The Herald (South Africa)

Mystery recovery of Mendi’s bell

- Andrew Unsworth

THE bell of the SS Mendi‚ which sank 100 years ago in the English Channel killing 646 men‚ including 607 black South Africans, has been recovered.

It is not known when the bell was removed from the wreck of the ship or by whom.

It was left at a pier in Swanage on the south coast of England after BBC reporter Steve Humphrey received an anonymous phone call on Wednesday last week.

The caller had seen recent TV coverage of the Mendi centenary.

Humphrey arranged to arrive at Swanage Pier in the early hours and found the bell in a plastic bag.

“There was an unsigned note addressed to him which said: ‘If I handed it in myself it might not go to the rightful place. This needs to be sorted out before I pass away as it could get lost’.”

Humphrey had been looking for the bell of the Mendi for the past 30 years.

Most of those who died were members of the South African Native Labour Corps (SANLC) on their way to France to do manual labour on the Western Front during World War 1.

They came from all over South Africa and the event is a key one in South African military history.

The wreck of the Mendi was only identified in 1974‚ 20km south west of St Catherine’s Point‚ Isle of Wight‚ so the brass bell was probably removed since then‚ probably in the 1980s.

The BBC reports that maritime archaeolog­ist John Gribble‚ who has surveyed the ship‚ said the bell was probably genuine.

The bell is to be put on display at a museum until a final decision is made about where it will be kept.

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