alaska. The bodies of the four men who had been on board – two crewmen and two passengers – were never found.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Mabel||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer swamped and sank in a dry dock in a heavy storm at Perth Amboy. Later raised.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=5 November=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=5 November 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Veta||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was wrecked on a reef off Yeo Island, Georgian Bay, Lake Ontario, Canada. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=6 November=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=6 November 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Pastime||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tow steamer burned at Little Falls, West Virginia, on the Monongahela River.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{ship||Preussen|ship|2}}

|flag={{Flagcountry|German Empire}}

|desc=File:Preussen total wreck - SLV H99.220-2132.jpg

The five-masted ship-rigged windjammer was accidentally rammed by {{SS|Brighton|1903|2}} ({{Flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}) in the English Channel off Dover, England, and beached without loss of life.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Wasaga||2}}

|flag={{flag|Canada|1868}}

|desc=The steamer caught fire, burned to the waterline and sank in 35 feet of water at Copper Harbor, Michigan, Keweenaw Point, in Lake Superior. Crew rescued by {{SS|Westmount||2}} ({{flag|Canada|1868}}).{{cite web |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?167063 |title=Wasaga (+1910) |publisher=Wrecksite |access-date=26 December 2020}}{{cite web |url=https://www.nemoha.org/details.asp?ID=2894756 |title=WISSAHICKON (1876, Package Freighter) |publisher=Alpena County George N. Fletcher Public Library Northeast Michigan Oral History and Historical Photo Archive |access-date=26 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=8 November=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=8 November 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Wimborne

|flag={{Flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The steamer was wrecked under Carn Barra Point near Land's End, Cornwall, United Kingdom. The crew were rescued by rocket lines from the shore.{{cite book |last=Noall |first=C |year=c. 1969 |title=Cornish Shipwrecks Illustrated |location=Truro |publisher=Tor Mark Press |page=19}} }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=10 November=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 10 November 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Baroness

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The barge sank in a collision with an unknown sail vessel {{convert|10|mi|spell=in}} west southwest of the Fire Island Lightship in the Atlantic Ocean. Her crew was rescued by the sailing vessel and landed in Europe.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=12 November=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 12 November 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Portland

|flag={{flag|United States|1912}}

|desc=During a voyage from Juneau to Cordova, District of Alaska, carrying 30 passengers, a crew of 53, and a cargo of 300 tons of general merchandise, the 1,420-gross register ton, {{convert|191.8|ft|m|1|adj=on}} steamer struck a submerged rock off Palm Point ({{coord|60|11|N|144|33|W|name=Palm Point}}) in Katalla Bay ({{coord|60.1819|N|144.4972|W|name=Katalla Bay}}) on the coast of Southcentral Alaska, floated off, and was beached on the shore of the bay, where she began to break up in the surf 12 hours later, becoming a total loss. All on board survived.{{Cite web|url=https://alaskashipwreck.com/shipwrecks-a-z/alaska-shipwrecks-p/|title=Alaska Shipwrecks (P) – Alaska Shipwrecks|website=alaskashipwreck.com}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=13 November=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 13 November 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Royal||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was holed by a log near the Blue River Bar in the Ohio River {{convert|5|mi|km|0}} below New Amsterdam, Indiana. She sank in shallow water on the Kentucky side of the river. Raised and repaired.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Sadie Lee||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was holed by a log at O.K. Landing on the Mississippi River and sank. She was raised.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Sea Light

|flag={{flag|United States|1907}}

|desc=The 20-gross register ton, {{convert|42.7|ft|m|adj=on}} motor vessel was stranded in Larch Bay ({{coord|56|12|N|134|43|W|name=Larch Bay}}) {{convert|4|nmi|km|0}} north of Cape Ommaney in Southeast Alaska. Her entire crew of eight survived. She later was salvaged and returned to service.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=16 November=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=16 November 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{ship|French cruiser|Infernet||2}}

