Shipwreck: Mikhail Lermontov
When: 16 February, 1986
Where: Port Gore, Marlborough Sounds
What happened
- The Mikhail Lermontov was a regular cruise boat in New Zealand waters. She had been refitted in 1982 and could carry 550 passengers in comfort. She was the Soviet Union's prestige liner.
- At the time of the shipwreck the Mikhail Lermontov was in the middle of a cruise season which included a number of 11-day cruises.
- On 16 February 1986 the Mikhail Lermontov left Picton 3:10 pm, carrying 740 passengers and crew. On board was the Marlborough harbourmaster Don Jamison. The ship headed up Queen Charlotte Sound towards the open sea.
- The captain had gone to his cabin, leaving Jamison in charge. As the ship neared Cape Jackson Jamieson took a course to bring the Mikhail Lermontov closer to the cape.
- The navigator queried the move, believing that this course could take the ship into danger, but Jamieson had decided to take the ship through the 460 metre-wide passage between Cape Jackson and its outlying lighthouse. No one notified the captain of the decision.
- At about 5:20 pm the Mikhail Lermontov, travelling at a speed of 15 knots, grounded on rocks on the right-hand side, suffering severe damage to the hull. The ship kept moving, but as she took on water, rolled to one side.
- The captain now returned to the bridge and tried to head towards Port Gore where the Mikhail Lermontov could be beached on the shore, instead of sinking in open water.
- An hour later the ship had lost all power and drifted onto a sandbank to wait for help. But the incoming tide lifted her off the sandbank into deeper water and she sank at about 10:50 pm.
- Rescue ships were on the scene quickly. It was raining and the rescue was not easy to carry out. All passengers and crew were taken off, apart from a Russian engineer who was thought to have drowned when the Lermontov first hit the rocks. His body was not recovered.
- The passengers were taken by a tanker and an inter-island ferry to Wellington the next morning. Only 11 had minor injuries.
How many died: 1 (11 injured)
Other events and outcomes
- A preliminary inquiry found that Jamison was operating outside the limits of the Marlborough Harbour Board pilot area, but in an area he knew extremely well.
- For some unknown reason he had tried to take the Mikhail Lermontov through a narrow passage where the water was too shallow for the size of the ship.
- Jamison's only explanation was that he was suffering from mental and physical exhaustion after working 80 hours a week for the previous four months.
- The Minister of Transport at the time, Richard Prebble, decided not to hold a formal inquiry.
- Don Jamison later refused to speak publicly about the loss of the ship, but surrendered his pilot's licence.
- The Soviet authorities held their own inquiry and the captain of the Mikhail Lermontov was given a suspended four-year prison sentence.
- A settlement was made out of court between the Marlborough Harbour Board and the ship's owners for damages.
- The wreck could not be salvaged, but oil from her tanks was recovered over the next two months. Since then three people have died while diving on the wreck.
Sources
- Ingram, C.W.N. New Zealand shipwrecks: 195 years of disasters at sea, Auckland, 1990
- Locker-Lampson, Steve. The wreck book, Auckland, 1994
- McLean, Gavin. Shipwrecks and maritime disasters, Wellington, 1991
More information
- Search our catalogue for more about the sinking of the Mikhail Lermontov

