HMS Manxman
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HMS Manxman

1940 Abdiel-class minelayer


Service Entry
August 03, 2009
Commissioning Date
August 03, 2009
Manufacturer
Alexander Stephen and Sons
Operator
Royal Navy
Vessel Type
minelayer, Abdiel-class minelayer
Pennant Number
M70
Tonnage
2650
Current Location
36° 39' 60", 0° 15' 0"

* This information from Wikidata is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

HMS Manxman (M70) was an Abdiel-class minelayer of the Royal Navy, named after an Isle of Man inhabitant. Commissioned on 7 June 1941, she was constructed as a fast, robust vessel designed for laying mines and supporting various naval operations. Her initial mission involved delivering mines to Murmansk, after which she transferred to the Mediterranean to conduct relief runs to Malta. Notably, in August 1941, she participated in Operation Mincemeat, laying mines in the Gulf of Genoa while disguised as the French destroyer Léopard. Between October 1941 and February 1942, HMS Manxman operated with the Home Fleet, undertaking mine-laying missions in the North Sea and English Channel. In March, she joined the Eastern Fleet at Kilindini, in the Indian Ocean, where she engaged in escort and patrol duties. On 8 October, she took part in the assault on Nosy Be, Madagascar, then occupied by Vichy French forces. Subsequently, she returned to the Mediterranean, delivering supplies to Malta and conducting mine-laying operations in the Sicilian Channel. On 1 December 1942, while en route from Algiers to Gibraltar, HMS Manxman was torpedoed by U-375 and sustained severe damage. After emergency repairs at Oran and Gibraltar, she was taken to Newcastle-upon-Tyne for extensive repairs. Recommissioned on 10 April 1945, she was prepared for service with the British Pacific Fleet, reaching Colombo in July and participating in the Victory over Japan Day celebrations in Melbourne. Post-war, HMS Manxman served in the Far East until December 1947, then returned to the Mediterranean Fleet in 1951. She appeared in the 1953 film *Sailor of the King* as the German cruiser Essen, fitted with dummy turrets and enlarged funnels for filming. That same year, she participated in the Fleet Review celebrating Queen Elizabeth II’s coronation. During the Suez Crisis in 1956, she was deployed for headquarters duties and is reputed to have outpaced an American Carrier Group in a notable display of speed and agility. In the early 1960s, HMS Manxman was refitted as a minesweeper support vessel, with modifications including the removal of her forward boiler and installation of diesel generators housed in a dummy funnel. Stationed in Singapore, she returned to the UK in 1968 for engineering training at Devonport. After a fire, she was transferred to reserve at Chatham Dockyard and was ultimately broken up at Newport in 1973.

This description has been generated using GPT-4.1-NANO based on the Vessel's wikidata information and then modified by ShipIndex.org staff.

Ships

7 ship citations (0 free) in 7 resources

Manxman (1940, cruiser minelayer) Subscribe to view
Manxman (Great Britain, 1940) Subscribe to view
Manxman (minelayer, built 1941, at Glasgow; tonnage: 2650 sd) Subscribe to view
Manxman, British minelayer Subscribe to view
Manxman, HMS (1940) Subscribe to view
Manxman, HMS (M 70) (British, 2650 tons; sunk by U-boats) Subscribe to view
Manxman, HMS: carries supplies to Malta Subscribe to view