Yorkshire's most famous ships in campaign to bring home First World War U-boat hunter
Built in Beverley in 1906, the Viola’s remarkable journey took her from the North Sea, where she was engaged in life or death struggles with German U-boats during the First World War, to her days spent as a whaling ship off the coast of Africa.
Today the 113-year-old Viola, almost the only survivor of the 3,000 fishing vessels which saw active service in the Great War, lies beached alongside the rotting quays of an abandoned whaling station on the island of South Georgia.
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Hide AdNow the trustees behind the campaign to bring her home have launched their latest fundraising and awareness effort, as hopes rise that she will finally set off on the 7,745-mile journey back to Hull next summer or the year after.
Artist Larry Malkin features the Viola on the cover of a new calendar Homeward Bound, along with 12 other famous Hull ships.
The paintings will be auctioned in 2020, with the artist donating 50 per cent of the proceeds towards the Viola Trust.
Mr Malkin said he fell in love with the ship when he started painting her and researching her incredible story.
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Hide AdHe said: “I feel such an affinity with this boat. When you look at the size of it - only 90 foot long - to think she went all the way to Grytviken and it is now abandoned.
“We need to get it back otherwise we lose the maritime history of Hull.”
Amazingly the wooden decking on the ship is “as good as the day she was built” and her engines are still in working order.
However the plan would to float her back the 7,745 miles home on a barge - at the cost of £1.5m, with another £1.5m needed to restore her.
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Hide AdProject manager Norman Court said they had to be “fairly guarded so as not to complicate things” in the build up to the announcement earlier this month that Hull Council had scooped a £13.6 million grant from the National Heritage Lottery Fund for a project to protect and promote Hull’s rich maritime history.
“We can now be a bit more bold and start drawing attention to Viola,” he said.
The hope is Viola will sit one day alongside Hull’s historic sidewinder trawler, Arctic Corsair, in the newly refurbished North End Shipyard.
Mr Court said promises and commitments he had received were “very strong” once the vessel was home. The £1.5 m needed to bring her home could be drastically reduced if she is brought home as a return load.
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Hide AdHe said: “With a fair wind it will be next summer and with complications the year after.”
Dr Robb Robinson, who discovered Viola’s bell in 2006 on a Norwegian farm, has been among those who have championed the campaign to bring the Viola back to Yorkshire.
Dr Robinson said: “I’m as confident as I have ever been we can pull this off. It is something we have to go for.
"We have this incredible maritime history but the Arctic Corsair excepted, we are very short on historic ships.”
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Hide AdThe oldest and most famous ship featured in the calendar is HMS Bounty - built at Blaydes Shipyard in Hull in 1784.
The crew mutinied after loading breadfruit in Tahiti, casting Captain William Bligh adrift in an open boat. Bligh survived - and later surveyed the lower Humber estuary.
Others have equally powerful stories - not least the Norland, a North Sea passenger ferry which was requisitioned in 1982 to transport 900 paratroopers from Portsmouth to the Falklands.
For a calendar, price £9.95 plus postage, contact [email protected].