The Final Voyage of the Valencia

By (author): Michael C. Neitzel
ISBN 9781772033151
Softcover | Publication Date: May 19, 2020
Book Dimensions: 5.5 in x 8.5 in
144 Pages
$9.95 CAD
E-Book Price: $7.99 CAD

About the Book

A dynamic retelling of the deadly 1906 sinking of the SS Valencia off the southwest coast of Vancouver Island, one of the worst maritime disasters in Canadian history.

There are few places on earth that have such a high record of marine casualties as the short yet treacherous stretch of coastline known as the Graveyard of the Pacific. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, the fifty-six kilometres between Port Renfrew and Cape Beale off Vancouver Island saw dozens of shipwrecks and claimed hundreds of lives.

On a blustery night in late January 1906, the steamship SS Valencia, heading from San Francisco to Seattle and Victoria, met its tragic fate on the rocks near Pachena Point. With over one hundred passengers and sixty-five crew members on board, only thirty-seven people survived the wreck. All of the women and children perished.

With journalistic precision, compassion for the victims, and condemnation for those who neglected to prevent the tragedy, author Michael C. Neitzel recounts the Valencia’s ill-fated final voyage, drawing heavily on first-hand accounts of the survivors and witnesses. The Final Voyage of the Valencia is a must-read for anyone interested in the maritime history of Canada’s west coast.

About the Author(s)

Michael C. Neitzel is an author, filmmaker, and avid sailor with a lifelong love of local and maritime history. He has written extensively about sailing and the sea for publications in Canada and Australia, and he is currently producing an hour-long television special about the Valencia tragedy for the Knowledge Network.

Reviews

"The Final Voyage of the Valencia begins with the poetry of embarkation—of men in suits and bow ties and women in long dresses, flowers, and smiles—and ends in a terrible drama. Neitzel’s terse, fine writing reveals with great heart and understanding the contradictions behind the 1906 sinking of the Valencia off the Vancouver Island coast." — Peter Johnson, author of A Not-So-Savage Land: The Art and Times of Frederick Wymper, 1838-1901