• SS Maine (1914)

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    Before the First World War had even begun, the small steel coaster SS Maine met her end off Dover after colliding with the Spanish vessel José de Aramburu on 2 April 1914. Her crew survived, but the ship went down near the harbour approaches, leaving behind a wreck now better known by a far more memorable name.

    Divers call her the Perrier Wreck because of the bottles scattered through the site. A collision, a lost coaster, and a seabed full of fizzy-water history. Dover wreck diving does like to keep things gloriously odd.

  • SS Luna (1919)

    Dover Deep Wreck Week
    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    SS Luna survived the First World War, then sank after the peace, because the Dover Strait apparently keeps its own diary of grudges. Join this SS Luna wreck dive to explore a Dutch cargo steamer lost to a mine near the Goodwin Sands in 1919, with all hands saved and a ship's bell that helped reveal her name nearly 90 years later.

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