|flag=none

|desc=The former French cruiser, in tow of the tug Hercules ({{flagcountry|German Empire}}) from Rochefort to Stettin for demolition, broke from its tow and was stranded near Sables-d'Olonne; later broken up in situ.{{cite news|title=Maritime Intelligence|date=18 November 1910|url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0001941/19101118/159/0008|newspaper=Shipping & Mercantile Gazette and Lloyd's List|page=8|via=British Newspaper Archive}}{{cite news|title=Maritime Intelligence|date=22 November 1910|url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/BL/0001941/19101122/146/0011|newspaper=Shipping & Mercantile Gazette and Lloyd's List|page=11|via=British Newspaper Archive}}{{cite book|last=Roche |first=Jean-Michel|title=Dictionnaire des bâtiments de la flotte de guerre française de Colbert à nos jours |volume=II, 1870-2006|publisher=Rezotel-Maury |edition=2013|isbn=978-2-9525917-3-7|location=Millau|language=fr}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=17 November=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=17 November 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|James B. Eades||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sank in a storm off the Presque Isle Peninsula near Erie, Pennsylvania, in Lake Erie. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=18 November=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 18 November 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Edith||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The canal boat collided with cribbing of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad bridge over the Schuylkill River and sank.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Sea Prince||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was sunk in a collision in San Francisco Bay with {{SS|Grey Stoke Castle||2}} ({{Flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}). Four crewmen killed. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=21 November=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=21 November 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=May

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The launch was sunk at a dock in East San Pedro, California, when {{SS|Watson||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) drifted into her.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Panther|1890|2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sank near Garden Island, Lake Michigan in shallow water. Raised in 1911, repaired and lengthened, returned to service.{{cite web |url=https://www.superiortrips.com/Whitefish/Panther_Shipwreck.htm|title=Panther |publisher=superiortrips.com |access-date=26 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=22 November=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=22 November 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Selja|1907|2}}

|flag={{flag|Norway}}

|desc=The steamer was sunk in a collision {{convert|3|mi|km|0|spell=in}} off Point Reyes, California, with {{SS|Beaver||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}). Two crewmen killed.{{cite web |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?142678 |title=Selja Cargo ship 1907-1910|publisher=Wrecksite |access-date=7 June 2019}} }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=23 November=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=23 November 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|B. B.||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sank after someone broke in to the laid up vessel and opened a valve at Moline, Illinois. Vessel was raised.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Gem||2}}

|flag={{Flag|United States|1912}}

|desc=The steamer struck an obstruction in the Mississippi River and sank at a wharf at New Orleans, Louisiana. Raised, repaired, and returned to service.{{cite web |url=https://search.library.wisc.edu/digital/AL6OMZOUR6HBTO8B |title=Gem (Packet, 1898-1914) |publisher=University of Wisconsin-Madison Libraries |accessdate=19 February 2021}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Henry C. Cadmus

|flag={{flag|United States|1912}}

|desc= The barge went ashore on Duck Island off Clinton, Connecticut.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Typhoon

|flag={{flag|United States|1912}}

|desc= The barge went ashore on Duck Island off Clinton, Connecticut.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=24 November=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=24 November 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Oneida||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tugboat ran aground in the Niagara River. She burned over night.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=26 November=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=26 November 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Saucy Jim||2}}

|flag={{flag|Canada|1868}}

|desc=The tug burned at dock at Christian Island, north west of Midland, Ontario, in Georgian Bay.{{cite web |url=https://greatlakeships.org/2900456/data?n=1 |title=SAUCY JIM (1887, Tug (Towboat)) |publisher=greatlakeships.org |access-date=26 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=27 November=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=27 November 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Mary||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The fishing tug sprung a leak and sank {{convert|15|mi|km}} off Chicago, Illinois. Her crew of four made it to shore in her lifeboat.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=30 November=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 30 November 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Cantonia||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned at Canton, Missouri.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|General||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tug was cut in two and sunk in a collision in a blinding snowstorm near Lime Island in the St. Marys River with {{SS|Athabasca||2}} ({{flag|Canada|1868}}). Three crewmen killed.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Hattie Darling||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was damaged by ice and sank entering the Kahkle Bros. Boat Yard on the Mississippi River at Rock Island, Illinois. Vessel was raised and repaired.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Pittsburg||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The dredge steamer burned opposite Economy, Pennsylvania, on the Ohio River.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

December

=3 December=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=3 December 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Marie Thomas||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The freighter burned and sank in the Murderkill River at Milton, Delaware. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=5 December=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=5 December 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Stirling Castle||2}}

|flag={{Flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The cargo steamer, which also used the name Nord America, ran aground off Morocco. She was refloated and towed to Genoa, Italy, where she was laid up before being scrapped in 1911.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Unknown barge

