SS Gairsoppa’s Silver Recovered Off Ireland’s Coast

Huffington Post |By Elliott Snyder | 07/23/2013

ss gairsoppa's

An American company recovered 61 tons of silver from the wreck of a merchant ship that sunk off Ireland’s coast during WWII. According to the company, it is the deepest and largest precious metal recovery from a shipwreck ever made.

The SS Gairsoppa was torpedoed by a German U-boat in February 1941, carrying insured and uninsured silver ingots now worth millions of dollars.

Odyssey Marine Exploration, a company specializing in recovering cargo from sunken shipwrecks, launched a first operation to secure the treasure of precious metals in 2012. After a recent successful second dive, the company now says it has recovered 99% of all of the insured silver on the ship. Odyssey believes there had also been uninsured silver on the ship, but that ship’s precious load has yet not been discovered.

“This is the heaviest amount of precious cargo ever recovered from the deepest depth,” Mark Gordon the president of Odyssey Marine Exploration, the company that completed the recovery, said according to CNBC.

According to Reuters, the find is worth about $35 million.

Odyssey first discovered the ship in 2011 after a ten-year-long search for the wreck, the AP notes. “We didn’t know where it was,” Odyssey’s senior project manager Andrew Craig told NBCNews. “It really was a case of going through every nook and cranny of the wreck site until we came across it.”

According to its contract with the UK, Odyssey can keep 80 percent of their haul of insured silver. The other 20 percent will go to the government.

However, Odyssey had problems with reclaiming their investments from governments in the past. As Bloomberg notes, the company recuperated $500 million in gold and silver in 2007 from the Black Swan wreck, which sank off the coast of Portugal during the Napoleonic Wars. However, after a court battle in the U.S., the company was ordered to return the treasure back to Spain.

“It’s a dramatic business,” Odyssey’s co-founder and chief executive Greg Stemm told Bloomberg.