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Detail of an Admiralty chart, showing Scapa Flow and the surrounding Orkney islands. This chart was
updated in 1924 when Cox began salvage operations and shows the positions of
the many wrecks he raised. Lyness, on the island of Hoy, where Cox based his
salvage operations is far left. (Courtesy - UK
Hydrographic Office)
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Ernest Cox poses for
a London photographer,
immaculately
dressed as always, even when at work in
the filth and squalor of a sunken
warship. He later said, "Without boasting, I do not think there is another
man in the world who could have tackled the same job. Before I undertook this
formidable task, I had never raised a ship in my life. Quite frankly, experts
thought me crazy, but to me these vessels represented nothing more than so much
scrap of brass, gunmetal, bronze, steel etc., and I was determined to recover
this at all costs." (Courtesy - the Cox Family) |
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The German Imperial High Seas Fleet
interned in Scapa after the armistice in November 1918. Vice Admiral
Ludwig von Reuter ordered their crews to scuttle all seventy-four vessels
rather than hand them over to the Royal Navy. Here a Royal Navy guard threatens
a destroyer captain at gunpoint to stop him from sinking his vessel. Altogether
nine unarmed German sailors were killed and fourteen injured when the Royal
Navy shot them, making these victims the last casualties of the First World
War. |
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The fast minelayer Bremse
was one of the ships that the Royal Navy tried to save when the fleet was
scuttled; to no avail. She ended up like this, capsized and partially beached
in Swanbister Bay on the main Orkney island of Pomona. |
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Looking down a line of
winches aboard one of Cox's floating docks. The winches can be seen clearly in
the foreground where teams of men literally heaved a sunken warship to the
surface. The technique became known as 'heaving twenties' because the men could
only turn their handles twenty times before needing a rest.
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A raised destroyer between the floating
docks during the 1920s, having just been dropped in Mill
Bay. Smit Salvage of Rotterdam used a similar method
nearly eighty years later to raise the Russian nuclear
submarine, Kursk, in 2001. |
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Two beached destroyers
waiting to be broken up in Mill Bay. It took about one month to reduce them to
scrap metal. Each ship was methodically stripped down to allow the vessel to
float further up the beach on the next high tide to be further broken up until
nothing was left. |
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Lyness Pier as it was in
the 1920s when the salvage operations were well under way. Mill Bay where the
vessels were broken up, is on the right and Ore Bay is to the left. The large
crane that killed Donald Henderson (a salvage labourer) is in the centre. |
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'Lyness Pier 24/6/25.'
This picture is dated four days after Henderson was killed when a 100ft jib
collapsed on top of him. The crowds of men on the pier are preparing to attend
his funeral. Loose wires can still be seen hanging down from where the jib once
stood. Cox's white pinnace is moored alongside. She was named Bunts, after his
daughter, and no doubt conveyed him to Lyness Pier for the funeral. |
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Sandy Robertson (right)
working as a diver's assistant to Sinclair (Sinc) Mackenzie, standing on the
ladder. Sandy helped save Sinc's life after an accident on the Von der Tann as
well as that of Thomas McKenzie. Sinc Mackenzie was the last diver to detect
life aboard the doomed submarine HMS Thetis in 1939. (Courtesy - Sandy
Robertson) |
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The Hindenburg heeling
over to starboard on the first attempt at raising her in 1926. Jenny Jack, Cox's
wife, is standing centre, facing the camera. A storm is beginning to blow up
that eventually led to Cox losing the fight to raise her - this time. |
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The storm that sank the Hindenburg on the
first attempt to raise her in 1926 as the waves lashed
the men and vessels trying to keep her afloat. Cox's
floating dock was holed, his pumps had failed and his
men were exhausted, but still he fought the storm to
hold on to his ship. |
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Ernest Cox, immaculately dressed as
always, looking very pleased as he stands on the bottom
of a salvaged warship. |
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Jim Southerland climbs
down an airlock on his way to work. The hatch was closed behind him and he
climbed down to the bottom hatch, knocking on it to let the men inside her know
that he was there. The airlock was then pressurized to equal the air pressure
inside the compartment, and Jim would climb through for his eight-hour shift.
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The 24,000-ton upturned
battleship Kaiser shortly after breaking the surface in March 1929. Men had to
gain access to the sunken warships' hulls through airlocks. The four airlocks
needed to enter and prepare the Kaiser can be clearly seen here, looking more
like ships' funnels. In order to reach a sunken ship, some of Cox's crudely
built airlocks were 60ft high. |
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The capsized Moltke en
route to Rosyth, surrounded by tugs. Through a misunderstanding two pilots were
appointed to guide her to the dry dock. An argument over who should command her
led to the Moltke being cast off as she headed for the Forth Bridge's cenrral
pillar, completely unassisted. The temporary housing for men and machines while
on the journey was built on the ship's bottom, which was now her top. |
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Adolph Hitler came to
power a few months before the Von der Tann was towed to Rosyth. The Nazi
Swastika flies over the tugboat Parnass on the von der Tann's starboard side.
Many sightseers were in Rosyth to see Cox deliver his last salvaged German
warship. They were also among the first to see this Nazi emblem in British
waters, which six years later would be a common symbol of evil throughout the
free world. |
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The Seydlitz weathering the storm that
struck while she was being towed to Rosyth. She arrived there despite the loss
of both equipment and supplies in the raging seas.
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A 'runner crew' of eleven
to fourteen men took the salvaged vessels the 270 miles from Scapa Flow to
Rosyth. In good conditions they could play cricket on board, but they also
weathered some terrifying gales.
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The runner crew aboard
the Prinzregent Luitpold pose for a picture in front of the corrugated iron
kitchen named the Hotel Metropole, built on the upturned hull. Their sense of
humour could be seen everywhere. The mess and bunkhouse were the Apartments de
Luxe. The notice to the left reads 'Honeymoons arranged, spring mattresses
fitted with speedometers. First aid equipment in all rooms. Second class rooms
no spring mattresses.' The menu on the right reads, 'Boiled Luitpold with knobs
on', 'Scapa salvage stew' with 'dock broth', Reporter James Lewthwaite of the
Daily Mail is in the centre of the back row. |
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The Seydlitz in her dry
dock, ready for breaking up. A sad end for a battle cruiser that survived the
Battle of Jutland and got back safely to Germany in spite of damage from
twenty-three direct shell hits and a torpedo strike. |
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All the German warships
salvaged in Scapa Flow met the same fate. Sometimes their armour plate was as
much as 12in thick and was a great source of revenue. Here a burner cuts the
armour plate into convenient chunks to fit into a furnace. Behind him are
propeller blades, which were also a highly prized commodity from the wrecks.
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Cutting up Moltke. A
burner at work.' With no Health and Safety regulations, the burner, with a
cigarette in his mouth, cuts up the battle cruiser with an oxy-acetylene torch.
He was breaking no rules in the 1920s as he stripped away metal to lighten her
for the voyage to Rosyth.
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Thomas
McKenzie (Chief Salvage Officer) working at his
desk, probably aboard the salvage vessel Bertha, after
Cox left Scapa Flow and Metal Industries took over. In
June 1939 McKenzie led a team of salvage divers to help
rescue ninety-nine submariners trapped aboard the sunken
submarine HMS Thetis, which ended in tragedy after his
offer of help was accepted too late. When the Second
World War began, like many of the Scapa Flow team,
McKenzie worked for the Admiralty Salvage Department,
which distinguished itself during the Battle of the
Atlantic and from D-Day onwards in Northern Europe. He
was eventually awarded the CBE and CB for his work.
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