The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Royals devastated by Mountbatte­n’s murder

- By Craig Campbell mail@sundaypost.com

Asecond cousin to the Queen, Lord Mountbatte­n was Prince Philip’s uncle and much-loved by all the royals.

So it seems strange now to think about how little protection he had when he spent one month each year in Ireland, close to the border with the north in an area where the IRA often took refuge.

Odder still to think that, though the police kept an eye on his Classiebaw­n Castle, nobody watched Shadow V, the boat he had berthed at the Mullaghmor­e public dock.

The 79-year-old and others had set off on the boat about 11.30am on August 27, 1979, when it was “blown to smithereen­s”. Although he was pulled from the water, Lord Mountbatte­n’s legs had been almost severed and he died shortly after.

Also on the boat were one of his twin grandsons, 14-year-old Nicholas, and a local boat boy, 15-year-old Paul Maxwell.

Both boys also died, and within hours 18 soldiers, 16 from the Parachute Regiment, were killed by two booby-trap bombs near Warrenpoin­t.

An IRA statement said: “This operation is one of the discrimina­te ways we can bring to the attention of the English people the continuing occupation of our country.”

The Lord and his family

had spent their summers at the castle, in Country Sligo in the west of Ireland.

It’s been said that the previous year the IRA had tried to shoot Mountbatte­n on board his boat, but bad weather made it impossible for a sniper.

In 1979, IRA member Thomas Mcmahon had got into the unguarded vessel during the night and attached a 50lb radio-controlled bomb.

The party were just a few hundred yards from shore when the IRA detonated the bomb. Mountbatte­n’s eldest daughter, Patricia, Lady Brabourne, and her husband John, Lord Brabourne, were also on board, along with their twins, Nicholas and Timothy.

John’s mother, Doreen, Lady Brabourne, was there, too. Aged 83, she would die from her injuries the following day.

Admiral of the Fleet Louis Francis Albert Victor Nicholas Mountbatte­n, 1st Earl Mountbatte­n of Burma, had been a Royal Navy officer and statesman. In an incredible career, he had been First Sea Lord from 1954 to 1959, the same position his father, Prince Louis of Battenberg, had 40 years before.

He then served as chief of the defence staff until 1965, which makes him the longest-serving profession­al head of the British Armed Forces. He was chairman of the NATO military committee for a year. Lord Mountbatte­n was given a full state funeral, and is still fondly remembered.

 ??  ?? First Sea Lord Louis Mountbatte­n at his office in Admiralty House, London in 1955
First Sea Lord Louis Mountbatte­n at his office in Admiralty House, London in 1955

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