Mayakovsky (ship)
On August 13, 1950, the steamer Mayakovsky (named for Soviet poet Vladimir Mayakovsky) sank at around 12:00 pm local time due to overloading of the vessel with too many people. Mayakovsky sank in the Daugava River that bisects Riga, not more than 15 metres (49 ft) from the present day site of the Stone Bridge. A total of 147 people died, including 48 children. It was the deadliest peacetime disaster in Soviet Latvian history. At the time, Latvia was a republic within the Soviet Union, under the rule of Joseph Stalin, and news of the disaster was not put in the state-controlled press. On August 19, 2011, almost 20 years after the breakup of the Soviet Union and the Republic of Latvia regaining its independence, a memorial plaque was dedicated at the Stone Bridge (the Akmens tilts) in memory of the victims.[1]
Date | 13 August 1950 |
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Location | Daugava |
Cause | Vessel overloaded |
Outcome |
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References
- "On the embankment a memorial was opened in memory of those who died on the steamer 'Mayakovsky'" (Article on Delfi, August 20, 2011, about the erection of a memorial plaque)