The list of shipwrecks in 1906 includes ships sunk, foundered, grounded, or otherwise lost during 1906.
|- |Annie Park | |The 214-ton schooner was wrecked on St. Govan's Head. Her captain and three crewmen died, two others made it to shore. |- |N.E.T. Co. No. 61 | |The 197-gross register ton scow sank off Duck Island at the mouth of the Housatonic River on the coast of Connecticut. The only person on board survived.
|- |Ailsa | |The 1,146-ton sailing vessel was abandoned off Rockall. |- | | |The 31-gross register ton sidewheel paddle steamer filled with water and sank from unknown causes in the Mississippi River at O'Bryan's Landing or Brien's Landing (sources disagree) near Cairo, Illinois. All three people aboard survived, but she was a total loss. |- | | |The steamer sank from an open seam in the Great Kanawha River at Charleston, West Virginia. Raised and recaulked. |- |Jennie Wand | |The 171-gross register ton schooner was stranded on the coast of the Baja California Peninsula 2 miles from La Paz, Mexico. All six people on board survived. |- |Pepin | |The 1,026-ton cargo ship was wrecked on Scarweather Sands.
|- |Gwladys | |The 127-ton sailing vessel was abandoned in the Atlantic Ocean. |- |Kipling | |The 142-ton sailing vessel was abandoned in the mid-Atlantic Ocean and sank in a gale. The crew were rescued. |- |Priscilla | |The 141-ton vessel was wrecked on Rocky Point, Torrisdale Bay. |- |Rowtor | |The , 2,351-ton cargo vessel struck a reef north of the Fratelli Rocks near Bizerta, French Tunisia, in heavy rain and rough seas. She traveled over the reef into deep water where she sank west of the rocks.
|- | | |The 140-gross register ton screw steam tug grounded on Romer Shoal, New York, and sank in dense fog in of water. Wreck removed in 1914. All nine people on board survived. |- |Caobang | |The 4,146-ton cargo ship was wrecked at Pulo Kampong. |- |Carlisle | |The 2,151-ton ship burned in the Saigon River. |- |Inger | |The 1,145-ton cargo ship was wrecked at Wheatall Point, near Sunderland.
|- |Cordillera | |The 635-ton sailing vessel was abandoned in the Atlantic Ocean. |- | | |The 26-gross register ton sidewheel paddle steamer sank in the Arkansas River at Webbers Falls, Oklahoma. Both people on board survived.
|- | | |The tow steamer was sunk in a gale off Salem, New Jersey. Later raised. |- |Ordovician | |The 1,112-ton cargo vessel was wrecked near Torres Vedras, Portugal.
|- |Royal Alfred | |The 151-ton cargo ship sank off Avonmouth.
|- |James E. Stansbury | |The 51-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Cedar Point, Maryland. All eight people on board survived. |- |Samuel L. Russell | |The 179-gross register ton schooner sank in the Chesapeake Bay with the loss of all five people on board. |- | | |The 84-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer either struck a coal flat or collided with an unnamed car float (sources disagree) on the Mississippi River at Vicksburg, Mississippi, and sank in of water. All six people on board survived.
|- |Richard | |The , 466-ton steam barge struck a rock, or ran aground, and was wrecked at Blanche Island, Shelburne, Nova Scotia in thick weather.
|- |Nicholas Thayer | |The 584-gross register ton bark departed Seattle, Washington, bound for Seward, District of Alaska, with 10 people on board and was never heard from again. |- | | |The steamer was wrecked when she struck a wooden projection of a bridge at Grand Ecore, Louisiana, and sank below the bridge. A deck hand and a chambermaid were killed.
|- |Altona | |The , 691-ton barquentine went aground on Shovelful Shoals, she was pulled off by the tug Gypsum Queen. She sank the next day, 12 January, in the channel east, or west northwest of Pollock Rip Lightship in about of water. |- | | |The steamer grounded and sank in the Ohio River below the Union Bridge, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Raised, repaired and returned to service. |- |Iris | |The 1,382-ton cargo ship was wrecked on Horns Reef, Denmark. |- |Richard K. Fox | |The 47-gross register ton schooner was stranded on the coast of Mexico in the Bay of Campeche. All four people on board survived. |- |Servia | |The 1,227-ton sailing vessel was abandoned in the Atlantic Ocean. |- |Shafner Bros. | |The 148-ton vessel stranded on Gull Rocks southwest of Briar Island, Digby, Nova Scotia. She came off and stranded again on Green Island, Tusket Islands, a Total Loss. |- | | |The 469-gross register ton screw steamer sank off Point Arena, California. All 16 people on board survived.
|- | | |The steamer ran aground on Brigantine shoal in dense fog. Pulled off by tugs on 13 January. |- | | | The barque was destroyed by fire at Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia. She later was scuttled in Saltpan Creek, Middle Harbour, Sydney, Australia. |- | | |The steamer either foundered at sea off Navarro, California, or ran aground and was wrecked near Greenwood, California, on 11 or 12 January.
|- |Orion | |The 1,970-ton vessel was wrecked near Merlimont, France. |- |Robert H. Stevenson | |The 1,290-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Diamond Shoals on the coast of North Carolina with the loss of all 12 people on board. |- |Unknown | |A barge, under the tow of the tug (), capsized, and after her towline was cut she sank off the New York City dumping grounds. The only crewman on the barge was lost, and the only crewman on another barge that Eugene F. Moran was towing also was lost somehow.
|- |Boringuen | |The 15-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Yabucoa, Puerto Rico. All three people on board survived. |- | | |The 66-gross register ton steam screw ferry burned at dock at Courtwright, Ontario. All four people on board survived, but she was a total loss. |- |Serbia | |The 2,344-ton cargo ship was wrecked at Nieuwe Diep.
|- |Dione | |The 221-ton vessel was wrecked near Dales Voe Walls.
|- |Manhatten | |The 100-ton vessel was wrecked near Canso, Nova Scotia.
|- |Atalanta | |The 370-gross register ton brig was stranded on "No Man's Land", floated off and drifted onto Seal Island in Penobscot Bay off the coast of Maine. All seven people on board survived.
|- | | |The 99-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer caught fire in the Monongahela River and was beached at Duquesne, Pennsylvania, where she burned out and became a total loss. All 13 people on board survived.
|- |Horace G. Morse | |The 437-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Bliss Island in New Brunswick, with the loss of two lives. There were five survivors. |- |Vienna | |The steamer struck an obstruction in the Tombigbee River at 10 Mile Shoal and sank.
|- | | |The 17-gross register ton motor yacht was stranded in St. Augustine Inlet on the coast of Florida. Both people on board survived.
|- | | Brazilian Navy |The Aquidabã-class battleship blew up and sank while anchored off Jacarepaguá, Brazil, after her ammunition magazines exploded. The explosion and sinking killed 212 people. Of her 98 survivors, 36 were injured. |- | | |The 2,632-gross register ton steel-hulled screw steamer sank after colliding in thick fog with the screw steamer () south west the Vineyard Sound Lightship in of water off Vineyard Haven, Massachusetts. wreck partially removed between 6 September and 11 October increasing clearance to . Nacoochie rescued all 25 members of her crew.
|- |Antoinette | |The 130-ton sailing vessel was abandoned off Ushant. |- | | |The 562-gross register ton iron-hulled tug was wrecked in thick fog on St. Mary Ledge (part of the Murr Ledges), a reef south-southeast of Southwest Head Light near Grand Manan, New Brunswick, Canada. All 17 people on board survived and rowed to shore in a lifeboat, but she was a total loss. Her wreck settled in of water . |- |Jautris | |The 178-ton cargo ship was sunk in a collision off Ushant. |- |Redcap | |The 135-ton fishing vessel was wrecked at Redcap, Orkney Islands. |- | | |The 463-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer struck a submerged object in the Mississippi River at Burns Landing near Tiptonville, Tennessee, and sank. All 28 people on board survived, but she was a total loss. |- | | | With 164 people on board, the 1,598-gross register ton screw passenger steamer was wrecked off Pachena Point, Vancouver Island, British Columbia, in thick weather and heavy seas with the loss of 136 lives â 42 crew and 92 passengers â according to one source and 126 lives according to another. The ship broke up about 36 hours later.
|- | | |The 28-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer was destroyed by an explosion on the Amite River at Whitehall, Louisiana, killing all five people on board.
|- |Collingham | |The 2,405-ton cargo vessel was wrecked at Cape Silleiro, Spain. |- |Genesta | |The 393-ton barquentine was wrecked on Scorpion Reef in the Gulf of Mexico. The crew were rescued by the fishing schooner B. F. Sutter and landed at Pensacola, Florida. |- |Morning Star | |The 186-ton cargo ship was sunk in a collision from the Newarp Lightship. |- | | |The 508-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer was destroyed by an explosion and fire while undergoing an overhaul on the ways at St. Johns, Oregon. One source says that all 20 people on board survived, while another says that two crew members were killed. |- |Stephen Woolsey | |The 32-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Montauk Point on the eastern end of Long Island, New York. All seven people on board survived. |- |Tamagawa Maru | |The 565-ton cargo ship was wrecked in the Spex Straits. |- |Wern | |The 162-ton cargo ship was sunk in a collision southeast of Point Lynas, United Kingdom.
|- |Avenel | |The 271-ton cargo vessel was wrecked outside Thurso harbour, Scotland. |- |L. Odin | |The 19-gross register ton sloop was stranded at Jones Inlet, Long Island, New York. All three people on board survived. |- |Mariechen | |Disabled and adrift since 25 December 1905, when a deadlight in her coal bunker had sprung open, leaving her without steam power during a voyage from Seattle, Washington, to Vladivostok in the Russian Empire with a crew of 50 and cargo of 5,000 tons of general merchandise on board, the 2,521-gross register ton, cargo steamer was wrecked during a snowstorm on a rock in False Bay () in Chatham Strait in the Alexander Archipelago in Southeast Alaska. She was later salvaged.
|- |Dixon Rice | |The 196-ton barquentine was wrecked on Riding Rocks, Biminia, Bahamas, a total loss, though some equipment was salvaged. |- | | |The yacht caught fire at dock at South Portland, Maine, and burned to the waterline and sank. Total loss. |- |Thyra | |The 991-ton cargo ship was sunk in a collision in the North Sea. |- |Unknown | |The car float, under tow of (), sank below Brown Buoy. |- | | |With no one on board, the 14-gross register ton sternwheel motor paddle vessel burned on the Ohio River at New Amsterdam, Indiana.
|- | | |The launch sank after a collision in Sydney Harbour. |- |Elisabetta | |The 390-ton cargo ship was wrecked at Stromboli.
|- |Irene | |The 491-gross register ton brig was abandoned at sea southeast of Cape Lookout, North Carolina. All seven people on board survived. |- |Unknown | |A car float, under tow by the tug (), was sunk in a collision with () off The Battery, New York City.
|- |Charlotte | |The 1,119-ton cargo ship was abandoned west of Lonstrup, Denmark. The crew survived, but the ship was a total loss. |- |Telephone | |The 100-ton vessel was wrecked at Cape St. Marys near Cape Race.
|- |Kenilworth | |The 327-ton cargo vessel struck a submerged rock and was beached to prevent sinking off Cove, near Aberdeen, a total loss.
|- |Franz | |The 160-ton fishing vessel departed Geestemunde on 2 January and vanished. |- |Neptun | |The 784-ton cargo vessel departed Burryport on 30 January and vanished. Debris was found on 5 February by the smacks Challenger and Sucessor about southeast of Lowestoft. |- |Olive | |The 824-ton cargo vessel departed Santander, Spain on 17 January and vanished. |- |Othello | |The 1,450-ton full rigged sailing ship departed Caleta Coloso on 8 January and vanished.
|- |Sumus | |The 223-ton cargo vessel departed Middlesbrough on 18 January and vanished. Probably sank in a blizzard during the night of 18âÂÂ19 January, Her boat and six bodies, out of nine crew, were found in the afternoon of 19 January ashore at Gristhorpe.
|- |Alma | |The 479-ton vessel was wrecked at Malden Island. |- | | |The steamer was pushed by wind during a gale into the bluff at Buffalo, Tennessee in the Cumberland River breaking a hole in her side causing her to sink in of water. Raised and repaired. |- |Laura | |The tow steamer grounded on Burlington Island at low tide. When the tide came back in she listed to port and filled with water. Scheduled to be pumped out. |- |Ludwig | |The 507-ton cargo ship was wrecked at Harboore.
|- |Ariadne | |The 1,671-ton vessel was wrecked off Crestan, Mazatlán, Mexico, in the Gulf of California. |- |Giuseppina | |The 208-ton vessel was wrecked near Bona. |- |Yankee Maid | |The 58-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Seal Island off the coast of Maine. The only person aboard survived.
|- |Fortuna | |With no one on board, the 10-gross register ton sloop-rigged yacht was stranded at Ipswich, Massachusetts. |- |Marshal | |The 1,785-ton vessel was wrecked west of Hook of Holland. |- |Swansea Castle | |The 594-ton barque sank in the South Atlantic Ocean () after springing leaks in heavy weather. The crew were rescued by Alice ().
|- |Bessie Dodd | |The 125-ton vessel was wrecked at St. Shotts, Newfoundland. |- |Costas | |The 1,329-ton cargo ship was stranded on Petro Island, Tenedos. Refloated and sold for scrap. |- |Dunbritton | |The 1,536-ton barque sank in the North Sea when her tow lines parted in heavy weather having been dismasted earlier. |- | | |The 13-gross register ton sternwheel motor paddle vessel was "cut down by ice" on the Ohio River at Leavenworth, Indiana. Both people on board survived.
|- |Mobile Bay | |The 1,117-ton cargo vessel burned at Anping, Formosa. |- |Richard | |The 1,338-ton cargo ship was wrecked on St. Andrew's Island. |- |Starke | |The 209-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Chandeleur Island in the Chandeleur Islands on the coast of Louisiana. All six people on board survived.
|- |Carey Bros. | |The grain boat, under tow by (), suddenly sank in the North River off New York City. |- |David | |The 1,337-gross register ton steel-hulled steamer was stranded on San Andrés Island in Costa Rica. All 21 people on board survived. |- |Domenico Padre | |The 116-ton vessel was wrecked at Licata, Sicily. |- |Fearless | |The 1,422-ton cargo ship was damaged in a collision at Egremont, Merseyside and was beached, breaking in half. The vessel was later refloated, beached again at Tranmere, Merseyside, and sold. |- |Febo | |The 2,271-ton cargo ship was wrecked on Cannon Rock, near Cloughey, County Down, Ireland, United Kingdom. |- |Hindustan | |The 133-ton fishing vessel sank off Conningbeg Lightship, Ireland, United Kingdom.
|- |Tris Ichrarchai | |The 389-ton vessel was wrecked at Ischia in the Gulf of Naples, about from Naples.
|- |County of Roxburgh | |The 2,209-ton barque was wrecked in a cyclone on a coral reef of Takaroa, Tuamotu archipelago, French Polynesia. Ten crewmen died. |- | | |The steamer struck a rock in the Columbia River at Curtis Landing, Washington, and was beached in a sinking condition. |- |Eimeo | |The 150-ton vessel was wrecked off Tikahau, Paumolee Group. |- |Thomas J. Owen | |The 68-gross register ton schooner burned at Sayreville, New Jersey. All four people aboard survived.
|- |Charleston | |The 94-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer was stranded at Wolf Island Shute in Missouri. All 24 people on board survived.
|- |Christal | |The 8-gross register ton motor vessel burned at Monhegan Isle in Maine. The only person on board survived. |- |Joseph Hay | |The 188-gross register ton schooner was stranded in the Sow and Pigs Islands off Massachusetts. All five people on board survived. |- |Veronica | |The 150-ton fishing ship was wrecked east of Lossiemouth, Scotland. |- |Vigilant | |The 115-ton cargo vessel was wrecked at Covie, east of Banff.
|- |Kiuho Maru | |The 241-ton cargo ship was wrecked at Okushiri, Hokkaido. |- |Unknown barges | |Three barges, under tow of the tug (), broke loose when seas broke over the tug in a severe storm south of Cape Canaveral, Florida, and were lost.
|- |Darby | |The 883-ton vessel grounded at Yarmouth, Nova Scotia. She was refloated but very leaky and was condemned. |- | | |The steamer went ashore in a gale south of Au Sable, Michigan. |- |Easton | |The covered barge was struck at dock at the foot of Twenty First Street, New York City, by the steamer () after Ganogas steering jammed in the East River. She was towed by Ganoga to Third Street, where she filled with water. |- |Feronia | |The 2,966-ton cargo vessel was wrecked in the Salween River at Moulmein, British Burma. |- |Jennie Lockwood | |The 433-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Pea Island on the Outer Banks of North Carolina. All six people on board survived. |- | | |The 21-gross register ton screw steamer was wrecked south of Au Sable, Michigan, when her wheel chains parted. Both people on board survived, but she was a total loss. |- |Winifred A. Froan | |The 858-gross register ton schooner was abandoned at sea off Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. All 14 people on board survived.
|- |Southcoates | |The 232-ton fishing vessel was wrecked on the southeast coast of Iceland.
|- |Agamemnon | |The 1,096-ton cargo ship was wrecked at Zoungouldak. |- | | |The 48-gross register ton screw steamer burned at her dock at Hickman, Kentucky. All four people on board survived, but she was a total loss. |- |Ira D. Sturgis | |The 235-gross register ton schooner was stranded on the coast of Delaware near the Indian River. All five people on board survived. |- | | |The laid-up 26-gross register ton sidewheel paddle steamer either was stranded or sank (sources disagree) in the Mississippi River at Albany, Illinois. All four people on board survived. |- |Scotsman | |The 189-ton cargo ship was lost in the Solway Firth.
|- |Abril | |The 1,295-ton cargo ship was wrecked from Clovelly, England. |- | | |The , 366-ton cargo vessel was wrecked on the Point of the Pool, Switha, breaking in two in a blinding snowstorm. Two crew died, nine others were rescued by the yawl Jack Reel ().
|- |Golden Eagle | |The 224-ton fishing vessel was wrecked near the Hvalsnes Reef, Iceland.
|- |Corennie | |The 624-ton cargo ship was damaged in a collision in the Scheldt near Bath, Belgium and was beached, later breaking in half. The ship was declared a total loss. |- |Württemberg | |The 253-ton fishing vessel was wrecked on the southeast coast of Iceland.
