HMS Glamorgan was hit by an Exocet missile during Falklands War but the ship didn't sink
Air Engineer Ian Tate lost eight colleagues when the helicopter exploded in the hangar.
Just two days before the Argentinian surrender, the British Task Force suffered its final attack on a Royal Navy ship during the Falklands War - and the last multiple losses of life.
HMS Glamorgan was a Portsmouth-based destroyer with a Portland-based helicopter.
On the morning of 12th June 1982, the aft of the ship was hit by a missile in the area of the hangar.
13 men were killed, whilst a 14th crew member succumbed to his injuries two months later.
More than half of those who didn't make it worked on the ship's flight.
HMS Glamorgan didn't sink and remarkably the destroyer was back in action under five hours later
The Exocet had been fired from a makeshift launcher on land around 20 miles away.
This is the unlikely story of one member of the ship's flight team who survived. Ian Tate lives on Portland in Dorset. Ian Tate sustained shrapnel wounds to his head and concussion. He was flown off to HMS Invincible for medical treatment but returned to HMS Glamorgan five days later.
Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio Solent reporter Laurence Herdman has been to meet him.
Duration:
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