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HNoMS Thor (1872)

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Name
  
Thor

Decommissioned
  
1918

Beam
  
14.48m

Launched
  
1872

Weight
  
2,007 tons

Draft
  
3.81 m

Laid down
  
1 January 1871

Fate
  
Wrecked 1919

Construction started
  
1 January 1871

Length
  
62 m

Displacement
  
1.792 million kg

Builder
  
Horten Navy Yard

HNoMS Thor (1872) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb4

Namesake
  
Norse god of thunder Thor

HNoMS Thor was a monitor built for the Royal Norwegian Navy in 1871. She was decommissioned in 1918, long after her heavy guns were outdated. She was considered an improvement on the Skorpionen class of monitors, with heavier armour and a wider beam.

Contents

The name was a reference to the Norse god Thor. The earlier monitor MjĂžlner was named after Thor's hammer.

Details

Thor was armed with two heavy rifled muzzleloaders in a revolving turret. She had 7 inches of iron armour on her deck, and her turret was protected by 14 inches of iron armour.

Wreck

After decommissioning, Thor was intended for scrapping. On 7 March, 1919, while being towed to the scrapyard, the ship was caught in a storm that broke the towing cable, stranding Thor on an island outside Verdens Ende in Vestfold. Two crew members were killed in the accident. Thor later sank in shallow water. A salvage operation removed parts of the ship, but the wreck remains largely intact and now lies at a depth of 8 to 14 meters southwest of Verdens Ende.

Thor is one of only three accessible monitor vessels in the world, the others being USS Monitor, which lies at about 60 meters some 42 kilometers southeast of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina and the other being HMVS Cerberus, in 5 metres of water in Victoria, Australia.

Notable crew

  • Johan Oscar Smith, founder of Brunstad Christian Church served as a gunnery officer on Thor in 1898.
  • References

    HNoMS Thor (1872) Wikipedia