This film is part of Free

A New dinghy for the Mary Rose expedition

It's high tide at Portsmouth Harbour as members of the Mary Rose expedition examine their latest acquisitions in this short film from Ilse McKee

Amateur film 1971 3 mins Silent

From the collection of:

Logo for Wessex Film and Sound Archive

Overview

We begin in the upper reaches of Portsmouth Harbour with a boat crossing choppy water with warships in the distance. Members of the Mary Rose expedition team examine a new Atlas Copco compressor which will be used on dives to the wreck site. An inflatable dinghy is also seen. We then relocate to a shingle beach where we see Gabby and Thomas McKee splashing about in the water.

The Atlas Copco compressor seen in this film played a major part in the expedition to raise the Mary Rose. It enabled the removal of the silt that covered the wreck, which was discovered by Alexander McKee and his team, lying in the approaches to Portsmouth Harbour. Ilse McKee, who made this film, records that her husband, Alexander, who made the Mary Rose his life's work, wrote to the Warner Brothers film studios in Hollywood, telling them about the project. They gave the McKees a movie camera in order to record significant moments in the project's early history. Many of these films are now held at the Wessex Film & Sound Archive.