Underwater armour find is a mystery

kenb

Bronze Member
Dec 3, 2004
1,894
30
Long Island New York
Detector(s) used
White's XLT
Undersea armour find is a mystery

DIVERS are trying to solve a mystery as to why a batch of Army vehicles and a huge gun were found at the bottom of the sea.
Thirty-five members of the Southsea Sub Aqua Club will be spending a week in July diving eight miles south of East Wittering, West Sussex, to try to discover why two tanks, two bulldozers and a field gun managed to end up 59ft under water.
The rusting vehicles – and there may be more – have been known about for some time but until now no-one has carried out a full site survey to work out what models the vehicles and field gun are and whether there is anything else down there.
The belief is that they were probably bound for the Normandy beaches and somehow fell off a landing craft during a storm.
Leading the team will be Alison Mayor, who admitted she had become hooked by the mystery.
She said: 'We dived the site in April 2004 and the visibility was terrible but we all thought at the time let's go back and do it properly. But we never got to go back.
'The thing is there's no shipwreck nearby but there are five items and that says to me it's something to do with D-Day.
'We will be trying to find out how those military vehicles came to be lying on the seabed.
'We also want to do a site survey and record whether they are British, American or Canadian – it could be any of them.
'We've been in touch with the tank museum at Bovington, which has given us information on how to identify the tanks
'The theory is that they fell off a section of a mulberry harbour road bridge called a Whale Bridge. But I think it's more likely to have been they fell off a landing craft tank or landing ship tank.'
The club has also been in touch with the Ministry of Defence, the Receiver of Wrecks and the Hydrographic Office to see if these organisations can shed any light on the mystery.


kenb
 

OP
OP
kenb

kenb

Bronze Member
Dec 3, 2004
1,894
30
Long Island New York
Detector(s) used
White's XLT
I get updates maybee 25% of the time and post them, I'll keep my eye out for you Nick.

kenb
 

corklabus

Full Member
Dec 5, 2007
126
2
West Virginia
Detector(s) used
none yet
I recall reading somewhere a long time ago that a lot of those PT type transporters sank on their way to the beaches of Normandy. So many so that the troops were nearly cut by a third or more. Shear weight and rough waters spelled doom for many of them. These vehicles may very well just be some of those.
 

DCMatt

Gold Member
Oct 12, 2006
10,356
13,478
Herndon Virginia
Detector(s) used
Minelab Equinox 600, EX II, & Musketeer, White's Classic
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
I used to work for a guy who was on a "clean up" crew in the south pacific towards the end of WWII. He said they simply picked up everything that was military and threw it in the ocean. It was a fast, easy, cheap way to clean up the islands used by the military as they hopped across the ocean on the way to Japan.

DCMatt
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Top