|- | | |The steamer was wrecked south of Flamborough Head, England. |- |Tercera | |The , 1,063-ton barque was wrecked on a reef off Juan de Nova Island in the Madagascar Channel. |- |Westphalia | |The 573-ton cargo ship was wrecked at Hanö.
|- |Rebecca B. Tennis | |The 12-gross register ton sloop was stranded at Newport News, Virginia. The only person on board survived. |- | | |The steamer sprung a leak and sank after being beached on a sandbar in the Savannah River west of Savannah, Georgia. Raised, repaired and returned to service.
|- |Dom Pedro | |The 193-gross register ton barge was lost when she struck a dock at New York City. The only person on board survived. |- |Kernwood | |The launch was damaged in a collision off Florida with Ferry () resulting in a tear in her hull. She was towed to East side Landing where she sank. |- |Kisshin Maru No. 2 | |The 999-ton cargo ship was wrecked at Matoya, Shima Province, Japan. |- |Phiscardon | |The 347-ton ship burned off Yniada.
|- |Corvin Matyas | |The 3,093-ton cargo ship was wrecked on Cabezos, Tarifa. |- |Lady Dora | |The 14-gross register ton motor vessel sank in Galveston Bay on the coast of Texas. Both people on board survived. |- |Maude Cassel | |The 3,917-ton, Doxford Turret-class cargo ship stranded on the Arkobadan Reef at Hapinge, Sweden. She later broke in two and was a total loss. |- |Speke | |The , 2,712-ton sailing ship was wrecked in a gale on rocks on Philip Island, Kitty Miller Bay, Australia. One crewman died.
|- |Renner | |The 100-ton vessel was wrecked near High Knock, Buxey. |- |Valladares | |The 158-ton cargo ship was sunk in a collision off Portugal.
|- |Jehan Ango | |The 114-ton cargo ship was sunk in a collision off "The Start".
|- |Germania | |The 802-ton sailing vessel was abandoned in the Atlantic Ocean. |- |Latwija | |The 428-ton vessel was wrecked near Ceara, Brazil. |- |Linnet | |The 127-ton fishing vessel was wrecked at Chalumna, South Africa. |- |Mary V. Duncan | |The 56-gross register ton schooner was lost when she collided with the schooner William and James () in the Chesapeake Bay. All four people on board survived.
|- |John Howard | |The 32-gross register ton schooner burned at Portsmouth, Virginia. Both people on board survived.
|- |Baldwin | Saint Vincent |The 561-ton barquentine caught fire and was beached at St. Vincent, a total loss. |- |Eliza J. Pendleton | |The 672-ton coastal schooner was abandoned off Fire Island. |- |Jesse W. Starr | |The 307-gross register ton schooner was abandoned in the North Atlantic Ocean off Virginia at . All six people on board perished.
|- |Blonde | |The 199-ton cargo ship sank in the North Sea. |- |Gus Shammel | |The 42-gross register ton screw steamer burned in Choctawhatchee Bay, Florida. All three people on board survived. |- | | |The 953-gross register ton schooner barge foundered in heavy seas in a gale off the coast of Maryland east-southeast of the Fenwick Island Lightship with the loss of all five people on board. The crew of her tow steamer saw four of her crewmen abandon ship in a lifeboat, but they were never seen again. |- |Thor | |The 299-ton cargo ship was wrecked at Lyngholmen, Norway.
|- |Albert | |The 125-ton schooner departed Svendborg, Denmark 24 February and vanished. |- |Buller | |The St Ives pilot boat, with seven pilots on board, capsized, in St Ives Bay, Cornwall, when a schooner hit her, throwing all her occupants into the water. There were no fatalities. |- |Centennial | |The 2,075-gross register ton, iron-hulled screw steamer departed Hakodate, Japan, bound for San Francisco, California, with a crew of 38 aboard on 24 February and was never heard from again. The steamer Pennsylvania (flag unknown) sighted wreckage from Centennial in the North Pacific Ocean in late March 1906. In 1912, Russian explorers found Centennial frozen in the ice and abandoned in the Sea of Okhotsk off Sakhalin Island with no lifeboats aboard and no sign of her crew. |- |Ferdinand Fischer | |The 1,777-ton vessel departed Geelong, Victoria, Australia on 13 February and vanished, possibly in Bass Strait. |- | | |The Workington collier almost wrecked on the Runnelstone, off Gwennap Head, Cornwall, and caught fire. She managed to make her way to Penzance where she was repaired.
|- |Africa | |The 716-ton vessel was wrecked off Mananzary, Portuguese Madagascar. |- |Agincourt | |The 4,232-ton cargo vessel was wrecked in the Pelew Islands. |- |John R. Bergen | |The 647-gross register ton schooner was abandoned in the North Atlantic Ocean at . All seven people on board survived. |- | | |The tug sank off Rockport, Massachusetts. Three of five crewmen died.
|- |Augustine | |The 1,106-ton cargo vessel was wrecked on Diamenta Rock, off Benghazi, Italian Libya. |- | | |The 421-ton steamer was wrecked on rocks called Les Kaines dâÂÂAmont, just off of Creux Mahie on the south coast of Guernsey () in fog. Some crew in her dinghy made it to shore, others in her lifeboat were rescued by the tug Alert.
|- |Lizzie Chadwick | |The 472-gross register ton schooner was abandoned off Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. All six people on board survived. |- |Myndert Starin | |With no one on board, the 203-gross register ton barge sank at Weehawken, New Jersey. |- | | |The steamer grounded on Middle Bar inside the bar at Cape Fear in a gale with heavy rain. Refloated on 9 March after removal of cargo.
|- |Mary Manning | |The 1,233-gross register ton schooner was severely damaged and dismasted in a gale and was abandoned after a 110-hour struggle in the North Atlantic Ocean at . All eight people aboard were rescued by Casilda. |- |Thordis | |The 3,735-ton cargo ship was wrecked at Port Stephens, New South Wales, in heavy weather. She broke up a week later, a total loss.
|- |John S. Deering | |The 478-gross register ton schooner was abandoned at sea in the North Atlantic Ocean east of Virginia at . Reported still afloat in waterlogged condition as late as July as a hazard to navigation drifting some at that time. All seven people on board survived. |- |Knaresbro | |The 3,101-ton cargo vessel was wrecked at Lemvig, Denmark. |- |Senior | |The 597-ton cargo ship was wrecked at The Scaw, Denmark.
|- |Francesco | |The 748-ton vessel was wrecked at Sapelo. |- |Hamilton Fish | |The 1,616-gross register ton schooner barge or scow barge burned and sank in the North Atlantic Ocean off Barnegat, New Jersey. All three people on board survived. |- |Millie | |The 639-ton schooner was wrecked off Avery's Rock, Machias Bay near Machias, Maine. |- |Mokihana | |The 15-gross register ton schooner was stranded at "Kahnlula", Maui, Territory of Hawaii. All three people aboard survived. |- |Senjen | |The 273-ton cargo ship was wrecked at Fiskenes, Andøya, Norway.
|- | | |The 125-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer burned overnight at dock at New Orleans, Louisiana. All 15 people on board survived, but she was a total loss.
|- |Baines Hawkins | |The , 703-ton cargo vessel was sunk by ice off Port Morien, Nova Scotia. |- |Chillan | |The 624-ton cargo ship grounded on Maule, Chile. The ship was refloated and beached in sinking condition, a total loss. |- |Nelson | |The 1,842-ton cargo vessel was stranded on Pierres Vertis and sank in the Fromveur Passage. |- | | |The tow steamer sprang a leak, rolled over on her side, and sank in the Monongahela River at Braddock, Pennsylvania. While the crew was transferring to the barge Tom Lysle was towing, one female crewmember, a chambermaid, was crushed to death between the vessels. The wreck was abandoned.
|- |British King | |The 4,717-ton cargo vessel sank in a gale in the North Atlantic Ocean after springing leaks and cargo shift. Of 47 crew, 8 cattlemen, and 2 stowaways, Mannheim () rescued 12 and her third officer, Bostonian () rescued 11 and her captain, plus five others after she sank at (). Her captain died two days later from injuries sustained. 28 crew in total died. One of Bostonians lifeboats was smashed. |- | | |The tug sank at the Barnes Brothers dock, Port Richmond, New York. The wreck was raised a couple of days later.
|- |Ayrshire | |The 133-ton fishing vessel sank in the North Sea. |- | | |The 875-ton cargo vessel sank in the North Sea after cargo shift off the Dutch coast. The fishing smack Uncle Dick () rescued six and her captain. 12 others died. |- |Decima | |The 794-ton cargo ship was wrecked at Hainan. |- |Gefion | |The 428-ton vessel grounded at Fredriksvaern. She was refloated but sold and was broken up. |- |Golden Rod | |The 132-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Burgeo, Newfoundland. All nine people aboard survived. |- |Snefrid | |The 399-ton vessel was wrecked near Laesoe in the Kattegat.
|- | | |The passenger steamer struck a snag just above Heather Island and sank in of water. Passengers and crew went to Silver Springs, Florida, in small boats. |- |Hermann | |The 436-ton barque was abandoned in the North Sea. The crew was rescued by the trawler Poonah. |- |Hirondelle | |The 107-ton vessel was wrecked in Thursoe Bay. |- |Kobold | |The 384-ton cargo ship sank in the Jadeplate. |- | | |The sidewheel paddle steamer was wrecked at Possession Bay, Chile, while under tow by the steamer Zealandia (). |- |Rigi | |The 499-ton sailing vessel was abandoned off Borkum. |- |Sidonian | |The 389-ton vessel was stranded on Laesoe. Refloated, condemned, and sold.
|- |Desdemona | |The 242-ton fishing vessel was wrecked on Stokkseyri Reef, east of Reykjanes, Iceland.
|- |Tamerlane | |The 898-ton sailing vessel was abandoned off Heligoland.
|- |Holland | |The 258-ton fishing vessel sank off Terschelling. |- |S. E. Davis | |The 79-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Clark Island, Maine. All three people on board survived.
|- |Sebago | |The 307-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Beaver Harbour, New Brunswick. All five people on board survived.
|- | | |The cargo ship was wrecked at Portland Bill, United Kingdom. |- | | |The , 1,129-gross register ton screw steamer burned on Lake Michigan south of Sheboygan, Wisconsin. One crewman was killed. The fish tug () rescued her 39 survivors and towed her to shore, where she burned to the waterline. She was declared a total loss. Her wreck lies off Cedar Grove, Wisconsin, in of water and is within the boundaries of the Wisconsin Shipwreck Coast National Marine Sanctuary. |- |Swale | |The 297-ton cargo ship was sunk in a collision off Bexhill.
|- |C. C. Lane | |The 321-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Boston, Massachusetts. All six people on board survived. |- | | |The oyster steamer sank at dock over night at New Haven, Connecticut, due to water not being shut off after filling a tank. One crewman sleeping on board died. |- |H. C. French | |The 142-gross register ton steam canal boat was stranded at New Haven, Connecticut. All four people on board survived. |- |Lady Antrim | |The 87-gross register ton schooner sank off Marblehead, Massachusetts, with the loss of three lives. There was one survivor. |- |N.E.T. Co. No. 10 | |The 197-gross register ton scow sank off the breakwater at New Haven, Connecticut. The only person on board survived. |- |Oak | |The 302-gross register ton barge was stranded in the Chesapeake Bay at Thimble Shoal off the coast of Virginia. Both people on board survived. |- | | |The 15-gross register ton sternwheel motor paddle vessel was crushed by ice on the Missouri River at Blencoe, Iowa. The only person on board survived. |- |Walter J. Schloefer | |The 138-gross register ton canal boat was stranded at New Haven, Connecticut. All three people on board survived.
|- | | |The tow steamer caught on the dock when the tide came back and she filled with water. She was pumped out. |- |Martha E. McCabe | |The 345-gross register ton schooner barge or scow barge sank at Barnegat, New Jersey. All six people on board survived. |- |Sainte Marie | |The 148-ton vessel was wrecked at Seaside, Brinker Island.
|- | | |The steamer struck an obstruction in the Mississippi River above Belle Point and sank in three minutes in of water. Four crewmen killed. |- |Raymond T. Maull | |The 538-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Gull Shoal on the coast of North Carolina. All six people on board survived. |- |Restituta Madre | |The 567-ton cargo ship sank from Aboukir.
|- |Edith and May | |The 128-gross register ton schooner was stranded in the Berry Islands in the Bahamas. All five people on board survived. |- |Jennie and Florence Cahill | |With no one on board, the 168-gross register ton barge sank off Oyster Bay, New York. |- |Sard | |The 480-ton cargo vessel was wrecked west of Portrush, Ireland, United Kingdom.
|- |Rutte | |The 348-ton cargo ship was sunk in a collision off the Isle of Wight. |- |Unknown car float | |A car float, under tow of the tug (), filled and sank in the North River off the Pennsylvania Railroad Ferry Dock, Jersey City, New Jersey.
|- |Arendal | |The 255-ton vessel was stranded at the entrance to Sunderland. Later refloated and broken up. |- | | |The tug sunk at dock in East Boston, Massachusetts, possibly snagged on the dock when the tide went out. Raised and repaired. |- | | |The tug struck a snag in the lower part of Boston Harbor and was beached on Lovells Island to prevent sinking in deep water. Raised and repaired. |- | | |The 85-gross register ton screw steamer was stranded at Bennetts Point, South Carolina. All four people on board survived.
|- | | |The steamer burned at dock at Fish Creek, Wisconsin.
|- |Aphrodite | |The 609-ton cargo ship was wrecked at Rettimo, Crete.
|- | | |The 1,647-ton sailing ship sank from Cape St. Francis () in a storm. The crew were rescued by (). |- |Montbars | |The 150-ton cargo ship was sunk in a collision on a voyage between Hennebont and Swansea.
|- |Antonio | |The 902-ton vessel was wrecked on Cape Henry. |- | | |The 84-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer sank with the loss of four lives when she struck a log at Belle Point, Louisiana. There were six survivors. |- | | |The steamer was damaged/wrecked on the bar at the entrance to Humboldt Bay, California. The tug () attempted to take her under tow, but was struck by () and was damaged and had to give up the attempt. Wasp made an unsuccessful attempt at passing a line. The crew abandoned her that evening. She ended up wrecked on the beach. |- |W. H. Van Name | |The 97-gross register ton schooner was lost when she struck the submerged wreck of the barge Oak () in Hampton Roads on the coast of Virginia. All four people aboard survived.
|- |Adelene | |The 193-ton sailing vessel was abandoned at sea east of Highland Light on 18 March. |- | | |The collier foundered in a storm. |- |Antonio | |The 174-ton fishing vessel was last seen on 12 March in a severe storm in the North Sea. The vessel probably sank between 12 and 15 March. |- |Carrie Easler | |The 179-ton sailing vessel was abandoned at sea off Nova Scotia on 18 March. |- |Chersones | |The 1117-ton vessel left Antwerp on 15 March and vanished. |- |Jonni | |The 155-ton fishing vessel departed Geestemunde on 11 March and vanished. |- |Merchiston | |The 1,840-ton cargo ship was sunk in a collision with Eda () north northeast of the Spurn Lightvessel off Spurn Head on 31 March or 1 April. |- |Minister Jansen | |The , 159-ton fishing trawler left Nordenham on 4 March and vanished. |- |Nicholas Thayer | |During a voyage from Seattle, Washington, to Seward, District of Alaska, with a crew of 16 and a cargo of 150 tons of coal, 150 tons of general merchandise, and 425,000 board feet () of lumber, the 584-gross register ton, bark disappeared with the loss of all hands in the Gulf of Alaska. The discovery by Alaska Natives of wreckage and cargo on Sitkalidak Island in the Kodiak Archipelago led many to believe that she had sunk near Kodiak, although this was well west of her most likely route from Seattle to Seward.
|- | | |The steamer sank at the Brownell Brothers Lumber Company dock in Berwick, Louisiana, in of water. Salvage not attempted.
|- | | |The cargo schooner was sunk in a collision with (flag unknown) off Halifax, Nova Scotia. Total loss, later raised and sold. |- |Edwardina | |The 845-ton vessel was wrecked near Nosara, Costa Rica. |- |Epiros | |The 2,280-ton vessel sank off Crete. |- | | |The tug caught fire in Newark Bay and was beached on the flats. The fire was extinguished by the steamer (). |- |Loughrigg Holme | |The 2,069-ton vessel was wrecked at Bari, refloated and later broken up at Palermo. |- | | |The tow steamer sank in a collision with () in the North River off the Communipaw Coal Dock.
|- |Lady Lewis | |The 2,930-ton vessel was wrecked near Motoges Point. |- | | |The , 149-gross register ton steam screw tug was wrecked on Hardings Ledge, a reef off Hull, Massachusetts, and sank in up to of water at . All nine people on board survived, but she was a total loss.
|- |Denbigh | |The 301-ton vessel capsized and sank while under tow northeast of Longships, Cornwall. |- |J. B. Demange | |The 417-ton vessel was wrecked at the entrance to St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. |- |Royallieu | |The 205-ton vessel was wrecked north of Flamborough Head.
|- | | |With no one on board, the 93-gross register ton screw steamer burned at Fish Creek, Wisconsin. |- |Duncan | |The 1,031-ton vessel stranded at Sherbrooke, Nova Scotia. Refloated and broken up at New York. |- |Zeta |Unknown British colony |The 144-ton vessel was wrecked at Rodriguez.
|- | | |The steamer burned and sank after her starboard boiler exploded at Portland, Ohio. Two crewmen were killed in the explosion. She was refloated. |- |Hounslow | |The 2,902-ton vessel was wrecked near Aserradores. |- |M. Struve | |The 1,582-ton vessel was wrecked at Foochow. |- | | |The towboat sank in a collision with () in the East River off Pier 8 that caused her to careen to the point she filled with water and sank. One crewman was killed. The survivors were rescued by J. H. Williams.
|- |Game Cock | |The 59-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Stonington, Maine. All three people on board survived. |- |Lotna | |The 12-gross register ton sloop was stranded at Swampscott, Massachusetts. The only person on board survived.
