Today in History: 1917 HMS Vanguard explodes in dock

HMS Vanguard, a steel St Vincent class battleship was launched from Vickers yard in Barrow-in-Furness (Yard No 374) on 6th February 1909. She measured 480.0′ x 84.0′ x 28.5′ and displaced 19,250 tons. Her twin Parsons direct drive steam turbine engines delivered 24,500 shaft horse power giving her a top speed of 21 knots. Her armament consisted of 5 x 12 inch Mark IX twin guns, 20 x 4 inch guns and 3 x 18 inch torpedo tubes. This arrangement was modified between 1910 and 1914 reducing her 4 inch guns by six and adding 2 x 3 inch anti aircraft guns. Further modifications later added 13 x 4 inch anti-torpedo guns and a 3 inch anti-aircraft gun.

Following her commissioning at Devonport in 1st March 1910 and a period of service as part of the Home Fleet based at Chatham Vanguard joined the 1st Battle Squadron in July 1912 based at Scapa Flow and took part in numerous and increasingly urgent exercises as tensions mounted in the years before the outbreak of World War One. With the declaration of war her crew then found themselves involved in even more exercises but increasingly frustrated at the deadlock of inactivity as the German fleet apparently avoided a full on contact that could have decided the outcome of the war. In April 1916 she was transferred to the 4th Battle Squadron also based at Scapa Flow and was to participate in the inconclusive action of the Battle of Jutland under the command of Captain James D. Dick. She steamed in sixteenth place in the line of twenty four battleships and took part in the action against the head of the German High Seas Fleet and its massive battle cruisers. She fired eighty 12 inch rounds during the engagement but is not known if she scored any hits. She returned unscathed to her berth in Scapa Flow – it was to be her last major sortie.

The panorama across Scapa Flow in July 1917 was incredible. The British Grand Fleet was in residence at its major wartime base. From the hills above the anchorage a vast array of fighting ships could be seen. In all, 199 Royal Navy vessels lay at anchor attended by a fleet of auxiliary vessels. The fleet consisted of 28 capital ships of 1st, 2nd, 4th and 5th squadrons, 9 vessels of 4th and 6th light cruiser squadrons, 57 destroyers of 11th, 12th, 14th and 15th destroyer flotillas and 25 submarines of 10th, 11th, 12th and 13th submarine flotillas. This huge assembly of sea power lay in frustrating wait for their enemy to venture out again after the inconclusive clash at Jutland in May 1916.

After a day of exercises on 9th July 1917 HMS Vanguard returned to her mooring at 6:30pm and took up her position at berth B.5 which was situated amid the lines of battleships moored off the north shore of Flotta. During that day two workmen from Chatham dockyard had been on board carrying out alterations to the breech mechanism of the Vanguard’s 12″ guns. Later investigations would reveal that one of these men had also been aboard HMS Natal shortly before she sank in unexplained circumstances in December 1915. On completion of their duties both men went ashore.

The Vanguard was an impressive sight as she lay in the still calm evening. As the evening lengthened, the strange half light that descends on the Orkneys at this time of year fell over the anchored fleet. On board HMS Royal Oak a concert was in progress and the music could he heard drifting across the calm, still water. Some of the officers from the Vanguard had shipped over to the Royal Oak to attend the concert. Gradually the lights round the anchorage flickered out as many of the sailors settled down for the night ready for their early watch the next day. At around 11:20pm the half dark evening was illuminated by a huge flame that shot up from the Vanguard aft of her foremast. Almost immediately the stillness was shattered by a massive explosion and the hillsides round Scapa were lit up by a gigantic fireball from the ship. A second even larger explosion followed which extinguished the flames and, as the smoke cleared, the Vanguard had disappeared. Around the anchorage burning wreckage rained down on the fleet – a large piece landed on the deck of HMS Belleraphon anchored next in line to the Vanguard – another, a complete 12″ gun turret weighing over 400 tons, landed on Flotta nearly a mile away.

Aboard the other ships the crews rushed to action stations as it was initially feared that the explosion had been the result of enemy action. However, as no further attacks took place, attentions turned to the rescue of survivors. A fleet of small boats headed for the area where the Vanguard had been anchored. The scene that they encountered was one of utter devastation. Broken and burned bodies littered the surface among the debris of the sunken ship. Among this debris searchers later found a letter in German, a German bible and a small photograph with German writing on it which were to add fuel to the theory that the disaster had been the result of sabotage. Only three survivors were found – one died later from his injuries – 804 British servicemen had been lost in those few tumultuous seconds. The bodies recovered were taken ashore and buried in Lyness cemetery.

