SEA GRAVEYARDS
SHIPS WRECKED BY WRECKS TRAPS ON' ENGLISH COAST The coasts of Britain are littered ■with wrecks which are the dread ot every skipper, writes a London exchange. They are the unknown, unchartered quantities. At any moment may come that shock which makes the great steel hull quiver. Rocks and shoals may be skirted with ease, but what if the water of the fairway glides a horrid hulk! Many of these graveyards under the sea are known, but there are countless others, sunk in the flurry of the storm, which are never located •—until fate strikes and wreck piles tipon wreck. Only recently the Solway Firth struck a submerged wreck off Margate Roads. She was among the fortunate, for her crew of ten were rescued and the vessel was beached on Shingle Bank. But that is child's play compared with the great graveyards. Romance lies in them as in the landsman’s sacred acre. Lives are lost and fortunes won all the year round in salvage work. If the sea would lay bare the lockers of Davy Jones, there would be found riches in gold, silver and precious stones mingled with the bones of those who have paid forfeit. At the moment there is a battle as to wAo should be held responsible for the wreck ot a vessel named the Spider, which is ashore off Lowestoft, and has been for several years. This wreck is a veritable spider. She is covered when the waves run high, and is causing other ships to be wrecked around her. Obviously it is someone's duty to remove her, and the subject has been before the Marine Department of the Board of Trade, Trinity House and a railway company, who either chartered or owned her. The harbour authorities disclaim responsibility, notwithstanding the wreck is a menace. There is a wreck at Rye which is w-ell out of reach of winter gales. Here a family lives. The vessel is perfectly dry at low water, but when the tide rises round her the wreck dwellers use a dinghy when they want to come ashore. It Is quite dry and comfortable— and they are not eternally bothered by rate and tax collectors.
There are times when wrecks come ashore to stay until they are either cut up or they rot to pieces. Such a wreck was the s.s. Wick Bay, which stranded in the Wash with* a full cargo on board. There were only certain times of the tide that the work of salvage could be carried out, and men were kept busy for years" in removing cargo and everything in the way of machinery and fittings until morning was left but the skeleton. Whoever die! the salvage work reaped a harvest through someone else’s misfortune. When recently a vessel was piled nigh and dry with a general cargo, the wreck fetched a mere song. The purchaser undertook to remove it. and as there were only a few farmers’ in the locality where the vessel stranded, the enterprising man had things pretty much his own wav He did remarkably well until they'came to the lower part of the main hold where a consignment of beer and spirits were stored. Work was suspended. Winter set in and much of the otherwise good cargo was destroyed.
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Bibliographic details
Sun (Auckland), Volume II, Issue 554, 5 January 1929, Page 14
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547SEA GRAVEYARDS Sun (Auckland), Volume II, Issue 554, 5 January 1929, Page 14
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