The waters off Cape Hatteras
have claimed mariners and their
ships since they first visited
the coast of North Carolina
in the sixteenth century. From
the time that Sir Walter Raleigh's
flagship, Tiger, ran aground
on the hidden shoals of the
Carolina Outer Banks in 1585,
there have been over one thousand
documented sinkings and strandings
along this treacherous coastline.
The sunken ships from these
four centuries of maritime history
make the Outer Banks the greatest
location for wreck diving outside
of Truk or Scappa Flow.
Many
of the wrecks that lie off Hatteras
were stranded on the hard sand
of Diamond Shoals; others met
their end from German torpedoes
during WW II. The storms that
beat against the shore in the
winter and late fall drove many
a sailing ship into the dangerous
shallow waters of the cape,
and then pounded them mercilessly.
Now many of them lie in the
warm Gulf Stream waters that
average 78-85 degrees in the
summer months and that boast
incomparable visibility. Once
you've dived these wrecks you'll
never stop coming back. |