Archive for category News

HMS “Victory” – The Alderney Maritime Trust’s Position

HMS Victory (1744) lies 50 miles off Alderney after striking the Casquets

HMS Victory (1744) lies 50 miles off Alderney after striking the Casquets

The discovery in 2008 by Odyssey Marine Exploration (OME) of the wreck site of Admiral Balchin’s HMS Victory which sank in 1744 was met with great interest by the Alderney Maritime Trust. It had long been thought by Alderney islanders that the ship had gone down as a result of it striking the Casquets in a violent storm; at approximately the same time gun fire had been heard and this led to the presumption that Victory was making a distress signal. In fact, the site where the wreck lies is about fifty miles west of Alderney. As the Trust is responsible for all wrecks in the waters around Alderney, we have prepared a document stating our position and support for the option to monitor the wreck in situ after selective recovery of items deemed to be at risk. AMT - HMS Victory: Our position (PDF).

More important finds returned from conservation

Bar shot conserved at York Conservation Laboratories

Bar shot conserved at York Conservation Laboratories

The latest batch of finds to be returned from York Conservation Laboratories include five unique expanding bar shot. These shot have two bars of iron linked together with a half cannon ball at either end. When closed up the shot is about 400mm long, but when they were fired from the cannon the weight of the half balls at either end cause the shot to spin and expand to their full length of about 800mm. Although there is no documentary evidence for the use of these shot and they have never before been seen it is assumed that the spinning shot would be very destructive to the enemy ship’s rigging and very unpleasant for any of the crew unfortunate enough to be struck by them.

Also included in the consignment is another cannon ball, increasing our tally of these, and a spike shot that has two long protruding spikes on either side of the ball. Again, the purpose of these is unclear, it had been thought that burning cloth might be wound around them and that the spikes would impale the shot and burning cloth to the ships timbers setting them alight, but in trial firing replica shot passed right through two inches of oak timber.

What has surprised us is the wide range of shot that seems to have been developed in the relatively short time between cast iron cannon being developed in the mid 16th century and our ship sinking in 1592.

Other items returned from York include another musket stock and part of its barrel, a pewter spoon and a wooden pully block.

This continues the Alderney Maritime Trust’s policy which is to ensure that every significant object recovered from the wreck is professionally conserved and returned to Alderney where the objects are placed in the care of the Alderney Museum. It must however be stressed that conservation is the most costly part of the Trust’s efforts to maintain a careful watch on the Alderney Elizabethan Wreck site and only to recover what it can afford to conserve.

Alderney Wreck artefact featured on BBC’s History of The World

An Elizabethan pan weight recovered from The Alderney Wreck is now featured on The BBC’s ‘A History of The World’ website, showcasing some of the most notable and influential items from our past. The pan weight is cited as unique in that it ‘captures a moment in maritime history as British sailors explored the modern World’.

Read the BBC article about the pan weight at The History of The World site.

Read more about the pan weight on the Alderney Wreck site.


A History of the World Badge

Pan weight replicas available to buy

Support the Alderney Maritime Trust’s work by buying a replica artefact from the Elizabethan wreck.  These are perfect replicas cast as paperweights and come in an attractive presentation case together with a certificate.

Buy now online via EBay for only £10.00 plus p&p

Pan weight replica

Pan weight replica

2009 dive concludes

This year’s dive on the Alderney Elizabethan Wreck has concluded with a successful revisit and much tidying of the site, so that future dives will be made easier by this year’s housekeeping 30 metres below the waves.
It might not sound like a fascinating season following 2008’s excitement in bringing two cannon to the Tower of London and subsequent replication and firing for the BBC TV programme. However this year was all about maintenance and preparation for future dives.

2009 dive commences

The 2009 dive has commenced as scheduled, following bad weather.  The marker buoy has drifted but the team are on track to replace sacrificial anodes and mark out the site more clearly.

Another season of diving looms on Alderney

It’s going to be a short season this year, with diving in September rather than earlier in the Summer, as has been the case in past years. This is due to time pressures on people and the divers’ availability.  After all, they all have day jobs and this is their busman’s holiday.

a04photo2-175

Diving on the Alderney Elizabethan wreck