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=A barge became waterlogged and sank in the Swash Channel entering New York Harbor and sank. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=7 December=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=7 December 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Geo. Nelson||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was holed by ice and sank in Lake St. Clair in {{convert|24|ft|m}} of water. Her crew of 7 made it to shore on the 9th.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=8 December=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=8 December 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=John S. Parsons

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The barge was wrecked on Rock Shoal in the St. Lawrence River.{{cite web |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?297862 |title=John S. Parsons (+1910) |publisher=Wrecksite |access-date=26 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Stella O'Callaghan

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The barge fouled another barge and sank {{convert|1|mi|spell=in}} south southeast of New Haven Light. Later raised.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=9 December=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=9 December 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Annie C. Grace

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc= The 516-gross register ton schooner departed Port Royal, South Carolina, bound for Baltimore, Maryland, with seven people on board and was never heard from again.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Axim|1894|2}}

|flag={{Flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The Elder Dempster {{GRT|2,804}} cargo ship left London on 9 December, bound for the Canary Islands but did not arrive. There were reports from another British ship that left Liverpool around the same time of violent storms, so it was presumed that she foundered and sank.{{cite web |url=http://www.wrecksite.eu/doc/wrecks/axim1.jpg |title=The Times – Feared Loss of a British Steamer |access-date=2 September 2013}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Ethel J.||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer hull was damaged by ice while leaving the harbor of Grand Marais, Michigan, on Lake Superior. She sank after returning to the dock. Raised, repaired and returned to service.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=10 December=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=10 December 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{HMS|Elfin|1905|6}}

|flag={{navy|United Kingdom}}

|desc=While transporting Royal Navy sailors to the depot ship {{HMS|Thames}} ({{navy|United Kingdom}}), the tender collided with the submarine {{HMS|C8}} ({{navy|United Kingdom}}) in the harbor at Harwich, England, and sank with the loss of five lives. She was refloated, repaired, and returned to service.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Jean|1889|2}}

|flag={{flag|Canada|1868}}

|desc=The tug burned to the waterline at Amherstburg, Ontario.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Olympia||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=File:SS Olympia.jpgDuring a voyage from Cordova to Valdez, District of Alaska, carrying 56 passengers, 60 crewmen, and a cargo of 350 tons of coal and general merchandise, the 2,827-gross register ton, {{convert|335|ft|m|1|adj=on}} steamship was wrecked without loss of life on Bligh Reef northwest of Bligh Island in Prince William Sound on the coast of Southcentral Alaska during a gale. Tugs from Valdez and Fort Liscum rescued her passengers and crew. Following the wreck, Steamboat Inspection Service investigators accused her captain of "unskillful navigation." Her wreck remained upright and visible on the reef until February 1922.{{Cite web|url=https://alaskashipwreck.com/shipwrecks-a-z/alaska-shipwrecks-o/|title=Alaska Shipwrecks (O) – Alaska Shipwrecks|website=alaskashipwreck.com}}"Outside News of Alaskan Doings", Fairbanks (Alaska) Daily News-Miner. 14 January 1911. Page A1. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=12 December=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=12 December 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Braddock||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tow steamer rolled on its side and sank at No. 6 Lock, Rice's Landing, Pennsylvania, on the Monongahela River after hitting an obstruction. Raised, repaired and returned to service.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=13 December=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=13 December 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Stella O'Callahan

|flag={{flag|United States|1912}}

|desc= The Barge was rammed and sunk by a scow at New Haven, Connecticut.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=14 December=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=14 December 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Columbia

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The motor launch was sunk in a collision with {{SS|Kitsap||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) in heavy fog in the area of Seattle harbor. One crewman killed, one rescued by Kitsap.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Kitsap||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was sunk in a collision with {{SS|Indianapolis||2}} ({{flag|United States|1908}}) in heavy fog in Seattle harbor. Everyone on board rescued by Indianapolis.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Loretta||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The delivery steamer was sunk by ice in the commercial slip in the harbor at Buffalo, New York.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Ottawa||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned at Cape Vincent, New York, due to spontaneous combustion of her cargo of coal. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=16 December=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=16 December 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SV|Abbie G. Cole||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The schooner was wrecked on Stone Horse Shoal and broke up. Her crew was rescued by {{ship|USRC|Gresham|1897|6}} (File:Ensign of the United States Revenue-Marine (1868).png United States Revenue Cutter Service).{{cite web |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015020609155&view=1up&seq=54 |title=Annual report of the United States Life Saving Service, Year ending June 30, 1914 |publisher=Government Printing Office, Washington |via=Haithi Trust |access-date=24 February 2021}}{{cite web |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?146626 |title=Abbie G. Cole (+1910) |publisher=Wrecksite |access-date=24 February 2021}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Hannah Beatrice