|- |D. Gifford | |The 253-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Field Rocks, Massachusetts. All six people on board survived. |- | | |The cargo ship was damaged in a collision with the steamer () in the Delaware River, tearing out her stem and causing her crew to beach her on flats off Fort Delaware, Delaware. |- |Helen F. Ward | |The 8-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Provincetown, Massachusetts. The only person on board survived. |- |Rising Sun | |The 80-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Drakes Island, Maine. Both people on board survived. |- |Sallie B | |The 286-gross register ton schooner sank in Casco Bay on the coast of Maine with the loss of four lives. There were two survivors.
|- |Bodo | |The 124-ton vessel was wrecked at Kalvik, Sofjord. |- |Marion | |The 235-gross register ton, cod-fishing schooner sank at Sanak Island in the Fox Islands group of the Aleutian Islands. Her crew of eight survived.
|- |Georgette | |The 612-ton vessel was sunk in a collision in the River Humber. |- |Lyn | |The 153-ton fishing schooner sank in Moltke Bay, Royal Bay, South Georgia Island.
|- |Nettie Cushing | |The 117-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Cornfield Sand Shoal on the coast of Connecticut. All four people on board survived. |- |Norwegia | |The 581-ton sailing vessel was abandoned in the Atlantic off the Blaskets, County Kerry, Ireland, U.K.. |- |Sirene | |The 103-ton vessel was wrecked on Iceland.
|- |Bouquet | |The barge, under tow by (), sank in Block Island Sound east of Watch Hill, Rhode Island, about offshore.
|- | | |The steamer was sunk in a collision with () in the St. Marys River.
|- |Angelo Padre | |The , 3,214-ton cargo vessel was damaged by an explosion and sank at La Corunna, Spain. The vessel was declared a constructive total loss. The wreck was raised, taken to Genoa and broken up. |- |G. L. Daboll | |The 49-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Egmont Key, Florida. All five people aboard survived. |- | | |The TB 82-class torpedo boat sank in the Mediterranean Sea after colliding with the destroyer (.
|- | | |The 118-gross register ton steam canal boat was destroyed by fire at the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Dock in St. George, Staten Island, New York. All four people on board survived. |- | | |San Francisco earthquake: The Steamer capsized at the Union Iron Works dock while being refit, puncturing her hull and sinking. Raised, repaired and returned to service by January, 1907. |- |Ella L. Slaymaker | |The 34-gross register ton schooner burned on the Delaware River. Both people on board survived.
|- |Comte de Smet de Naeyer | |The 1,863-ton sail training ship sprang a leak and sank off Ushant, drowning thirty two of the fifty four crew on board, including eighteen cadets. |- |Kazan | |The 5,472-ton vessel was wrecked on Nilkete Rock southwest of Panadura, Ceylon.
|- |Afrika | |The 1,240-ton vessel was sunk in a collision off Kefken, Euxine.. |- |Louise Hastings | |The 123-gross register ton schooner sank at Havana, Cuba. All three people on board survived.
|- | | |The steamer sank while tied up at dock at Bennetts Point. One crewman possibly died.
|- |Mary F. Pike | |The 125-gross register ton schooner was stranded on East Point on Prince Edward Island. All four people aboard survived. |- |Norumbega | |The 126-gross register ton schooner was lost when she collided with the schooner Edith L. Allen () off Fenwick Island on the coast of Maryland. All 17 people aboard survived. |- |Stella | |The 171-ton vessel was sunk by ice near Grund Kollen.
|- |Anne | |The 132-ton schooner foundered near Marwick Head, Orkney. |- | | |The steamer struck an iceberg on 21 April in the North Atlantic Ocean and sank on 24 April. Her entire crew was rescued by (). |- |St. Peter | |The 551-ton schooner was wrecked at Calhouns Point, New Brunswick.
|- |Chu Kong | |The 490-ton ferry sank near Swatow. |- |Mary Anne | |The canal boat sank after the steamer () struck her, causing her to fill and sink at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
|- | | |The cargo ship was sunk in a collision with () off Cape Rachado, Malaya in the Malacca Strait. Survivors were rescued by Haversham Grange and (). |- |Havana | |The salvage vessel was sunk in a collision with () off Halifax, Nova Scotia. |- | | |The steamer struck a snag between Washington, North Carolina, and Tarboro, North Carolina, and was beached off Indian Creek.
|- |Gudrun | |The 108-ton vessel was wrecked at Stokkseyri, Iceland. |- |Henriette | |The 119-ton fishing vessel was wrecked at ReykjavÃÂk Roads.
|- |Audacieuse | |The 145-ton vessel was abandoned in the Atlantic 25 miles east of Cape Broyle. |- |Idria | |The 211-ton vessel grounded and condemned at Hide, Slite, Gotland. |- |William F. Campbell | |The 211-gross register ton schooner sank in Penobscot Bay off Owls Head, Maine. All five people aboard survived.
|- |River Hunter | |The 284-ton barkentine was wrecked while under tow at the entrance to WhangapÃÂ Harbour, New Zealand.
|- |Brenda | |The 1,995-ton vessel burned at ValparaÃÂso, Chile and was beached in sinking condition, a total Loss. |- | | |The steamer struck Les Anons, a rock south of Jethou. There were 29 survivors and 10 deaths. The ship was salvaged on 1 August 1906 and returned to service after repairs. |- |Maria Josefa | |The 116-ton vessel was wrecked on the breakwater at Barcelona.
|- |Adeline | |The 15-gross register ton screw steamer sank at Whealton, Virginia. All three people on board survived. |- |ÃÂolus | |The 137-ton vessel departed Haugesund on 10 April and vanished. |- |Merchiston | |The 1,840-ton cargo ship was sunk in a collision with Eda () north north east of the Spurn Lightvessel off Spurn Head on 31 March or 1 April.
|- |Blanefield | |The 3,411-ton cargo ship was sunk in a collision with the barque Kate Thomas () south of Beachy Head (). Twelve crew were rescued, but one died afterwards. Five others were reported missing.
|- |Alaska | |The 60-gross register ton, iron-hulled screw steamer was destroyed by fire while in winter quarters at St. Michael, District of Alaska. All eight people aboard survived. |- | | |The steamer capsized in a windstorm and broke in two at Fairview, Illinois. A total loss. |- |Preston | |The 2,099-ton vessel was wrecked at Point Bay, near Camarinas, Spain.
|- | | |With no one on board, the 15-gross register ton, sternwheel paddle steamer sank in the Yukon River at Russian Mission, District of Alaska.
|- |Float No. 33 | |The car float was sunk when struck in thick fog by the ferry () off Pier L, Jersey City, New Jersey. |- | | |The tow steamer sank at dock at the Nelson & Son Mill in Boggy Creek, Nassau River, Florida when her rail hung up on the guard of a lighter. Later raised.
|- |Levy Bros. | |The 24-gross register ton schooner barge or scow barge sank in Lake Pontchartrain in Louisiana. All three people on board survived. |- |Rock Island | |The 533-gross register ton, sternwheel paddle steamer was crushed by ice and sank at a wharf in the Tanana River at Chena, District of Alaska. All 30 people on board survived. Repeated attempts to refloat her failed. |- |Rosa | |The 281-ton vessel was wrecked 10 miles from Rio Grande do Sul.
|- |Alice | |The 61-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Chincoteague Cove on the coast of Virginia. All four people on board survived. |- | | |The steamer struck a snag and sank at Cassville, Wisconsin, in the Mississippi River in of water. Later raised.
|- |M. I. Wilcox | |The 377-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Colchester Point on the coast of Ontario. All five people on board survived. |- |Vandalia | |The 41-gross register ton schooner sank in the Gulf of Mexico off Cape Romano on the coast of Florida with the loss of all four people aboard.
|- | | |The 2,038-gross register ton schooner sank off Cleveland, Ohio, with the loss of one or two lives. There were 10 survivors. Wreck removed in November. |- | | |The 2,040-gross register ton schooner barge or scow barge, under tow by (), sank in a storm on Lake Erie off the lighthouse at Pelee Island, Ontario () in of water. All seven people on board rescued by Pabst. Later the wreck was blown up with dynamite and dispersed by tugs with grapple hooks. |- |Erbrin | |The 576-ton vessel was wrecked at Caicos. |- |Horn Point | |The 12-gross register ton sloop sank in East Lynnhaven Inlet on the coast of Virginia. All three people on board survived.
|- |Tanana Chief | |The 72-gross register ton, sternwheel paddle steamer was wrecked on the Kantishna River in the District of Alaska. All eight people on board survived.
|- |Europa | |The 984-ton vessel was wrecked at Skvattan. |- |Mystery | |The 162-ton schooner was wrecked at Cape Pine. |- | | |The steamer ran aground and sank in the vicinity of Thessalon, Ontario, in the Canadian Channel.
|- | | |The tug sank at the Communipaw Coal Dock in Jersey City, New Jersey, when the wake of the United States Government steamer Scout () washed across her deck, causing her to heel over and flood. She was raised by nightfall and towed to a drydock and found to be undamaged. |- |Dream | |The 12-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Savannah, Georgia. All four people on board survived. |- |Sardinero | |The 2,096-ton vessel struck a submerged object in fog and sank east of Wolf Rock, Cornwall, England (). The crew were rescued by Golden Rule (). |- |Shokaku Maru | |The 285-ton vessel was wrecked near Port Kushiro, Hokkaido, Japan.
|- |Hattie G. Dixon | |The 528-gross register ton barkentine was stranded on Chappaquiddick Island on the coast of Massachusetts. All eight people on board survived.
|- |Olga | |The 444-ton vessel was wrecked on Molokai, Hawaii Territory.
|- | | |The 223-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer was wrecked in the Rock Island Rapids on the Columbia River near Rock Island, Washington. All nine people on board survived. |- |Teresina Mignano | |The 607-ton vessel was sunk in a collision in the Gironde estuary.
|- |Baltimore | |The ferry was damaged when struck by the lighter () in the North River off Desbrosses Street in New York City, punching a hole in her hull. She made it to her Desbrosses Street slip and unloaded her passengers and cargo before sinking.
|- |Ivanhoe | |The labor schooner was wrecked on a reef at Altar Cove, Malaita Island, British Protectorate of the Solomon Islands. |- | | |The TB26-class torpedo boat foundered in the Mediterranean Sea off Damietta, Egypt, while under tow by the cruiser ().
|- |Nord | |The 2,330-ton vessel was wrecked near Nexo, Bornholm, Denmark. |- | | |The steamer struck an obstruction and sank in the Big Sandy River at Red House, Kentucky. |- |Unknown barge | |The coal barge, under tow of the tug (), was sunk when she was sucked into the propeller of (flag unknown) off Twenty-Seventh street, Brooklyn.
|- |Eugenie | |The 656-ton vessel was wrecked near Stockholm. Refloated, taken to Stockholm and condemned.. |- |Fortuna | |The 164-ton schooner was wrecked on a reef off the north end of West Falkland, Falkland Islands in a gale, a Total loss. Crew and passengers rescued by schooner "Lafonia". |- |Waldemar | |The 111-ton vessel was wrecked on the east coast of Oland.
|- |Cassard | |The 2,289-ton A type Chantiere de La Loire class Barque was wrecked on Bleaker Island, Falkland Islands in fog in a gale . |- |Jupiter | |The 292-ton vessel was wrecked at Visby, Sweden. |- |Koyukuk | |During a voyage with 32 people aboard, the 280- or 286-gross register ton (sources disagree), sternwheel paddle steamer struck a rock and was wrecked at the mouth of the Little Delta River on the Tanana River below Chena, District of Alaska. All on board survived. She may have been salvaged.
|- |Golden Gate | |The 899-ton vessel was wrecked 5 miles north of Port Desire, Argentina. |- |Manau | |The 2,745-ton vessel was wrecked north of Bahia. |- |Oakburn | |The 3,865-ton vessel was wrecked at Duiker Point, South Africa. Two crew were killed.
|- |Lotta Talbot | |The 342-gross register ton, sternwheel paddle steamer was wrecked at Fairbanks, District of Alaska. Her crew of five survived. |- | | |The steamer sank at dock at Juneau, District of Alaska. Raised, machinery salvaged, and was broken up. |- |Trio | |The 870-ton sailing vessel was abandoned in the Atlantic.
|- |John H. Crook | |The 100-gross register ton canal boat was stranded in Quebec. The only person on board survived. |- |Lucia Vittorio | |The 554-ton vessel was wrecked from Vladivostok. |- | | |When the steamer attempted to pass between the disabled steamer Pennsylvania () and another tow off Portsmouth, Virginia, she struck Pennsylvania and had to be beached.
|- | | |The steamer sank at dock in Cleveland, Ohio, after springing a leak in Lake Erie. She was raised. |- |Hugin | |The 1,332-ton vessel sank after striking a rock in the Sarmiento Channel. |- |Thomas Tryon | |The canal boat sank at the mouth of Glen Cove Creek in the harbor of Hempstead, New York, Long Island. The wreck was removed in December 1906.
|- |Gustavus A. Müller | |The 21-gross register ton sloop was stranded at Tucker's Beach, New Jersey. Both people on board survived. |- |Olga | |The 498-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Kahoolawe in the Hawaiian Islands. All 12 people on board survived.
|- |Badger | |The 200-ton fishing vessel was wrecked at Bow Aikerness, Westray. |- |Carrick | |The , 577-ton cargo passenger ship was sunk in a collision with Duke of Gordon () in dense fog (). Two crewmen jumped aboard Duke of Gordon at time of the collision. The rest of the survivors were rescued by Mastiff. Her captain, a cabin boy, and four passengers died. |- |Dixie | |The 12-gross register ton sternwheel motor paddle vessel sank in the Tennessee River at Johnsonville, Tennessee. All 12 people on board survived. |- |John Eggers | |The 25-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Wind Point, Wisconsin. The only person on board survived. |- |Katherine M | |With no one on board, the 191-gross register ton barge burned at Hastings, Minnesota. |- |Peter Berg | |The 1,833-ton vessel was wrecked at Dunnet Head, Scotland. |- |Queen of Cambia | |The 834-ton vessel was wrecked at Vivero, Spain. |- |Ribble | |The , 182-ton steam trawler was wrecked in fog at Mizen Head, United Kingdom.
|- |Canadian | |The 108-ton schooner was abandoned in the Atlantic on a voyage from Cadiz, Spain to St. John's, Newfoundland. |- |Gem | |The 180-ton vessel was sunk in a collision off the Coquet. |- |Lismore | |The 1,676-ton sailing ship was wrecked on Easterly Point, Santa Maria Island, Chile in heavy weather, breaking in two, a Total Loss. Her Master and 12 crew killed, 4 survivors.
|- |Invicta | |The 178-ton vessel was towed while burning into Felixstowe where she sank. The wreck was later blown up. |- |Mable Wilson | |The 1,224-gross register ton schooner sank off Cleveland, Ohio, with the loss of one life. There were seven survivors. |- |Trio | |The 308-ton vessel grounded on Oregrund and was condemned.
|- |Antofagasta | |The 1,016-ton vessel was wrecked at Valparaiso, Chile. |- |James A. Stetson | |The 65-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Amherst in the Magdalen Islands in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence. All four people on board survived. |- | | |The steamer was en route from Newcastle to Lisbon with a cargo of Singer sewing machines when she ran aground in thick fog on Tasse de la Frette Rocks, northwest of Burhou near Alderney, Channel Islands.
|- |G. B. Lockhart | |The 305-ton brig was wrecked on Bonaire and broke up in high seas. Her Master and his wife died. Their 4 year old son and the rest of the crew survived. |- | | | The battleship was wrecked on Lundy Island in thick fog. After her guns and other equipment was salvaged, Salvage was abandoned in 1907 and the ship was scrapped in situ. |- | | |The trawler was damaged in a collision with () off the "Smalls". Her captain tried to make it to port but she sank 3 hours later. The crew were rescued by the yacht ().
|- | | |The steamer sank after colliding with the steamer () off St. Clair, Michigan in the St Clair River. Five crew, including two women, were killed. |- |Gwendoline | |The 724-ton vessel was sunk in a collision in the North Sea. |- |Knias Gortschacow | |The 3,287-ton transport was sunk by a naval mine off Vladivostok, Russia. |- |Loire Inferieure | |The 180-ton vessel was sunk in a collision off Trafalgar. |- |Maggie A. Phillips | |The 95-gross register ton schooner departed Baltimore, Maryland, bound for Gregorytown in the Bahamas with six people on board and was never heard from again.
|- |E. and G. W. Hinds | |The 115-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Plympton, Nova Scotia. All four people on board survived. |- |Pitcairn Island | |The 1,320-ton vessel burned before 17 May in the Pacific Ocean west of Chile ().
|- | | |The ferry sank at dock in a windstorm at Baton Rouge, Louisiana. |- |Diana | |The 138-ton fishing vessel was sunk in a collision on the River Elbe. |- |Three Sisters | |The 33-gross register ton schooner was lost when she collided with an unidentified barge in Hampton Roads on the coast of Virginia. All three people on board survived.
|- |Clara E. Rogers | |The 144-gross register ton schooner was lost off Vineyard Haven Light on the coast of Massachusetts after colliding with an unidentified screw steamer. All four people on board survived. |- | | |The 66-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer capsized and burned in a windstorm at Lake Des Allemands, Louisiana. All 15 people on board survived, but she was a total loss.
|- |Aristide Marie Anne | |The 115-ton fishing vessel was abandoned 10 miles off the north coast of Iceland. |- |Cornwall | |The 181-ton vessel was wrecked on Cavallos de Fas, near Esposende, Portugal. |- |Geromina | |The 102-ton vessel sank 10 miles southwest of Punta Falcone, near Asanaru Island. |- |Magdeleine | |The 208-ton fishing vessel was wrecked in St. Mary's Sound, Scilly Islands. |- | | |The 174-gross register ton screw steamer burned at dock at either Ogdensburg or Waddington, New York (sources disagree). All 25 people on board survived. |- |Unknown barge | |The barge, under tow by (), sank as a result of a collision between T. J. Wood and the tug () at Vesta Mine No. 4 in the Monongahela River.
|- |Bulgaria | |The 1,888-gross register ton screw steamer was wrecked in heavy fog on Fisherman Shoal in Lake Michigan. All 15 people on board survived, but she was a total loss.
|- |General Roberts | |The 142-ton fishing vessel sank northeast of Round Island, Scilly Islands. |- |Volunteer | |The 585-gross register ton schooner was stranded on the coast of California near Bodega Head with the loss of three of the 10 people aboard. |- |Yorkshire | |The 1,306-ton vessel was wrecked on Leman Sands.
