William Stewart AM

b. 31/12/1847 Paisley, Renfrewshire.  d. ? 1904 Govan, Glasgow, Scotland. 

DATE OF AM ACTION: 09/05/1877 Huanillos, Chile.

William was born on 31st December 1847 in Paisley, Scotland, the son of William and Hamilton Stewart (nee Bickert).  On 31st December 1874 (his 27th birthday) he married Christina McDonald in Govan, Glasgow. They would have six children though sadly William became a widower when his wife died and he raised his children alone. He received his Albert Medal at Llanelli, South Wales on 4th October 1878 and later was a sailmaker. He died in Glasgow in 1904, aged 57. 

 

AM CITATION:

On the 9th May, 1877, the ” Conference” and “Avonmore”. and twenty-five or thirty other vessels, were lying at anchor off the village of Huanillos, a short distance from the shore, loading with guano. The village itself stands on a platform or ledge of the mountains, about thirty feet above the sea-level, and the mountains-rise precipitously to a height of 5,000 feet. According to the statement of Captain George Williams, the late Master of the ” Conference,” at about 8.30 P.M., the weather being dark and gloomy, with a calm sea, a severe shock of an earthquake was. felt. The ship trembled so much that the masts and yards seemed to be coming down, and the stern moorings parted. The noise of the earthquake, as it shook the mountains, was very great. Large boulders were rolled down the side of the mountains, and, striking against each other, emitted sparks of fire while the cries ot the guano-diggers on the mountains, who were in danger of their lives, increased the terror of the scene. The earthquake was followed by three distinct tidal-waves, bich rolled in from seawards’at intervals of about ten minutes, rising about fifty feet, as seen by the murks on the shore, causing many vessels to break their moorings and drag their anchors, and submerging the village of Huanillos, The first tidaldrove two vessels across the bows of the Conference, and carried away her bowsprit and jibboom. The second tidal-wave carried away her starboard bower-chains ; and at the same time, the American vessel “Geneva” was driven against the fore-rigging of the ” Conference,” damaging her severely. She then commenced to drift towards the rocks. The ” Geneva” was then carried back, and again driven against the ” Conference,” cutting the latter down amidships, four or five planks below the covering-board. Then a vessel which afterwards proved to be the ” Avonmore’ was seen for a moment as she was driven at a furious rate across the bows of the ” Conference.” Almost immediately her anchor-light disappeared, and the cries of drowning people were heard. It was at this time when, as it is stated, ” everything was calculated to destroy the strongest nerves,” when ships, out of the power of human control, were rangins about in all directions, the sea confused and turbulent, and the.Conference herself badly damaged, that the Master called for volunteers from his crew to man the jolly-boat. After some hesitation, JOHN MITCHKLL, WILLIAM STEWART, and CHARLES WILSON volunteered their services. They rowed away into the darkness, which was then described as so great that objects were invisible at a distance equal to the ships’ length, and after some time succeeded in rinding and rescuing the Masier of the ” Avonmore ” and his child, the Second and Third Officers, and an A.B. Fortunately there was no further tidal-wave, and when the boat returned to the ” Conference ” the disturbance of the sea had considerably abated, but the rest of the crew were about to abandon the “Conference” in their other boat, as she was then close on the rocks, with her stern and hows knocked in. Both boats then rowed out to sea. Four vessels, including the ” Avonmore ” and the ” Conference,” were totally wrecked that night at Huanillos, five were uninjured from being moored outside of the others, and all the rest were more or less damaged. Numerous lives were lost.

 

BURIAL LOCATION: UNKNOWN.

LOCATION OF MEDAL: UNKNOWN.