Anchor of British warship that sank in 1890 is found decorating home

by · Mail Online

One of the last known traces of a British warship that sank off Spain with 173 souls has been found being used as a garden ornament.

HMS Serpent, a British torpedo cruiser, was lost in a storm off the treacherous Costa da Morte or 'Coast of Death' in 1890, during her first commission.

Her wreckage was scattered and in the weeks that followed, the bodies of 142 crewmen washed up on the shore.

Now Spanish police have discovered a piece of her survives – as decoration on the facade of a house in Muxia, in northwestern Spain.

A probe was launched in June after officers were tipped off that a local home had the Serpent's anchor on display.

The Guardia Civil – one of Spain's two national law enforcement agencies – described what happened in a statement.

The anchor of a British warship that sank off Spain with 173 souls has been found being used as a garden ornament
HMS Serpent, a British torpedo cruiser, was lost in a storm off the treacherous Costa da Morte or 'Coast of Death' in 1890, during her first commission

It said: 'According to the testimonies obtained, this anchor was extracted in the area of Cabo Vilán, in Camariñas, around 25 years ago, when a fishing boat caught the anchor in its nets.

'When trying to recover it, already close to the surface, the gear broke and the anchor returned to the bottom.

'So the boat's captain noted the coordinates, so that another vessel with a greater draft could pick it up the next day.

'The man under investigation later took the anchor and used it to decorate his home.'

Under local law in Galicia, north-west Spain, the remains of shipwrecks pre-dating 1901 are considered protected cultural heritage.

The law demands that any protected artifacts recovered without authorisation must be confiscated and made available to the relevant authorities.

A depiction by The Graphic illustrated newspaper of the loss of HMS Serpent
A Spanish man took the anchor and used it to decorate his home, police say

The Spanish Federation of Underwater Activities determined that the anchor was of the 'admiralty' type, common among Royal Navy ships in the 1800s.

As well as the anchor of the Serpent, officers located two other anchors, whose origins are being looked into. 

The man is now being investigated for an alleged crime against historical heritage.

The anchors have been transferred to the Museum of Man, in Camelle, where they will be preserved.

O Faro, a Galicia blog, describes the loss of the Serpent.

It says that the ship, a third-class torpedo cruiser, had departed Portsmouth two days earlier, bound for west Africa with a cargo of cannons and torpedo launchers.

Captain Harry Leith Ross ordered the ship's watch, Gould and Burton, to look for the signal from from the lighthouse at Cabo Vilán.

But in the heavy fog, the men saw nothing and didn't hear the waves crashing violently against the nearby reef, called Punta do Boi.

Then there was a loud bang and the Plymouth-built ship ran aground.

Captain Ross ordered the ship be reversed, but it was futile, and the sea pounded the Serpent into the rocks.

The lifeboats were released, but immediately obliterated by the waves.

When the waves finally released Serpent from the reef, she broke in two and sank.

 The Spanish Federation of Underwater Activities determined that the anchor was of the 'admiralty' type, common among Royal Navy ships in the 1800s
The anchor was recovered from the sea around 25 years ago, Spanish police say
The anchor is said to have been found after initially being in the nets of a fishing boat
A model of HMS Serpent on display in Galicia, Spain. The ship sank on its first commission 

Both Gould and Burton survived, along with fellow crew member Luxon – all three of them had worn life jackets.

But there had been just 25 life jackets available for the crew of 175, and the navy learned its lesson, mandating that all its ships henceforth carry enough life jackets for the whole crew.

The three men identified the bodies of 142 crew mates that washed up over the following 45 days, but no trace of the others was ever found.

The bodies were buried in what is now called the Cementerio de los Inglés, or English Cemetery.

In its statement the Guardia Civil emphasised the importance of heritage protection.

It said: 'We remind the public of the importance of respecting and protecting historical and cultural heritage, and call on citizens to report any suspicious activity that may endanger this legacy.'