|flag={{Flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The ketch, sailed from Ballinacurra, County Cork, for Dublin with malt, on 15 December and not seen again. She was believed lost in a hurricane off the Irish coast on the following day.{{cite news |title=Missing Vessels |url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000038/19110216/268/0011 |access-date=8 February 2023 |work=Belfast News-Letter |issue=29789 |date=16 February 1911 |page=11 |via=British Newspaper Archive}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Jesse

|flag={{Flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The schooner, sailed from Ballinacurra, County Cork, for Dublin with barley, on 15 December and not seen again. She was believed lost in a hurricane off the Irish coast on the following day.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Lucy Johns

|flag={{Flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The schooner, sailed from Ballinacurra, County Cork, for Southampton with oats, on 15 December and not seen again. She was believed lost in a hurricane off the Irish coast on the following day.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SV|S. A. Fownes||2}}

|flag={{flag|Canada|1868}}

|desc=The schooner, dismasted in a gale, was blown over Pollock Rip Shoal eventually sinking {{convert|5|or|6|mi|0|spell=in}} south east of Monomoy Island. Just before sinking her crew was rescued by {{ship|USRC|Gresham|1897|6}} (File:Ensign of the United States Revenue-Marine (1868).png United States Revenue Cutter Service). Nine members of Gresham{{'}}s crew later received the United States Life Saving Service's Life Saving Medal for the rescue.{{cite web |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?155056 |title=S. A. Fownes (+1910) |publisher=Wrecksite |access-date=24 February 2021}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Sappho

|flag={{Flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The ketch sailed from Waterford, Ireland, for St. Helier, Jersey with malt, on 15 December and not seen again. She was believed lost in a hurricane off the Irish coast on the following day.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Stanley Miner||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tow steamer sank off Pier 45 in the North River from unknown causes. raised before end of year and repaired.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Victoria

|flag={{Flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The schooner sailed from Ballinacurra, County Cork, for Dublin, with oats, on 15 December and not seen again. She was believed lost in a hurricane off the Irish coast on the following day.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=17 December=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=17 December 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Genesee||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The canal boat struck a submerged wreck a short distance west of North Brother's Light and sank.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Leland||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer burned at Huron, Ontario.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=20 December=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=20 December 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Clara E. Uhler||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer sank at the City Coal Dock at New Bedford, Massachusetts. Raised on 24 December. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=21 December=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=21 December 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Russia

|flag={{flag|Belgium}}

|desc=Her cargo of Esparto grass caught fire and she was abandoned {{convert|100|nmi|km}} southwest of Ouessant, France. All forty-one crew rescued by {{SS|Hampshire||2}} ({{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}).{{cite web |title=SS Russia (+1910) |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?142442 |website=wrecksite.eu |access-date=12 February 2020}}}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=22 December=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=22 December 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Warnick||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tugboat struck a rock in the Niagara River and was beached. She burned over night.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=24 December=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=24 December 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Alaska|1878|2}}

|flag={{flag|Canada|1868}}

|desc=The steamer was destroyed by fire at Tobomorry, Ontario, Canada.

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=25 December=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=25 December 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Baltique||2}}

|flag={{flag|Belgium}}

|desc=The steamship was accidentally rammed and sunk by {{SS|Finland||2}} ({{flag|Belgium}}) in the Flushing Roads ({{coord|51|25|30|N|3|35|22|E}}) with the loss of six of her sixteen crew.{{cite web |title=SS Baltique (+1910) |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?15862 |website=wrecksite.eu |access-date=12 February 2020}} }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=28 December=

{{shipwreck list begin |date=28 December 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Leonard Richards||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tow steamer sprung a leak and sank at the Atlantic Dock, Brooklyn, New York. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