|- |Otto Wathne | |The 547-ton vessel was wrecked at Siglefjord, Iceland.
|- |Adelaide | |The 223-ton vessel sank off Cape Prior. |- |Dreadnot | |The 9-gross register ton sloop was lost when she struck a submerged wharf off Charleston, South Carolina. The only person on board survived. |- | | |The cargo steamer, a steel bulk carrier, struck a rock in the St. Marys River off De Tour Village, Michigan, and sank in shallow water. She later was refloated, but sank again on 15 June. |- | | |The steamer struck a sunken log and sank at Stillwater, Minnesota. Her boiler and machinery were salvaged and used in another steamer.
|- | | |The 53-gross register ton screw steamer was destroyed by fire while docked overnight at Southport, North Carolina. All eight people on board survived.
|- | | |The 13-gross register ton motor paddle vessel sank off Pitts Point, Kentucky. All three people on board survived.
|- |Emma L. Cottingham | |The 522-gross register ton schooner sank in the Gulf of Mexico at () with the loss of five lives. There were three survivors. |- | | |The cargo ship was wrecked off Cape Sable Island, Nova Scotia. Her crew survived. |- | | |The 81.77-gross register ton, steam screw tug was wrecked on a sand bar in the District of Alaska about above the mouth of the Kvichak River when she grounded on a falling tide. The next rising tide twisted off her keel and she sank. Her entire crew of seven survived, but she was declared a total loss.
|- | | |The 94-gross register ton motor schooner was swamped and wrecked on the bar at the entrance to Humboldt Bay, California, eventually drifting on to the beach alongside the wreck of (). All but two crewmen were saved by the United States Life Saving Service. |- | | |The steamer sank at Colee, Florida from Picolata, Florida, on the St. Johns River. Later raised. |- |Unknown barge | |The barge, under the tow of the tug (), was sunk in a collision with another barge, also under tow, off Pier 24 in the North River. Later towed to the Jersey Flats. It is unclear if still filled or was refloated at the time.
|- |Withlacoochee No. 9 | |The 119-gross register ton barge sank in port at Inglis, Florida. The only person on board survived.
|- | | |The 566-gross register ton motor vessel burned near Destruction Island off the coast of Washington. All 14 people aboard survived. |- | | |A scow caught fire at the Savannah Wharf in the harbor of Baltimore, Maryland, setting the steamer on fire. She drifted across the harbor, filled with water, and grounded on the south side of the harbor. Was raised by July, not as damaged as first thought. |- |Meuse | |The 794-ton vessel was sunk in a collision off Haaks Lightship. |- |Vauban | |The 1,735-ton vessel was wrecked at Bonavista.
|- |Corriere | |The 1,575-ton stranded on Ship Island, Mississippi. Refloated, taken to Mobile, Alabama, condemned and sold. |- |Jennie Sweeney | |The 643-gross register ton schooner sank off the coast of North Carolina near the Cape Fear Bar. All eight people on board survived. |- |Rose | |The barge was damaged when struck by () in the Delaware River causing her to be beached off the mouth of the Christiana River.
|- | | |After sinking in the St. Marys River in Michigan on and being refloated, the 2,348-gross register ton steel-hulled steam cargo ship, a bulk carrier, was under tow to Detroit, Michigan, by the cargo ship Sir Henry Bessemer for repairs when she foundered in Lake Huron south of Thunder Bay on the coast of Michigan. All 20 people on board survived. Her wreck lies in of water at (). |- |Nordstern | |The 261-ton fishing vessel was wrecked on Iceland. |- |Orion | |The 150-ton fishing vessel sank in the North Sea. |- |Toyotomi Maru | |The 1,456-ton transport was sunk by a naval mine off Myongchkyon, Korea.
|- |Mignonne | |The 102-ton vessel sank 10 miles east of Seydisfjord.
|- | | |The steamer was almost cut in two in a collision with Georgia () on Lake Michigan. Her passengers were taken off and she tried to beach, sinking in of water. Raised 5 July, repaired and returned to service. |- |Drepano | |The 1,558-ton vessel was wrecked at Takura, east of Benghazi, Ottoman Tripolitania. |- |Edith L. Allen | |The 969-gross register ton schooner sank in the North Atlantic Ocean off Florida at (). All nine people on board survived. |- | | |The steamer sank in shallow water near Harbor Beach, Michigan. Raised, repaired, and returned to service.
|- |Ares | |The 1,151-ton vessel was sunk in a collision with Hilversum () in the North Sea in of water. |- | | |The steamer was damaged in a collision with Georgia () at the mouth of White Lake Harbor. She proceeded into the harbor where she sank. |- |Hiddie Feore | |The 341-ton vessel was wrecked at Bacurano. |- |Silva Americano | |The 179-ton vessel was wrecked at the entrance to the Kwanza River, Portuguese Angola.
|- | | |The 43-gross register ton screw steamer was sunk by a floating object while docked at the foot of Walnut Street in New Orleans, Louisiana. The only person on board survived. |- |Portland | |The 493-gross register ton barkentine was stranded in the harbor at San Pedro, California. All 10 people on board survived.
|- |Bertha | |The 240-ton schooner, or barkentine, was sunk in a collision off South Goodwin or South Sand Head. |- |Empress | |The 484-ton vessel was sunk in a collision in the Irish Channel.
|- |F. T. Barry | |The 839-ton vessel was damaged in a collision, and was beached at Gunfleet Sands to prevent sinking, but was a total loss.
|- |Argentina |Unknown British colony |The 583-ton barquentine was abandoned in the South Atlantic off Brazil at . |- |Ashford | |The 1,909-ton vessel was sunk in a collision west southwest of Beachy Head. |- | | |The steamer listed and sank at Duluth, Minnesota, when lumber was stacked too high causing her to list enough to fill with water.
|- | | |The tug struck a rock in dense fog, slid off and sank between Duluth, Minnesota, and Port Arthur, Ontario. Later raised. |- |Walkyrie | |The 138-ton fishing vessel was wrecked at Langenes, Iceland.
|- |Carrier | |The 346-ton vessel was wrecked on Southeast Tow Rock, off St. Govan's Head. |- |E. C. Hay | |The 63-gross register ton schooner was lost when she collided with the passenger screw steamer () in the North River off the Desbrosses Street Ferry terminal in New York City. All four people on board survived. |- |Lillie |Unknown British colony |The 311-ton vessel was wrecked on Grand Cayman Island.
|- |Dolphin | |The 115-ton vessel was wrecked in the Pacific Ocean on the breakwater at Salina Cruz, Mexico. |- | | |The steamer struck a submerged object between Duluth, Minnesota, and Superior, Wisconsin, and started leaking. She sank in shallow water. Later raised.
|- |Argus | |The 526-ton vessel was abandoned on fire 35 miles off Destruction Island, later towed while still burning into Neah Bay, Washington, a Total Loss. |- |Claire | |The 192-ton vessel was sunk in a collision off Miquelon. |- | | |The 62-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer burned in Bayou Felix in Louisiana. All 10 people on board survived. |- |Hinode Maru | |The 1,115-ton vessel was sunk in a collision near Sasebo. |- | | |The tow steamer sank at dock at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania over night. Raised at 4 p.m. that day. |- | | |The 1,457-gross register ton screw steamer, a wooden bulk carrier, sank after colliding in fog with the screw steamer () in Thunder Bay on the coast of Michigan below Middle Island and north of Thunder Bay Island. Her wreck lies in of water at . William R. Lynn rescued all 16 people on board. |- |Nivelle | |The 2,241-ton vessel was wrecked at Point Grande, off Antofagasta, Chile.
|- |Elna | |The 120-ton schooner was abandoned prior to 11 June in the Atlantic on a voyage from Cadiz, Spain to Robert Bay.
|- |Mary G. Powers | |The 133-gross register ton schooner sank off Newfoundland. All eight people on board survived.
|- |Hanover | |The 23-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Point Lookout, Maryland. Both people on board survived. |- |Salem | |The 847-ton vessel was wrecked off Abo, Russia. |- |Samuel R. Waite | |The 39-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Cove Point, Virginia. All five people on board survived. |- |Valdivia | |The 3,443-ton vessel was wrecked at Mocha. |- |Viking | |The 1,420-ton vessel was wrecked 61 miles north of Olga Bay.
|- |Ella G. Eells | |The 256-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Libby Island on the coast of Maine with the loss of four lives. There was one survivor. |- |George Edwin | |The 99-gross register ton schooner sank in the Bay of Fundy off Grand Manan, New Brunswick. All four people on board survived. |- |Kingston | |The 1,070-gross register ton schooner barge or scow barge sank off Shinnecock, New York, with the loss of one life. There were two survivors. |- |Louise Anna | |The 149-ton sailing vessel was abandoned in the Atlantic. |- |Unknown car float | |The car float was sunk at dock when struck by barges that got out of control due to an eddy current off Rivington Street in the East River. |- |Vinland | |The 965-gross register ton schooner burned in the East River off Rikers Island in New York City. All five people on board survived.
|- | | |The freighter sank at dock at Pier 9S, Port Richmond, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, when punctured by an obstruction on a falling tide. Raised on 9 July and repaired.
|- |Agenor | |The 1,487-gross register ton full-rigged ship was stranded at Yukimini, Tokushima Shioku Japan. All 17 people on board survived. |- |Gold Star | |With no one on board, the 168-ton barge was wrecked in the Tanana River at Tanana, District of Alaska. |- | | |The schooner was sunk in a collision off Tarpaulin Cove. |- | | |The schooner sprung a leak in Lake Ontario and was beached, probably in the area of Oswego, New York. |- | | |The wrecking steamer sank at dock at Lewes, Delaware. Raised and inspected, Certificate of Inspection revoked for being in unsafe condition due to rotten timbers.
|- |Hanna | |The 311-ton vessel was wrecked at Cape Langenaes, Iceland. |- | | |The steamer struck a submerged object and sank in the Ohio River near Eighteen Mile Island.
|- | | |The steamer struck a snag and sank in the North East River in North Carolina. |- |Fishren | |The 938-ton vessel was sunk in a collision with "Langdale" in fog in the English Channel. |- |Harlyn | |The 1,453-ton vessel was wrecked near Cape Negro (Ref doesn't say if French Tunisia, or French Morocco).
|- |Cumbrian | |The 1,306-ton vessel was sunk in a collision about 9 miles from the Koppergrund lightship, near Stockholm.
|- |Eaglet | |The 130-gross register ton schooner was lost when she collided with the protected cruiser () in the North River between New York City and New Jersey. All four people on board survived. Wreck removal completed 29 August 1907.
|- | | |The Elder Dempster steamship was on a voyage from Veracruz, Mexico, to Montreal, Quebec, when she ran aground and was wrecked east of Louisbourg, Nova Scotia. |- |Helen L. Martin | |The 423-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Point Breeze on the coast of Newfoundland. All seven people on board survived. |- | | |The steamer took a shear off course in the Mississippi River near Trempealeau, Wisconsin, running her onto shore where a stump holed her hull, sinking her in of water. Later raised, repaired, sold and converted into an excursion boat.
|- |Mollie Barton | |The 154-gross register ton canal boat was lost in a collision with an unidentified French Navy warship in the Hudson River off New York City. The only person on board survived. |- | | |The steamer sank in the Mississippi River near Trempealeu, Wisconsin. Raised beginning on August 19th and repaired. |- | | |The steamer struck a snag in the Tar River and had to be beached for temporary repairs.
|- | | |The steamer struck a boulder, rolled over and sank at Limekiln Crossing in the Detroit River. Raised the next day.
|- |Harald | |The 164-ton fishing vessel was wrecked at Revsnaes, Iceland.
|- |Isle of Caldy | |The 1,381-ton vessel was sunk in a collision off East Goodwin. |- |Colonel Smith | |The 241-ton fishing vessel foundered in the North Sea.
|- | | |The steamer was wrecked at Shelter Cove, California, a total loss. |- | | |The coal schooner was stranded on Gull Shoals from the Little Kinnakeet, North Carolina Life Saving Station in smoky weather, a total loss. The crew were rescued by the United States Life Saving Service.
|- |Lizzie W. Hunt | |The 9-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Isle au Haut in Penobscot Bay on the coast of Maine. All three people on board survived. |- |Wilhelm and Elise | |The 186-ton vessel grounded at Christianopel, Sweden. Refloated and condemned at Kalmar.
|- | | |The steamer sank at dock over night at Petersburg, Virginia, when her sea valves were opened, one man was arrested. Raised 24 July. |- |Sir Henry | |The brigantine was wrecked 1 1/2 miles from East Cape, New Zealand. Lost with all hands.
|- | | |1905 Russian Revolution: The torpedo cruiser was run aground to thwart a take over by mutineers at Reval. Later salvaged. |- | | |The steamer struck a rock and sank near Lock No. 11 in the Great Kanawha River. Raised and repaired. |- | | |1905 Russian Revolution: The torpedo cruiser was run aground to thwart a take over by mutineers at Reval. Later salvaged.
|- |City of Toledo | |The 245-gross register ton schooner was lost when she struck a bridge at Detroit, Michigan. All seven people on board survived. |- |Cyril | |The 2,294-ton vessel was wrecked in Trepassey Bay, Newfoundland. |- |Earl of Beaconsfield | |The 141-ton vessel was sunk in a collision off County Down, Ireland, U.K.. |- |Reaper | |The 1,468-gross register ton bark burned at Port Ludlow, Washington. All 15 people on board survived.
|- |John A. Allen | |The 43-gross register ton schooner was lost in a collision with the steam screw ocean liner () off Georges Bank between the North Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Maine. All seven people on board survived. |- |King Cadwallon | |The 3,225-ton vessel was wrecked in fog on the Hard Lewis Rocks, Scilly Islands. |- |Talis | |The 870-ton vessel was sunk in a collision with "Roman" near the Royal Sovereign Lightship.
|- | | |The 124-gross register ton tug sank after colliding with the screw steamer () in the Detroit River near Belle Isle in Michigan, a total loss. All eight people on board were rescued by .
|- |Diadem | |The 67-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Ash Island in Penobscot Bay on the coast of Maine. All three people on board survived. |- | | |The steamer struck a submerged object while leaving the dock at Pier 12, Port Richmond, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and was beached to prevent her from sinking. |- | | |With no one on board, the 13-gross register ton motor vessel burned at Sheboygan, Wisconsin. |- |Loma | |The 19-gross register ton schooner was stranded off the New Point Loma Lighthouse at Point Loma, San Diego, California. All six people on board survived. |- | | |The steamer was wrecked south of Roches-Douvres Light.
|- |Hokuyu Maru | |The 920-ton vessel was wrecked off Shiriuchi, Hokkaido, Japan. |- | | |The steamer foundered off Bilbao, Spain. |- |Stella B. | |The 100-ton vessel was sunk by an iceberg in the Strait of Belle Isle, Canada. |- | | |The 266-gross register ton schooner sank in Lake Erie northeast by north of Colchester Light. All six people on board rescued by her tug ().
|- | | |The steamer struck the government extension of the breakwater at Cleveland, Ohio, and sank. Raised 23 August, repaired and returned to service. |- |Era | |The 134-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Pointe Plate on Miquelon Island. All 14 people on board survived.
|- | | |The sloop yacht capsized on Lake Michigan from the Jackson Park, Illinois Life Saving Station. The crew were rescued by a boat. The United States Life Saving Service towed her into harbor where she was beached.
|- | | |The motor launch broached and capsized crossing the Hereford, New Jersey Bar. Survivors were rescued by the power boat (), and auxiliary sloop (). |- |Kilmore | |The 2,215-ton vessel was sunk in a collision near West Hinder Lightship. |- | | |The motor sloop broached and capsized crossing the Hereford, New Jersey Bar. Survivors rescued by the United States Life Saving Service, power boat Violet, and a skiff. |- | | |The steamer struck a submerged log and sank in Mullet Lake. One passenger died.
|- | | |The schooner capsized at Eatonville, Nova Scotia, during unloading. Subsequently salvaged, repaired and returned to service. |- | | |The sloop yacht ran ashore in thick fog and was wrecked in the area of the Jerrys Point, New Hampshire Life Saving Station. The crew reached shore on an air mattress.
|- |Earl Dunraven | |The 1,310-ton vessel was wrecked 4 miles east northeast of Viuda Island. |- |Socoa | | The three-masted full-rigged sailing ship was stranded off Kildonan Point, Lizard Point, in dense fog. She was re-floated after jettisoning 50,000 barrels of cement and beached in Cadgwith Cove. She was later towed round to Falmouth and repaired. |- |Unknown | |A motor launch broke loose from her moorings at Orleans, Massachusetts, eventually drifting ashore and was wrecked. Her machinery and equipment was salvaged.
|- | | |The 362-gross register ton screw steamer ran aground and was wrecked at Shelter Cove, California, on either 16 or 18 July (sources disagree). All 17 people on board survived. |- |Margarita | |The 550-ton vessel was abandoned on fire in the North Atlantic about 9 July.
|- | | |The steamer struck a snag and sank in the Apalachicola River above Mary's Landing. Later raised. |- | | |The collier ran aground off the south coast Block Island in dense fog. Refloated by tugs. |- | | |The steamer sank in shallow water when struck by the barge Mars, under tow by (), in the Pasquotank River. After sinking, her cargo of lime caught fire and she burned to the water level.
|- | | |The steamer sank at dock at Pier 8, Port Richmond, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, over night. The only crewman on board was killed.
|- | | | The passenger steamer was wrecked on the Punta Hormigas, a reef off Hormigas Island east of Cape Palos, Cartagena, Spain, with the loss of at least 150 â and perhaps as many as 400 â lives. The steamer () and the merchant ships Joven Migeul and Vicente Llicano (both flag unknown) were among ships rescuing survivors. |- |Unknown launch | |The steam launch, belonging to (), was sunk in a collision with the tug () in the harbor of New Haven, Connecticut.
