It is sad, but it is unfortunately the fact that a wooden boat of that age is a significant commitment and it is going to be increasingly difficult to find private owners for them who will be prepared to put in the time and money to keep them afloat. It is a pity that nobody thought to offer it to one of the dockyard museums around - Chatham or Portsmouth, for example. The time must be fast approaching when those will be the only homes able to give these historic old boats the care they need.
In reality, does anyone really want to preserve them? Do people want to go along to museums to see random old boats which might have been used momentarily for something significant?
It is sad, but it is unfortunately the fact that a wooden boat of that age is a significant commitment and it is going to be increasingly difficult to find private owners for them who will be prepared to put in the time and money to keep them afloat. It is a pity that nobody thought to offer it to one of the dockyard museums around - Chatham or Portsmouth, for example. The time must be fast approaching when those will be the only homes able to give these historic old boats the care they need.
In reality, does anyone really want to preserve them? Do people want to go along to museums to see random old boats which might have been used momentarily for something significant?
Wasn't 'Compass Rose' the name of the ship in Monserrat's 'The Cruel Sea'?
Yes it was.Wasn't 'Compass Rose' the name of the ship in Monserrat's 'The Cruel Sea'?
Yes it was.
I struggle to work out why items, in this case a boat, are held in such high reverence just because they were involved in some act and must be saved at all costs. Back in 1993 I met a group of men who arrived in France on D-Day H-hour 0, some of the paratroopers before H-Hour! I don't expect any of them to be alive today.
An interesting point AntarcticPilot that I totally agree with. Keep a small selection of artefacts, but not everything. Being in Normandy with a "Bigot" was humbling. To my surprise I was in conversation with a lady where we lived and I mentioned I was playing a small part in the publication of a couple of books on the Americans and the preparations for D-Day in Devon and that the Normandy beaches were selected using post cards and the Devon training beaches chosen because they were the same type of beaches. With a glint in her eye she said, "yes, it was the job of the chap on the desk next to mine to collate the postcards", instantly I knew who she worked for during WWII.First of all, I am NOT arguing that the boat should have been saved at all costs. She was clearly well past that point, and beyond a certain point it becomes impossible to keep a vessel going without heroic efforts which I quite agree aren't always justified. That said, if I owned a "little ship", I would feel duty bound to do my best for her, and to pass her on to others who would feel the same.
However, I think that the passing of the generation that was at Dunkirk and D-Day makes it more relevant to preserve physical memories of the sacrifices made then, not less. That doesn't mean that every single vessel that took part should be preserved no matter what, but that we should ensure that a representative sample are preserved, as a focus for memory.
"Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." (George Santayana, 1905)
For anyone who wants to contribute to preservation of an almost lost Dunkirk Little Ship....... you can bung a few quid the way of the Skylark Trust:
http://www.skylarkix.com/
Skylark spend quite a long time on the bottom of Loch Lomond. I am pretty sure that if she was not a Dunkirk participant she would have either been left where she was or removed in a destructive way. Almost total rebuild required.
Wasn't 'Compass Rose' the name of the ship in Monserrat's 'The Cruel Sea'?
For anyone who wants to contribute to preservation of an almost lost Dunkirk Little Ship....... you can bung a few quid the way of the Skylark Trust:
http://www.skylarkix.com/
Skylark spend quite a long time on the bottom of Loch Lomond. I am pretty sure that if she was not a Dunkirk participant she would have either been left where she was or removed in a destructive way. Almost total rebuild required.