Ju 88 bomber recovered from Thames Estuary

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Remains of German WWII Junkers Ju 88 bomber recovered from Thames Estuary

By Richard Moss | 15 December 2014
Wessex Archaeology recover remains of identified German Ju 88 bomber shot down off coast of Clacton in April 1943

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Flugzeug Junkers Ju 88© German Federal Archive (Deutsches Bundesarchiv) via CC BY-SA 3.0 de

The remains of a World War Two Junkers Ju 88 German aircraft have been recovered from the outer Thames Estuary, 10 miles south east of Clacton.

Unearthed by a dredger in August 2011 as part of ongoing work on a shipping channel for the new Thames Gateway, sonar investigations undertaken by Wessex Archaeology revealed what appeared to be the outline of twin engines. A diving search in February 2012 confirmed the wreck site as being that of a Ju 88.

More than 15,000 Junkers Ju 88s were produced, but the presence of fragments from a large format camera suggested that this discovery was a rare prototype T series, designed for high speed reconnaissance missions.

The largest artefact to emerge from the watery depths was an aircraft engine with markings identifying it as a BMW 801 engine, common in Ju88s including the T series. But the discovery of a control panel from a nitrous oxide boost system raised hopes that the rarer model had been discovered.

Known as the Ha-Ha Device, the system allowed the Ju 88T’s fuel to be enriched with oxygen which gave increased speed at high altitude.

The discovery of a FuG 25 ‘Friend or Foe’ radio system, which gave the high-flying series a means of being identified by their own air defence systems, meant archaeologist were able to confirm the type as well as the identity of the aircraft.

Only one T series is believed to have crashed in British waters: experimental works prototype Ju 88T Works Number 0678 T9+FH.

It was a clear morning on April 23 1943 when the Luftwaffe plane crossed the English Coast between Harwich and the Black Water Estuary at 32,500 feet. But trailing them at 34,000 feet were two RAF Spitfires flown by Norwegian pilots from 331 Squadron, who had been scrambled to intercept. From their vantage position above they honed in on the Ju 88’s vapour trails.

Piloted by veteran test pilot Leutnant Hans Joachim Baeumer, of the special operation unit Versuchsversband Oberbefehlshaber der Luftwaffe (VOdL), the German plane had flown from Schiphol Airport in Holland on a photographic reconnaissance mission over the Chelmsford Marconi New Street Works, which produced vital components for radar systems.

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Rb5-30 Camera Plate© wessex Archaeology

As well as intelligence for bombing raids it is thought Baeumer and his crew were tasked with testing the capabilities of the prototype.

When his rear gunner spotted the Allied fighters, Baeumer aborted the mission and went into a steep dive to try and outrun his attackers - probably using the new Ha-Ha device. Unluckily for him and his crew the fighters pursuing him were new supercharged Mark IX Spitfires - specially modified for high altitude combat with a souped-up Rolls Royce Merlin engine.

According to the account of Marius Eriksen, the Norwegian RAF fighter ace who claimed the kill, a short burst from his machine guns set the Ju 88’s port engine on fire before two more bursts caused it to turn over and explode.

Baeumer parachuted out and was picked up later, unconscious and with facial burns, by an Allied Air Sea Rescue launch. He was the only survivor of the three-man crew.

Despite being a mainstay of the German Luftwaffe and conceived as a Schnellbomber or fast bomber, Baeumer's Ju 88 was one of hundreds to succumb to RAF fighters during the war.

But as the war progressed it carved a niche in other roles such as ground attack, night fighting, tank busting, reconnaissance and anti-shipping – a role which wrought havoc among Mediterranean convoys.

The Ju88 also took part in 'lone wolf' attacks against the British coastline during the closing stages of World War Two.

Throughout all of these episodes and guises, the Thames Estuary was a constant target. And as a main artery for Allied shipping convoys, Luftwaffe activity remained a threat throughout the war.

Today these battles have left archaeological evidence scattered all over the Estuary, from Sheerness to Clacton and beyond.

Work to record this underwater evidence, as dredging clears new shipping lanes, is being overseen by Wessex Archaeology, whose survey of the crash site has yielded more than 300 fragments, many of which have been identified.

Speaking for the DP World London Gateway, Environmental Manager Marcus Pearson said the aircraft represents "an important part of the Estuary’s marine and military heritage".

“As a result of the work undertaken by Wessex Archaeology, the aircraft vividly illustrates a past which, although relatively recent, is now fading from memory," he added.

“In a single episode the crash site intertwines the stories of secretive Luftwaffe units, the contribution of Allied nations to RAF units, decorated fighter aces and veteran test pilots.”

Further finds from the ongoing dredging process have included an aero engine believed to be from a German Heinkel He 111, a propeller hub from an as-yet-unidentified German aircraft and part of an Allied parachute.

The group and the DP World London Gateway have developed a pdf booklet called Archaeology from the Sky: The Air War over the Thames Estuary which explores the story of the Dornier and their wider work to preserve and record the archaeology that remains beneath its watery depths.


http://www.culture24.org.uk/history...rs-ju-88-bomber-recovered-from-thames-estuary
 
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