51°16′25″N 1°30′30″E / 51.27361°N 1.50833°E The Goodwin Sands are a 10-mile long sand bank in the English Channel, lying six miles east of Deal in Kent, England. More than 2,000 ships are believed to have been wrecked upon them and as a result, they are marked by numerous lightships and buoys. Notable shipwrecks include the VOC ship Rooswijk, Stirling Castle and the South Goodwin Lightship.
There is currently a lightship on the end of the sands, on the farthest part out to warn ships. The sands were once covered by two Lighthouses, one each at the north and south ends of the sands. The southern lighthouse is now owned by the National Trust, and the north one is still in operation.
An annual cricket match was until recently played on the sands at low tide.
Several naval battles have been fought nearby, including the Battle of Goodwin Sands in 1652 and the Battle of Dover Strait in 1917.
Legend holds that the sands were once the fertile low-lying island of Lomea. This, it is said, was once owned by Godwin, Earl of Wessex, after whom they are named. When he fell from favour, the land was given to St. Augustine's Abbey, Canterbury, whose abbot failed to maintain the sea walls, leading to the island's destruction.
Another theory is that their name came from Anglo-Saxon gōd wine = "good friend", a very euphemistic name given by sailors.
In 1974 a plan was put forward to build a third London airport on the Goodwin Sands, with a huge harbour complex, but the idea faded into obscurity.
Shipwrecks on the Sands
17th century
- John, the son of Phineas Pett of Chatham, was involved in an ordeal in the beginning of October 1624, when occurred: "a wonderful great storm, through which many ships perished, especially in the Downs, amongst which was riding there the Antelope of his Majesty, being bound for Ireland under the command of Sir Thomas Button, my son John then being a passinger in her. A merchant ship, being put from her anchors, came foul of her, and put her also from all her anchors, by means whereof she drove upon the brakes [the Sands], where she beat off her rudder and much of the run abaft, miraculously escaping utter loss of all, for that the merchant ship that came foul of her, called the Dolphin, hard by her utterly perished, both ship and all the company. Yet it pleased God to save her, and got off into the downs, having cut all her masts by the board, and with much labour was kept from foundering." (From the Autobiography of Phineas Pett.)
Phineas received news of the shipwreck at Deal, and was dispatched by the Lord Admiral to attend to the ship and use his best means to save her. He used chain pumps, replaced the rudder, and fitted jury masts, by which effort she was safely brought to Deptford Dock.
- In 1690 HMS Vanguard, a 90-gun second-rate ship of the line, struck the Sands, but was fortunate enough to be got off by the boatmen of Deal.
Great Storm of 1703
In the the Great Storm at least 13 men of war and 40 merchant vessels were wrecked in the Downs, with the loss of 2,168 lives and 708 guns. Yet, to their great credit, the Deal boatmen were able to rescue 200 men from this ordeal.
Naval vessels lost to the sands included:
- HMS Northumberland Deptford built, and, from there locally manned, lost with all hands
- HMS Restoration Deptford built, and, from there locally manned, lost with all hands; also
- HMS Stirling Castle, a 70-gun third rate built at Deptford in 1679.
- the Woolwich fourth-rate HMS Mary was totally overwhelmed with the loss of 343 men.
- the boom ship HMS Mortar was lost with all of her 65 crew.
19th-20th century
The brig Mary White was wrecked on the Sands in a storm in 1851; seven men of her crew were rescued by the lifeboat from Broadstairs.
The Radio Caroline vessel MV Ross Revenge drifted onto the Sands in November 1991, effectively ending the era of offshore pirate radio in Britain.
Literary references
William Shakespeare mentions them in The Merchant of Venice, Act 3 Scene 1:
- Why, yet it lives there uncheck'd that Antonio hath
- a ship of rich lading wrecked on the narrow seas;
- the Goodwins, I think they call the place; a very
- dangerous flat and fatal, where the carcasses of many
- a tall ship lie buried, as they say, if my gossip
- Report be an honest woman of her word.
Herman Melville mentions them in Moby-Dick, Chapter VII, The Chapel:
- In what census of living creatures, the dead of mankind are included; why it is that a universal proverb says of them, that they tell no tales, though containing more secrets than the Goodwin Sands...
Further reading
- Richard Larn and Bridget Larn - Shipwrecks of the Goodwin Sands (Meresborough Books, 1995) ISBN 0-948193-84-0