|
|
|
Transmitted 7 February 2000
|
|||||||||||||||
| In 1991, 60 miles off the coast of New Jersey, a team of American divers led by Richard Kohler and his partner John Chatterton discovered the wreck of a German U-boat lost in 1945 in the dying days of the Battle of the Atlantic, the longest campaign of World War II. But this was no ordinary U-boat, and its discovery eventually revealed a remarkable story.
Sunk off Gibraltar? According to US military records, U-869 was sunk off Gibraltar in 1945. Kohler and Chatterton spent nearly a decade trying to prove otherwise. On their third exploratory dive on the wreck, the divers had entered a breach in the hull and inside discovered swastikas, Nazi eagles and other artefacts that had left them in no doubt that this was a wartime U-boat of the Kriegsmarine. They had also retrieved a knife engraved with the name 'Horenburg'. Subsequent research at the U-boat archive in Germany revealed that only one man with the name of Horenburg had served on a U-boat - the mysterious U-869. But the German records tallied with those of the US Navy - that the U-869 had met its end off Gibraltar. The knife was not clinching proof of another fate. Deadly hazards Once inside, they had to negotiate jagged wreckage and tangled debris, an environment posing deadly hazards to even the most experienced. In six years, the wreck claimed the lives of three divers. But the team pressed on, in part because of their sense of responsibility to the families of the lost U-boat crew. In the winter of 1997, John Chatterton devised a daring but highly dangerous plan to get past the wreckage and into the U-boat's electric motor room to retrieve the plaque that could confirm the evidence provided by Horenburg's knife. Had the divers found the elusive U-869? If they had, why was its wreck found so many thousands of miles from where it was supposed to be? And what caused the U-boat to meet such a terrible fate? |