The ship foundered before 30 May whilst on a voyage from Rhode Island to the Piscataqua River. Her crew were rescued.[11]
1755
1756
January
22 February
List of shipwrecks: 22 February 1756
Ship
State
Description
Unidentified boats
A landslide into the Langfjorden in Norway generated three megatsunamis with heights of 40 to 50 metres (131 to 164 ft) in the Langfjorden and the Eresfjorden that destroyed 196 boats.[12]
While on voyage to Norway with a cargo of Frisian roof tiles and bricks she wrecked near the Dutch island Griend on the east wall of the Vliestroom.[13]
The packet boat ran aground and was wrecked 2 nautical miles (3.7 km) off Danzig with the loss of two lives. She was on a voyage from Danzig to Cronstadt.[19]
The ship was captured by the privateer Annanime (France) on 19 November whilst on a voyage from Virginia, British America, to London. She was sent in to Cherbourg but was lost off that port.[23]
The sloop was captured by the privateer Annanime (France) on 20 November whilst on a voyage from Newfoundland, French America to Poole, Dorset. She was sent in to Cherbourg but was lost off that port.[23][24]
The ship was driven ashore and damaged at Plymouth, Devon. She was on a voyage from New England, British America, to London. She was subsequently refloated and taken in to Plymouth for repairs.[21][23]
^"NEW YORK, June 3". Pennsylvania Gazette. 6 June 1754.
^"Shipwrecks on Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge". Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge. Retrieved 19 January 2014.
^"PHILADELPHIA, November 7". Pennsylvania Gazette. 7 November 1754.
^"(untitled)". Lloyd's List (1981): 78 v. 3 January 1755.
^"Lost at sea". gloucester-ma.gov. Retrieved 11 June 2021.
^"(untitled)". Lloyd's List (1990): 78 v. 4 February 1755.
^"(untitled)". Lloyd's List (1985): 78 v. 17 January 1755.
^"(untitled)". Lloyd's List (1987): 78 v. 24 January 1755.
^"(untitled)". Lloyd's List (1986): 78 v. 21 January 1755.
^"(untitled)". Edinburgh Evening Courant. 25 June 1754.
^"(untitled)". Edinburgh Evening Courant. 30 May 1754.
^Hoel, Christer, "The Tjelle Rock Avalanche in 1756," fjords.com Retrieved 22 June 2020
^ a b"Scheepswrak: STAD BERGEN". Wrakkenmuseum [nl] (in Dutch).
^"(untitled)". Edinburgh Evening Courant. 13 November 1756.
^"(untitled)". Lloyd's List (2205): 78 v. 22 February 1757.
^"(untitled)". Lloyd's List (2197): 78 v. 25 January 1757.
^"British bomb vessel 'Falcon' (1745)". Threedecks. Retrieved 18 June 2021.
^"SHIPS LOST 1526 TO 1825". OBX History. Retrieved 18 January 2015.
^Chernyshev, Alexander Alekseevich (2012). Погибли без боя. Катастрофы русских кораблей XVIII–XX вв [They died without a fight. Catastrophes of Russian ships of the XVIII-XX centuries] (in Russian). Veche.