The ship was sunk in 1941 by the German battleship Bismarck, with the loss of all but three of the 1,418 crew. The laying of the keel for HMS Hood got under way at John Brown Shipyard in Clydebank ...
The ship was sunk in 1941 by the German battleship Bismarck, with the loss of all but three of the 1,418 crew. The laying of the keel for HMS Hood got under way at John Brown Shipyard in Clydebank ...
First launched more than 100 years ago, HMS Hood was one of the greatest and biggest warships ever built by the Royal Navy. She was affectionately known as ‘The Might Hood’ and was the final ...
The battle-cruiser HMS Hood was launched at John Brown's shipyard in Clydebank on 22 August 1918. Until the commissioning of the new aircraft carrier HMS Queen Elizabeth, there had never been a ...
The British public saw HMS Hood as invincible - so her loss was devastating ... But there are also many thousands of crew members and their relatives and friends who want to commemorate the ...