Captain
Alexander Rodger
Alexander
Rodger, sea captain and shipowner, was born in November 1801 at
26 Shore Street, Cellardyke. He was educated at the Parish School
in East Forth Street and passed the first 19 years of his life
in his native village. At the fishing and by studying hard he
acquired a knowledge of navigation which was unusual for someone
of his age and limited opportunities.
At
the age of about 19 he joined a collier as a sailor and in little
more than a year was appointed second mate, being promoted two
years later to the command of a brig in which he made many successful
voyages to the Mediterranean. He subsequently sailed over the
world and was the commander of the first ship of any size or tonnage
to sail from Glasgow to an Australian port.
An
incident that well illustrates his character occurred when he
was making a voyage in his own ship, the Helen, through the Indian
seas, when drifting with little or no wind but with a heavy swell,
the ship struck a sunken reef where according to the charts there
was a clear and open sea. The violence of the shock made the ship
quiver from stem to stern and a large piece of her false keel
was knocked away and floated alongside. Once clear of the reef
it was ascertained that the pumps could keep the water from gaining
a hold so Captain Rodger lowered a boat and made the most careful
soundings and bearings of the reef. On his return home he reported
the results to the Admiralty. 'Rodger's Rock' was thereafter recorded
on the chart.
After
years of hard service Captain Rodger was compelled by failing
health to retire from the sea and it was about this time that
the first news of the Australian gold fields reached this country.
He immediately planned an expedition to the gold fields, which
he led himself, consisting of sixteen young fishermen from Cellardyke,
five of whom were his own nephews. After spending six months with
the expedition, the success of which can be gathered from the
fact that the £1,200 advanced towards the expedition was
repaid and each member had about £200 over, he returned
home.
He
then began another speculative enterprise. He had long been convinced
that fast clipper ships had great advantages in the China tea
trade and by 1855 he was part owner of the Kate Carnie with C.
Camie of Glasgow. This was the first clipper ship built by Steele
& Co. Next came the Ellen Rodger, named after his wife, with
Captain John Keay of Anstruther as her master. Next came Min,
Captain John Smith, Anstruther, and in 1863 his most famous clipper
Taeping, which in 1866 won the most exciting tea race of them
all.
Taeping,
Captain McKinnon, drawing less water than Ariel tied up in London
docks twenty minutes ahead of Captain Keay, 99 days out of Foochow.
Such a close and exciting finish had never been seen before in
- an ocean race. Taeping divided her winnings of 10 shillings
per ton with the crew of the Ariel and Captain Mckinnon divided
the captain's £100 with Captain Keay.
Local
interest in the race was intense as Ariel was captained by Captain
Keay of Anstruther and included Anster men in her crew while Taeping
was owned by Captain Rodger of Cellardyke and her crew included
Dykers. His last clipper ship, the Lahloo , was built in 1867.
When Lahloo and Taeping were both lost in the East in 1872 he
sold the Mon and retired. He bought a field at the east end of
Cellardyke for the use of the community and had rocks cleared
from the harbour entrance and each winter he gave £20 for
the poor of the burgh. For many years he was an examiner for marine
certificates and served on the board of Clyde Lighthouses. He
died on June 6th 1877 at Newton Place, Glasgow, after a short
illness in his 76th year. Rodger Street, Cellardyke, was named
after him.
If
you would like to visit Cellardyke as part of a highly personalized
small group tour of my native Scotland please e-mail me:
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