=31 December=

{{shipwreck list begin |date= 31 December 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Elsie

|flag={{flag|United States|1912}}

|desc=With no one aboard, the 159-gross register ton steamer sank during a snowstorm while at anchor in Valdez Bay ({{coord|61|07|N|146|16|W|name=Valdez Bay}}) off Valdez on the south-central coast of the District of Alaska.{{Cite web|url=https://alaskashipwreck.com/shipwrecks-a-z/alaska-shipwrecks-e/|title=Alaska Shipwrecks (E) – Alaska Shipwrecks|website=alaskashipwreck.com}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SS|Sheldon Bros.||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer struck heavy ice and sank near Erie, Pennsylvania. }}

{{shipwreck list end}}

Unknown date

{{shipwreck list begin |date=Unknown date 1910 |sort=}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Charles L. Hutchinson

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The 80-ton barge sank in the Yukon River at Kaltag, District of Alaska.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SV|Crown||2}}

|flag={{flag|Norway}}

|desc=The barque was abandoned in the Atlantic Ocean ({{coord|28|39|N|44|39|W}}). Crew rescued by {{SS|Kilsyrh||2}} ({{flag|United Kingdom|civil}}). Reported still afloat off the east coast of the U.S. in the summer of 1910.{{cite web |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=chi.103308961&view=1up&seq=368 |title=American Marine Engineer August, 1910 |publisher=National Marine Engineers Beneficial Association of the United States |via=Haithi Trust |access-date=31 December 2020}}{{cite web |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?175871 |title=Crown (1909+) |publisher=Wrecksite |access-date=31 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Febrero

|flag=Flag unknown

|desc=The ore carrying ship hit an unnamed rock to the northeast of the Runnel Stone, near Land's End, Cornwall, England. All crew were lost except for the cook.{{cite web|last=Liddiard|first=John|title=The Undiscovered Runnel Stone|url=http://www.jlunderwater.co.uk/old_site/photoix/runnelstone/index.htm|access-date=31 October 2011}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Heart Failure

|flag={{flagcountry|United States|1908}}

|desc=File:Heart Failure.jpgThe wooden barge was abandoned sometime before 1910. Her wreck lies in {{convert|18|ft}} of water in Lake Huron off the coast of Michigan at {{coord|45.0621|-83.37755|name=Heart Failure}}.{{cite web|url=https://thunderbay.noaa.gov/shipwrecks/heart_failure.html|title=Heart Failure|work=National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration|access-date=November 16, 2019}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Loch Katrine

|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}

|desc=The ship was dismasted and abandoned. She was later towed to Sydney and hulked.{{cite web |url=http://www.clydesite.co.uk/clydebuilt/abandoned-ships/LOCH_KATRINE_47.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150315051818/http://www.clydesite.co.uk/clydebuilt/abandoned-ships/LOCH_KATRINE_47.html|url-status=usurped|archive-date=15 March 2015|title=LOCH KATRINE |publisher=Clydesite |access-date=1 July 2016 }}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{ship||Lothair|clipper|2}}

|flag={{flag|Peru|civil}}

|desc=The composite clipper was lost.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{SV|Minnie||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The schooner sank in the Great Lakes sometime in 1910.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Princess

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The steamer was wrecked in Ward Cove off the western coast of Revillagigedo Island in the Alexander Archipelago in Southeast Alaska.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Sea Wolf

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The motor schooner sank {{convert|1|nmi|km|0|spell=in}} off Nome, District of Alaska, late in the autumn of 1910.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship=Sesnon #8

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The barge was reported lost at Nome, District of Alaska.

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{ship|USAT|Sheridan}}

|flag={{flagicon|United States|1908}} United States Army

|desc=The transport was wrecked off Barnegat Light.{{cite web |url=https://www.history.navy.mil/our-collections/photography/numerical-list-of-images/nhhc-series/nh-series/NH-43000/NH-43723.html |title=NH 43723 USAT Sheridan, 1892-1910 |publisher=US Navy Heritage and history Command |access-date=27 August 2019}}

}}

{{shipwreck list item

|ship={{MV|Winneconne||2}}

|flag={{flag|United States|1908}}

|desc=The tug was sunk at Milwaukee, Wisconsin, some time in 1910.{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RH7VAAAAMAAJ&dq=Ship:++Goodyear,+1910&pg=PA103 |title=Beeson's Directory of the Northwest Lakes |publisher=Harvey C. Beeson |via=Google books |access-date=29 December 2020}}

}}

{{shipwreck list end}}

References

{{reflist}}

{{shipevents|1910}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2019}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:List Of Shipwrecks In 1910}}

1910

Shipwrecks

Ship