toyboy
Well-Known Member
From Wiki:- The ship's wreck was upright on the seabed with only the bridge visible at high tide, but it blocked the channel. Only buckled plating amidships held the two main sections of the wreck together and they were cut by explosives when salvage began shortly after her sinking. The two halves were raised by pontoons, and were subsequently broken up. 750 long tons (760 t) of ferrous scrap and 38 long tons (39 t) of non-ferrous metals were recovered between June 1940 and February 1944.
So your wreck would not have been her.
Nor my collerier. When we dredged Felixstowe for the new marina we took up tons of coal. Interestingly half a bar of gold came up too and a lad dived into the hold and retrieved it. The dredging company fought him in court and lost. I always wondered what happened to the other half? It was common and sometimes quite alarming when we dredged up a bomb and had to listen to it rumbling along the pipe. Many of the lads had collections of shells.
