Sanctuary Banner
February 16, 2009
















Email envalope
Have a Question or Comment?
What can we do to make this site more useful to you?

FKNMS Privacy Policy

Note: Adobe Acrobat Reader required for PDF documents.
Problems accessing PDF documents?
Download the document to disk:
Mac Users: Option-click
PC users: Right-click


Last Updated 1/20/2000

Yellow WaveYellow Wave

SWT Logo The Florida Keys Shipwreck Trail SWT Logo

Benwood

This ship was built in England in 1910 and sunk in 1942. She lies between French Reef and Dixie Shoals on a bottom of low profile reef and sand in depths ranging from 25 to 45 feet.

The Benwood is located between French Reef and Dixie Shoals in 25 to 45 feet of water. She sank after a collision in 1942 with the Robert C. Tuttle.

Chart of the Benwood

Click here for a printable version.


History:

The Benwood, built in England in 1910, was owned by a Norwegian company and registered as a merchant marine freighter. She was 360 feet long with a 51-foot beam. She carried ore and was armed with 12 rifles, one four-inch gun, six depth charges and thirty-six bombs.

On the night of April 9, 1942 the Benwood was on a routine voyage from Tampa, Florida, to Norfolk, Virginia, carrying a cargo of phosphate rock. Rumors of German U-boats in the area required her to travel completely blacked out with the Keys coastal lights three miles abeam. The Robert C. Tuttle, also blacked out, was traveling in the same area, bound for Atreco, Texas. The two ships were on a collision course. The bow of the Benwood collided with the port side of the Tuttle. The Tuttle was not in immediate danger, but the Benwood’s bow was crushed and taking on water. The captain turned her toward land and a half-hour later gave orders to abandon ship. The next day the keel was found to be broken and the ship declared a total loss.

Salvage began soon after the sinking and continued into the 1950s. It is believed that she was dynamited as a navigational hazard and was used by the U.S. Army for aerial target practice after World War II. This is one of the most popular shipwreck dives in the Keys.

Archaeology:

The remains of the Benwood are scattered over a wide area. The bow of the ship is the most intact feature, forming a 25-foot profile in the water column. The hull structure is mostly intact up to the level of the first deck. Large steel knees join the deck plate to the outer hull and sides of the vessel. These knees are massive reinforced triangles of steel which outline the ship’s hull shape despite the loss of the hull plates themselves.

The first deck has been punctured in many places, forming a network of “nooks and crannies” perfect for fish habitat. Divers can peer through these holes into the cargo hold and see the space where ore was once carried.

Marine Life Commonly Observed on this Site:

  • Watch for these fish and invertebrates: goatfish, grunts, moray eels, lobster, glassy sweepers, snapper, grouper, and hogfish.
  • Look for these bottom dwelling organisms: sea fans, sea whips, brain coral, fire coral, and sponges.

Click here for the Dixie Shoal site page which gives more inforamtion on the physical aspects of Dixie Shoal

DOC | NOAA | NOS | ONMS | Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary