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Local divers find U-boat wreck
A World
War Two maritime mystery has been solved by two Orkney men.
For Ian Trumpess
and Kevin Heath, both from Stromness, are the first people in over
55 years to see the wreck of a German U-boat, which sank in water
off Orkney in 1944.
Fifty men
perished when the vessel, on her first wartime mission, was gunned
down in an air attack. Their bodies are believed still to be on
board.
Thirty-six-year-old
Mr Trumpess has dived on the wreck of the submarine U-297 twice
in the past few weeks following their discovery 16 miles west of
Yesnaby to the west of Orkney.
'There is
a number of feelings that go through you - it is exhilarating, the
thrill of finding it and knowing I am the first person ever to see
it since it went down,' he said.
While on
a second dive Mr Trumpess took video footage and confirmed the find
to the German Embassy and the Ministry of Defence.
Along with
wreck researcher and clam boat operator Mr Heath, initial investigations
on the Admiralty Chart showed that there was a wreck of some kind
in the area.
'Kevin did
some digging around and said it could be the wreck of the U-297.
She is class 7C-41, the workhorse of-their day.'
Four lifeboat
canisters spotted along the deck of the vessel distinguished it
as being, without a doubt, the class 7C-41 type from a Norwegian
flotilla, Mr Heath explained.

As it would have been: A class 7C-41 submarine similar to the one
discovered 16 miles west of Yesnaby.
The vessel,
which had only been in action for one month, was gunned down by
a Sunder-land aircraft, from 201 Squadron based in Lochearn, late
in the afternoon on December 6, 1944.
In a twist
to the tale Mr Heath (37), explained that on the morning of December
6 the de-stroyer escort HMS Bullen was torpedoed off Cape Wrath
by the submarine U-775.
'The Sunderland
witnessed the Bullen sinking. He also saw two ships the HMS Lochinsh
and HMS Goodall laying out patterns of depth charges and they reported
having destroyed a submarine.'
It was later
thought that particular sub had been the U-297. However, the Sunderland
- a flying boat with a crew of 12 under commander Flight Lieu-tenant
D. R. Hatton - continued to patrol this time to the west of Orkney
until she spotted the wake of a submarine. On closer inspection
the snorkel and periscope were seen.
Mr Heath
said: 'They came in and launched a depth charge attack from 50ft
but that attempt failed and they came in for a second attack. They
managed to drop six depth charges at 60ft between each one. Three
went into the wake and three went ahead.'
All evidence
of a submarine in the area disappeared, until a large patch of oil
started spreading over the sea.
At 5.30
pm the Sunderland returned to base.
'For all
this time it was believed that the Lochinsh and Goodall destroyed
the 297 in the morning in a totally different place. They had actually
depth charged another submarine which escaped,' Mr Heath added.
The U-297,
which never sank anything in her short career, was part of the 11th
Flotilla in Norway built in 1943 and under the command of ObLt Wolfgang
Aldegarmann.
The submarine's
first patrol was with the 8th Training Flotilla in the Baltic, where
she re-mained until October 31, 1944, then joining the 11th Flotilla
as a combat boat.
Mr Heath
said: 'She was only in action from November 1 to December 6. Her
job was to ba-sically hunt shipping. She was out to kill shipping
in the AN 15 area, that is the German grid that covers Orkney across
to Cape Wrath and north to the Westray Firth.'
It was decided
that Mr Trumpess, who has been diving since he was 15, would go
down to the wreck to investigate.
'A couple
of weeks ago we decided to bite the bullet. I got a bottle of helium
and got a mix together.'
The wreck
is lying in 87 metres (280ft) of water which only experienced divers
are able to tackle using a carefully calculated mix of helium and
oxygen.
'We did
a grid search based on the co-ordinates given from the hydrographics.'
Amazingly,
the men located the submarine within seven minutes.
Mr Trumpess
got kitted up and jumped in after marking the exact area of the
wreck with a shotline.
It took
him more than half an hour to reach the seabed, and what he saw
left him speechless.
'It started
getting very dark, you know you are getting deep when you are touching
280ft. I settled down on the bottom. I let my vision and my eyes
focus in. There was a shadow to my left. I cast my eyes over and
saw the wreck.'
Stories around
Orkney had suggested that it could be the wreck of a freighter,
but at a glance Mr Trumpess could see it was not.
'This was
no freighter, it was a submarine,' he said.
It is also
rumoured that a young Orkney man at the time may have witnessed
the air attack from the cliffs of Yesnaby. If you are that man the
two divers would love to hear from you.
On his 'scooter'
- a diver propulsion vehicle - Mr Trumpess rode around the wreck,
spend-ing 20 minutes exploring a sight never seen before by the
human eye.
Although
the 66-metre long vessel remains largely intact and in excellent
condition it has obviously been damaged in parts.
'On the
forward of the conning tower (used by the commander when the vessel
is under attack) on the port hand side I noticed four hatches in
a row. Later investigations showed this to be of the 7C-41 - no
doubt about it.'
He continued:
'The winter garden (which holds the anti-aircraft guns) has fallen
off and is lying on the starboard side below.'
The conning
tower hatch is open and the chair where a man would have sat lies
empty.
The lower
hatch is shut tight, as are all the others suggesting the vessel
went down quickly with no chance of escape.
'It seems
most likely that the snorkel broke off letting in tonnes of water,'
Mr Heath said. 'Initially there would have been absolute panic and
horror and they were obviously given no alarm as they would have
attempted to crash dive, but they took no action.'
The entire
dive took Mr Trumpess 103 minutes - much longer than it would have
taken for the vessel to sink.
'Hopefully
it would've been over quickly for them,' Mr Heath, who started researching
the wreck a year ago, added.
The men
are planning to take another trip out to sea for a third dive to
get more video footage. And Mr Trumpess says he has considered salvaging
a lifeboat canister lying away from the submarine.

The lifeboat canisters on the deck of the vessel
which prove beyond doubt that the wreck is a
German U-boat class7C-41.
'It is a
brass one with an orange lifeboat inside. I have been toying with
the idea of salvag-ing it and giving it to Lyness Wartime Museum
in Hoy. But I don't know where I would stand legally and in any
case if it is declared a war grave it shouldn't be touched. It should
be given the respect it deserves.'
The men
are waiting to get a crew list and hopefully photos of the men from
the Ministry of Defence.
But Mr Trumpess
warned looting divers to stay away.
'There are
certain groups of divers that come up to Orkney and loot. I would
be very upset if that happened here, but I have video footage that
shows everything that is there.'
The wreck
is now in addition to those already lying in Orkney waters. Britain's
greatest sol-dier, Lord Kitchener, died on the cruiser HMS Hampshire,
sunk by mines off Orkney's west coast in 1916. There was tragedy
again in 1939 when the German submarine U-47 slipped through the
incomplete defences to sink the British battleship HMS Royal Oak
with the loss of over 800 lives.
And between
the wars arguably the world's greatest feat of salvage - the raising
of the scuttled German fleet - was carried out in Orkney waters.
According
to the German wartime film Das Boot, Hitler sent out 40,000 men
aboard Ger-man U-boats during World War Two. Less than 10,000 returned.
They are
far from finished in their quest to find more wrecks, of which there
are hundreds more out there, they say. 'This is
just the beginning, we definitely hope to find more wrecks out there,'
the two divers agreed. |