|- |Hamlet | |The 380-ton brig was wrecked at Hesselø, Læsø, Denmark. Her crew took to her lifeboat, but it capsized killing 5 of the 8 crew. |- |Irene | |The 650-ton barge foundered in the outer harbor at St. Michael, District of Alaska, when her seams opened while she was alongside the steamer San Mateo () to take on cargo. The vessel City () towed the partially sunken barge â with 300 tons of hay and general merchandise aboard â into the inner harbor, where she grounded. |- |Sverre | |The laid up 381-ton vessel was wrecked 2 miles from Slite, Gotland, Sweden.
|- | | |The 43-gross register ton screw steamer burned to the waterline while tied up at a dock in Houghton, Washington. All five people on board survived. |- | | |The 74-gross register ton screw steamer burned at Houghton, Washington. All five people on board survived. |- | | |The 616-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Pollock Rip Shoal from the Monomoy Point Life Saving Station on 6 or 7 August, eventually sinking in of water. Wreck removed with dynamite between 12 October and 9 November. All eight people on board were rescued by the United States Life Saving Service.
|- | | |The 513-ton steamer ran aground in thick fog and was wrecked on Long Pierre Rock off Herm, Channel Islands, whilst on passage from Middlesbrough to St. Malo. |- | | |The tug was sunk when struck by the tug () in the Harlem River off One Hundred Twenty Fifth Street causing her to list to the point of filling with water and sinking. Later raised.
|- | | |The 71-gross register ton screw steamer sank in Lake Erie off West Sister Island after losing the packing from her stuffing box, creating a leak that the pumps could not handle. All five people on board survived. She later was raised.
|- |Evelina | |The 289-ton vessel was stranded at Markets Hallar. refloated for scrapping.
|- |Brooklyn | |The steamer ran aground on rocks off the breakwater at Pointe Delgarde, St. Michaels, The Azores. Refloated on 21 August and sailed to Lisbon for repairs. |- |Cornelia | |The 60-gross register ton schooner sank in Back Creek in Virginia. All three people on board survived. |- | | |The 197-gross register ton steam barge caught fire while tied up at a dock at Marine City, Michigan, but was cut loose drifting out into a storm beyond reach of the City Fire Department, a total loss. All eight people on board survived.
|- |Bulgaria | |The barge sprung a leak on Lake Michigan and was beached near the Plum Island Life Saving Station.
|- |De Ruyter | |The 1,682-ton vessel sank off Helsing Fors after striking a wreck. |- | | |The steamer sprung a leak north east of Grosse Point, Michigan. The crew abandoned ship after the pumps could not keep up with the leak. She was towed by tugs to Chicago, Illinois where she sank in a slip. Total loss. |- |Umberto I | |The 766-ton sailing vessel was abandoned in the North Atlantic.
|- | | |The 294-gross register ton screw steamer was stranded in the Arctic Ocean at Cape Parry on the coast of the Northwest Territories. All 48 people on board survived.
|- | | |The steamer burned to the water's edge at dock at Edgewater Point, Gideon's Bay, Lake Minnetonka. Her captain and mate, only ones aboard, escaped. |- |Island City | |The 423-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Shediac, New Brunswick. All seven people on board survived. |- | | |The schooner went ashore at Watch Hill, Rhode Island.
|- | | |The steamer ran aground and capsized in the Sacramento River at Hog Island, California. |- |Isabella Gill | |The 585-gross register ton schooner departed New York City bound for Mayport, Florida, with eight people aboard and was never heard from again.
|- |Alexander | |The 294-ton steam whaling bark was wrecked at "Chugak" in the District of Alaska, apparently a reference to Shuyak Island in the Kodiak Archipelago. |- |Cingalese | |The 662-ton sailing vessel ran aground at the Hood Point Lighthouse in East London, South Africa in the Eastern Cape. It was refloated and towed into the harbour, where it was broken up. |- | | |The steamer was sunk in a collision with () north north east of Long Tail Point in Green Bay.
|- |Adelphi Sifnio | |The 2,215-ton vessel foundered west of Algiers, French Algeria. |- |Ann Thomson | |The 252-gross register ton barge sank off Point Lookout on the coast of Maryland. Both people on board survived. |- | | |The 2,044-gross register ton screw steamer sank after colliding with the steamer () on Lake Huron off Pointe Aux Barques, Michigan. All 20 people on board survived. |- |Julia D. Schmidt | |The 9-gross register ton schooner sank off Thacher Island on the coast of Massachusetts. The only person on board survived. |- |Oweene | |The 24-gross register ton iron-hulled sloop-rigged yacht burned in Long Island Sound. Both people on board survived.
|- |Ardell | |The 27-gross register ton schooner sank in Tampa Bay off the coast of Florida. All three people on board survived. |- |Bat | |The 101-gross register ton schooner was stranded in the Bay of Fundy on Grand Manan in New Brunswick. All four people on board survived. |- |Boston Marine | |The 150-ton vessel stranded near Cape Germain, then floated off and drifted ashore at Cape Tormintine. Dismantled. |- |Freda | |The 217-ton vessel was wrecked near Roda Beacon, Oeland, Sweden. |- |Lanoy | |The 192-ton vessel was wrecked on Gunfleet Sands. |- |M. H. Morris | |The 16-gross register ton schooner sank off Block Island off the coast of Rhode Island. The only person on board survived. |- |Manchuria | |The steamer was stranded on the northeast end of Oahu in the Territory of Hawaii. |- | | |The 9-gross register ton screw steamer burned at anchor off Point Jefferson, Washington. All three people on board survived. |- |Princess Irene | |The 763-ton vessel was wrecked at Linney Head, Pembroke.
|- |Mary L. Cushing | |The 1,658-gross register ton bark was stranded at Mazatlán, Mexico. All 16 people on board survived. |- | | |The 9-gross register ton screw steamer burned at anchor off Point Jefferson, Washington. All three people on board survived.
|- | | |The steamer sprung a leak and was beached at Port Washington, Wisconsin. Later refloated and taken to Milwaukee for repairs. |- |Majore | |The launch went ashore on Lake Ontario north west of the Charlotte, New York Life Saving Station. Her machinery was salvaged. |- | | |On a journey from her home port of Garston with a cargo of coal, the steamer hit the Low Lee rocks, Mount's Bay in thick fog from her destination, Newlyn. |- |Rapid | |The 297-ton vessel was wrecked at Langenaes, Iceland.
|- |C. B. Rossell | |The 178-gross register ton barge sank in the Chesapeake Bay off Poplar Island in Maryland. All three people on board survived. |- | | |The freighter was destroyed by fire just south of the Illinois Slip, Chicago, Illinois, when her cargo caught fire. Her crew of 25 escaped. |- | | |The steamboat foundered off George Island in Lake Winnipeg in Manitoba.
|- |Philadelphia | |The steamer sank at dock at Pier 39 South, in the Delaware River over night. Raised and found leaky seams was the cause.
|- |Concordia | |The 676-ton barque caught fire and was abandoned in the Atlantic. |- |M. H. Perkins | |The 76-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Rockport, Massachusetts. All 14 people on board survived. |- | | |The steamer encountered a gale shortly after leaving Cleveland, Ohio. She returned to harbor but suffered a broke steam line resulting in her cutting loose two barges and then being beached. The two barges drifted ashore.
|- |Agnes L. Potter | |The 279-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Cleveland, Ohio. All five people on board survived. |- | | |The 173-gross register ton screw steamer ran aground in dense fog and was wrecked south of the Point Pinos Lighthouse, from Monterey, California. All 20 people on board survived. |- |William Grandy | |The 464-gross register ton schooner barge or scow barge was stranded at Cleveland, Ohio. All four people on board survived.
|- |America | |The tug was sunk when struck by Lighter No. 228 that had developed a leak and a list to starboard while being towed by the tug Juniata (). When the list got to a steep angle part of her cargo of scrap iron slid overboard causing her to turn to port and hitting America. Her crew were rescued by Juniata. |- | | |The 61-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer burned to the waterline and sank while tied up at a dock overnight at Brownsville, Minnesota. Both people on board survived. |- |Clover | |Recently bought from Gibraltar by French contractor André Boyer, the 108-gross register ton steam tug sank after becoming disabled in strong winds off Cape Salou, Tarragona, Spain. Two men on the launch died. |- |Hudson | |The launch was sunk in a collision with the ferry () at Jersey City, New Jersey. Both men on the launch died. |- | | |The 6-gross register ton cat boat sank after colliding with the sidewheel paddle steamer () in the harbor at Nantucket, Massachusetts. Both people on board survived. |- |Mostyn | |The 122-ton vessel was sunk in a collision off Holyhead, Wales, U.K..
|- |C. P. Dixon | |The 717-gross register ton schooner departed Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, bound for Fajardo, Puerto Rico, with eight people on board and was never heard from again. |- |Excelsior | |The 348-gross register ton, three-masted schooner was wrecked on Cape Rozhnof () at Nelson Lagoon, District of Alaska. Her crew of 19 survived. |- |Virginia | |The 704-gross register ton schooner barge sank off Cape Fear, North Carolina. All five people on board survived.
|- |Roi des Belges | |The 216-ton fishing vessel was wrecked on Corubello Rock, off Villagarcia. |- |Rosalia | |The 135-ton vessel was wrecked near Cape Penas. |- | | United States Army |The transport ran aground on Barber's Point, Territory of Hawaii. Refloated later and returned to service. |- |Yaralla | |The 482-ton vessel was wrecked on Naselai Reef, Kuba Point near Numbaulau, Fiji after a boiler tube explosion and, later, her towline parted.
|- |Cingalese | |The full-rigged ship was dismasted and abandoned in the Indian Ocean. She was on a voyage from Zanzibar to Hamburg, Germany. Cingalese was later towed in to East London, South Africa, where she was scrapped in 1907. |- | | |The tug sunk sometime in August off Long Tail Point Light. She was refloated in mid-1907 and taken to Sturgeon Bay.
|- | | |The 9-gross register ton motor yacht burned at Algonac, Michigan. Both people on board survived. |- |Annie L. Henderson | |The 428-gross register ton schooner burned at Bangor, Maine. All seven people on board survived. |- |Cavalier | |The 299-ton lumber schooner was wrecked on Chantry Island Reef in Lake Huron. Crew rescued the next morning after spending the night in her rigging.
|- |Gipsy | |The 11-gross register ton motor vessel was stranded at Rockaway Beach in Queens, New York. All four people on board survived.
|- |Hirondelle | |The 321-ton vessel was wrecked off Morlaix. |- | | |The 61-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer capsized and sank at Trinity, Louisiana. All nine people on board survived, but she was declared a total loss. |- |Theodore | |The 176-ton vessel was wrecked at Pourcenaux Rock 2 miles east of Quemenes.
|- |Elina | |The 2,652-ton vessel was wrecked at Baccaro, Nova Scotia. |- | | |The steamer sank at Palatka, Florida, on the St. Johns River. Later raised.
|- |Unknown scow | |The scow, under tow of the tug (), was sunk in a collision with an unidentified schooner under tow of () in the East River off Riker's Island, New York City. |- |Wm. Crosthwaite | |The barge sank in a collision with its tow steamer () in Lake Erie off Kellys Island.
|- |Chauncey E. Burk | |The 916-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Sandy Point on Great Abaco in the Bahamas. All nine people on board survived. |- | | |The 391-gross register ton screw steamer sank after colliding with the screw steamer Milwaukee () off McGregor Point in the St. Clair River on the Canada-United States border between Michigan and Ontario. One passenger and one crewman were killed. There were 14 survivors. |- |Walrus | |Carrying her captain, six passengers, and a deck cargo of two stoves and two gas tanks, the 9-gross register ton, motor vessel was destroyed by fire in Tongass Narrows in the District of Alaska after a lantern exploded. Two passengers â a six-year-old girl and a 15-year-old girl â were trapped by the fire and burned to death. The captain and the other four passengers escaped in a lifeboat.
|- | | |The 374-ton schooner was abandoned in the Atlantic. |- |Gosta | |The 169-ton vessel was abandoned in the North Sea.
|- |Emma R | |The 251-gross register ton barge sank at New York City The only person on board survived. |- |Maggie R | |The 5-gross register ton catboat was stranded on Gay Head on the coast of Massachusetts. The only person on board survived. |- |Uhlenhorst | |The 690-ton vessel foundered off Trindelen.
|- | | |The 72-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer sank in the Savannah River in Georgia. All six people on board survived. |- |Elim | |The 196-ton vessel was wrecked at Thorshavn, Faroe Islands. |- |Metamora | |The 36-gross register ton schooner sank at New Harbor, Maine. Both people on board survived. |- |Oliver S. Barrett | |On the day she departed Port Royal, South Carolina, for a voyage to New York City, the 634-gross register ton schooner capsized at sea with the loss of eight lives. There was one survivor.
|- |Irvin | |The 989-ton vessel was wrecked north of Leixoes, Portugal. |- |Leah | |Operating as an inland passenger vessel with 199 people aboard, the 477-gross register ton, sternwheel paddle steamer sank after striking a submerged rock or snag in the Yukon River at Quail Island, below Kaltag, District of Alaska. Her wreck filled with ice and mud over the next eight months and became a total loss.
|- |Anna M. Stammer | |The 419-gross register ton schooner departed Gulfport, Mississippi, bound for Cartagena, Colombia. She capsized during the voyage with the loss of all eight people on board. She was salvaged and was towed in to Key West, Florida, where she arrived on 11 January 1907. |- |Lotus | |The 128-ton vessel was wrecked at Fieron, Oscarshamn, Sweden. |- |Unknown canal boat | |A canal boat, under tow of the tug (), was damaged when she struck a submerged log that went through her bottom in the Columbia Basin causing her to fill and be beached near Clinton Street, Brooklyn.
|- |Marec | |The 142-ton fishing vessel foundered off St. Ann's Head. |- |Semiramis | |The 137-ton vessel was wrecked at Port Talbot, Wales, U.K..
|- |Emanuel | |The 217-ton vessel was wrecked at Sandorbrok, Iceland. |- | | |The 2,335-gross register ton coastal passenger-cargo ship was wrecked in heavy rain squalls at Cape Hinchinbrook, Hinchinbrook Island, District of Alaska. All 121 people on board survived. A small party took a lifeboat to Valdez, Alaska, to seek help; the remaining 110 people stranded aboard the wreck were rescued by ( United States Lighthouse Service). Oregon was declared a total loss.
|- |Carl Both | |The 543-ton sailing vessel was abandoned off the Faroe Islands.
|- | | |The steamer struck an obstruction and sprung a leak west north west of Middle Ground. She sank west north west of Middle Ground Light before she could be beached. Crew left in boats and were rescued by the barge Harold. |- | | |The steamer sprung a leak and was beached at Marblehead, Ohio, east of the Life Saving Station. Six of her crew removed to shore by the United States Life Saving Service, with seven choosing to remain on board. Refloated on 18 September and towed to Sandusky, Ohio, for repairs where she sank, a total loss. The vessel was raised on 26 June 1907, taken to Detroit where she was dismantled and abandoned in 1908. |- |Oliver S. Barrett | |The 561-ton vessel sank in the North Atlantic. |- |Virginia H. Hudson | |The 579-gross register ton schooner barge or scow barge sank at Hereford, New Jersey. All four people on board survived.
|- | | |The yacht foundered in heavy seas on Lake Erie midway between Stony Point, Michigan, and Point Moullee. Her captain and engineer, the only two people on board, were rescued by (). |- |Coat Coal | |The 479-ton vessel foundered in the English channel.
|- |Rapidan | |The 26-gross register ton schooner burned at Lower East Pubnico, Nova Scotia. All eight people on board survived. |- |Twilight | |The 376-gross register ton schooner capsized in the North Atlantic Ocean off Charleston, South Carolina, with the loss of six lives. There was one survivor.
|- |Cassie F. Bronson | |The 1,124-gross register ton schooner was stranded near Cape Fear, North Carolina. All nine people on board survived. |- |Charles F. Tuttle | |The 776-gross register ton schooner sprung a leak then turned on her beams ends and was abandoned off Charleston, South Carolina in a hurricane. All eight people on board were rescued by "Seguranca" 48 hours later. |- | | |The steamer sank at dock in Charleston, South Carolina, when seas washed over her stern in a gale. |- |Ethel | |The 734-gross register ton bark was stranded at Singleton Swash, South Carolina, with the loss of two lives. There were nine survivors. |- |James D. Dewell | |The 603-gross register ton schooner sank in the North Atlantic Ocean off Charleston, South Carolina, with the loss of all seven people on board. |- | | |The 22-gross register ton motor yacht burned at New Haven, Connecticut. Both people on board survived. |- |Nelson E. Newbury | |The 658-gross register ton schooner sank, or capsized with the derelict vessel drifting ashore on Pea Island, with the loss of six lives in the North Atlantic Ocean off Charleston, South Carolina. There were two survivors. |- |Ohio | |The 325-ton sailing vessel was wrecked near Cape Hatteras. |- |R. D. Bibber | |The 769-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Frying Pan Shoals, North Carolina, or capsized off Frying Pan Shoals and was beached on the Cape Fear River bar. All five people on board survived.
