The sinking of the battlecruiser HMS Hood on 24 May 1941 dealt a major blow to the British Royal Navy. Like Titanic years before Hood had seemed invincible & much of the hopes of the Navy rested with her as the nation entered the war with Germany. The epitome of British naval power the 48 360-ton Hood boasted eight 15-inch & eight 4-inch guns
- a formidably armed vessel that the Royal Navy had hoped could match German battleships such as the Bismarck. But in just eight minutes after an encounter with Bismarck & her consort Prinz Eugen HMS Hood blew up & sank to the bottom of the Alantic taking the lives of 1 418 men with her. Her sinking was met with disbelief both in England & around the world; the formerly invincible Royal Navy now seemed very vulnerable. Author Dr Andrew Norman explores the events leading up to the disaster & the legacy left in its wake. His research
Includes:: reports from both the Royal Naval Museum & German naval records & many of the photographs included are previously unpublished. In HMS Hood: Pride of the Royal Navy" he reassesses the possible reasons for Hoods sinking in the light of the discovery of her wreckage in July 2001."