About: George Francis McGough   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/6_PKf8cukk9wQ1j-EJv76Q==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

George Francis "Paddy" McGough (July 4th, 1875 - 1940?) was an Able seaman of the Titanic. He survived the sinking. He was born in County Wexford, Ireland. Two Third Class passengers were also born there: Robert Mernagh band his cousin Elizabeth Doyle. At the Hampshire Assize in July 1900 he was cleared of murder but convicted of manslaughter on the high seas and sentenced to 15 months' imprisonment with hard labour. It was while detained as His majesty's pleasure at Winchester Prison that George McGough was recorded on the night of the 1901 census. He may have died in Essex in 1940.

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  • George Francis McGough
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  • George Francis "Paddy" McGough (July 4th, 1875 - 1940?) was an Able seaman of the Titanic. He survived the sinking. He was born in County Wexford, Ireland. Two Third Class passengers were also born there: Robert Mernagh band his cousin Elizabeth Doyle. At the Hampshire Assize in July 1900 he was cleared of murder but convicted of manslaughter on the high seas and sentenced to 15 months' imprisonment with hard labour. It was while detained as His majesty's pleasure at Winchester Prison that George McGough was recorded on the night of the 1901 census. He may have died in Essex in 1940.
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Birth Date
  • 1875-07-04(xsd:date)
death place
  • Essex
Text
  • The fellow at the tiller was an Irishman. Paddy had no authority, he was just a deckhand. He was wonderful, telling me about the stars.
Birth Place
  • Duncannon, Co Wexford, Ireland
death date
  • 1940(xsd:integer)
By
  • Robertha Josephine Watt, Second Class passenger
boarded the ship at
lifeboat
abstract
  • George Francis "Paddy" McGough (July 4th, 1875 - 1940?) was an Able seaman of the Titanic. He survived the sinking. He was born in County Wexford, Ireland. Two Third Class passengers were also born there: Robert Mernagh band his cousin Elizabeth Doyle. McGough went to sea but in March 1900, when aged only 25, he was charged with the murder of a shipmate aboard the collier Rustington, while berthed at Santos Harbour, Brazil. After a night out drinking he had returned to his ship and challenged his shipmates to a fight. A fireman named John Dwyer tried to persuade McGough to go to his bunk but McGough instead butted him in the stomach and tipped him into an open hold. Dwyer fell 20 feet and was found bleeding profusely, he died moments later. At the Hampshire Assize in July 1900 he was cleared of murder but convicted of manslaughter on the high seas and sentenced to 15 months' imprisonment with hard labour. It was while detained as His majesty's pleasure at Winchester Prison that George McGough was recorded on the night of the 1901 census. After his release he resumed his seagoing career but in 1910 he was convicted of a sexual assault on a victim named Lily Harper (age unknown) and sentenced to 3 months' hard labour. In the 1911 census he was living at 8 St George's Street, listed with him were Beatrice Gannaway, a servant, and a friend named Jermia Donoon. Early the following year he would marry Beatrice Nellie Gannaway (1886-1965), they are thought to have had no children. When he signed on to the Titanic as an Able Bodied Seaman on 6th April 1912, he gave his address as 15 St George's Street, Southampton, he gave his age as 25 when he was in fact in his late 30s. He was rescued in lifeboat 9 and took charge of the tiller. "The fellow at the tiller was an Irishman. Paddy had no authority, he was just a deckhand. He was wonderful, telling me about the stars." - Robertha Josephine Watt, Second Class passenger When Bertha thought she saw land, he explained that what she could see was an icefield. Nearby, first class passenger, Mrs Lily May Futrelle, complained that the man near her had entered the boat under false pretences, claiming he could row, when he could not. McGough told her, “Madame, he wants to save his life as much as you do yours.” At dawn, the sight of the Carpathia steaming towards the survivors raised everyone’s spirits, and McGough exclaimed, “Let us pray to God, for there is a ship on the horizon and it’s making for us.” McGough returned to England aboard the Lapland with other crew. He would later serve as a crewman aboard the same ship. Other he served aboard throughout his career included: Llanstephan Castle, Briton, Tagus, Minnekahda, Fort St. George, Oropesa and Corbis. He may have died in Essex in 1940.
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