Almost immediately rumours of spies and sabotage began to circulate. News of the German letter and bible reinforced these stories. Five days after the tragedy a terse official statement was made: “HMS Vanguard blew up while at anchor as the result of an internal explosion. The ship sank immediately and there were only three survivors.”

The Court of Enquiry was held on 30th July with Rear Admiral William Nicholson in the chair. The two survivors were interviewed but could remember little. Other witnesses from ashore and the other ships were also questioned but could describe only the flame spout and the double explosion but nothing for certain relating to the cause of the disaster. A number of expert witnesses were also interviewed with enquiries focusing on the stability of the cordite stored in the magazines and in particular the temperature of the ammunition storage spaces. During the enquiry it was revealed that three years earlier fire had broken out on Vanguard due to coal sacks overheating and spontaneously igniting.

The court did briefly examine the possibility of sabotage. It was well known that German spies were operating in many ports in this country and abroad and a number of ingenious devices had been uncovered which had been used to set fire to or sink a few British merchant ships. Firstly, they investigated the seemingly bizarre possibility that high frequency radio waves had been used to ignite some kind if incendiary device on board the ship – a suggestion which modern experience supports all to well – but this was dismissed after expert witnesses stated that it was not possible. The court also spent many hours interrogating the two workmen and, in particular, the individual who had been aboard Natal shortly before she was lost in remarkably similar circumstances. The court could not reach an opinion on the testimony of the two men and they were referred to a higher authority. Inexplicably it would appear that they were not questioned further and returned to their normal duties. In the end, the findings of the inquiry were inconclusive. The report stated that the explosion could have been caused by the ignition of unstable cordite but that they could not rule out the possibility of sabotage.

The wreck lay undisturbed in position 58°51.425’N, 03°06.445’W (WGS84) in a depth of 33 metres for nearly fifty years before a salvage licence was granted to Nundy Marine Metals in the 1960’s. Some salvage work was carried out during the late 1960’s and early 1970’s but, after this licence expired in 1982, the site was designated a war grave in 1983 and since then diving on the wreck has been forbidden unless specific permission is granted. Over the years there have been numerous surveys of varying quality carried out on the site but it was not until the winter of 2016-17, as the 100th anniversary of the loss of the ship approached, that a comprehensive quality survey, including a multi-beam scan of the wreck was completed.

Divers who have visited the wreck have reported that all that remains of the huge ship is a 20 metre section of the stern and a 25 metre section of the bow which rises dramatically from the seabed standing 15 metres high. Between the two major sections the seabed is a tangle of twisted metal and debris, no doubt the result of the combined effects on the fatal explosion and the activities of the salvage teams. The Vanguard is designated as a Protected Military Wreck with a restricted area radius of 200 metres.

Read more here: HMS Vanguard

Also on this day:
455 Roman military commander Avitus is proclaimed emperor of the Western Roman Empire
660 Battle of Hwangsanbeol: At Nonsan, China a 50,000 strong Silla force led by general Kim Yu-shin annihilate the army of Baekje and kill their leader general Gyebaek
695 18 Rabbit [Yax K’uk Mo’] ascends to the throne of the important Maya city state of Copán and reigns for 43 years
1401 Turko-Mongol ruler Tamerlane (Timur) destroys Baghdad, killing 20,000
1795 James Swan pays off the $2,024,899 US national debt
1864 The first British train murder: bank clerk Thomas Briggs is robbed and killed by German tailor Franz Muller on the North London Railway. Muller is later chased to NY, tried, and executed.
1872 Donut cutter patents granted to John Blondel, Thomaston, Maine
1877 First Wimbledon tennis championship - first official lawn tennis tournament - begins featuring men’s singles only
1910 Walter Brookins, flying a Wright biplane over Atlantic City, New Jersey, becomes first to fly an airplane to an altitude of 1 mile (actually reaching 6,175 feet or 1.169 miles)
1916 First cargo submarine to cross Atlantic arrives in US from Germany
1955 Bill Haley & His Comets’ “Rock Around the Clock” tops the Billboard chart as one of the best-selling singles ever
1957 Discovery of element 102 (Nobelium) announced by an international team at Nobel Institute of Physics in Stockholm, named after Alfred Nobel
1958 Giant splash caused by the fall of 90 million tons of rock and ice into Lituya Bay, Alaska, washes 1,800 feet up the mountain
1962 Andy Warhol’s first West Coast gallery exhibition in the Ferus Gallery of Los Angeles
1979 Voyager 2 flies past Jupiter
1981 Nintendo releases arcade game “Donkey Kong,” created by Shigeru Miyamoto, in Japan (July 31 in the US)
2018 Bright pink is the world’s oldest biological color according to scientists, produced by tiny cyanobacteria in 1.1 bn-year-old marine shale rock from Taoudeni Basin, Mauritania
2021 Death Valley, California, hits a temperature of 130 degrees F (54.4 C), one of the highest temperatures ever recorded on earth

