- SS Castilian
SS "Castilian" was carrying a cargo of
munitions cite book |title= Underwater Guide to North Wales Vol. 2|last= Holden|first= Chris|year=2008 |publisher= Calgo Publications|isbn= 978-0-9545066-1-2|pages= p57] toLisbon when she struckEast Platters Rocks , nearThe Skerries (Anglesey) and on12 February 1943 sank.In 1987 a Royal Navy clearance vessel spent several months removing unexploded ordnance from
Fydlyn Bay nearby believed to have come from the wreck. In 1997 the location of the wreck on East Platters Rocks was designated under section 2 of theProtection of Wrecks Act 1973 in 1997 with a 500 m exclusion zone regardingscuba diving activities because of its potentially dangerous cargo. [UK SI| title = The Protection of Wrecks (SS Castilian) Order 1997|url=http://www.opsi.gov.uk/si/si1997/19971976.htm | year=1997 |number= 1976| force=13 August 1997 ]Other boats with the same name
There were two other Ellerman Lines ships called SS "Castilian". The first, ex-"Umbilo", was purchased in 1909 from Bullard, King & Co renamed "Castilian", 1917 torpedoed and sunk by
Unterseeboot 61 off Ireland. The third built 1955, 1963 renamed "City of Peterborough", 1964 reverted to "Castilian" (1966-7 chartered toCunard , temporarily renamed "Arabia"), 1971 sold toMaldives renamed "Maldive Freedom". An even earlier "Castilian" was wrecked onPorthmadog Bar in 1868. [cite web|url=http://freespace.virgin.net/r.cadwalader/maritime/lifeboat/wreck.htm|title=Vessel Losses and Casualties in Tremadoc Bay and St Patrick's Causeway]References
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