|- |Albatross |Unknown British colony |The 146-ton vessel foundered near Futaunum Pass. |- |Anna Precht | |The 398-ton barque was wrecked on Barber Sands in a Force 6 gale. Two crew died, 6 rescued. |- |Aspenrade | |1906 Hong Kong typhoon:The 973-ton vessel was wrecked on Stonecutter's Island, Hong Kong. |- | | |1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The steamer went ashore at Hong Kong in a typhoon. |- | | |1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The steamer went ashore at Hong Kong in a typhoon. |- | | |1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The steamer went ashore at Kelleta Island, Hong Kong in a typhoon. |- | |Unknown |1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The steamer went ashore at Hong Kong in a typhoon. |- | | |1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The gunboat went ashore at Hong Kong during a typhoon. |- | | |1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The steamer went ashore at Hong Kong in a typhoon. |- | | |1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The steamer went ashore at Hong Kong in a typhoon. |- | | | 1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The was wrecked at Hong Kong in a typhoon. Five crew were killed. Later salvaged and returned to service. |- |Fukaye Maru | |1906 Hong Kong typhoon:The 232-ton vessel foundered off Wanchai. |- | | |The steamer sank at Sandusky, Ohio, after arriving for repairs. Later raised, repaired and returned to service. |- | |Unknown |1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The steamer went ashore at Hong Kong in a typhoon. |- |Hoi Cheong |Unknown British colony |1906 Hong Kong typhoon:The 461-ton vessel was wrecked at Hong Kong. |- | |Unknown |1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The steamer went ashore at Hong Kong in a typhoon. |- | |Unknown |1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The steamer was sunk at Hong Kong in a typhoon. |- |Kong Nam |Unknown British colony |1906 Hong Kong typhoon:The 501-ton vessel was wrecked at Hong Kong. |- | | |1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The steamer went ashore at Hong Kong in a typhoon. |- |Nellie Floyd | |The 457-gross register ton schooner sank with the loss of her Captain in the North Atlantic Ocean southwest of Frying Pan Shoals Light off the coast of North Carolina. There were six survivors. |- | | |1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The steamer went ashore at Hong Kong in a typhoon. |- |Pak Kang |Unknown British colony |1906 Hong Kong typhoon:The 434-ton vessel was wrecked at Hong Kong. |- | | | 1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The steamer went ashore at Hong Kong in a typhoon. |- | | |1906 Hong Kong typhoon:The steel screw sloop foundered alongside a coaling pier in Hong Kong during a typhoon. |- | |Unknown | 1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The steamer was sunk at Hong Kong in a typhoon. |- | |Unknown |1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The steamer went ashore at Hong Kong in a typhoon. |- | | |1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The steamer went ashore at Hong Kong in a typhoon. |- | | |1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The steamer went ashore at Hong Kong in a typhoon. |- | |Unknown |1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The steamer went ashore at Hong Kong in a typhoon. |- | | |1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The steamer was sunk at dock at Hong Kong in a typhoon. |- | | |1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The schooner was sunk, or stranded, at Hong Kong in a typhoon. Refloated and condemmed. |- | | |1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The steamer went ashore at Hong Kong in a typhoon. |- | | |1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The steamer went ashore at Hong Kong in a typhoon. |- | | |1906 Hong Kong typhoon: The steamer went ashore at Hong Kong in a typhoon.
|- |Austria | |The 1,050-ton sailing vessel was abandoned in the Atlantic Ocean. |- | | |The steamer struck the wreck of () in a gale on Lake Erie off the lighthouse at Pelee Island, Ontario () in of water. |- | | |The 136-gross register ton motor vessel was stranded in Port au Port Bay on the coast of Newfoundland. All 15 people on board survived. |- | | |The motor vessel struck a submerged object and sank at Bethlehem, Indiana. Later raised. |- | | |The 477-gross register ton sterwnheel paddle steamer struck a rock or snag off Quail Island in the Yukon River and sank below Kaltag, District of Alaska. She was declared a total loss. All 199 people on board survived. |- | | |The steamer was wrecked on a reef in Lake Winnipeg, suffering a broke back. She broke up in a storm on 26 September.
|- |Cassie F. Bronson | |The 952-ton vessel was wrecked at Conway, South Carolina. |- | | |The excursion steamer sank in shallow water at Port Huron, Michigan. |- |Josepha Formosa | |The 535-ton vessel was wrecked at San Feliú de Guixols, Catalonia, Spain. |- |Vera | |The 10-gross register ton motor vessel burned on the Queets River in Washington. All four people on board survived.
|- | | |The 221-gross register ton screw steamer sank off Battery Island in the Cape Fear River in North Carolina after colliding with the screw steamer (). All 24 people on board survived. |- |Easdale | |The 116-ton vessel was wrecked on Scaurs of Cruden near Aberdeen.
|- |Ellida | |The 117-ton vessel sprung a leak and capsized, drifting ashore at Faggerviken. |- |Skip | |The 16-gross register ton scow was wrecked at Mount Andrew () on the Kasaan Peninsula in Southeast Alaska after the lines mooring her to a wharf parted in a storm and she drifted ashore, where the surf broke her up. The only person on board survived.
|- |Linnea | |The 355-ton vessel was wrecked at Cayo Hicacos.
|- |Columbian | |The sternwheel paddle steamer was destroyed by an explosion and fire on the Yukon River at Eagle Rock in Canadaâ²s Yukon Territory, killing six members of the 25-man crew. |- | | |The 8-gross register ton sternwheel motor paddle vessel burned on the Tennessee River at Decatur, Alabama. The only person on board survived. |- |Georgian | |The 1,098-ton vessel went aground on Terschelling. Later refloated and sold for scrap. |- | | |The 996-gross register ton schooner was stranded on the Isle of Pines off the coast of Cuba. All nine people on board survived, . |- |Lila | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 6-gross register ton sloop sank in Dauphin Island Bay on the coast of Alabama. Both people on board survived. |- | | |The 72-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Assateague Island, Virginia north of the Life Saving Station, a total loss. All 15 people on board made it to the beach in the vessels boats. |- | | |The schooner sprung a leak at Newburyport, Massachusetts, and was beached. |- |Olivia | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 9-gross register ton schooner in Dauphin Island Bay on the coast of Alabama with the loss of all three people on board survived. |- | | |The 22-gross register ton screw steamer was lost after she collided with the screw steamer () in the Detroit River on the Canada-United States border between Michigan and Ontario. All three people on board survived. |- | | |The tug was sunk in a collision with the tug () in the East River off Adams Street, Brooklyn. One crewman died later on shore. |- | | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The barge was separated from her tug (), during the hurricane west north west of the Dry Tortugas and was never seen again. Lost with all nine hands.
|- |Campbell | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The sailing bark was sunk at a pier at Pensacola, Florida. |- |Daisy | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 33-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Horn Island on the coast of Mississippi with the loss of one life. There were four survivors. |- |Elmer E. Randall | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 56-gross register ton schooner sank in the Gulf of Mexico off Mobile, Alabama. All eight people on board survived. |- |Fort Morgan | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The steamer was driven ashore at the foot of St. Frances Street, Mobile, Alabama. |- |Fred P. Litchfield | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 1,045-gross register ton schooner barge or scow barge sank in the Gulf of Mexico at . All eight people on board survived. |- | | |1906 Mississippi hurricane:With no one on board, the 89-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer sank off Mobile, Alabama. |- | | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The sailing vessel capsized in Herron Bay on the coast of Alabama and was driven into a marsh. Her owner was her sole survivor. She was refloated, repaired, and returned to service. |- |Hastings | |The 916-ton barge burned in the Irrawaddy River near Prome, British Burma. |- |Hercules | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The sailing bark lumber ship was wrecked on Ship Island just north of Fort Massachusetts and was declared a total loss. |- |Jennie Hulbert | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 440-gross register ton brig was abandoned in the Gulf of Mexico. All eight people on board survived. She remained afloat and was towed in to Port Eads, Louisiana, on 10 October. |- |Navarre | |The 304-ton fishing vessel was wrecked on Basses de St. Marie Rocks, St. Pierre and Miquelon. |- |S. O. Co. No. 90 | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 2,019-gross register ton schooner barge or scow barge sank in the Gulf of Mexico off the Dry Tortugas with the loss of all nine people on board. |- |Unidentified schooners | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: A small fleet of several sailing schooners sank at Heron Bay, Alabama, with the loss of all hands.
|- |A. J. Chapman | |With no one on board, the 48-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Wrights Mill Beach on the coast of Florida. |- |Agnes | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 14-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Bayou La Batre, Alabama, with the loss of all three people on board. |- |Agnes | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: With no one aboard, the 8-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Dauphin Island, Alabama. |- |Altama | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 31-gross register ton schooner was stranded in Pensacola Bay, Florida. All six people on board survived. |- | | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The steamer was sunk at Mobile, Alabama. |- | | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: After the 122-gross register ton sidewheel paddle steamer's dock at Pensacola, Florida, was blown away, she was stranded on the beach in Pensacola Bay and broke up. All six people on board survived. |- | | |The brigantine foundered at Alicante, Spain. |- |Athena |Unknown British Colony |1906 Mississippi hurricane:The 663-ton vessel was wrecked at Mobile. |- |Aurore | |The 194-ton vessel was wrecked on the bar of the Limpopo River. |- |Baunen | |1906 Mississippi hurricane:The 833-ton vessel was wrecked on Horn Island, Mississippi. |- |B. F. Sutter | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 36-gross register ton schooner was stranded in Pensacola Bay, Florida. All seven people on board survived. |- |Campbell | |1906 Mississippi hurricane:The 1,099-ton vessel was wrecked at Pensacola. |- | | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The packet ship was driven ashore at Pensacola, Florida. Refloated and repaired. |- |Carrie N. Chase | |The 48-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Fisherville, Florida. All seven people on board survived. |- | | |The 385-gross register ton screw steamer sank in Lake Erie off Pelee Island, Ontario, with the loss of two lives. There were ten survivors. |- |Clara R. Grimes | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 34-gross register ton schooner was stranded in Pensacola Bay, Florida. All eight people on board survived. |- |D. W. | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: With no one on board, the 5-gross register ton sloop was stranded in Pensacola Bay, Florida. |- |Ethel | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 7-gross register ton schooner sank at Heron Bay, Alabama, with the loss of one life. There were two survivors. |- | | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The lumber barque sank off Mobile, Alabama, after the hurricane passed over the city. |- |Fluorine | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 386-gross register ton bark was stranded on Cat Island on the coast of Mississippi. All nine people on board survived. |- |Francis and Margery | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 40-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Pensacola, Florida. All six people on board survived. |- |Gertrude A. Bartlett | |The 374-gross register ton schooner was abandoned in the North Atlantic Ocean at . All seven people on board survived. |- |Gracie S | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 9-gross register ton schooner was stranded in Pensacola Bay on the coast of Florida. All five people on board survived. |- | | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 998-gross register ton steel-hullled sidewheel paddle steamer was stranded on Dauphin Island , Alabama. All 33 people on board survived. |- | | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The steamer was wrecked at Mobile, Alabama. She was a Total Loss. |- | | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 20-gross register ton screw steamer's dock at Pensacola, Florida, was blown away, setting her adrift, and she broke up on the beach. All five people on board survived. |- |Hercules | |1906 Mississippi hurricane:The 1,199-ton vessel was wrecked at Ship Island, Mississippi. |- |Hilary | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 38-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Perdido Key, Florida. Both people on board survived. |- |Irma | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: With no one on board, the 6-gross register ton schooner was stranded in Pensacola Bay on the coast of Florida. |- | | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The laid up steamer was driven ashore at Mobile, Alabama. |- |J. Wago | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 19-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Biloxi, Mississippi. All four people on board survived. |- |Jas. P. Collins | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 13-gross register ton schooner was stranded in Pensacola Bay, Florida. All four people on board survived. |- | | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 50-gross register ton screw steamer burned at Fairport, Mississippi. All three people on board survived. |- | | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: With no one on board, the 774-gross register ton screw steamer was lost when she collided with the barge Black Diamond () at Mobile, Alabama. |- |Josie Johnson | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 27-gross register ton schooner was stranded in Pensacola Bay, Florida. All six people on board survived. |- |Kauikeaouli | |The 140-gross register ton schooner was abandoned in the Pacific Ocean off Hawaii. All seven people on board survived. |- | | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: With no one on board, the 144-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer was wrecked at Mobile, Alabama. |- | | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The sloop was lost in Dauphin Island Bay () on the United States Gulf Coast in Alabama. |- |Margaret S | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: With no one on board, the 11-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Cat Island, Mississippi. |- |Margrette B | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 13-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Point of Pines, Alabama, with the loss of both people on board. |- |Marie | |1906 Mississippi hurricane:The 1,022-ton vessel was wrecked at Pensacola. |- | | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: With no one on board, the laid-up 198-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer â a packet ship â was blown from her moorings on the east side of the Mobile River to the city side at Mobile, Alabama, and was wrecked. She was a total loss. |- | | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The steamer was wrecked at Mobile, Alabama. She was later raised and repaired. |- |Mary Gray | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 8-gross register ton schooner sank in Dauphin Island Bay () Alabama. All four people on board survived. |- | | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The steamer was wrecked at Mobile, Alabama. She was later raised and repaired.. |- | | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The steamer's dock was blown away in lower Mobile Bay and she driven up on the beach. Refloated and repaired. |- |Merzapore | |1906 Mississippi hurricane:The 1,144-ton vessel was stranded at Mobile. Later refloated, taken to Gulfport, Mississippi for conversion into a barge. |- |Minerva | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 64-gross register ton schooner sank in Pensacola Bay, Florida. All eight people on board survived. |- | | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 42-gross register ton screw steamer was blown away from her dock at Pensacola, Florida, and broke up on the beach in Pensacola Bay. All five people on board survived. |- |Nellie B | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: With no one on board, the 6-gross register ton schooner was stranded in Pensacola Bay, Florida. |- |Norge | |1906 Mississippi hurricane:The 1,580-ton vessel was stranded at Mobile. Later refloated, taken to Gulfport, Mississippi for conversion into a barge. |- |Old Hickory | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 29-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Mobile, Alabama. Both people on board survived. |- |Olivari | |1906 Mississippi hurricane:The 1,008-ton vessel was wrecked at Pensacola. |- |Olive | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: With no one on board, the 172-gross register ton schooner sank in the Mobile River in Alabama. |- |Olivia | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The schooner was lost in Dauphin Island Bay () Alabama. |- | | |The lighter sank at dock in the East River at One Hundred and Fifty-Sixth Street. |- |Trojan | |1906 Mississippi hurricane:The 1,624-ton vessel was wrecked at Mobile. |- |Two Friends | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 6-gross register ton sloop sank at Heron Bay, Alabama, with the loss of both people on board. |- |Two Sisters | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 21-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Bay Point, Alabama. Both people on board survived. |- |Wm. H. Warren | |1906 Mississippi hurricane: The 31-gross register ton schooner sank off St. Joseph Point, Florida with the loss of all seven people on board.
|- |Ashbrooke | |The 1,419-ton vessel was sunk in a collision near Brunshausen. Raised and sold for scrap. |- |Felix | |The 119-ton sailing vessel was abandoned off Windau, Russia.
|- |No. 2 (or Car Ferry No. 2) | |The 1,548-gross register ton barge â a train ferry â capsized and sank off Chicago, Illinois, in a gale. Her master and two crewmen were killed. There were three survivors: The steam tug () rescued two of them, and the United States Life-Saving Service rescued the other. |- | | |The steamer sprung a leak and foundered in heavy seas on Lake Erie east of the south end of Kelleys Island. Two or three crewmen went down with the ship after refusing to get in the lifeboat when ordered to. |- |Loch Etive | |The 104-ton vessel was wrecked near Tarbert. |- | | |The tow steamer filled and sank when a line to her tow parted causing a severe list in the Mississippi River south of New Orleans, Louisiana, sinking in of water.
|- |Akashi Maru | |The 1,571-ton vessel was wrecked near Amoy. |- |Charterhouse | |The 2,021-ton cargo ship sank in a typhoon in the Hainan Straits off Hainan Head. Crew rescued by "Kohsichang" (). |- |Lady Bird | |The 219-ton fishing vessel was wrecked 2 miles north of Collieston, Scotland. |- |Negaunee | |The 640-gross register ton schooner was stranded in Lake Erie. All seven people on board survived. |- |Oshkosh | |The 16-gross register ton motor yacht burned at Oshkosh, Wisconsin. All seven people on board survived.
|- |Asa T. Stowell | |The 419-gross register ton schooner departed Pensacola, Florida, bound for Havana, Cuba, with seven people on board and was never heard from again. |- |Launberga | |The 1,215-ton vessel was stranded on Frying Pan Shoals sometime before 24 September. Refloated, towed to Southport and sold. |- | | |The trawler disappeared after leaving Grimsby for the Faeroe Isles fishing grounds. Lost with all hands.
|- |Pelican | |The 13-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Pass-a-Grille on the west coast of Florida. Both people on board survived. |- | | |The steamer sprung a leak in a severe gale off Cape Flattery. She was beached in Callam Bay. After removing some cargo she was refloated and taken to Seattle, Washington, for repairs.
|- | | |During a severe windstorm, the 36-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer either was stranded or foundered while tied up at a dock in the Ohio River at Eckel's Landing near Grand Chain, Illinois. All four people on board survived, but she was declared a total loss.
|- | | |The decommissioned torpedo gunvessel was sunk as a target.
|- |Shasta | |The 722-gross register ton screw steamer ran aground in dense fog and was wrecked off Point Conception on the coast of California with the loss of one life. There were 15 survivors.
|- |Ada Medora | |The 290-gross register ton schooner was stranded off Buffalo, New York, a total loss. Half her cargo was salvaged. All seven people on board survived. |- |Edward Wright | |The 23-gross register ton schooner capsized in the Chesapeake Bay off Thomas Point on the coast of Maryland with the loss of both people on board. |- |Gracie A | |With no one on board, the 7-gross register ton sloop was stranded on Squirrel Island off Boothbay Harbor, Maine. |- |Manningtry | |The 2,845-ton vessel was abandoned at sea 109 miles west of Fayal, The Azores.
|- | | |The schooner was wrecked in heavy seas and high winds south west of the Quoddy Head Life Saving Station, a total loss. Her six crewmen survived. |- | | |The schooner dragged anchor in a gale and went ashore west of the Rocky Point, New York Life Saving Station. Crew rescued by the United States Life Saving Service. |- |May Richards | |The 530-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Ohio's North Bass Island in Lake Erie. All six people on board survived.
|- |Abram Smith | |The 372-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Duck Island in Lake Huron. All seven people on board survived. |- | | |The 82-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer burned either in the Mississippi River at New Orleans, Louisiana, or in Vermilion Bay on the coast of Louisiana, according to different sources. All six people on board survived, but she was declared a total loss. |- |J. B. Comstock | |The 325-gross register ton schooner was stranded in the Duck Islands in Lake Huron. All seven people on board survived. |- |Lotus | |The 148-gross register ton sand barge, under tow by the steamer (), sprang a leak and sank near Egg Island off Cohansey Point on the coast of New Jersey. Winfield S. Cahill rescued her crew. |- | | |The steamer broke loose from her moorings in high winds at Northport, Michigan. The winds blew her ashore where she broke up, a total loss. |- |Pasadena | |The 2,076-gross register ton schooner barge or scow barge was stranded on the Portage Canal Breakwater in Michigan with the loss of two lives. There were eight survivors. |- |Port Stephens | |The 3,554-ton vessel was abandoned at sea 150 miles south of New Zealand () after breaking her propeller shaft and was drifting to the south rapidly. Her crew was taken off by barque "Ravenscourt" ().
