Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Hunt for owner of ‘newly found’ Mendi bell

- MICHAEL MORRIS

THE bell from the doomed SS Mendi is on prominent – if temporary – display at Southampto­n’s prestigiou­s SeaCity Museum, while research continues into establishi­ng the artefact’s legal owner.

The SS Mendi went down in the early hours of February 21, 1917, claiming the lives of 607 volunteers of the South African Native Labour Contingent, nine white officers, and all 33 British crew, after being struck in thick mist by a larger vessel, SS Darro, sailing at speed.

The bell, delivered anonymousl­y to a BBC reporter in Swanage on the south coast of England last month, is presumed to have been recovered from the wreck site, 11 nautical miles south west of St Catherine’s Point on the Isle of Wight, in recent decades.

The wreck was identified in 1974, and was a popular dive site until 2009, when Britain’s Ministry of Defence designated the location a protected war grave, making it an offence to remove items.

In terms of Britain’s Merchant Shipping Act of 1995, anything taken from a wreck or found on the shore must be reported to the Receiver of Wreck, whose task is to estab- lish its legal ownership.

South Africa’s historical and sentimenta­l associatio­ns with the vessel, a cargo ship chartered by the British government during World War I and refitted as a troopship, are likely to play a part in determinin­g the bell’s final home.

In terms of British law, however, the first task is to determine who may legally claim ownership of the artefact.

Britain’s Receiver of Wreck, Alison Kentuck, told Weekend Argus this week she had “been in correspond­ence with the potential owner of the wreck” with a view to establishi­ng the legal status of the bell.

“We have progressed our research… but no conclusion has been reached as yet.

“We have looked at the wording of the original charter party agreement for the SS Mendi to determine who was likely to be liable on the total loss of the vessel. We are hoping to locate further papers that are specific to the Mendi.”

Kentuck told Weekend Argus last month that South Africa’s sentimenta­l claim would doubtless be a factor.

“We are aware of the resonance that this bell will have in South Africa and this will form part of the discussion on the bell’s long-term future.” pool-West Africa trade. The vessel was chartered by the Ministry of Transport in 1916, fitted out as a troopship in Lagos in October. It set sail for France from Cape Town in January 1917, and sank in the Channel on the final leg of its journey, from Plymouth.

Among the dead were three Pondoland chiefs, Henry Bokleni, Dokoda Richard Ndamase and Mxonywa Bangani.

In the century since, the Mendi disaster has become a symbol of unrewarded black valour – none of South Africa’s black volunteers in the war received the British War Medal – and the depredatio­ns of 20th century history. The Mendi deaths are memorialis­ed at various sites in South Africa, Britain and Europe.

The ownership of the wreck was examined in a comprehens­ive 2007 Wessex Archaeolog­y report on the Mendi, commission­ed by English Heritage.

Wessex Archaeolog­y said: “Neither the Mendi nor the Darro were Royal Navy ships, although the Mendi was on UK government War Service at the time of its loss. But, as it sank as a result of a collision, it was a marine rather than a war loss. As such the War Risk Office would not have been involved in the sub- sequent insurance claim and the Department for Transport is not the owner of the wreck.

“As a marine loss, the Mendi would have been the subject of an insurance claim and the insurers would normally have become the owners. However, enquiries of the relevant Elder Dempster records indicate they have not survived and enquiries of Lloyds have failed to identify the insurers concerned. Wessex Archaeolog­y is also aware that the Salvage Associatio­n has been unable to locate the current owners.”

Ocean Transport and Trading, the successors to Elder Dempster, indicated “they were unable to confirm that they were the owners”.

The bell, with “Mendi” deeply etched on its side, came to light when an unknown donor left it, wrapped in plastic, at Swanage Pier in the town of Swanagein the early hours of June 14, having alerted BBC reporter Steve Humphrey.

A note read: “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.”

The caller is reported to have said the recent coverage of the Mendi centenary had prompted him to hand over the artefact.

 ?? PICTURE: SUPPLIED ?? The bell from the SS Mendi on prominent display this week at Southampto­n’s SeaCity Museum.
PICTURE: SUPPLIED The bell from the SS Mendi on prominent display this week at Southampto­n’s SeaCity Museum.

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