V2 Rocket Removed From Mudflats Of River Stour Near Harwich, Essex

PA/Huffington Post UK  |  By   |  Posted: 31/03/2012 21:36 Updated: 31/03/2012 21:48

V2 Rocket
Royal Navy divers deal with a WWII V2 Rocket

Bomb disposal experts have removed the remnants of a German war-time V2 rocket which was found submerged in mudflats off the English coast, it emerged.

The 4ft-long section of the Second World War missile was pulled out at low tide from the River Stour between Harwich, Essex, and Felixstowe, Suffolk.

It had been discovered nose down and was projecting about two feet out of the mud, around 300ft from the shoreline, a Royal Navy spokesman said.

It was lifted from the mud onto a barge following a delicate operation by a six-man Navy team who worked with the Army's 101 Engineer Regiment bomb disposal team.

To begin with, they excavated around the lowest part of the missile to discover the warhead section missing, meaning it posed no safety risk.

The venture section of the rocket, named after a scientific reaction that happens when fluid passes through a narrow pipe, may now be donated to the nearby sailing club.

Members of the club have unwittingly passed the rocket in the mud for decades.

Lt Dan Herridge, officer-in-command of SDU 2, said: "This was a successful result to the operation and means people using the waterways and living locally can have confidence that this was not a dangerous piece of ordnance."

The V2 rocket was developed by scientist Wernher von Braun who went on to be a key figure behind the American effort to put man on the moon.

Built by concentration camp prisoners, more than 3,000 V2s were launched from the Continent at South East England and the Belgian port of Antwerp.

The missile attacks resulted in the deaths of an estimated 7,250 people, mostly civilians. Of these, more than 2,750 were killed in London, and another 6,523 injured.

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Bomb disposal experts have removed the remnants of a German war-time V2 rocket which was found submerged in mudflats off the English coast, it emerged. The 4ft-long section of the Second World War ...
Bomb disposal experts have removed the remnants of a German war-time V2 rocket which was found submerged in mudflats off the English coast, it emerged. The 4ft-long section of the Second World War ...
 
 
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01:44 PM on 04/01/2012
It looks like a Dyson Vacuum Cleaner
12:26 PM on 04/01/2012
Venturi not venture.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GingerlyColors
No will to change it, no right to criticize it
06:40 AM on 04/01/2012
The V2 Rocket was at the time the pinacle of Nazi engineering. Unlike the V1 'Doodlebugs' which can be shot down there was no defence against the V2 which the first of which was launched against England in the late summer of 1944 when Germany was well in retreat. Nazi scientists were working on other projects at the time and it was believed that Germany was only six weeks away from aquiring the atomic bomb when it surrendered in May, 1945. By persecuting the very people who would have given Germany the Bomb, they certainly shot themselves in the foot! German Jews worked in the Manhatten Project which gave America the atomic bomb which finally ended the war in Japan.
Can you imagine one of those V2's coming over with an atomic bomb in it's warhead? Even if such a horrific thing happened late as March or even April 1945, Nazi Germany could have turned the war back into it's favour as whole towns would have been wiped out and it would have only taken about a dozen such missiles to level London. The moral of this story is be careful who you persecute.
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vividrick
I came, I saw...I had a cup of tea!
04:20 AM on 04/01/2012
This was never designed to combat allied arms, all it did in the main was to kill civilians. A last chance to scare Britian into submission. But we held out :-) ...Interesting the same engineers went to work for NASA.

What did the sailing club do that was so wrong? :-(
07:39 PM on 04/01/2012
What did the sailing club do?Nothing. the target was more than likely Harwich or Ipswich or anything in between.Also there was a Royal Navy training establishment In the vicinity HMS Ganges.
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vividrick
I came, I saw...I had a cup of tea!
10:55 PM on 04/01/2012
I'm referring to where it maybe detonated.
03:55 AM on 04/01/2012
Wow! Cool!
03:51 AM on 04/01/2012
The inner city of Dresden was largely destroyed by 722 RAF and 527 USAAF bombers that dropped 2431 tons of high explosive bombs, and 1475.9 tons of incendiaries. there were as many as 25,000 civilian casualties, I'm not 'Pro' anything just putting a little perspective here.
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05:13 AM on 04/01/2012
Perspective? What about the people of Coventrys "perspective? The people of London? All the poor folk who had to suffer The Blitz? What of their "perspective"?

Dresden? If you can't take it don't dish it out. Germany got paid back in it's own coin.
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05:20 AM on 04/01/2012
Dresden? - It was Coventrated.
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GingerlyColors
No will to change it, no right to criticize it
06:42 AM on 04/01/2012
Do they send strike-breakers to Dresden in Germany?
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Dean M Miller
I Feed On The Tears Of Liberals
01:57 AM on 04/01/2012
cool stuff
11:20 PM on 03/31/2012
Its actually called a Venturi effect not a Venture - The Venturi effect is the reduction in fluid pressure that results when a fluid flows through a constricted section of pipe. The Venturi effect is named after Giovanni Battista Venturi (1746–1822), an Italian physicist.
11:38 PM on 03/31/2012
Johnr968: Well put. Ignorance is the norm for Huff writers......can't get anything right it seems.
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mudshark12
Now who are you jiving with that cosmik debris?
10:05 PM on 03/31/2012
I predict the Europeans will be finding remnants of that awful war for another 50 years. And they cant be too careful as some of those explosives become very unstable as they age.