On 5 May 1918,
Kyarra was sailing from
Tilbury to
Devonport to embark civilian passengers and take on full general cargo. However she was sunk by the German submarine near
Swanage with the loss of six lives on 26 May 1918. The captain of
UB-57,
Oberleutnant Johannes Lohs, died at sea, aged 29. Lohs sailed from
Zeebrugge on 3 August 1918. The last contact he made with base was on the evening of 14 August 1918. At the time
UB-57 was homeward bound. She was believed to be in the area of the Sandiette Bank, east of the
Straits of Dover. It is thought
UB-57 hit a
mine. Lohs' body subsequently washed ashore was buried in the
Ysselsteyn German war cemetery, Netherlands. SS
Kyarra was discovered in the late 1960s by a member of the Kingston and Elmbridge
British Sub-Aqua Club, which later bought the wreck. The wreck, which lies off
Anvil Point, remains popular with divers. In honour of this vessel, a house was named in Ipswich, Queensland, built in 1920. ==References==