There seems to be a run on finding things lost from previous wars. The Australian Naval battle cruiser, HMAS Sydney, was sunk in 1941 by a German raider. There has been a search for the HMAS Sydney without success. However, the German raider was found on Saturday giving renewed hope that the Sydney will also be found.
Both the HMAS Sydney and the German vessel, the DKM Kormoran, sank after a battle off Australia’s western coast on Nov. 19, 1941 during World War II.
None of the 645 men aboard the Sydney survived. But 317 of the Kormoran’s 397 crew rowed to the Australian coast in life boats and were taken prisoner. The 9,500-ton Kormoran had been disguised as a Dutch merchant ship when it opened fire on the Sydney.
“Finding the Kormoran is one big step forward (to finding the Sydney),” said Prime Minister Kevin Rudd.
The wreck was found Saturday 500 miles north of the Western Australia state capital Perth, he said.
The government-funded $3.9 million search for the Sydney began two weeks ago and is headed by U.S. shipwreck hunter David Mearns.
Mearns was involved in finding the wrecks of the British battle cruiser the HMS Hood and the DKM Bismarck, the German battle ship that sank her in the North Atlantic in 1941.
The Sydney weighed in at 6,600 metric tons (7,300 U.S. tons), making it the largest vessel from any country to be lost with no survivors during the war.
The fate of the ship and its crew has remained an enduring mystery, though a parliament inquiry into the tragedy in 1999 accepted accounts by Kormoran survivors that they last saw the ship in flames and heading toward Perth.
