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In Victoria, a sword for the ages will make its manner again to U.Ok.


Grandpa John (Jack) Hilton Louis acquired the sword with leather-based strap and scabbard from an expert diver a long time earlier who had recovered it from the wreckage web site of HMS Royal Oak at Scapa Movement within the Orkney Islands off the north tip of Scotland.

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A corroded sword linked to a torpedoed Royal Navy warship — and gathering mud in a Victoria basement for greater than 40 years — went on show on the CFB Esquimalt Naval Museum Saturday and can finally discover its manner dwelling to the UK.

James Atwood, a retired Sea King helicopter pilot, was given the sword by his English grandfather within the early Eighties.

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And the 97 centimetre blade had an unimaginable story.

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Grandpa John (Jack) Hilton Louis, who spent 5 years combating within the Second World Battle and retired as a serious, acquired the sword with leather-based strap and scabbard from an expert diver a long time earlier who had recovered it from the wreckage web site of HMS Royal Oak at Scapa Movement within the Orkney Islands off the north tip of Scotland.

The battleship had been concerned within the well-known First World Battle naval battle of Jutland in 1916, however was an early casualty of the Second World Battle when a German U-boat slipped by way of a spot in anti-submarine defences and drilled three torpedoes into the ship’s starboard aspect on Oct. 14, 1939.

Royal Oak was caught abruptly with its watertight doorways nonetheless open and a fireball tearing by way of its decks. It capsized and sank in 13 minutes.

Retired Canadian Lt.-Cmdr. Paul Seguna, a volunteer researcher for the CFB Esquimalt Naval and Navy Museum, stated of the 1,260 sailors on Royal Oak that evening, 835 died. Amongst them was Peter Grosvenor Piddington, 20, from a squimalt household. The son of Main Arthur Piddington and Helen Piddington was a midshipman within the Royal Navy.

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Obituary
The announcement of Peter Piggington’s loss of life aboard the Royal Oak within the Victoria Each day Colonist on Oct. 17, 1939. Picture by Occasions Colonist

Atwood had no concept the sword from the Royal Oak had one other connection to Victoria, however after listening to in regards to the analysis on the ship and the native sailor who died aboard, he thought that the relic ought to come out of his basement and be placed on show.

He stated he launched Seguna to the sword his grandfather gave him throughout a night over supper, and the entire historical past began unfolding.

Given its potential historic significance, Atwood determined that the sword must be repatriated to the UK to hitch different Royal Oak artifacts within the assortment of the Scapa Movement Museum.

“I’m comfortable it’s going to a spot the place some of us will discover it significant,” Atwood, a third-generation army man, stated this week.

Seguna stated Scapa Movement Museum has expressed an curiosity in buying the sword primarily based on the supporting background info. He stated U.Ok. authorities in Canada have additionally been made conscious of the sword and the intention to ship itto the museum.

Till repatriation preparations are finalized, Seguna stated the intent is to exhibit the sword on the CFB Esquimalt Naval and Navy museum.

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The museum on the Esquimalt base can be displaying a lithograph of an authentic watercolour portray associated to a go to by Royal Navy battle cruiser HMS Hood to Victoria’s Ogden Level and Vancouver in 1925.

Hood was misplaced on Might 24, 1941, in a battle with the German battleship Bismarck and heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen. The sinking within the North Atlantic’s Denmark Strait claimed 1,418 lives, with solely three survivors.

Three midshipmen who died had a Vancouver Island connection — Thomas Norman Kemp Beard, 20, of Victoria, Francis Llewelyn Lloyd Jones, additionally 20, was born in Victoria; and Christopher John Birdwood Norman, 19, was born in Duncan.

dkloster@timescolonist.com

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