A QUIET ROOM – 80 years after the sinking of the warship Hustadvika

A QUIET ROOM – 80 years after the sinking of the warship Hustadvika

“Quiet Rooms” – two stone blocks commemorating the ships “Irma” and “Henry” overlooking the sea where they tragically sank 80 years ago.

Irma's encounter with Henry 80 years ago became one of many major tragedies that occurred along the Norwegian coast during World War II. Today, two large stone blocks stand at the far reaches of the sea in memory of these two ships and all those who died.

“A quiet, starry, cold February evening. Two boats are heading north towards Hustadvika. The fast northbound 'Irma' has passed the Hesteskjæret lighthouse, and caught up with the slower freighter 'Henry'. It will be a short and unhappy meeting, one that will become their shared tragic fate.

Norway is at war, and this evening two Norwegian torpedo boats are hiding in Averwe. They have been ordered to attack an expected enemy convoy. They see the two ships coming, and a tragic torpedo strikes Irma and Henry.

This is how the event is described on the information board at the memorial website. “Irma”, built in 1905, sank on February 13, 1944. 61 passengers along the Norwegian coast perished along with the four sailors on board the freighter “Henry” on the darkest evening of February.

Quiet room

It's easy to get immersed in history when you look at Hustadvika. Farther towards the sea in order to see the tragic crime scene. The “Stille rom” memorial site was specially built to accommodate grief, bereavement, reflection and reconciliation.

In the middle of a region where storms can whip the sea into a foaming riot, the PP Meditation Room is very powerful on calm days. Two large rocks were carefully removed from the rock and placed in place. In memory of the two ships and everyone on them. The silence gives an additional echo in the space between the stone walls and in the rock pit formed during excavation.

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Stone of belonging

The memorial also demonstrates how stone has benefited us as a society in many ways. The stories told through stone are important as carriers of culture and history.

The Quiet Room's use of an “unmoving” stone gives an added sense of belonging. In the middle of a large geological region where eternity shaped the rock, the rocks rise during the day and lock into place. In the 3D cut made by the sculptor, the gneiss, an often overlooked rock, is beautifully shown with its bands in the walls.

The stone in the middle

The precisely milled and raised blocks immediately show us the importance of stone as a bearer of culture and a transmitter of history. At the same time, 3D blocks give us a classic example of how the expression of rock structure depends on the observed section.

The rocks concern our intimate history here in the middle of the sea divide. But they, along with the minerals and structures in the rock, also carry a natural history extending back more than a billion years.

For us geologists, the artwork is at the same time a classic example of 3D geology. The sides of the rocks show how the expression of the rock structure depends on the observed section.

By knowing the surrounding geology, we know that the history of the River Gneiss goes back 1,650 million years. The floating structure that we see today was formed in connection with the formation of the Caledonian Mountain Range deep in the Earth's crust about 400 million years ago.

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in the memory

The monument was created by sculptor Geir Stormoen. In memory of those who died after the war in the sinkings of the highway ship “Irma” and the freighter “Henry”. The memorial site is located in the fishing village of Røeggen at the far end of the Nordmøre municipality in Averøy. It was officially unveiled by His Majesty King Harald V on 16 September 2002: “The fate of Irma and Henry is a particularly painful and painful memory because it was the Norwegians who took the lives of the Norwegians.”

The memorial is a peaceful place for everyone who visits the place. On short evening trips or as long-distance tourists. As a cultural bearer and conductor of the history of our time. A place used by schoolchildren and students. In the midst of what gives us the natural history of immortality.

Photo by Annie K.  Engvik

Here in the Hustadvika sea gap, near the Histsjær lighthouse, was the scene of the tragic night of February 13, 1944.

Dalila Awolowo

Dalila Awolowo

"Explorer. Unapologetic entrepreneur. Alcohol fanatic. Certified writer. Wannabe tv evangelist. Twitter fanatic. Student. Web scholar. Travel buff."

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