Briggs, Gilling, Goodschaad, Head, Lorenzen, Martens and Richardson are the names of the people on the abandoned, derelict, ghost, mystery ship Mary Celeste. Benjamin Spooner Briggs, accompanied by daughter Sophia and wife Sarah, served as captain. Andrew Gilling, Edward William Head and Albert Richardson respectively were second mate, cook and steward, and first mate to four sailors: Gottlieb Goodschaad, Boz and Volkert Lorenzen, and Arian Martens.
The ship Mary Celeste was going east.
The Dei Gratia found the Mary Celeste.
What happened to all the people aboard inside
The number of people aboard Mary Celeste came to ten: the captain with his two-year-old daughter and wife as well as a total of seven crewmen and officers.
Industrial alcohol was in the barrels aboard Mary Celeste.
Yes, the ship Mary Celeste reached Gibraltar.
Mary Celeste was a British ship built in Canada during the British ownership of the US and Canada. Mary is the name of the daughter of the man who built the ship. Celeste is Spanish roughly meaning "heavenly beauty".
Ten people are known to have disappeared from the half brig Mary Celeste. The disappearances took place in November 1872 sometime after or while the hermaphrodite brig in question was passing the Azores. The course was a bit odd since typical shipping routes rounded the Azores off the archipelago's southern coasts whereas Mary Celeste was traveling off the northern shorelines.
Equipment, papers and people complete the list of what and who went missing from the abandoned, derelict, ghost, mystery ship Mary Celeste. Equipment includes a chronometer and a sextant while papers reference the captain's documents. People refers to the Mary Celeste 10 of captain with daughter and wife, three officers and four seamen.
No, there were no life boats on Mary Celeste after the crew went missing.
The ship Mary Celeste was built on Spencer's Island, Nova Scotia, Canada, in 1861.
Benjamin Spooner Briggs is the name of the captain who disappeared, along with his daughter Sophia and his wife Sarah, from the half brig Mary Celeste in 1872. Three officers numbered among the missing Mary Celeste 10: Andrew Gillings as second mate, Edward William Head as cook and steward, and Albert Richardson as first mate. Four seamen from Germany, the country of the merchants whose cargo of raw industrial alcohol Mary Celeste was transporting, vanished as well: Gottlieb Goodeschall, the brothers Boz and Volkert Lorenzen, Arian Martens.