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STEED
09-26-11, 12:50 PM
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/uk-ship-sunk-u-boat-discovered-164528145.html

Quick get that £132 million, we need it to help pay the debt.

Osmium Steele
09-26-11, 01:00 PM
Good luck recovering the silver from 3 miles down.

Incredible find though!

BossMark
09-26-11, 01:02 PM
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/uk-ship-sunk-u-boat-discovered-164528145.html

Quick get that £132 million, we need it to help pay the debt.
Yep tossers Dave and George would like it to say we have cleared £132m off our debts :har:

Rhodes
09-26-11, 03:46 PM
Damn, it shoud been sunk near Madeira...:arrgh!:

sidslotm
09-26-11, 03:58 PM
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/uk-ship-sunk-u-boat-discovered-164528145.html

Quick get that £132 million, we need it to help pay the debt.

you got a dept then Steed, I have't :cool:

Torplexed
09-26-11, 07:55 PM
I hope they got the ship's manifest right. It would be embarrassing to recover the cargo and find it was actually rubber or coal. :D

They keep reporting it on the radio today as "a ship that was sunk by a Nazi torpedo", as if the warhead was emblazoned with a big black swastika. I guess German torpedo didn't sound dramatic enough. :doh:

papa_smurf
09-27-11, 05:20 AM
Could this be the start of a new rush to salvage other sunken ships form this era. Not to put a downer on this, but many sailors went down with these ships and thus can be considered as war graves.

Jimbuna
09-27-11, 07:09 AM
The salvage company do best out of it...80% of the cargoes value :o

papa_smurf
09-27-11, 07:44 AM
The salvage company do best out of it...80% of the cargoes value :o

I think thats due to the ship been sunk in international waters, if it was in UK territorial water UK government would get more, if not all (I think, may be wrong).

Jimbuna
09-27-11, 08:15 AM
I think thats due to the ship been sunk in international waters, if it was in UK territorial water UK government would get more, if not all (I think, may be wrong).

Either way it's not going to go very far....might cover Camerons QPR season ticket :DL

Herr-Berbunch
09-27-11, 08:42 AM
The salvage company do best out of it...80% of the cargoes value :o

That's just over £100m, but what cost to recover the load? There will be a profit, I imagine, but not too much.

Jimbuna
09-27-11, 09:54 AM
That's just over £100m, but what cost to recover the load? There will be a profit, I imagine, but not too much.

Well personally speaking, if she has war dead aboard I'd rather they left her alone.

Rongel
09-28-11, 09:15 AM
Whoa!

I just read more about this from the newspaper. It read that the captain of the U-boat was Ernst Mengersen. U-101 fired four torpedoes but only one hit the ship. Still the 5237 ton ship went down in 20 minutes. And this was the shocking part, 85 crewmembers escaped to lifeboats, but the crew of the U-boat fired them with machineguns and only one survived, man called Richard Ayres.

EDIT: Weird, one newsite says that the lifeboats capsized and the men drown, no word about shootings...

mookiemookie
09-28-11, 09:19 AM
They keep reporting it on the radio today as "a ship that was sunk by a Nazi torpedo", as if the warhead was emblazoned with a big black swastika. I guess German torpedo didn't sound dramatic enough. :doh:

Hey you don't know, maybe that torpedo was a card carrying member of the party. :ping:

Hottentot
09-28-11, 10:40 AM
Whoa!

I just read more about this from the newspaper. It read that the captain of the U-boat was Ernst Mengersen. U-101 fired four torpedoes but only one hit the ship. Still the 5237 ton ship went down in 20 minutes. And this was the shocking part, 85 crewmembers escaped to lifeboats, but the crew of the U-boat fired them with machineguns and only one survived, man called Richard Ayres.

EDIT: Weird, one newsite says that the lifeboats capsized and the men drown, no word about shootings...

Here is the U-boat.net's article (http://www.uboat.net/allies/merchants/ships/765.html) on the ship

And here is how they tell the events:

At 00.08 hours on 17 Feb, 1941, the unescorted Gairsoppa (Master Gerald Hyland) was hit on the starboard side just behind the bridge in #2 hold by one G7a torpedo from U-101 (http://www.uboat.net/boats/u101.htm) about 300 miles southwest of Galway Bay, Ireland. The ship had been in convoy SL-64 (http://www.uboat.net/ops/convoys/convoys.php?convoy=SL-64) which was slowed down by bad weather and running low on coal, she was detached alone to Galway on 15 February.

At 18.00 hours on 16 February, the U-boat spotted the ship but had troubles to hit the target due to heavy seas and missed with a spread of two torpedoes at 23.28 hours and one G7e torpedo at 23.32 hours. The Gairsoppa caught fire and settled slowly by the bow after being hit in the third attack, but Mengersen decided to give up further attacks when a coup de grāce missed at 00.20 hours, assuming correctly that the burning freighter will sink anyway in the heavy seas.

The survivors managed to abandon ship in three lifeboats before she sank within 20 minutes. However, two of the boats were never seen again and its occupants presumably perished in the cold and bad weather. The boat in charge of the second officer set sail with eight Europeans and 23 Lascars aboard, but after seven days most had died of exposure and only four Europeans and two Lascars were still alive when the boat reached land on 1 March. Sadly, it capsized in the swell and surf of Caerthillian Cove on The Lizard, Cornwall and all occupants drowned except the second officer, who was rescued unconscious by a coastguard. The bodies of two Europeans and the two unidentified Lascars were recovered and buried in the Landewednack Churchyard. The master, 82 crew members and two gunners were lost.

Edit: Also, it appears Mengersen survived the war. I suppose they would have tried him as war criminal if such shooting had happened.

Rongel
09-28-11, 11:16 AM
Here is the U-boat.net's article (http://www.uboat.net/allies/merchants/ships/765.html) on the ship

And here is how they tell the events:

Edit: Also, it appears Mengersen survived the war. I suppose they would have tried him as war criminal if such shooting had happened.

Thanks for the info,

really weird that the newspaper talked about crew gunning the survivors! The article was from international news agencies, STT-Reuters-AFP. There was a mention about the capsizing lifeboat after the shoot. But it almost read like it was a massacre. It's something like this in english: "Some of the 85 crewmembers managed to get to lifeboats, but at the same time the crew of the u-boat was firing them with machineguns". :dead:

What?!

Jimbuna
09-29-11, 07:48 AM
I've two book references to the sinking and neither make mention of shooting of survivors.

Herr-Berbunch
09-29-11, 07:53 AM
Sounds like a journalist doing what a journalist does, take two seperate stories and cherry-pick the sensational bits to make one gripping read. Don't let facts get in the way of a good story! :nope: