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History of Wasa:
When she set sail on her maiden voyage, the ship of the line Wasa was
the most impressive ship in the Swedish Navy. She sank within minutes,
not a mile from Land, and it would be 333 years before she was salvaged.
Named for the Royal House of Wasa, she was built for the Navy of
Gustavus Adolphus, then the dominant military force in the Baltic when
Sweden was at war with Poland.
Wasa was scheduled to join the existing fleet and on April 10, 1628,
she sailed from Stockholm with about 250 people aboard. Orders of the
day read “If anyone wishes to have his wife with him, he is free to do
so here in the Stockholm Channel, but not on a voyage where the
objective is the enemy”.
The crew had to warp the ship out of the harbour (by pulling the ship
up by using the anchor); Wasa had gone no more than fifteen yards when
a sudden gust laid the ship on her beam-ends. Water rushed in through
the open gun ports and she sank immediately. The death toll was
estimated at about 50 people, which included wives and children.
Many parties were initially blamed including the Captain and the
shipbuilder, but there was no conclusive evidence. Thereafter,
construction of Swedish warships came under more direct control of the
Navy.
There were various attempts to salvage her, some of which were
partially successful in retrieving artefacts and guns. In 1956 however,
amateur archaeologist Anders Franzen succeeded in extracting a core
sample of her hull, and efforts soon began to raise the ship.
On August 20, 1959, Wasa was pulled from the mud, and transferred to an
area where the water was only 15 metres deep. On April 24th 1960 she
broke the surface, and two weeks later she floated to dry dock on her
own hull. By the autumn, she was safely housed in the museum building
where she remained under continuous water spray to prevent her timbers
from disintegrating.
Wasa’s more than a thousand sculptures and fragments constitute one of
the largest collections of mannerist-style seventeenth-century wooden
sculpture in the world.
One of the most popular attractions in Sweden since her recovery, Wasa
is the centrepiece of the Statens Sjohistoriska Museum on the Stockholm
waterfront.
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