Kodima.
Whitsand Bay and Plymouth Sound
Shipwrecks. by Neil Mawdsley
Diary: A walk on the cliffs at Tregantle in
early February 2001. (bit
poetic, overdone a bit?)

What a Day!
The wind was howling, pushing me backwards
against the gorse. The sky was dark grey with needles of rain. A white sea
stretched beneath me, surging and foaming and thundering against the cliffs.
It held in its grasp a stricken cargo ship: The Kodima. All along the
cliff-line great planks of wood were buffeting back and forth like
match-sticks creaking and
moaning
in the wind. Men with ropes were hauling them, up the cliffs, onto lorries
or trucks and stealing away, as was, and is, always the tradition, before
the Custom and Excise man arrives!
More Information
So I sketched, and photographed the scene,
before the raw wind and rain drove me back into my car. It was exhilarating,
but numbingly cold.
The “Kodima” was a Maltese registered cargo
ship of 6395 dwt with a Russian crew, on passage from Sweden to Libya with a
cargo of timber, some of which was stowed on deck. There was no loss of
life.
With a south-westerly gale behind them, many
a ship, mistook Whitsand Bay for Plymouth Sound, perhaps guided on by false
lights on the cliffs. They were soon swept into Cawsand Bay and wrecked.
There are many stories of loss of life but heroic rescues too. With time,
the rescue services became more organised.
The seas around Plymouth can get very
rough. The drama, the spectacle of nature at its most magnificent and
dangerous has been a fascination to a generation of artists both English and
Continental.
There is much that is hidden beneath the
waves of Whitsand Bay and the deep canyons of Plymouth Sound. Ask any diver.
Several years ago I researched and
illustrated two historical maps about the shipwrecks here. What interested
me as an artist was putting together scenes from the sketchy information
available. Names and dates give a glimpse of the centuries past. I found,
as expected perhaps, the winter storm months of November, December and
January, accounted for most wrecks. Of course, smugglers and wreckers have
always played their part.
Shipwrecks are dramatic, distressing events.
Whitsand Bay and Plymouth Sound have had there share of tragedies over the
centuries.
This scene in Whitsand Bay to mark the
sinking of the ‘Scylla’ was a relatively calm day.
Names from the past echo an era that is very
different than today. The ‘Josiah and Betty’ in 1721, wrecked near Rame
Head, but fifteen chests of silver saved. In 1901 the fully rigged ship
‘Gypsy of Nantes’ sailed all the way from Chile, with nitrates, only to be
wrecked at Downderry. My posters outline and illustrate hundreds of such
wrecks.
Early accounts of wrecks describe near
typhoon conditions sweeping away whole fishing fleets at Looe. Whole
families were devastated and starved. In the Second World War, a German U
boat torpedoed the Liberty ship; ‘James Egan Lane’ from the USA. After a
defiant struggle, the great iron ship sank to the sandy bottom of Whitsand
Bay. This wreck became very popular with divers and now largely rusted away,
only to be replaced by the newly wrecked HMS Scylla, only a short distance
away. This new artificial reef, opens a new exciting chapter of mystery
beneath the waves of Whitsand Bay.
At Tregantle, when the weather is kinder, I
love the way the sunlight sometimes search-lights sunbeams on a shimmering
blue sea below. It is a magnificent view, but a long way up and down the
cliffs to reach that wonderful beach!
Whitsand Bay Wrecks Poster.
Plymouth Sound Wrecks Poster.
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