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Sweden's Vasa marks 50 years out of the water

AFP/The Local
AFP/The Local - [email protected]
Sweden's Vasa marks 50 years out of the water

Half a century has passed since the sunken 17th century royal warship Vasa was brought to the surface, but the story of how one of Sweden's biggest failures became a national treasure still fascinates.

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"The first thing we saw was a little wooden head, and after some time came

another wooden head... It was a fantastic sight," said retired navy commander

Jarl Ellsen, ahead of Sunday's 50th anniversary of the raising of the ship.

Slowly, what was once briefly the crown jewel of the Swedish navy was

raised off the Baltic sea bed where it had rested for more than 300 years

after pitifully sinking just minutes into its maiden voyage.

For the large crowd gathered at the Stockholm harbour on April 24, 1961 and

the some 100 million people following the event from around the world on

television and radio, the suspense was enormous.

"We didn't know how she would behave," said 90-year-old Ellsen, who at the

time was a spokesman for the Swedish navy.

"It was very exciting. She came up rather slowly because they had to take

it very, very easy not to break her," he said.

More than three centuries earlier, the Vasa, commissioned by Swedish King

Gustav II Adolf to be the mightiest warship in the world, set sail in the late

afternoon of August 10, 1628 on its maiden voyage.

After raising its massive sails and firing celebratory canon shots in front

of the royal palace in Stockholm, the ship majestically glided off, only to

discover after a few minutes and a mere kilometre out, it did not have enough

ballast to counteract the weight of its 64 guns.

"The Vasa story is the story of a historic fiasco," said Marika Hedin, a

historian and head of the Vasa Museum, today by far Sweden's most visited

museum.

Managing to raise the 69-metre (226-foot) wreck nearly intact -- the first

ever underwater salvage of such a large vessel -- "gave the ship back its

symbolic meaning for Sweden as a success story," she said.

"It was an absolutely crazy project," Hedin admits, pointing out that at

the time the salvage began, no one had any idea if it would even be possible,

how much it would cost or if the ship would remain intact.

Yet the enthusiasm around the project was enormous: "I think the idea was

to salvage her and also to rewrite the history around her, to make her an

example and the symbol of those greater days" in Sweden's glory period during

the rein of Gustaf II Adolf, she said.

Swedish military circles were eager to revamp the Scandinavian country's

image felt by many to have been tainted by what they saw as its "cowardice" in

remaining neutral throughout World War II, Hedin added.

Vasa's second life began in 1956 when navy engineer Anders Franzen located

the wreck at a depth of 32 meters (105 feet).

He had been looking for the all-but-forgotten warship, knowing that the

Baltic Sea was perfect for preserving wrecks due to the fact that the teredo,

a wood-penetrating ship worm, is absent from its icy, brackish waters.

In fact, today some 20,000 ship wrecks have already been discovered at the

bottom of the Baltic, while archeologists suspect there could be more than

100,000.

Far fewer were known of when Franzen began his tireless search, using a

special core sampler which, after years of patience, one day pulled up a piece

of blackened oak from a depth of about 30 metres.

Diver Per Edvin Fälting plunged in and quickly contacted Franzen by radio:

"I can't see anything, since it's pitch-dark here, but I can feel something

big -- the side of a ship," he said.

"Here is one gun port and here's another. There are two rows. It must be

the Vasa."

Soon ideas -- many of them far-fetched -- of how to bring the majestic rig

to the surface were being tossed around: should they freeze the ship and the

water around it before raising it and letting the iceberg melt in the sun, or

perhaps fill it with ping-pong balls that would help float it to the surface?

In the end, it was decided to slip massive steel cables under the hull and

lift the wreck out of the water.

But digging out the seabed beneath the hull to make room for the cables was

no small feat, with the divers constantly fearful the massive ship would

collapse on top of them.

"We were military divers and we were given an order to dive," said Åke

Lindquist, acknowledging that at the time he was just 19 and "didn't know how

exciting it was."

"At the time it was just a black ghost lying 32 metres under the surface,"

he said.

Housed in a special museum built over an old dry dock, the Vasa is today

the world's most visited maritime museum and expects to register at the end of

this month its 30 millionth visitor in 20 years

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