• SS Amplegarth (1918)

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    On 10 May 1918, Amplegarth was on passage from Dunston-on-Tyne to St Nazaire with a cargo of coal when she struck a mine laid by the German minelaying submarine UC-71, commanded by Oberleutnant zur See Walter Warzecha. She sank about 1 mile west-south-west of Dover Harbour. The best Cardiff shipping summary I found records no lives lost, which is a blessedly rare line in a First World War wreck note. For divers, this is a proper Dover war wreck: a big merchant steamer, a working cargo, a UC-boat minefield, and a loss right on the doorstep of one of the busiest wartime ports in Britain.

  • SS Cuvier (1900)

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    SS Cuvier was carrying cargo for Brazil when SS Dovre tore into her near the Dover Strait in 1900. Within five minutes she had gone, leaving three survivors clinging to a capsized boat and at least 26 men lost in one of the Channel's sharpest civilian wreck tragedies.

  • SS Efford – Stern (1940)

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    Efford sank after the collision, reportedly cut in two, and her remains are known as two separated wreck sections off Dover. That makes her an especially interesting dive: not a grand liner or warship, but a compact coaster with a dramatic physical story written into the seabed. For divers, Efford offers exactly the sort of Channel wreck that rewards close inspection: broken structure, wartime context, collision damage, and the odd thrill of knowing the bow and stern are not necessarily where polite naval architecture intended them to be.

  • HMS Flirt (1916)

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    HMS Flirt went to help stricken drifters during the 1916 Battle of Dover Strait, then German torpedo boats caught her at point-blank range. This wreck dive follows a Royal Navy destroyer lost in minutes, with sixty dead, nine survivors and one of the Dover Patrol's sharpest night-fighting stories.

  • MV Andaman (1953)

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    On 24 May 1953, Andaman collided with the Panamanian steamer Fortune about 3 miles south of the South Goodwin Lightvessel. She began sinking, and her 38 crew abandoned ship into two boats. The Dover lifeboat launched, but the crew had already been picked up by the SS Arthur Wright, before being transferred to the lifeboat and landed at Dover. No lives were lost. For divers, Andaman is a fine post-war Channel wreck: a substantial Swedish cargo ship, lost in fog near the Goodwins, with a clean rescue story and enough size, structure and atmosphere to make her far more than a name on a chart.

  • SS Cuvier (1900)

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    SS Cuvier was carrying cargo for Brazil when SS Dovre tore into her near the Dover Strait in 1900. Within five minutes she had gone, leaving three survivors clinging to a capsized boat and at least 26 men lost in one of the Channel's sharpest civilian wreck tragedies.

  • Unidentified Wreck – Offshore

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    This deeper offshore wreck dive heads beyond the usual inshore marks to a more serious Channel site, where depth, tide and distance add real commitment. Expect mystery, machinery, wreckage and the chance to help piece together a story that still refuses to surface politely.

  • Unidentified Wreck – Offshore

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    This deeper offshore wreck dive heads beyond the usual inshore marks to a more serious Channel site, where depth, tide and distance add real commitment. Expect mystery, machinery, wreckage and the chance to help piece together a story that still refuses to surface politely.

  • Cullins Buffet Dinner

    Cullins Yard 11 Cambridge Road, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    Hosted by Mutiny Diving, the buffet is on us. Bring your appetite, settle in for the evening, and if you can, consider a donation to the RNLI, whose crews stand ready when the sea decides to remind us who is really in charge.

    Free
  • SV Mindora (1864)

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    Her career was brutally short. On 28 November 1864, Mindora collided in the English Channel with the Khersonese, another outward-bound sailing ship, reportedly on passage from London to Calcutta. Contemporary shipwreck listings place the collision about 8 nautical miles south-west by west of South Foreland, with Mindora sinking and the other vessel abandoned in a sinking condition. For divers, this is a proper Victorian mystery wreck: a young barque lost almost as soon as her story began, a collision in one of the world’s busiest sea lanes, and a seabed site that still gives up small clues from a long-vanished age of sail.

  • HMT Étoile Polaire (1915)

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    On 3 December 1915, Étoile Polaire struck a mine and sank off the South Goodwins. The minefield is recorded as having been laid by the German minelaying submarine UC-1, commanded by Kapitänleutnant Egon von Werner. Her wreck has had a confusing afterlife: Canterbury Divers and Historic England both note that a site once listed as HMT Cayton Wyke was positively identified as Étoile Polaire when her bell was recovered. The wreck lies in about 27 metres, stands up to 5 metres proud, and is described as fairly intact, with a blown-off bow, open holds, intact stern and surviving superstructure. For divers, this is a cracking Dover Patrol wreck: compact, atmospheric, strongly identified, and close enough to the Goodwins to add that little pinch of "this place has been eating ships for centuries".

  • SS Laristan (1899) & SS Denbighshire (1887)

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    Close beside her lies the older Denbighshire, lost in 1887 and later identified by her recovered bell. Historic England notes her wreck lies close to Laristan, while Canterbury Divers describes the Denbighshire as sitting only about 10 metres from the bigger Laristan, in a maximum depth of about 31 metres, standing around 5 metres proud. For divers, the appeal is obvious: two Victorian wreck stories in one dive, one a cargo steamer loaded with iron ore, the other an earlier casualty close enough to turn the seabed into a historical puzzle. It is a cracking Dover site for anyone who likes machinery, structure and a little identity intrigue with their slack water.

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