The Scotsman

Relatives gather in Orkney for HMS Vanguard disaster centenary

● Descendant­s among those paying tribute to the 843 on board who died

- By LUCINDA CAMERON

0 HMS Vanguard blew up 100 years ago yesterday with the loss of all but two of her crew Relatives of those killed in the Royal Navy’s worst wartime accident marked its centenaryy­esterday.hmsvanguar­d sank following an accidental explosion in Scapa Flow off Orkney on 9 July 1917, with the loss of 843 lives. Only two of the 845 men on board survived.

Forty descendant­s took part in a wreath-laying service over the wreck site yesterday.

Divers from the Royal Navy’s Northern Diving Unit took a single wreath to the seabed to place on the wreck.

They had earlier recovered a White Ensign, laid on the wreckage of the Vanguard in 2009, and replaced it with a new flag.

Among the victims was Lieutenant Evelyn Dunbar-dunbar-rivers, known to his family as Evie, who joined the Vanguard in November 1913.

He was 26 on the night the ship went down and his portrait hangs in the hallway of the family home.

His great-nephew Duncan Dunbar-nasmith, of Glen of Rothes, Moray, was among the descendant­s at the ceremony.

He said: “I’ve grown up with the painting. To be in Scapa Flow, on the waters above the ship, our links with him feel so much more substantia­l – we feel closer to a man whose life came to a sudden end at such a young age so long ago.

“It has been wonderful for us to be among so many descendant­softhosewh­oservedabo­ard Vanguard.noneofuswi­llforget the sacrifice they made.”

As a child, Paula Smith, from Ipswich, remembers her grandmothe­r talking with sorrow of her younger brother Henry Metcalf, a 19-year-old Royal Marine who had served aboard Vanguard for just two months when he died.

She said: “They never found him and she never made it to Scapa Flow. I’m doing this in her memory as well as his.”

The wreath-laying ceremony was followed by a service of commemorat­ion at Lyness Royal Naval Cemetery in Hoy, where 41 of the ship’s crew were buried.

Five-year-old Harry Remers, from Midhurst in West Sussex, laid a wreath on behalf of all the descendant­s.

His great-great-uncle, Lieutenant Reginald (Rex) Elgood, was among those who died.

The events culminated with a special night watch service at St Magnus Cathedral in Kirkwall, timed to mark the moment the Vanguard went down – 11:20pm.

Although the cause of the explosion has not been proven, the accepted explanatio­n is that a fire started in a fuel compartmen­t next to one of the battleship’s armaments magazines, triggering explosions that blew the ship apart. British fliers may have to fork out more money for flights to help fund US immigratio­n officers stationed in UK airports, an industry source said.

Discussion­s between the UK and United States on the potential deployment of US Customs and Border Protection officers to the country are ongoing.

The system allows passengers to avoid queues at immigratio­n and customs when they touch down on American soil. It would involve law enforcemen­t officers checking travel documents, passports, visas and making sure travellers abide by customs and agricultur­e importatio­n rules at UK airports before flights are boarded.

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 ??  ?? 0 Lieutenant Reginald (Rex) Elgood was among those who died, his great great nephew, Harry Remers, aged five, laying a wreath in Orkney yesterday
0 Lieutenant Reginald (Rex) Elgood was among those who died, his great great nephew, Harry Remers, aged five, laying a wreath in Orkney yesterday

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