HMS Port Napier

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Visible part of the remains of the Port Napier in 20 metres of water at mid-tide looking towards Skye
Visible part of the remains of the Port Napier in 20 metres of water at mid-tide looking towards Skye

The Port Napier was taken over by the Admiralty during its construction and converted to lay mines. After being loaded with her cargo, she dragged her anchor during a gale in the Kyle of Lochalsh on 26 November 1940 and grounded in shallow water.[1] While being unloaded there was a fire in the engine room, whereupon the harbour and towns nearby were evacuated, and she was towed well out into the loch and cast adrift in anticipation of an explosion.[1]

A massive explosion on 27 November, which fortuitously didn't set off any of the mines, blew her apart and she tipped over on her starboard side and sank in 20 metres of water with her port side visible at low tide.[2]

In 1955 the Royal Navy took off the steel plating on her port side and removed the mines and 4000 anti-aircraft shells.[2]

The wreck is a popular, if silty, site for scuba diving owing to its relative intactness and shallow location.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Gordon MacKay. The Wreck of the Port Napier. Dive and Sea the Hebredies.
  2. ^ a b John Liddiard (February 2000). Port Napier Wreck Tour. Diver Magazine.