Dardanelles Raider HMS E14 – British Submarine Found Intact After 94 Years

Last Voyage of the E14 – click on thumbnail to go to larger image.

On April 27, 1915, at the height of the the World War I Gallipoli campaign, Lt-Cdr Edward Courtney Boyle piloted the submarine HMS E14 beneath the minefields, guns and search lights of the the Narrows, the heavily defended entrance to the Dardanelles, the gateway to the Sea of Marmara and Istanbul.  Once past the ” impregnable defences,”  the E14 spent three weeks in the Sea of Marmara, sinking numerous ships including two warships and a White Star cruise liner packed with 6,000 Turkish troops bound for Gallipoli.  The E14 then again slipped back out through the Dardanelles to safety.  In 1918, the E14, under the command of Lt-Cdr Geoffrey Saxon White, was lost in the Dardanelles. Both Lt-Cdrs Boyle and White were awarded the Victoria Cross.  White’s was awarded posthumously.

The location of the submarine was unknown until this year when the ship was located intact by Turkish documentary-makers in the Dardanelles, after a search that began in January.   The submarine is the only British E-class submarine ever to be discovered intact.

Found after 94 years – the submarine which won two VCs

The submarine was found at a depth of 65ft, around 800ft from the beach. It is lying at an angle of almost 45 degrees on the sloping seabed, and all but the front 23ft of the 181ft vessel is covered in sand.

While the wreck looks largely intact, at least one shell hole is visible near the bows, indicating the battering the submarine took.

Her location also suggests she was less than a quarter of a mile from getting out of the straits and out of the range of guns.

Mr Kolay said: “They were almost out of the Dardanelles and would have been safe. The wreck is in a good condition and is one of the best preserved submarines of its type left on the earth. It is of great historical significance, as well as being, of course, a war grave.”

Comments

Dardanelles Raider HMS E14 – British Submarine Found Intact After 94 Years — 6 Comments

  1. This is quite a fantastic find. There is nothing that I would like more than to see the vessel that was feted for my Great Uncle and the rest of the sleeping crew.
    I am in such a mixed state as I am not sure of the security of the site now found. Diving to the site would be a wish for myself although not a diver.
    Ships that are lost at sea are unique and I do believe that it should remain so.

  2. My great great uncle Martin Robert Bond died on E14. God rest his sole. What they did was amazing. What was the name of your Uncle?

  3. I have been trying to find out as much as I can about the E14 as my grandad, Able Seaman Michael Loy served on the E14 when it was the first to get through the Dardanelles. I’m 58 now, and my mum is 90 – but I still remember sitting at my grandad’s feet as a youngster and listening to his First World war stories when he was at sea (though he didn’t talk about them for years after he came back). I vividly remember him saying how they had to be quiet as they were under an enemy ship and nearly ran out of oxygen (think they had to stay submerged for 3 days). So very proud of him – my cousin in South Africa was given grandad’s Distinguished Service Medal as he was named after him. But I know my grandad always regretted my Uncle Jack’s death in World War 2 (who I am proudly named after) as he joined at 15 and a half and so desperately wanted to follow in his dad’s footsteps and trained for two years (despite getting rheumatic fever) on the HMS Caledonia and joined the destroyer HMS Duneaden which was sunk in Bermuda – he was only 17/18 years old – and I treasure the remaining page of a letter I have just been given just before he went on the destroyer. So very proud of all of them.

  4. Marc, Martin Robert Bond was from near Norwich Norfolk. He was an artificer, he trained most of WW1 then died on the E14. I’ve created a Facebook group to keep the memory of him and the submarine alive. Please feel free to join and keep in contact. Regards Philip Bond