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  1. #1
    pt
    Oct 2009
    Lisbon
    684
    2 times

    Passed away: Keith Jessop, salvage diver

    From Times Online, May 29, 2010

    Keith Jessop: salvage diver

    On May 2, 1942, after three days of attacks by German submarines, destroyers
    and aircraft in the Barents Sea, the mortally wounded cruiser HMS Edinburgh
    was given her coup de grâce by a torpedo fired from one of her escorting
    destroyers, and slid from sight beneath the waves. About 840 of her crew of
    nearly 900 who had not been killed in the attacks on her had been safely
    transferred to other British warships of the convoy escort.

    The sailors had been saved, but a cargo of bullion, 4½ long tons (4,572kg)
    of gold bars, carried in the cruiser’s bomb room, went to the bottom with
    her. The 465 gold ingots were part of Stalin’s payment to Britain for the
    supplies and military aid that the Allies were shipping to the Soviet Union
    along the perilous Murmansk convoy route. In the years following the end of
    the war they were to become the focus of an intensive effort to recover them
    by successive British governments.

    Finally, in the early 1980s, after several abortive efforts to retrieve the
    gold, the self-made diver Keith Jessop achieved the remarkable feat that had
    eluded a number of long-established, well-financed salvage companies. It was
    the culmination of a government effort that had been a stop-start affair
    since 1954 when a contract had been awarded to the UK-based company Risdon
    Beazley, but work had been aborted by strained relations between the British
    and Soviet governments. The designation of the Edinburgh site as a war grave
    in 1957 only complicated matters, putting a further stop to intrusive
    exploration of the wreck.

    But in the late 1970s, with a Labour Government increasingly anxious to
    recover the gold to swell the Exchequer’s coffers, efforts were renewed, and
    a number of companies made bids for the contract. In 1981 Jessop Marine,
    which under its founder had developed complex cutting machinery and the
    saturation diving techniques that enabled divers to avoid the deadly effects
    of the “bends”, permitting them to work at depth for long periods, won the
    argument about sensitivity to a war grave site against other companies which
    favoured explosives-led methods of entering the wreck.

    In April 1981 Jessop’s survey ship Dammtor had located the cruiser’s final
    resting place at a depth of 800ft (245m) in a position approximately 72.35N,
    35.00E. Its detailed filming of the wreck enabled Jessop to plan his
    operation with military precision. By August 30 that year the dive-support
    vessel Stephaniturm was at the wreck site and salvage operations began in
    earnest. In spite of injury to several of the Jessop marine divers, on
    September 15 one of them penetrated the armoured room and recovered the
    first bar of gold. Over the next three weeks, until bad weather forced the
    suspension of diving on October 7, 431 of the 465 ingots were been
    recovered, worth an estimated £45 million.

    It was a triumph for Jessop, an entirely self-made man who had been born
    into poverty and had no background in either diving or marine salvage. He
    had been born at Keighley, West Yorkshire, in 1933, the son of a textile
    mill worker. Leaving school without any qualifications, he followed his
    father into the mill, married a local girl, had three children and looked to
    be set for the life of drudgery that that been the lot of his own parents.
    Lent some scuba diving equipment by a friend for recreation at weekends, he
    began to see the possibilities of making a modest living and began to
    salvage scrap metal, brass and copper fittings from wrecks in shallow water
    off the west coast of Scotland. As time went by he acquired an ex-Fleetwood
    trawler and began to systematise his operation, working on larger wrecks and
    retrieving more saleable items.

    Having survived the risks he took in his early years, he took professional
    training in deep sea diving. In 1969 he salvaged a cargo of copper from the
    3,000-ton Finnish motor vessel Johanna Thorden, which had run aground near
    the island of Swona in the Pentland Firth while on passage home from New
    York in 1937. As a result he began to make a reputation as a diver who would
    attempt salvage operations in places others preferred to avoid.

    By the time the question of trying to find the Edinburgh and salvage her
    precious cargo was reopened in the 1970s he was in unique position to gain
    the contract, as a result of the techniques both in diving and in salvaging
    that he had developed, although as a small salvage operator with no
    financial backing he had to take out a second mortage on his home. Although
    the British and Soviet governments were the principal beneficiaries of the
    salvage, Jessop Marine earned about £2 million. But for Jessop there was a
    somewhat sour aftermath to the triumph of 1981. Other, much larger
    companies, could not believe that this “underwater scrap merchant” could
    have “stolen”, as they saw it, the contract from under their noses. In
    February 1983 Jessop found himself charged with conspiracy to defraud two
    rival firms for the contract, having allegedly bribed an official of the
    Salvage Association. After a two-week trial both Jessop and the accused
    official were cleared of all charges at the Old Bailey in April 1984.

    Nevertheless the whole affair damaged the reputation of Jessop Marine and
    its ability to function during the period between charges being laid and his
    acquittal. Jessop was convinced that he had been the victim of a conspiracy,
    and left Britain to work abroad. He carried out a number of adventurous
    explorations on the old Spanish Main, including searches for the lost
    treasure of Henry Morgan and the wreck of Columbus’s flagship Santa Maria.
    Latterly he had lived in France.

    In 2001 he published a memoir detailing his exploits entitled Goldfinder.
    He married, in 1955, Mildred Woodhouse. The marriage was dissolved, and he
    is survived by two sons, a daughter and his partner Deborah.

    Keith Jessop, salvage diver, was born on May 10, 1933. He died on May 22,
    2010, aged 77.

  2. #2
    mx
    Nov 2004
    Alamos,Sonora,Mexico
    8,707
    8 times

    Re: Passed away: Keith Jessop, salvage diver

    Gracias Alexandre': Me ecanto' , mas por favor -- si tienes interes en el sr Morgan, Habla con el sr Chagy.

    Thanks Alexandre: Loved it, more please. If you are interested in Henry Morgan, talk to Chagy.

    Don Jose de La Mancha

    "I exist to live, not live to exist"

  3. #3

    Apr 2005
    857

    Re: Passed away: Keith Jessop, salvage diver

    Alexandre,

    Thanks for posting this. In light of your previous posts, I wonder if you would say whether you approve of Keith's efforts in salvaging the gold from the Edinburgh. He did so at the requests of the Governments that owned the ship and the gold, who got the vast majority of the benefits, and he made a couple of million pounds in the very dangerous process.

    I think he did a very good thing in very difficult circumstances.

    Mariner

  4. #4

    Mar 2006
    7

    Re: Passed away: Keith Jessop, salvage diver

    My condolences to Mr. Jessop's loved ones - He is a great inspiration to me.

 

 

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