• SS Toward (1915)

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    On 31 October 1915, Toward struck a mine laid by the German minelaying submarine UC-6, commanded by Matthias Graf von Schmettow, near the South Foreland / Dover area. The explosion tore into her beneath No. 2 hold, just forward of the bridge. She caught fire, settled quickly, and was abandoned. Remarkably, all the crew were rescued, including men who had jumped into the sea. For divers, Toward is a proper First World War Channel wreck: mine warfare, wartime cargo, a dramatic sinking, and a site still rich with clues from a ship that went down in one of the Dover Patrol’s most dangerous corridors.

  • The Orangeman Mystery

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    The wreck known as the Orangeman is one of Dover’s more curious local names, generally linked to the steamer Helene, which was lost off the coast while carrying a cargo of citrus fruit from Valencia to Antwerp. For divers, it is one of those Kent wrecks where folklore and fact overlap, the nickname surviving because the cargo was memorable even when the wreck’s true identity became muddled.

  • HMT Bonar Law – FY1223 (1915)

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    On 27 October 1915, Bonar Law sank on the South Goodwins after a collision, with sources specifically placing her loss after contact with the South Goodwin Light Vessel. She had been patrolling and minesweeping in one of the most dangerous stretches of water in the Dover Strait, where shoals, mines, traffic and weather all queued up to ruin someone’s day. For divers, this is a classic Dover Patrol wreck: small, purposeful, historically loaded, and tied directly to the hard, often overlooked work of the hired trawler crews who kept the Channel routes open. No grand liner glamour here, thank heavens. This is tougher stuff.

  • SS Romulus (1889)

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    On 17 January 1889, Romulus was in the English Channel off the South Foreland when she was run into by the French steamship Felgrano and sank in the early hours. Contemporary wreck listings record one crew member lost. For divers, this is a strong Dover Strait collision story: a Sunderland steamer outward bound for the Mediterranean, a night-time impact off the Kent coast, and a wreck with the quiet appeal of Victorian working steam, iron, coal trade and Channel fog. Not a showy wreck, thankfully. The best ones rarely are.

  • Neap Tide

    Neap Tide marker for general dive planning around Dover. Use as guidance only. Final dive timings depend on skipper judgement, weather, sea state, tidal data and site conditions.

  • Unidentified Wreck – Offshore

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    These dives are for curious divers who like a bit of mystery with their slack water. The wreck may have been rarely dived, poorly recorded, misidentified, or never properly explored. There may be no neat answer waiting on the shotline, which is half the fun and also the reason humans keep buying expensive torches and calling it a hobby. Look for clues: boilers, engines, winches, cargo, crockery, ballast, armament, construction details, anything that might help bring a lost name back from the seabed. You are not booking a routine wreck dive. You are joining a proper offshore puzzle, and the next clue might be yours.

  • SS Eidsiva I (1915)

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    On 31 October 1915, Eidsiva struck a mine and sank, part of the grim run of losses from UC-6’s newly laid field that also claimed or damaged vessels including Toward, HMT Othello II and HMY Aries. For divers, Eidsiva offers a proper First World War Channel story: a neutral Norwegian collier, a cargo of coal, a Dover Strait minefield, and a wreck lying in the busy waterway where commercial trade and naval warfare collided in steel, steam and bad luck.

  • SS Empire Rupert (1945)

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    Her end came on 24 January 1945, around 10 nautical miles off Dover, when she collided with SS Twickenham Ferry, the Southern Railway train ferry then running wartime Channel service. Empire Rupert sank after the collision, with sources giving the position as roughly 51°03'N, 01°32'E. The best tug-specific source I found gives 11 lives lost, while the Wrecksite summary confirms the collision and sinking but truncates the casualty detail. For divers, this is a different kind of Channel wreck: not a merchantman with a cargo hold full of curiosities, but a hard-used wartime tug with Normandy service behind her, lost in the final months of the war on the busy Dover approaches. Small ship. Big story.

  • Spring Tide

    Spring Tide marker for general dive planning around Dover. Use as guidance only. Final dive timings depend on skipper judgement, weather, sea state, tidal data and site conditions.

  • SS Loanda (1908)

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    For divers, Loanda is one of those wrecks that rewards curiosity as much as good buoyancy. She lies upright in roughly 17 to 23 metres, standing several metres proud, with exposed engine remains, an intact propeller, and a cargo story worthy of a Victorian dockside whisper. Reports mention gin and champagne bottles, clay pipes, perfume bottles, trading beads, and the persistent tale of newly minted shillings, although the shilling story is not supported by the manifest. It’s shallow, atmospheric, artifact-rich and very much a slack-water dive, the kind of Dover wreck where every broken bottle and clay pipe feels like it has been waiting 116 years to be noticed.

  • HMTS Monarch (1915)

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    On 8 September 1915, Monarch was on passage from Santander to Newport with iron ore when she struck a mine laid by the German submarine UC-5, about 2.5 miles south of Folkestone, near the defence boom gate. She sank with frightening speed, reportedly in around three minutes, with three lives lost. The wreck lies upright but dispersed in roughly 21 to 28 metres, with boilers, triple-expansion engine remains, cable gear, pulley wheels, GPO-marked finds and cable-related fittings still giving the site its unmistakable character. For divers, Monarch is a cracking First World War Channel wreck: part industrial archaeology, part wartime casualty, and part underwater museum of the age when Britain’s messages travelled through copper, gutta-percha and optimism.

  • SS Toward (1915)

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    On 31 October 1915, Toward struck a mine laid by the German minelaying submarine UC-6, commanded by Matthias Graf von Schmettow, near the South Foreland / Dover area. The explosion tore into her beneath No. 2 hold, just forward of the bridge. She caught fire, settled quickly, and was abandoned. Remarkably, all the crew were rescued, including men who had jumped into the sea. For divers, Toward is a proper First World War Channel wreck: mine warfare, wartime cargo, a dramatic sinking, and a site still rich with clues from a ship that went down in one of the Dover Patrol’s most dangerous corridors.

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