- HMS Hampshire (1903)
HMS "Hampshire" was a "Devonshire"-class
armoured cruiser of theRoyal Navy . She was constructed at theChatham Dockyard , Kent and commissioned in 1905 at a cost of around £900,000.She served in
World War I and fought at thebattle of Jutland on 31 May 1916. Immediately after the battle she was directed to carry Lord Kitchener fromScapa Flow on a diplomatic mission to Russia. Sailing forArkhangelsk in a gale she struck a mine at around 19:40 on 5 June 1916 offMainland, Orkney betweenBrough of Birsay andMarwick Head . The ship sank very rapidly. Kitchener, his staff and most of the crew perished; only twelve men survived. The mine is believed to have been one of those laid by the submarine "U-75" on 23 May.Fritz Joubert Duquesne , aBoer and German spy, claimed to have sabotaged and sunk HMS "Hampshire", killing Kitchener and most of the crew. According to German records, Duquesne assumed the identity of Russian Duke Boris Zakrevsky and joined Kitchener in Scotland. On route to Russia, Duquesne signaled a German U-boat to alert them that Kitchener’s ship was approaching. He then escaped on a raft just before HMS "Hampshire" was destroyed. Duquesne was awarded theIron Cross for this act. In the 1930s and 40s, he ran the famous "Duquesne Spy Ring " and was captured by theFBI along with 32 otherNazi agents in the largest espionage conviction in U.S. history.The wreck was designated as a controlled site under the
Protection of Military Remains Act . She lies in around 65 metres of water off the north west coast of Orkney . In 1983 one propeller and part of a drive shaft were illegally salvaged. The prop was later given to Lyness museum, Orkney after protests.References
*Colledge
* [http://www.opsi.gov.uk/si/si2008/uksi_20080950_en_1 SI 2008/950] Designation under the Protection of Military Remains Act 1986External links
* [http://www.hmshampshire.co.uk/ HMS Hampshire memorial site]
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