✨ New Arrivals Just Dropped!Explore
Shipwrecks of the California Coast
HomeStore

Shipwrecks of the California Coast

Shipwrecks of the California Coast

More than two thousand ships have been lost along California's 840 miles of coastline--Spanish galleons, passenger liners, freighters, schooners. Some tragedies are marking points in U.S. maritime history. The City of Rio de Janeiro, bound from Hong Kong to San Francisco in 1901, sliced the fog only to strike a rock and sink in twenty minutes, sending 128 passengers to watery graves. Seven U.S. Navy destroyers, bound on a fateful 1923 night from San Francisco to San Diego, crashed into the rocks at Honda Point on the treacherous Santa Barbara County coast, killing 23 sailors in one of the military's worst peacetime losses. Join author Michael D. White as he navigates the shoals of shipping mishaps with both salvage stories and elegies to the departed.
$7.70

Original: $21.99

-65%
Shipwrecks of the California Coast

$21.99

$7.70

Shipwrecks of the California Coast

More than two thousand ships have been lost along California's 840 miles of coastline--Spanish galleons, passenger liners, freighters, schooners. Some tragedies are marking points in U.S. maritime history. The City of Rio de Janeiro, bound from Hong Kong to San Francisco in 1901, sliced the fog only to strike a rock and sink in twenty minutes, sending 128 passengers to watery graves. Seven U.S. Navy destroyers, bound on a fateful 1923 night from San Francisco to San Diego, crashed into the rocks at Honda Point on the treacherous Santa Barbara County coast, killing 23 sailors in one of the military's worst peacetime losses. Join author Michael D. White as he navigates the shoals of shipping mishaps with both salvage stories and elegies to the departed.

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

More than two thousand ships have been lost along California's 840 miles of coastline--Spanish galleons, passenger liners, freighters, schooners. Some tragedies are marking points in U.S. maritime history. The City of Rio de Janeiro, bound from Hong Kong to San Francisco in 1901, sliced the fog only to strike a rock and sink in twenty minutes, sending 128 passengers to watery graves. Seven U.S. Navy destroyers, bound on a fateful 1923 night from San Francisco to San Diego, crashed into the rocks at Honda Point on the treacherous Santa Barbara County coast, killing 23 sailors in one of the military's worst peacetime losses. Join author Michael D. White as he navigates the shoals of shipping mishaps with both salvage stories and elegies to the departed.

You may also like

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

The Majesty of Natchez Notecards

$5.95

$2.08

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Cajun Primitives Notecards

$7.95

$2.78

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Cajun Christmas Cards

$7.95

$2.78

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

How Iowa Cooks

$14.95

$5.23

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

La Meilleure de la Louisiane

$19.95

$6.98

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Tacoma's Tall Ship

$24.99

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Rocky Mountain Winter Coaster Set

$19.95

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Mohawk Mountain Ski Area

$24.99

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Beignet Bunny

$19.99

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Chicago Art Institute Holiday Snow Lions Coaster Set

$19.95

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Chicago Coaster Set

$19.95

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Boston Sports Legends Coaster: Set of 4

$19.95