|- |Samuel H. Foster | |The 672-gross register ton schooner barge or scow barge was stranded ion the Portage Canal in Michigan. All seven people on board survived. |- |Skulda | |The 1,177-ton vessel was sunk in a collision with "Trento" () in the Firth of Forth. |- | | |The 575-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer was wrecked after hitting a rock in the Entiat Rapids in the Columbia River off Entiat, Washington, a total loss. All 17 people aboard survived. |- |Vasconia | |The 3,084-ton vessel caught fire at Madeira and was sunk to extinguish the fire. Refloated and taken to Marseilles. |- |Wayne | |The 708-gross register ton schooner barge or scow barge was stranded southwest of the Portage Canal in Michigan. All seven people on board survived.
|- |John R. Rees | |The 81-gross register ton schooner sank off Dymers Wharves, Virginia. All four people on board survived. |- | | |The steamer sank at dock in the Black River while under repair at Poplar Bluff, Missouri. She was scheduled to be raised later. |- |Sparta | |With no one on board, the 6-gross register ton schooner sank in Papys Bayou in Florida. Both people on board survived.
|- |Black Diamond | |With no one on board, the 121-gross register ton barge was lost when she collided with the screw steamer () off Mobile, Alabama. |- |Ella Powell | |The 140-gross register ton schooner sank off New London, Connecticut, with the loss of one life. There was one survivor. |- |Helen B. Crosby | |Carrying a cargo of coal, the , 1,776-gross register ton four-masted schooner was stranded on Inner Bay Ledge, a reef in Penobscot Bay east of Owls Head, Maine. She broke up and sank at , a total loss. All 11 people on board survived. |- | | |The tow steamer was entering "The Narrows" of the Saco River in New England when she was pushed ashore, causing damage that resulted in beaching and partial sinking.
|- | | |While no one was on board, the 1,118-gross register ton screw steamer burned to the water's edge at Marysville, Michigan. |- |Dolphin | |The 5-gross register ton sloop-rigged yacht was lost when she struck a dock at Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The only person on board survived. |- |Hattie Wells | |The 376-gross register ton schooner burned at Marysville, Michigan. All three people on board survived.
|- |Merom | |The 925-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Bonaire in the Netherlands West Indies. All nine people on board survived.
|- | | |The ferry struck a picket, holing her hull, and sank at Point Pleasant, West Virginia, in the Ohio River. |- |Wanderer | |The steamer sprang a leak and sank in Jew Fish Creek near Miami, Florida, in of water. Later raised.
|- |Moccasin | |The 15-gross register ton schooner sank at Knights Key in the Florida Keys. The only person on board survived.
|- | | |The accidentally sank. Raised, repaired and returned to service.
|- |Nirvana | |The 53-gross register ton schooner was stranded on the Isle of Pines off Cuba. All seven people on board survived. |- |Star of Peace | (South Africa) |The 211-ton fishing vessel was wrecked on Quion Point off Cape Town, South Africa.
|- |Henry Sutton | |The 602-gross register ton schooner departed Chéverie, Nova Scotia, with seven people on board and was never heard from again. |- |Houseboat No. 4 | |1906 Florida Keys hurricane: The accommodations barge broke loose from her moorings, she broke up and sank in Hawke's Channel near Longboat Key, Florida. Of approximately 175 men aboard 72 were rescued by Jenny (), the rest were lost. |- |Palm | |1906 Florida Keys hurricane: The 12-gross register ton motor vessel was stranded on Long Key in the Florida Keys. Both people on board survived. |- |Race | |1906 Florida Keys hurricane: The 28-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Knights Key in the central Florida Keys. All five people on board survived. |- |Sidney | |1906 Florida Keys hurricane: The 7-gross register ton schooner sank off Metacumbie, Florida. All three people on board survived. |- |Silver Heel | |1906 Florida Keys hurricane: The 10-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Miami, Florida. All seven people on board survived. |- | | |1906 Florida Keys hurricane: The 165-gross register ton iron-hulled passenger sternwheel paddle steamer was wrecked off Elliott Key in the Florida Keys with the loss of 21 lives. There were 76 survivors. She was a total loss. |- |Sunbeam | |The 7-gross register ton schooner sank at Cutler, Florida. Both people on board survived. |- |Thistle | |1906 Florida Keys hurricane: The 10-gross register ton motor vessel was stranded on Key Largo in the Florida Keys. Both people on board survived. |- |Two Brothers | |1906 Florida Keys hurricane: The 12-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Elliott Key in the Florida Keys. All three people on board survived.
|- |A. A. Rowe | |The 45-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Egmont Key at the mouth of Tampa Bay on the coast of Florida. All five people on board survived. |- | | |The steamer capsized and sank at the Drawbridge Wharf in the harbor of Baltimore.
|- |Anchovy | |With no one on board, the 11-gross register ton scow was stranded on Mayne Island in the southern Gulf Islands in British Columbia, Canada. |- | | |The 977-gross register ton steam barge was wrecked in thick fog on Cape Henry on the coast of Virginia south of the Cape Henry Lighthouse. The United States Life-Saving Service rescued her entire crew of 15 and some of her cargo was salvaged, but she was declared a total loss. |- |Lebanon | |The 565-ton vessel foundered 13 miles off Cape Mayor.
|- |Sesnon No. 5 | |While anchored off Nome, District of Alaska, the 27-gross register ton barge broke loose from her moorings during a gale and was stranded on the beach west of Nome. The only person on board survived. On 4 January 1907, she was completely demolished when crushed by ice during a storm that struck while she still was stranded. |- |Sesnon No. 9 | |While anchored off Nome, District of Alaska, with no cargo aboard, the 18-gross register ton barge broke loose from her moorings during a gale and was stranded on a beach west of Nome. The only person on board survived. On 4 January 1907, she was completely demolished when crushed by ice during a storm that struck while she still was stranded.
|- |Abbotsford | |The 1,058-ton vessel was sunk in a collision off Sunderland, England. |- |Corona | |The steamer burned to the waters edge at Duluth, Minnesota. |- | | |The steamer sank at Marksville, Louisiana. Raised and repaired.
|- | | |The steamer struck the Ohio Street Bridge in Buffalo, New York, and sank. |- |Frank Butler | |The 74-gross register ton schooner was stranded in the Chesapeake Bay at Windmill Point on the coast of Virginia. All three people on board survived. |- |Haversham Grange | |The 7,550-ton vessel caught fire 675 to 800 miles (depending on source) northwest of Cape Town, South Africa. Her crew was taken off by "Matatua". She was still burning the next morning when hope of extinguishing the fire ended.
|- | | |The steamer was wrecked after dragging anchor and going ashore on Little Calumet Island. Her boiler and machinery was salvaged. |- | | |The 165-gross register ton screw steamer burned and sank off Long Neck Point or Shippan Point in Stamford, Connecticut (sources disagree) due to lamps overturning in a collision with an unidentified schooner. All 11 people on board were rescued by . |- |Lewis H. Giles | |The 135-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Wood Island, Newfoundland. All ten people on board survived. |- | | |The motor launch filled and sank at dock in a gale with high seas near the Sturgeon Point Light. Her cargo, machinery, and propeller were salvaged, and then she was abandoned.
|- |Collins Howes, jr. | |The 33-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Saddle Island in Penobscot Bay on the coast of Maine. Both people on board survived. |- |Glenullen | |The 73-gross register ton schooner was stranded in Machias Bay on the coast of Maine. Both people on board survived. |- | | |The 34-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer sank in the Ouachita River at Camden, Arkansas. All seven people on board survived. |- | | | The barque was wrecked in rainy weather at Clatsop Spit, Oregon. Crew rescued by the United States Life Saving Service. |- | (or Skagit) | |The 506-gross register ton barkentine was wrecked in fog on Vancouver Island near Clo-oose, British Columbia. Her master and the cook died, but the other eight people on board survived. She was a total loss. |- |Teutonic | |The 152-ton fishing vessel foundered in the North Sea.
|- | | |The steamer was wrecked in dense fog off Minorca or Puerto Mahon, Balearic Islands. |- |Plow Boy | |The 16-gross register ton schooner was stranded in northern Lake Michigan off Waugoshance Light on the coast of Michigan. Both people on board survived. |- |Sehome | |The 11-gross register ton, schooner was wrecked with the loss of her entire crew of three at Point Gardner () on Admiralty Island in the Alexander Archipelago in Southeast Alaska.
|- | | |The package freighter struck the submerged breakwater extension at the entrance to the harbor of Cleveland, Ohio, holing her hull. The wind and seas worked her over the submerged extension and she sank east of the entrance. Though reported a total loss she was raised 28 November and repaired and returned to service. Her crew was rescued by the United States Life Saving Service. |- | | |The ketch was sunk in a collision with (flag unknown) off Cape Schank.
|- |Baron Huntly | |The 1,398-ton vessel foundered off Cabo Raso, Portugal. |- | | |The 92-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer burned while tied up at a dock on the Mississippi River at Caruthersville, Missouri. All ten people on board survived, but she was declared a total loss. |- |Elgin | |The 330-gross register ton barge was abandoned in Lake Superior off Grand Marais, Minnesota. Both people on board survived. |- |Hermann | |The 2,243-ton cargo ship was sunk in a collision with Peter Rickmers () in fog near the East Goodwin Lightvessel. Twenty crew died and four rescued. |- | | |The 13-gross register ton motor paddle vessel burned on the Missouri River at Leavenworth, Kansas. All three people on board survived. |- |Norna | |The 23-gross register ton schooner sank off Lake Worth, Florida. Both people on board survived. |- | | |The steamer ran aground in a gale and high seas in Lake Huron from the Harbor Beach, Michigan, Life-Saving Station. Her master scuttled her to prevent further damage and then her crew abandoned ship. The United States Life-Saving Service rescued her entire crew. She later was pumped out, refloated, and pulled off by tugs on 2 November.
|- |Elixir | |The 2,746-ton vessel was wrecked on Cape Ballard. |- |Serbury | |The 3,873-ton vessel was wrecked at Homborsund, Norway near Christiansand while under tow and her towline broke.
|- | | |The steamer foundered off Hainan Head, Hainan Island with a loss of over 60 lives. 24 crewmen and 2 women were rescued from a raft after 43 hours by (). |- |Checotah | |The 658-gross register ton schooner barge or scow barge sank in Lake Huron off Harbor Beach, Michigan. All seven people on board survived. |- | | |The 17-gross register ton screw steamer was wrecked after breaking her moorings and going ashore on Governor's Island or Little Calumet Island (sources disagree) in the St. Lawrence River opposite Clayton, New York. All three people on board survived.
|- | | |The schooner parted her anchor chain in a gale and high seas in the area of the Rocky Point, New York Life Saving Station. She drifted ashore east of the station and sank. Her crew was rescued by the United States Life Saving Service. |- |Nemea | |The 3,461-ton vessel was abandoned at sea in the North Atlantic. |- |Silver Star | |The 35-gross register ton schooner sank in the York River in Virginia. All three people on board survived.
|- |Emma S | |The 50-gross register ton schooner sank off Charleston, South Carolina, with the loss of all four people on board.
|- |Grace Deering | |The 627-gross register ton barge sank in the Atlantic Ocean off Miami, Florida. All six people on board survived.
|- |Turret Bell | |November gale of 1906:The 2,21-ton Whaleback cargo ship went ashore on Cable Head near St. Peter's Lake, Prince Edward Island, in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Canada. In 1908 she was towed off the beach and resunk for the Winter. Salvaged in the Summer of 1909, repaired and returned to service
|- |Harlingen | |The 3,471-ton vessel was wrecked in fog 1 1/2 miles northwest of Cabo Frio, Brazil.
|- | | |The schooner ran aground south of the Nauset, Massachusetts Life Saving Station in high winds and surf. Her crew was rescued by the United States Life Saving Service. |- | | |The 11-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer sank. All five people on board survived.
|- |Concordia | |The 423-ton vessel foundered in the North Sea. |- |Eldora | |The 52-gross register ton schooner sank north-northwest of the Cultivator Shoals off the coast of Maine. Both people on board survived.
|- |Crown | |The , 266-ton steam trawler was wrecked on the Isle of Man, southwest of Maughold Head.
|- | | |The 77-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Gay Head, Massachusetts, a total loss. She was stripped by the Underwriters. All three people on board were rescued by the United States Life Saving Service.
|- |Nan M. Dantzler | |The 224-gross register ton schooner was abandoned with the loss of one life in the Bay of Campeche off Coatzacoalcos, Mexico. There were five survivors.
|- |Margarethe | |The 574-ton vessel was sunk in a collision off Sweden. |- | | |The steamer burned in Lacasine Bayou, a tributary of the Mermenton River.
|- |Arrow | |The tug sank in a collision with () off Pier 20 in the East River.
|- |Choho Maru | |The 124-ton vessel was beached on fire near the Esaki Lighthouse, Awaji Island, Japan. |- | | | The barquentine was wrecked in fog, rain, wind, and high seas at the mouth of the Columbia River. Her crew made it to shore in the ship's boats. |- | | |The 1,934-gross register ton schooner barge or scow barge was stranded at Shinnecock, New York after losing her tow line to Edward Luckenbach () on 12 November. Vessel and cargo a total loss. All four people on board rescued by Edward Luckenbach. |- | | |With no one on board, the 14-gross register ton sidewheel motor paddle vessel sank in the Ohio River at Caseyville, Kentucky. |- |Ross | |The 1,384-ton vessel ran aground on rocks off Ireland. She got off but was leaking badly and foundered the next morning near North Bishop Rock. Her crew was picked up from her lifeboats by "Argo".
|- |Emma Claudina | |The 195-gross register ton schooner sank off Cape Elizabeth in Grays Harbor on the coast of Washington. All eight people on board survived. |- | | |The 14-gross register ton motor vessel burned at Brents Wharf, Maryland. All five people on board survived. |- | | |The 914-gross register ton screw steamer burned in the St. Clair River on the Canada-United States border between Michigan and Ontario and was beached on St. Clair Flats. All 14 people on board survived. |- |Sir Isaac Lothian Bell | |The barge was sunk in a collision with () in the St. Clair Rapids on the Canadian side of the St. Clair River in of water.
|- |James M. Hall | |The 87-gross register ton schooner was stranded in a strong wind, rain, and high seas at Long Branch, New Jersey. All four people on board were rescued by the United States Life Saving Service. |- |Lugano | |The 174-gross register ton schooner was stranded in a Gale with rain, hail and high seas at Point Judith in Narragansett Bay on the coast of Rhode Island with the loss of three lives. There were two survivors. |- |Mary Lee Newton | |The 112-gross register ton schooner was stranded in Boston Harbor on the coast of Massachusetts. All four people on board made it to shore on the vessels boat. |- |Samuel C. Holmes | |The 79-gross register ton schooner was stranded on purpose to save the crew in a strong wind, rain, and high seas off Long Branch, New Jersey yards south of James M. Hall". All four people on board were rescued by the United States Life Saving Service. |- |Unknown canal boat | |The canal boat, under tow of the tug (), was damaged in a collision with the ferry () off Grand Street, in the East River, She was towed to the foot of Rivington Street where she sank.
|- | | |The 97-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer struck a snag and sank in the Mississippi River at Torras Landing off Torras, Louisiana, near the mouth of the Red River of the South. All 20 people on board survived. |- | | |The steamer, while under tow, sprung a leak in a severe storm and sank off Pultneyville, New York. |- |Margaret Dall | |The 149-gross register ton schooner dragged anchor was stranded in a Gale with rain and rough seas in Lake Michigan on South Manitou Island off the coast of Michigan . All five people on board survived. |- |Marshall Perrin | |The 149-gross register ton schooner was stranded and broke up at Fletchers Neck on Wood Island in Saco Bay on the coast of Maine after her anchor chains parted in a gale with snow, rain and hail. Her master perished and one of her two crewmen disappeared. Her other crewman washed ashore and was her sole survivor. |- |Unknown | |The dredge filled and sank in the channel of the Shrewsbury River south west of the Spermaceti Cove, New Jersey Life Saving Station with only her upper house above water.
|- |Australian | |The 2,838-ton cargo vessel was wrecked on Vashon Head off Port Essington, 130 miles from Palmerston, Northern Territory, Australia. Crew rescued by "Pretoria". |- |Flyton | |The 553-gross register ton barge sank in the Gulf of Mexico. All four people on board survived. |- | | |The Canadian-owned, British-registered steamer struck a rock a rock off Marvin Island east of Thunder Cape, Lake Superior and sank, storms later pushed her into deep water off Trowbridge Island. The crew abandoned ship in her boats.
|- | | |The 130-gross register ton screw steamer sank after colliding with the steam screw schooner Jeannie () in Puget Sound off Alki Point just outside the harbor of Seattle, Washington. Of the 76 people on board, either 40 or 45 (sources disagree) lost their lives. |- |Luis G. Rabel | |The 582-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Bull Island on the coast of South Carolina. All seven people on board survived. |- | | |The barque ran aground in South Australia on the south coast of Kangaroo Island near the mouth of the Stun Sail Boom River, whilst on passage from Hobart to Port Pirie.
|- | | |With no one on board, the 14-gross register ton sternwheel paddle motor vessel sank in the Cumberland River at Clarksville, Tennessee.
|- | | |While no one was on board, the 35-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer burned to the waterline at either Stillwater or Duluth, Minnesota (sources disagree). |- | | |The 131-gross register ton steam canal boat struck a submerged object in Long Island Sound west-northwest of the Cornfield Point Lightship and sprang a leak. She was beached on Long Sand Shoal and was abandoned. All five people on boatrd survived. |- | | |The steamer was tied to the bank of the Barren River at Bowling Green, Kentucky, when she was struck by a waterlogged barge that was drifting downriver, sinking her. |- |Mamie Doherty | |The canal boat grounded in the Hudson River off the mouth of Poesten Kill, Troy, New York, broke in two and was abandoned. Wreck had not been removed by June 1907.
|- | | |The 1,609-gross register ton screw steamer was wrecked in Lake Erie on Point Pelee, Ontario, during a gale. All 21 people on board survived, but she was declared a total loss. |- | | |The steamer rolled over on her side and sank from unknown causes in the Monongahela River at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania off Twenty-Fifth Street. Raised, repaired, and returned to service. |- |Grayfield | |The 2121-ton vessel was wrecked on Robin Rigg, near the Solway Lightship. |- | | |The paddle steamer was rammed and sunk in fog in the Columbia River at Rainier, Oregon, by the steam schooner Cascade. She was refloated, repaired, and returned to service. |- | | |The steamer sprang a leak during a gale and snow storm between Erie, Pennsylvania, and Superior, Wisconsin, and went ashore at the mouth of the Mineral River near Ontonagon, Michigan, and was wrecked. Her crew made it to shore in boats. Total loss.
