HISTORIC MALDON DISTRICT – Curious sights on the Blackwater

By The Editor

27th Mar 2022 | Local News

All pictures from the Mersea Museum website
All pictures from the Mersea Museum website

A previous feature has covered the laid-up merchant ships on the Blackwater. The estuary has been for many years a favourite location for the lay-up of redundant merchant vessels during times of economic difficulty. Rather than pay expensive fees for taking up quayside space, vessels are anchored in sheltered river estuaries – a process that is tightly regulated now, but which has always involved securing the vessel, switching off most power, and maintaining a watchkeeper to perform basic functions to keep the ship safe.

The excellent Mersea Museum website lists 480 ships that have been laid up in the Blackwater.

Ships sometimes stayed for years, depending on the circumstances. The 1930s recessions saw the river full of ships. The immediate years after 1945 saw big collections of ships, including some damaged ones and others from the huge growth in wartime ship construction that were just not getting enough trade to justify their employment. The late 1950s saw over forty ships arrive, and 1980's recession was the source of more lay-ups.

On arrival, crews were taken off, often landing at Maldon. Both anchors would be laid out with a swivel to enable movement with the tide. Most ships had a tiny skeleton crew or just a single watchman. Local employment was provided: supplies had to be delivered, sometimes barges with generators to help the ships turn over their engines, and the tricky job of laying out the anchors usually needed local help.

Ships generally left under one of two circumstances: either trade had revived and the ship was recommissioned and left to resume its trade, or its owners gave up and it was towed off for scrap.

Most of these ships were standard merchant ships, or in some cases small liners. But there are some quite bizarre sights that are listed on the Mersea Museum website.

The Greek owned Liberty Ship 'Michalakis' caused a sensation in 1958 when she broke her moorings and drifted onto the mud opposite the Esplanade at Mersea. Locals were able to walk right round the stranded giant before she was finally refloated.

Another curiosity (also a Liberty Ship) was the 'Helena Modjeska', which arrived in the Blackwater in two halves, having been wrecked on the Goodwin Sands. The two halves were moored alongside each other in the Blackwater for some time, before being towed off for scrap.

Other unusual sights included three giant Admiralty floating docks. One of these blew ashore at Decoy Point on East Mersea.

Our final oddity in the gallery is 'Oceanteam Installer', which looks like a cross between an oil rig and Alton Towers. It has been variously described as a sheerlegs pontoon, a dredger and a cable layer. It may have served as all of these in its time.

     

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