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1955 Jimmy Smits - American actor (LA Law; Running Scared; NYPD Blue; The West Wing), born in Brooklyn, New York
1945 Dean Koontz - American sci-fi author (Star Quest, Beastchild), born in Everett, Pennsylvania
1942 Richard Roundtree - American actor (Getting Even; Shaft), born in New Rochelle, New York (d. 2023)
1901 Dame Barbara Cartland - English romance author (Camfield #69), born in Edgbaston, Birmingham, England (d. 2000)
1856 Daniel Guggenheim - American mining magnate and philanthropist, born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (d. 1930)

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2021 Paul Mariner - English soccer striker (35 caps; Plymouth Argyle, Ipswich Town, Arsenal, Portsmouth) and coach (Plymouth Argyle, Toronto FC), dies from brain cancer at 68
2021 [Jonathan] Jono Coleman - British-Australian television and radio, writer, and comedian, dies of prostate cancer at 65
2019 Rip Torn [Elmore Rual Torn Jr] - American actor, voice artist and comedian (Cross Creek, The Larry Sanders Show), dies at 88
2002 Rod Steiger - American actor (In the Heat of the Night; The Pawnbroker; The Illustrated Man), dies of pneumonia at 77
1932 King Camp Gillette - American businessman and inventor of inexpensive and disposable safety razor blades, dies at 77

Holidays on this day
Call of the Horizon Day
Fashion Day
Martyrdom of the Bab
National Don’t Put All Your Eggs in One Omelette Day
National No Bra Day (also on October 13th)
National Sugar Cookie Day

The Funnies:

Interesting (not necessarily extinct) animal of the day:

The South Island Takahe is a rare relict of the flightless, vegetarian bird fauna which once ranged New Zealand. Four specimens were collected from Fiordland between 1849 and 1898, after which takahē were considered to be extinct until famously rediscovered in the Murchison Mountains, west of Lake Te Anau, in 1948. Until the 1980s, takahē were confined in the wild to the Murchison Mountains. They have since been translocated to seven islands and several mainland sites, making them more accessible to many New Zealanders. Conservation work by the Department Of Conservation and community groups aims to prevent extinction and restore takahē to sites throughout their original range. The success of DOC’s Takahē Recovery Programme relies heavily on a partnership with Mitre 10 who through Mitre 10 Takahē Rescue is helping to ensure the long-term survival of this treasured species.

Read more: South Island takahe | Takahē | New Zealand Birds Online

Quote of the Day:

“Being entirely honest with oneself is a good exercise.”

Sigmund Freud

Video of the Day:

Happy birthday to Bon Scott (1946):

and to John “Mitch” Mitchell (1947):

and to Marc Almond (1957):

and finally Jim Kerr (1959):

Comic of the Day:

Credit: #1270; In which Time is saved – Wondermark

Inspirobot Always Controversial, Occasionally Inspirational Quote of the Day:

Read @Vikingmichael’s confirmed Spark! from yesterday here: https://community.spiceworks.com/t/spark-pro-series-8-july-2025

Don’t forget to leave some spice right here ↓

46 Spice ups

I definitely feel this was a accident in the magazines (someone dropped something and inproper storage handling)

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Great Spark! as always.

1981 Nintendo releases arcade game “Donkey Kong,” created by Shigeru Miyamoto, in Japan (July 31 in the US)

44 years later, and Nintendo still support the Donkey Kong series… while neglecting some of their other franchises.

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does bab realise that she is going to be martyred?? is her mother at the window telling the unruly crowd that has gathered that she can’t come out because she’s been naughty?

