Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Legal victory for MoD over shipwreck

- BRIAN FARMER news@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

DEFENCE ministers have won a High Court battle over what should happen to artefacts on the wreck of a British warship which sank more than 250 years ago.

HMS Victory, which was launched in 1737, was lost in a storm off the Channel Islands in 1744 while under the command of Admiral Sir John Balchin.

The wreck was found in the English Channel near Torbay, Devon, in 2008.

Defence ministers have decided that artefacts should stay on the wreck and be preserved in situ.

The Maritime Heritage Foundation, a charity chaired by Lord Lingfield – a descendant of Sir John Balchin – wanted to remove artefacts for preservati­on and challenged that Ministry of Defence decision.

But a judge has dismissed the foundation’s challenge after analysing evidence at a High Court hearing in London.

Mrs Justice Lieven said yesterday, in a written ruling, that the ministry’s decision was lawful and not irrational.

She said HMS Victory was a British Navy flagship and the wreck contained at least 41 bronze cannons, ship-borne artefacts, iron ballast, wooden fixtures and fittings, parts of two anchors and a rudder.

The judge said there had been claims the ship may have been carrying gold bullion.

But she said there was no “direct evidence” to support such claims.

Mrs Justice Lieven said the Ministry of Defence had concluded that the wreck was at “minimal risk” and could be “appropriat­ely monitored”. She said officials had “fully engaged” with the foundation throughout the decision-making process.

Five years ago, then defence secretary Sir Michael Fallon had said the foundation could recover some “atrisk” artefacts, but had subsequent­ly changed his mind.

An HMS Victory website,

developed by the Maritime Heritage Foundation, tells how the ship was the predecesso­r of Nelson’s Victory.

The website says the man of war, which was built in Portsmouth, Hampshire, was the “greatest warship in the age of sail” and Sir John Balchin one of the most respected and longest-serving fighting officers

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