|- | | |The 1,731-gross register ton screw steamer was beached on the coast of Lake Erie east-northeast of the Fairport, Ohio, Life-Saving Station after springing a leak in high seas during a gale. All 21 people on board were rescued by the United States Life-Saving Service. |- | | |The steamer developed leaks in heavy seas and was beached at Leamington, Ontario. Later pumped out and taken for repairs. |- | | |The 87-gross register ton sidewheel paddle steamer was stranded in Lake Ontario off Pultneyville, New York. All three people on board survived. |- |Swainby | |The 3,653-ton vessel was sunk in a collision off Hartland Point, Devon, England.
|- | | |The 23-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer destroyed by fire at Florence, Alabama. All five people on board survived, but she was declared a total loss.
|- | | |The steamer struck a rock and sank at Dunkirk, New York. |- |La Rabida | |The 52-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Naubinway, Michigan. All three people on board survived.
|- |Acme | |The coal boat was damaged in a collision with () off Fourth Street, Long Island City, New York, in the East River and was beached. |- | | |The motor boat was sunk in a collision with () in the Elizabeth River.
|- |Jennie G. Pillsbury | |The 154-gross register ton schooner was stranded on Two Bush Reef in Penobscot Bay on the coast of Maine. She floated off and was leaking badly, she rolled over and drifted out to sea. She eventually drifted ashore near the Burnt Island, Maine Life Saving Station. All four people on board were rescued by the United States Life Saving Service. |- | | |The steamer was wrecked in strong wind and heavy seas 8 miles north west of the Marblehead, Ohio Life Saving Station.
|- | |' |The 72S-class torpedo boat was wrecked off Favignana, Sicily. |- |John R. Zimmerman | |The 336-gross register ton barge was stranded at the mouth of the Elizabeth River on the coast of Virginia. Both people on board survived. |- |Reindeer | |With no one on board, the 14-gross register ton schooner sank in Broad Cove off Eastport, Maine. |- | | |The steamer was tied to the bank at Grand Bayou, Louisiana, when out going tide left her grounded, she rolled over and sank. Was scheduled to be raised. |- | | |The steamer was damaged in a collision with an oil barge in the Atchafalaya River at the Lagonda Bridge, she was beached to prevent sinking.
|- |Celtic | |The 170-ton vessel suffered a broken propellor shaft and was sunk in a collision with a vessel coming to her assistance in the North Sea. |- |Monarch | |The 140-ton fishing vessel foundered in the North Sea. |- | | |The steamer capsized during a heavy squall near Antioch, California. Raised and repaired.
|- | | |The tug was lost in a storm on Lake Erie sometime in November. |- | | |The barque departed from Callao, Peru for Melbourne, Australia on 26 November. No further trace, presumed foundered in the Pacific Ocean with the loss of all hands. |- | | |The steamer was lost in a storm on Lake Erie sometime in November. |- | | |The steamer was lost in a storm on Lake Erie sometime in November. |- |Little Malta | |The steam trawler sank in the Teifi Estuary. |- | | |The steamer was lost in a storm on Lake Erie sometime in November. |- | | |The steamer was tied to the shore, New Orleans area, and was stranded by dropping water with her stern sunk low in the mud sometime in November. Was expected to be raised. |- | | |The tug was lost in a storm on Lake Erie sometime in November.
|- |Adam W. Spies | |The 1,222-gross register ton schooner was stranded in the Gulf of Mexico west of Stirrup Key () in the Florida Keys. All 10 people on board survived. |- |Charles G. Hill | |The 192-gross register ton barge sank in of water in the Hudson River off Marlborough, New York, her mast sticking several feet above the water. The only person on board survived. Wreck removed by 17 December.
|- | | |The 2,000-ton cargo barque was wrecked at Horse Island, Dunmore Head, Kilbaha, Shannon Estuary, County Clare, Ireland, United Kingdom. |- | | |The steamer caught fire and sank in of water near the White River, Michigan Life Saving Station. |- |Virginian | |The 309-gross register ton barge was stranded at Branford, Connecticut. The only person on board survived.
|- |A. P. Emerson | |The 243-gross register ton schooner sank off Cape Sable, Newfoundland. All six people on board survived. |- |Captain Jameson | |The barge went ashore at Mumford Cove, near Groton Long Point, Connecticut. |- |Providence | |The 1,651-gross register ton iron-hulled schooner barge or scow barge was abandoned in the North Atlantic Ocean east of North Carolina at . All eight people on board survived. |- |Thomas M. Righter | |The barge sank a off the Southwest Ledge Light, New Haven, Connecticut. |- | | |The 27-gross register ton steam catamaran was destroyed by fire on the White River at Gainer's Ferry near Batesville, Arkansas. All eight people on board survived. |- |Virginian | |The barge sank in heavy seas between the Branford Beacon and the Southwest Ledge Light, New Haven, Connecticut.
|- | | |The 145-gross register ton motor vessel was stranded at Port au Port, Newfoundland, with the loss of one life. There were 11 survivors. |- |Emma R. Harvey | |The 286-gross register ton schooner was stranded in Digby Gut on the coast of Nova Scotia with the loss of two lives. There were five survivors. |- | | |The 82-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer burned at Greenwood, Mississippi, at the confluence of the Tallahatchie, Yalobusha, and Yazoo Rivers. All 28 people on board survived.
|- | | |The tug was damaged in a collision with the tug () off the Morris Canal basin, Jersey City, New Jersey, and was beached, but sank.
|- |Bonny Doon | |The 570-gross register ton barkentine was stranded on Stone Horse Shoal on the coast of Massachusetts, sinking in 16 to 20 feet of water. Wreck removed with Dynamite starting between 21 and 24 January 1907, halted by weather and finishing between 24 March and 1 April 1907. All eight people on board survived. |- | | |The passenger steamer was grounded across the river from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on flats off Pettys Island where fireboats from Philadelphia extinguished a fire in her holds that had started on 5 December off Absecon Lighthouse. Pumped out on 7 December. |- |Florence I. Lockwood | |The 299-gross register ton schooner was stranded and sank on Williams Shoal at Chincoteague Inlet on the coast of Virginia. All six people on board were rescued by the United States Life Saving Service. |- | | |The 1,575-gross register ton full-rigged ship sank in a gale in the North Pacific Ocean west of Cape Flattery, Washington, with the loss of her cook and a cabin Boy who died of exposure after the sinking. 16 survivors were rescued from debris on 8 December by (). |- | | |The passenger-package freighter strayed off course and was wrecked when she ran into the palisade area on the north side of Blake Point on Isle Royale in Lake Superior at full speed at night with the loss of one life. All other passengers and crew evacuated safely onto Isle Royale, where they camped for four days until rescued on 10 December 1906. During the night of 11âÂÂ12 December 1906, the wreck broke into two pieces, leaving only the bow section visible.
|- |Buena Vista | |The 1,600-gross register ton steel-hulled schooner barge or scow barge, under tow of (), foundered in a northeast gale east-southeast of Montauk Point, Long Island, New York, with the loss of three crewmen. There were two survivors. |- |Coloma | |The 852-gross register ton bark was abandoned in the Pacific Ocean off Cape Beale, Vancouver Island, British Columbia. All ten people on board survived. |- |Ella Rohlffs | |Carrying 10 passengers, a crew of 12, and a 10-ton cargo of empty beer kegs, lumber, and miscellaneous boxes on a voyage from Howkan to Ketchikan, District of Alaska, with a stop at Coppermount, the 149-gross register ton, steamer ran aground during a snowstorm on the north end of Long Island in the Alexander Archipelago in Southeast Alaska about north of Howkan without loss of life. The steamer Cordova () took off her passengers on 8 December. |- |isle of Iona | |The 1,139-ton vessel was wrecked near Whitby, England. |- | | |The lighter was damaged in a collision with a float towed by the tug () off Pier 6, North River and was abandoned by her crew. After being abandoned she had a slight collision with the tug (), she was then towed by W. H. Flannery to the Bedloe Island flats where she sank. |- | | |The 1,289-gross register ton full-rigged ship or Barque became waterlogged and was abandoned in the Pacific Ocean at (). All 16 people on board survived.
|- |Charles L. Mitchell | |The 597-gross register ton schooner was abandoned off Cape Henry, Virginia. All seven people on board survived. |- |Heinrich Gehrke | |The 1,278-ton vessel foundered off Rixhoft. |- | | |The 18-gross register ton screw steamer burned on Lake Erie at Dunkirk, New York. All five people on board survived. |- |William Marshall | |The 305-gross register ton schooner was abandoned in a waterlogged condition. She stranded off Highland Light on Cape Cod on the coast of Massachusetts on 11 December, and broke up in a storm later in the month. All six people on board survived.
|- |Heathpool | |The 3,828-ton vessel was wrecked near the Outer Dowsing Lightship in a storm. All on board, crew of 24 & a pilot, were lost.
|- |Segesta | |The 1,782-ton vessel was sunk in a collision with "Lula" () off Cyrenaica, Italian Libya. |- |Victoria |Unknown |The passenger steamer was sunk in of water at Brockville, Ontario.
|- |J. J. Stewart | |The 51-gross register ton schooner sank in the James River in Virginia. All four people on board survived.
|- | | |The schooner was wrecked off Goose Island, Isaac's Harbour, Nova Scotia. |- |Genâ²l J. L. Selfridge | |The 20-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Fisherman Island on the coast of Virginia. Both people on board survived. |- | | |The 2,126-gross register ton screw steamer ran aground on Big Summer Island in Michigan during a snowstorm and broke up. All 21 people on board survived. |- | | |The 9-gross register ton motor vessel sank in West Pass at Apalachicola Bay on the coast of Florida. All three people on board survived.
|- |Columbia | |The tug struck an obstruction in the Patapsco River and developed a leak. She sank after making it to dock. Later raised. |- |Edgar Randall | |The 62-gross register ton schooner was lost when she collided with the screw steamer () off Mobile, Alabama. All eight people on board survived. |- |No. 7 | |The 65-gross register ton scow was lost when she collided with the screw steamer () at Lime Kiln Crossing in the Detroit River on the Canada-United States border between Michigan and Ontario. All nine people on board survived. |- |Themis | |During a voyage from Ketchikan, District of Alaska, to Crofton, British Columbia, carrying a load of copper ore and canned salmon, the steam cargo ship struck Crocker Rock northwest of Scarlett Point on Vancouver Island and sank without loss of life.
|- | | |The 70-gross register ton schooner, a pilot boat, was sunk in a collision with the screw steamer () off Sandy Hook, New Jersey. All 10 people on board survived. Note: In 1897, the James Gordon Bennett was bought by Miller J. Morse of the Atlantic Yacht Club and made into a yacht. He changed her name to Hermit. |- | | |After suffering a fire in her port coal bunker earlier in the day, the 59-gross register ton tow screw steamer reignited at 8 P.M. and got out of hand and she sank at dock at Mill's Shipyard in Camden, New Jersey, because of a fire in her starboard coal bunker. Her after house and decks was destroyed. All four people on board survived. |- |Surprise | |The 197-ton vessel was wrecked on Ardmore Island. |- |The Rose | |The 142-ton vessel was sunk in a collision off The Nash.
|- | | |With no one on board, the 16-gross register ton screw steamer was stranded at Ontonagon, Michigan. |- |Billiton | |The 302-ton vessel struck a coral reef and foundered off the Natuna Islands, Netherlands East Indies. |- | | |The sidewheel wrecking steamer caught fire at dock at Rondout, New York, and later sank when her seacocks were open to put out the fire. The vessel was scheduled to be raised in Spring 1907. |- | | |The passenger ship ran aground off Plum Point, Kingston, Jamaica, and was wrecked. The wreck sank during a seaquake in 1907.
|- | | |The steamer sank after colliding with the steamer Arlington () in the English Channel off Dungeness, Kent, United Kingdom.
|- |Charlotte Ann Pigot | |The 28-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Port Royal, South Carolina. All three people on board survived. |- |Elfrida | |The 2,257-ton vessel was sunk in a collision with "Glenlee" () in thick fog off Flamborough Head. Crew rescued by Glenlee. |- |P. T. Barnum | |The 667-gross register ton schooner was abandoned in the North Atlantic Ocean east of Bodie Island in the Outer Banks of North Carolina. All eight people on board survived. |- | | |The 244-gross register ton sternwheel paddle steamer was wrecked when her boilers exploded on the Mississippi River at Gold Dust Landing 17 miles below Vicksburg, Mississippi. Of the 65 people on board, either 10 (her master, eight crewmen, and one passenger) or 12 were killed, according to different sources.
|- | | |With no one on board, the 9-gross register ton motor vessel was stranded at Brooklyn, New York.
|- |Edgar | |The 15-gross register ton scow sank at Everett, Washington. The only person on board survived. |- | | |The passenger steamer caught fire and was beached off Port Dufferin, Nova Scotia. |- |Tilley | |The ketch sprang a leak in the Bristol Channel and was abandoned. Her three crew were rescued by Ragusa 2 ().
|- |Beatrice | |The 712-ton vessel was wrecked at the mouth of the harbor at Sydney, C.B.. |- |Kong Enge | |The 688-ton vessel was wrecked in Skjalfand Bay Iceland. |- |Strathconia | |The 284-ton vessel burned off Port Dufferin.
|- | | |The sail vessel sank in a collision in the Patapsco River near Seven Foot Knoll, Maryland, with the tug (). The crew were rescued.
|- |Casper Heft | |The 107-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Smiths Point, Virginia. All four people on board survived. |- |Lytton | |The petroleum barge exploded on a slipway at Dalla, British Burma.
|- |Endeavour | |The 226-ton vessel was wrecked at Providence. |- |Teutonic | |The , 152-ton steam trawler sank in the North Sea.
|- |Carrollton | |The 1,450-gross register ton bark was stranded at Midway Atoll in the Pacific Ocean. All 15 people on board survived. |- |Hazeldene | |The 2,204-ton vessel was wrecked in snow squalls and sleet on Cannon Rock, 3 miles from Cloughy, County Down, Ireland, U.K.. |- | | |The 16-gross register ton screw steamer burned at Keyport, Washington. All three people on board survived.
|- | | |The 14-gross register ton screw steamer burned at Mobile, Alabama. All four people on board survived. |- |Redwood | |The 1,197-ton vessel was wrecked at Wyk.
|- | | |The schooner stranded on Jetty Sands west north west of the Point Adams, Oregon Life Saving Station. Refloated 14 January 1907. |- |Orion | |The 1,097-ton vessel was sunk in a collision in The Humber. |- | | |The 1,057-gross register ton steel-hulled steam sidewheel paddle ferry sank with the loss of one life after colliding with the schooner barge Flora () â towed by the tug () â in the North River off Christopher Street in of water in New York City. Joshua Lovett and the tug () rescued Patersons 14 survivors. Wreck reduced in height to clearance by June 1907. |- |Ralph F. Hodgdon | |The 90-gross register ton schooner burned in the Bay of Islands on the coast of Newfoundland. All six people on board survived.
|- | | |The 12-gross register ton sternwheel motor paddle vessel sank at Tiptonville, Tennessee. Both people on board survived. |- |Lavinia | |The 40-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Waikiki on Oahu, Hawaii. All five people on board survived.
|- | | |The steamer sank at dock during a heavy gale at San Diego, California. Raised and repaired.
|- | | |The tug struck a rock and sank off Pie Island in of water in either January, June or July. Raised, repaired and returned to service. |- |Annie | |The 15-gross register ton schooner was stranded at Brunswick, Georgia. Both people on board survived. |- | | |With no one on board, the 22-gross register ton motor paddle vessel was stranded in the Colorado River in the Arizona Territory. |- |Bergen | |The lifeboat was lost during a rescue operation off Stave, Andøya. |- |Carita | |The vessel was lost in the Inside Passage in Tongass Narrows in the Alexander Archipelago in Southeast Alaska near Ketchikan, District of Alaska. |- |Catherine | |With no one aboard, the 12-gross register ton sloop-rigged yacht sank in the Christiana River in Delaware. |- |Colombia | |The 1,202-ton vessel departed Wallaroo, Australia on 26 January for Falmouth and vanished. |- |C. Paulsen | |The 701-ton barque departed Cuxhaven, Germany 31 January and vanished. |- |Gracie | |With no one on board, the 40-gross register ton schooner was stranded on the Savannah River in Georgia. |- |Harvest Home | |The 78-gross register ton schooner was lost when she collided with an unidentified British vessel off Cape Cod, Massachusetts. All three people on board survived. |- |Helvecia II | |The small cargo carrying tugboat departed San Carlos de Bariloche sometime in 1906 and vanished on Lake Nahuel Huapi. Wreck located in 2024. |- | | |The 80-ton coastal lighter sank. She was refloated, lengthened to 77 ft, repaired, and returned to service. |- |Jorgen Bang | |The 675-ton vessel departed Surabaya, Netherlands East Indies on 22 March for Delagoa Bay, Portuguese Mozambique. Last seen in the Bali Strait 28 March and vanished. |- | | |The steamer sunk sometime in 1906 in the Menominee River at Milwaukee, Wisconsin. She was refloated in mid 1907. |- |Polly | |The steam tug sank in the Yukon River. |- |Rodenbek | |The 1,602-ton brigantine departed Liverpool 23 January for Australia and vanished after being spoken to on 12 February at (). |- |Sandbeck | |The 293-ton vessel sank in the River Niger sometime in 1906. |- |Sorata | |The 733-ton vessel departed Apia, Samoa on 25 January for Marseille and vanished. |- |Stetson and Ellison | |The 56-gross register ton schooner sank in Delaware Bay. All four people on board survived. |- |West Side | |The United States Department of Commerce and Labor publication Thirty-Ninth Annual List of Merchant Vessels of the United States for the Year Ending June 30, 1907, reported that the 324-gross register ton schooner was stranded in Georgian Bay near Parry Sound, Ontario, Canada, on an unidentified date. All six people on board survived.