HISTORY OF CAPE HENLOPEN
AND BEYOND
GERMAN U – 853
WHEREABOUTS A MYSTERY
Where is the German
submarine U-853 ? The only real authority on the matter, Melvin
Joseph, is away in
Florida on business and was not reached for comment. There
have
been reports the sub was
raised and on it's way to Lewes, Delaware. Another report said
it is underwater off
Block Island, Rhode Island, where it was sunk in WW II. Last
Monday Wilhelm Von
Keudell the German council in Boston reported to have said the sub
was raised by Melvin
Joseph Company and on its way to Lewes. Keudell when contacted
yesterday says he was
misquoted last Saturday while in Newport to place a wreath on the
graves of the two crewman
whose body had been recovered eight years ago. I gave the
information I had, which
was two weeks old, that he thought she could have been raised but
the operation had come to
a standstill but did not know why.
Joseph's wife was reached
yesterday and she only knew her husband was trying to raise the
U853 but the weather and
waters got bad and the had to abandon the project. The Block
Island Coast Guard knows of
the attempt and the abandonment and gave the name of a New
York salvage company as
the contractor, The Murphy Machine Salvage Company and tha t
Joseph Contractors were a subcontractor .
Now comes a telegram to
the New York Headquarter of the Coast Guard from the
Submarine research
Associates of East Greenwich, Rhode Island, saying the U853
holds
unsafe explosives and not
be allowed in any port. The German press council at the German
Embassy in Washington, DC said his government had no rights to
the submarine but his office was notified of the salvage attempt
because there are 55 German seamen aboard.
Bill Frank of the New
journal papers says the U853 is still on the bottom off Port
Judith
with 53 dead including the
skipper, Kaptainleutnant Helmet Sommer and that the stories of
gold and cash were on board are inventions of the minds. Bill
Franks story is in the Saturday Wilmington Morning News, Saturday
November 23, 1968.
Abstract: Wilmington
Morning News, by Susses Bureau, Susan Sternberger, Wednesday,
November 20, 1986.
No comments:
Post a Comment