WHAT
LURKS BENEATH THE DEPTHS?The
Kent and Sussex coastline is one of the richest areas in the UK
for historical treasure, but before you head off to see for yourself,
don鈥檛 forget to pack your snorkel and flippers.
There
are nearly 4,000 recorded wrecks around the coast. Inside Out begins
its search with just two, each hiding a very different cargo -
one an unexploded time bomb, the other a goldmine.
Very
unusual cargoJust
two miles off the port of Sheerness, Kent, is the Montgomery, one
of 2000 liberty ships built by the Americans in W.W.II. Used to
transport supplies, this liberty ship had a more unusual cargo than
most - 6,000 tons of explosives.
The
Montgomery arrived in Kent on the 20th August 1944. Over night,
the ship was blown onto shallow sands, where it broke its back
and sank.
24
hour monitoringAlthough
part of the cargo was removed, 3,000 tons of explosives still remain
- enough to blow Sheerness itself right out of the water! | The
South coast has been the scene of many a shipwreck |
Not
surprisingly, the wreck is monitored 24 hours a day with an alarm
rigged to alert vessels in danger of sailing too near.
But
before house prices in Sheerness plummet and everyone heads inland,
it鈥檚 worth noting that the Montgomery has laid quietly there for
60 years and appears stable.
In
fact attempting to relieve the vessel of its volatile cargo could
be fraught with more difficulties than leaving it to rest in peace - which
we sincerely hope she does!
Illegal
cargoFor
all the dangers that lie on the sea bed, there are also rewards,
as a group of divers discovered to their advantage. In
1894, off the coast of Dungeness, the Dutch-registered steamship,
The Castor, went down in thick fog. She was sailing from Turkey
with a highly valuable, but illegal cargo destined for a Dutch museum.
The cargo was not to be seen again until the 1990s.
Local
divers Colin and Luke recovered seven pieces of marble; two heads
and five funerary slabs which turned out to be ancient Greco Roman
marbles dating back over 2,000 years.
Far
from making them an interesting focal point in their back garden,
Colin and Luke declared their find to the receiver of the wreck
- not an easy task when the ship sank over 200 years ago. Generous
reward | Many
more wrecks are waiting to be explored |
After
three years of inquiries, the marbles were finally returned to Turkey
where they鈥檇 been illegally exported 100 years earlier.
The
divers did not go away empty-handed, picking up a substantial salvage
reward, more than enough to pay for several interesting focal points
in their gardens! So
if any budding treasure seekers out there fancy a challenge, there
are 4,000 wrecks just waiting to be explored. But
before you grab that wetsuit with pound signs in your eyes - take
heed - the goldmine may turn out to be a ticking time bomb! |