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I checked the site I got the holidays from, and the Martyrdom of the Bab is correct.

This should explain it:
Execution of the Báb - Wikipedia

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Sabotage?

Not to be confused with his brother, Solomon R. Guggenheim, the namesake of the Guggenheim Museum.

I would watch his comedy as a child. I was in my 20s before I realized the play of words in his stage name.

Quartz fluid and Radium??? Now I have questions.

I think it is just a bunch of wibbly wobbly, timey wimey stuff.

No music today @Panda-Marie @chrisdavis8 @gurugabe1 @HulkSmash @shreddie

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That’s over $51 million in today’s dollar

Rock n Roll at it’s finest.

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Inspirobot: Does the Pope’s hat count as holy?

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What?? NO MUSIC??? The travesty of it all…

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@shreddie

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Ok ok here.

@shreddie @HulkSmash @gurugabe1 @Panda-Marie (she went in search of Amelia Earhart) @jameswalker20

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As with the USS Maine, it was probably unstable propellant. The British had several incidents of magazine fires and explosions during WWI plus several battlecruiser losses at Jutland due to unstable propellant in conjunction with poor safety practices.
Her successor HMS Vanguard (23) - Wikipedia was the last battleship ever commissioned since due to priorities in WWII she was not commissioned until 1946. That ship was a modification of the never completed Lion class to use WWi era 15" gun mounts in storage in place of the designed 16" guns.
The current HMS Vanguard is a ballistic missile submarine commissioned in 1992

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1795 James Swan pays off the $2,024,899 US national debt

Where is a James Swan when you need him :sob::joy:

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Did y’all miss me yesterday? The construction crew on the building next door shut off our power, thinking our generator would kick in. It didn’t, knocking all of our servers and central switches down. Once power was restored a few hours later, some of our servers would not come back online, so I had to restore them. Then they informed us that they wanted to take the power back down later in the day, but we told them no, since our generator was not working. They sent someone over to work on our generator, and after a few hours, they told us it was fixed and that they were still planning on shutting off our power. We were leery about the generator, and told them no again. They shut off our power anyway, thinking our generator would kick in, which it didn’t. They finally restored our power this morning, and I had to scramble to get all of our switches and servers back up. I have finally gotten everything back up and running. We informed them that under no circumstances were they to shut off our power again, as our main server room also houses the main network equipment and servers for our county offices, courts, and hospital.

Now that my stress level is back down to high:

1962: Bob Dylan records “Blowin’ In The Wind”
1995: American psychedelic rock band the Grateful Dead performed their last concert at Soldier Field in Chicago; lead guitarist and vocalist Jerry Garcia died the following month.

2019: American businessman and politician Ross Perot—who ran for U.S. president as an independent in 1992, receiving some 19 percent of the popular vote—died at age 89.

1856: Nikola Tesla - Serbian-American inventor
1956: Tom Hanks - American actor
1947: O.J. Simpson - American football player
1964: Courtney Love - American musician and actress
1971: Marc Andreessen - American software engineer. Mosaic, Netscape

I am musically declined today

@atruex @georgeSVFC @yellowshirtcc @ich-ni-san @jemjules @hulksmash @panda-marie @chrisdavis8 @jameswalker20 @machomanrandall @DailyLlama @Nerf_Herder

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He would look at the president and laugh in his face. "The national debt is how much? And you want me to pay it? :rofl:

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Watching Naked Gun hits different these days. :joy:

I had to look this up:


If you go to the site - the numbers don’t stop!
Some Jack Black?

@jameswalker20 @gurugabe1 (greatly missed) @Panda-Marie @chrisdavis8

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Thank ya

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Nice… Joan Jett - Classic…

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Wow, that really blows…glad you’re up and running again, I’d be having some very strongly-worded emails sent to whomever is in charge of making sure the generator and UPS’s work correctly!

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I had to look this up:

If you go to the site - the numbers don’t stop!

If you ever have time, the book\movie I.O.U.S.A. is an excellent explanation of all of this.

I’ve only watched the movie.

I used to watch the clock religiously. It was at $5.5 when Obama went into office, $16 when Trump took over, $21 when Biden took over, and then it skyrocketed as the pandemic took hold.

As the movie quotes, Bill Clinton is the only administration in the history of the US where the clock went backwards.

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