Ship |
State |
Description
|
AG-13
|
Imperial Russian Navy
|
The AG-class submarine sank accidentally. She was refloated, repaired, and returned to service as AG-16.
|
Ariel
|
United States
|
The schooner was wrecked off the Inubōsaki Lighthouse, Japan.
|
Aurora
|
United Kingdom
|
The ship was presumed to have been sunk by a mine with the loss of all hands in the second half of 1917. She was on a voyage from Sydney, New South Wales to Iquique, Chile.
|
Belem
|
United Kingdom
|
The ship sank near Bude, Cornwall.[1]
|
Catherine
|
United States
|
The steamer was reported lost at Ugashik, Territory of Alaska.[2]
|
Dorade
|
French Navy
|
The naval trawler was lost sometime in 1917.
|
Harriet G
|
United States
|
During a voyage from Puget Sound to Hawaii with a cargo of lumber, the 252-ton brig capsized in the Pacific Ocean off Cape Flattery, Washington. The halibut schooner Sumner ( United States) salvaged Harriett G, which was re-rigged as a three-masted schooner and placed back in service as Esther ( United States).[3][4][5][6]
|
Key West
|
United States
|
The vessel was lost in Unimak Pass in the Aleutian Islands near Scotch Cap on the southwest corner of Unimak Island.[7]
|
Mary Sachs
|
United States
|
The 30-ton, 60-foot (18.3 m) twin-screw schooner was wrecked on Banks Island near Cape Kellett off the coast of Canada′s Northwest Territories.[8]
|
Orthes
|
Norway
|
The barque was abandoned in the Atlantic Ocean. She subsequently foundered.[9]
|
Prince John
|
United States
|
The steamer was lost in Wrangell Narrows in the Alexander Archipelago in Southeast Alaska.[10]
|
Reuben L. Richardson
|
United States
|
The 92-net ton schooner was wrecked in Clarence Strait in the Alexander Archipelago in Southeast Alaska.[11]
|
Spes & Fides
|
Norway
|
The fishing steamer, a former whaler, suffered an engine malfunction and sank in a storm off Tromsø, Norway. There were no deaths in the shipwreck. The wreck was located by divers at a depth of 20 m (66 ft) in 2014, after a search initiated by Sandefjord Museum.[12]
|
Spokane
|
United States
|
The steamer became a total loss at Farallon Bay (55°11′40″N 133°04′45″W / 55.19444°N 133.07917°W / 55.19444; -133.07917 (Barren Islands)) off northeastern Dull Island in Southeast Alaska.[13]
|
Taurus
|
United Kingdom
|
World War I: The coaster struck a mine and sank in the North Sea east of the Shetland Islands with the loss of nine crew. This was either during July 1917 or August 1917.[14]
|
SM U-50
|
Imperial German Navy
|
World War I: The Type U 43 submarine is believed to have struck a mine and sank in the North Sea off Terschelling, Friesland, Netherlands on or after 31 August.
|