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May 15th, 2020 : Scapa Flow
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Little more than twenty years later, the German Navy returned to Scapa Flow and sank HMS Royal Oak.
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The technical quality leaves something to be desired but having recently watched the documentary on TV it's worth persevering with. LINK |
That's an amazing story.
I have never heard about pre-atomic steel. This should have been an early warning about WWII (and the Royal Oak). "On the 21st June 1919 the German sailors began scuttling the ships and 51 battleships and other vessels went to the bottom of the Flow." |
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Good old Wiki has a fascinating read on the history:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scuttl..._at_Scapa_Flow Yep, Griff, TIL on the steel and the term as well as shitloads everyday. |
Since you all have lives, I try to update you now and then. ;)
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If it's all about education then I think I can help out the writer of the quote in Bruce's opening post and anyone else who plans a visit. The plural of Orkney is Orkney. It is fine to say Orkney Islands or refer to the whole archipelago as Orkney but Orcadians get really annoyed by the word Orkneys so if you want to make friends when you're there...
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Ha, ha. Thanks for posting that, I really enjoyed it. I am actually familiar with the song (poem?) and although I can’t seem to find it right now I’m pretty sure I have a recording of it somewhere in my collection, albeit by a different artist.
While using Google to try to work out who recorded ‘my’ version I discovered that “Captain Hamish Blair” was in fact an alias of Andrew James Fraser Blair, a Scottish journalist and sci-fi author who died in 1935 meaning “Bloody Orkney” must pre-date WWII. |
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