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Gaul alongside at Hull. Pictured just days before her fatal voyage, she was one of the most modern ships in the fishing fleet.
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Gaul alongside at Hull. Pictured just days before her fatal voyage, she was one of the most modern ships in the fishing fleet.

The fishing vessel Gaul was a deep sea trawler based at Hull, United Kingdom. She sank some time on the night of the 8-9 February 1974 in storm conditions in the Barents Sea north of Norway. No distress signal was sent and her loss was not realised until 10 February after she twice failed to report in. An extensive search operation was launched but no trace of the ship was found at the time, apart from a lifebuoy recovered three months later. Thirty-six crew were lost in the worst peacetime disaster to befall the UK fishing fleet.

The 1970s inquiry

The original Formal Inquiry in 1974 concluded that the most likely reason for her loss was that she was capsized by a succession of heavy seas (ie very large waves) and was unable to right herself. Note that the preliminary inquiry had found serious deficiencies in the maintenance of hatches on Gaul's sister ship Kurd, but that this was downplayed at the formal inquiry.

In 1975 the Norwegian trawler Rairo reported snagging her nets on an obstruction in the area Gaul was lost. In 1977 the UK government decided against launching a search based on this (and other similar) information, despite being confident that this was indeed Gaul. They argued that it would add insufficient new information in aid of safety at sea to justify the cost.

Suspicions mount

Relatives of the crew were reluctant to accept the inquiry findings because Gaul was one of the most modern ships in the UK fishing fleet, only 18 months old, and in 1975 a TV programme claimed she had been sunk while engaging in espionage. Over the years other theories, including conspiracy theories, have been advanced:

The wreck is found

In 1997 a TV crew, with help from Norwegian experts located the wreck exactly where Rairo had reported snagging her nets.

This prompted UK Deputy Prime Minister (and Hull MP) John Prescott to ask the Marine Accident Investigation Branch of the Department for Transport to carry out extensive surveys of the wreck, which it did in 1998 (with further work in 2002). From its findings MAIB said there was enough new evidence to warrant a new inquiry. Specifically the surveys revealed that several of Gaul's hatches were either seized open or, in some cases, secured open. Also, the ship's steering gear (rudder and kort nozzle) was full over to port. Prescott agreed and launched a new inquiry (the Reformed Formal Inquiry).

2004 inquiry

0n 17 December 2004 the RFI concluded that these open hatches compromised the ships watertight design and, combined with a following (and as already noted heavy) sea led to flooding on the factory deck. An attempted emergency manoeuvre by the officer of the watch (a perfectly logical move to try to turn 'into the sea') catastrophically deprived Gaul of her stability - as floodwater moved around - and buoyancy, causing her to sink very rapidly, stern first.

The report dismissed the notion that Gaul was involved in espionage or that she was in a collision and found that she was not fishing at the time of her loss, meaning no snagging occurred.

In the immediate wake of the report, relatives of the crew said they were not satisfied [link] and the truth was still to be told.

Notes

External links

 


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