Firstly, the costs involved in moving her whole would probably have been high enough to make the likelyhood of her being scrapped a definite possibility, so chopping her up is the only compromise. Also, there is the access issue, if I were a wheelchair user with my interest in U-boats, I'd really be quite offended if somebody were to argue that I should be denied the chance to see her in her entirety just because they didn't want her to lose her shape.
I think what they've done is respectful in that it preserves her interior as she was found which probably provokes more awe than if she were restored, and nobody is denied the chance to experience her to the same level as anybody else. I'd hate to be told 'You wait out here while I go inside and see things you can only dream about'.
Cutting her was best for her and everybody who wants to see her. It wasn't done by 'butchers'.
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The owl and the pussycat went to sea in a beautiful pea-green boat.
It only took one T1 eel to convince that boat not to float.
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