Sightings of the Loch Ness Monster are rare, seeing it on land is rarer still, but the rarest of all sightings belong to those people who dive into the depths of the loch to unexpectedly encounter its most notorious resident. I could probably count all these stories on the fingers of one hand stretching back over 130 years.
So, I was delighted to stumble upon this new (yet old) story of a diver who had an unsettling time of it in Loch Ness in the 1880s. I was perusing some old newspaper clippings in the National Library of Scotland when I came across this letter from a reader in the 9th December 1933 issue of the Dundee Courier and Advertiser.
The text of the story is given below:
LOCH NESS MONSTER
Sir, As much has appeared in the
press recently regarding the Loch Ness monster, perhaps it may be of interest
to the readers of the “Courier and Advertiser” to hear a little more from one
who for some years dwelt in the district of Dores, on the beautiful classic
shores of Loch Ness.
Once coming to “Meffin” I made
the interesting discovery that one of the residents of this village also hailed
from this part of Inverness-shire. After discussing persons and places the
conversation turned round to the Loch Ness monster.
“I remember,” he began, “how the
villagers in that district used to talk about a monster being seen on Loch
Ness, about three(?) miles from Invermoriston – that is, at Ruskich(?). The
story runs that a gentleman sailing down the loch in his yacht was driven
shorewards. The yacht sank and came to rest on a ledge of rock.
In order to secure some of his
valuables the owner of the sunken yacht hired the Caledonian Canal diver – Honeyman
by name – from the village of Clachnaharry. He intimated to the assembled
onlookers that he would begin work the following morning. When the coast was
clear, however, the diver, thinking that he and his ??? would get something for
themselves, donned his diving suit and descended into the water to make
inspection.
When he got to the yacht it
slipped off the ledge of the rock and disappeared into the depths. But then, to
the diver’s intense horror, a huge beast, measuring about nine feet long and
possessing a body as stout as that of an average man, passed in front of him.
Perhaps the diver thought that it
was the ??? of the lower regions that had come to advise him on his dishonest
work, or that Loch Ness possessed the door to the nether regions. Whatever it
may have been, the diver, who in very truth had ‘got the wind up,’ adamantly
refused to descend into the water again.
“I understand,” added my friend,
“that there is still living in Clachnaharry a man that can remember the details
of this incident, which happened nearly 50 years ago. It was no unusual thing
for parents of the Loch Ness district to frighten recalcitrant children by
threatening to bring the Loch Ness water horse to them.” - I am, etc,
A Lover of the Highlands.
Methven.
Some of the words are hard to pick out due to the letter being printed at the spine of the newspaper. The words I am not sure of are marked with a (?) while illegible ones are marked "???". However, I am sure you get the gist of the story. My guess is that this sinking occurred three miles north of Invermoriston near Alltsigh which marked the beginning of the long Ruskich Wood. Since the incident is alleged to have happened fifty years before around 1883, a contemporary half-inch to the mile survey map below marks the general area (courtesy of the National Library of Scotland).
The story itself concerns a sunk yacht and a diver called Honeyman from Clachnaharry. Addressing the boat first, I have found no record of such a sinking in the newspapers of the time which some may presume to cast doubt upon the story.
In fact, stories of sinkings at Loch Ness are pretty rare. The best known one was the schooner "Margaret Wilson" which struck the rocks near Point Clair back in 1861. It was carrying a large cargo of guano at the time (and wonders whether such a load attracted or repelled Nessie!).
But I would suggest sinkings could as easily not be reported. The best example I can think of was the sinking of the Zulu class boat, the "
Pansy", off Foyers at some time after 1911. There is no record of this 80 foot vessel sinking in Loch Ness and it was not discovered until 2002 during the Loch Ness Project's
Operation Groundtruth. More details can be found
here.
However, more success was gained in the matter of our diver Honeyman. An examination of the 1881 census revealed a small number of males by that name residing in the Inverness county. The most likely candidate was James Honeyman who resided at No.2 Low Street in the Clachnaharry area. He was aged 31 years in 1881 which best places him as our man since the other Honeymans were aged 0, 11, 14, 61 and 66.
However, his trade is stated as "
carpenter" in the 1881 census and "
house joiner" in the 1891 census. One may have expected the job of "
diver" to be stated but on reflection I would not think so. My reason for saying so is because I do not think such a skill would be a full time job. For example, a
search revealed that a Donnie Goodwin was a lock keeper on the Caledonian Canal as well as a diver. One suspects he spent more time being a lock keeper than a diver! In the same light, I suspect other divers required other jobs to gain income. Below is an 1874 picture of a diver courtesy of the Highland Heritage website
Ambaile. It cannot be verified if this is James Honeyman himself.
James Honeyman's street is still there today (though doubtless it would be unrecognisable to him). It's location near the mouth of the Caledonian Canal may suggest that he was well placed for a maritime-related job.
Now at this point some may ask about the well known Duncan MacDonald story from 1880. To remind readers, here is the story quoted from "The Loch Ness Story" by Nicholas Witchell.
An
experience by another MacDonald in 1880 was of an altogether different
nature and terrifying in the extreme. As a diver, Duncan MacDonald was
sent down to investigate a ship that had sunk in the Caledonian
Canal entrance at Fort Augustus. Not long after, he sent urgent signals
on his line to be immediately brought back to the surface.
Shaking and
ashen faced, he refused to say what he had seen for several days. When
he had sufficiently composed himself, he told the tale of how he had
seen a “very odd looking beastie ... like a huge frog” lying on the rock ledge where the wreck was lodged as he examined its hull.
He refused to ever dive in the loch again though it would appear this encounter was where Loch Ness ends and the canal begins.
My first thought was whether these two stories could be the same or related in some way. But I do not think so as there is more that divides than unites them. They occurred about the same time but the names and locations are different.
So a man descends into Loch Ness seeking riches but returns with terror. What exactly did he see that day? Something nine feet long and one to two feet wide swam past him but there is not much more to add. That is certainly bigger than anything known in Loch Ness but not quite full Nessie proportions. One wonders if the diver had managed to see the whole creature from the limited field of view of his helmet?
Getting rough dimensions of a similar helmet, suggests the diameter of the helmet is about 24cm and the "porthole" is just over 9cm. The boat was most likely on a ledge about 10m under where I guess the horizontal visibility would be less than 6m. Drawing some field of view triangles based on these numbers gives a field of view of about 4.5m at a distance of 6m. Likewise, a 3m creature would full occupy the horizontal field of view at a distance of 4m. So, the creature would have to be less than 12 feet away to not be fully visible through the helmet visor.
Of course, it could be our oft mentioned but never seen Atlantic Sturgeon which would have these proportions. Would Honeyman have recognised a sturgeon? One presumes so, but who knows in those conditions? I will just remind readers here that no sturgeon has ever been seen or caught in Loch Ness.
So, an interesting story and one wonders if James Honeyman's descendants still tell this tale of their great-great-grandfather? If so, perhaps you could contact me at this blog!
The author can be contacted at lochnesskelpie@gmail.com