In 2002 the wreck of a British cruiser was located by divers off the
coast of Tunisia. The stunning photographs of the wreck inspired Dr
Richard Osborne to delve into the controversy surrounding the loss of
one of the Royal Navy's proudest ships - HMS Manchester.
After taking part in the Norway campaign of 1940, Manchester was sent to
the Mediterranean, where she was involved in the dangerous Malta
convoys. On her first convoy she was struck by a torpedo and badly
damaged. In danger of sinking at any minute, her skipper, Captain Harold
Drew, managed to save his ship.
Her next operation was to prove her last. In Operation Pedestal, the
vital Malta relief convoy, Manchester was again hit by a torpedo. This
time, rather than risk the lives of his crew Drew decided to scuttle his
ship. For this Drew was court-martialed in what would become the longest
such case in the history of the Royal Navy.
Using the testimony of those involved, the highly respected naval
historian Dr Osborne pieces together one of the most intriguing stories
to emerge from the Second World War. Coupled with photographs of the
wreck and a detailed account of its discovery, The Watery Grave: The
Life and Death of HMS Manchester, will shed new light on this remarkable
tale.