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  1. The Ghost Ship of the Outer Banks. The five-masted schooner Carroll A. Deering was built in 1919 in Bath, Maine and wrecked on January 31, 1921. Cape Hatteras is home to many maritime legends but perhaps none is as curious as the real-life story of the massive schooner, Carroll A. Deering. Lost on the Outer Shoals in 1921 and discovered ...

  2. sunkenshipsobx.com › carroll-a-deeringCarroll A. Deering

    Perhaps the crew of the Carroll A. Deering went down with them. An article on June 21, 1921, of the New York Times, spoke of the disappearance of the two ships. The headline indicated that piracy was involved in the disappearance of three American ships. The article mentions Carroll A. Deering and Hewitt but doesn't name the third ship.

  3. 27 de ene. de 2016 · Carroll A. Deering as seen from the Cape Lookout lightship on January 28, 1921. (US Coast Guard) This image is a work of a United States Coast Guard employee, taken or made during the course of an employee’s official duties. As a work of the U.S. federal government, the image is in the public domain. Subject to disclaimers. Wikipedia.com

  4. 21 de sept. de 2022 · Desde então, o desaparecimento dos ocupantes do Carroll A. Deering, que ficou conhecido como o “Navio Fantasma de Outer Banks”, se tornou um dos mais discutidos e investigados enigmas marítimos dos Estados Unidos – sem que, até hoje, ninguém saiba o que de fato aconteceu, exatos 100 anos atrás. O Carroll A. Deering, assim batizado em ...

  5. The mystery of what happened remains one of maritime history’s most famous ghost ship stories. The Carroll A. Deering was built in Bath, Maine, in 1919 by the G.G. Deering Company for commercial use and was named for the owner’s son. The ship was 255 feet long, 44 feet wide, and weighed 1,879 tons.

  6. 1 de feb. de 2021 · OUTER BANKS, N.C. (Charlotte Observer) - The 100th anniversary of a bizarre chapter in Outer Banks history — the arrival of a ghost ship — was quietly marked over the weekend with a tribute posted on Facebook. “The Carroll A. Deering, a five-masted schooner, fell victim to the Graveyard of the Atlantic when she ran aground on the Diamond ...

  7. In late January 1921, less than two years after her maiden voyage, the Maine schooner Carroll A. Deering ran aground on Diamond Shoals off of North Carolina’s Cape Hatteras. The Deering was on a return run up the East Coast after delivering a load of coal to Brazil. All sails but the flying jib were set. Coffee and soup were on the stove ...