They call them the Purton Hulks, a mile-and-a-half-long stretch of ghostly boat wrecks that once formed the oddest of makeshift tidal erosion barriers on the River Severn. They include nothing of Mary Rose antiquity, but local marine historian Paul Barnett thinks they are precious just the same. "What we have here is the largest boat graveyard in maritime Britain, but they have no protection whatsoever. I cannot understand that," he says. Between 1909 and 1963, at least 80 vessels were beached at Purton, originating from a stormy night 100 years ago when there was a massive landslip in a bank between the river and the parallel Sharpness to Gloucester Canal. A plea went out to commercial boat owners for old vessels to be run aground to plug the breach. Boats were towed over to the far side of the river just before the onset of high tide, and then released so that they thundered into the bank. As the tide fell back, a hole was drilled in the ship's side to allow in water and, over time, mud, silt and sand. It worked brilliantly. What was once a narrow bank is now a broad, cliff-like expanse of grassland. Not only that, its vast array of old working boats has become a magnet for marine archaeologists, historians and boat fanatics. Barnett was born within sight of the Swan Hunter shipyard on the Tyne, where his father worked. When the family relocated to Gloucester in the 1970s, father and son would wander down to the Sharpness docks to watch the boats arriving and came upon ...
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