Ahoy, Hoy!
Posted in Architecture, Art Deco, Trips at 12:00 on 13 August 2017
Ahoy-hoy was the suggestion of the inventor of the telephone Alexander Graham Bell for the greeting people should use when answering the telephone. I couldn’t avoid thinking of it as we approached the island of Hoy across Scapa Flow on the ferry crossing from the terminal at Houton to Lyness.
Hoy from ferry:-
Approaching Lyness:-
Plaque at Lyness Ferry Terminal commemorating the salvaging of ships from the scuttled German High Seas Fleet in Scapa Flow. Apparently the metal from the ships found use in the space programme as it was uncontaminated by radioactive fallout:-
Old Fortified Building on Hoy seen from Lyness Naval Cemetery. This must have been to do with either or both of the World Wars:-
The Hoy Hotel. Art Deco/Moderne style. We met an Australian photographing the building. He had come to Hoy as that was his surname:-
Photo in the Lyness Naval Museum of the Garrison Theatre, Hoy, built by the Royal Marines. Now no more except for the foyer:-
Tags: Ahoy-hoy, Alexander Graham Bell, First World War, Houton, Hoy, Lyness, Lyness Naval Cemetery, Orkney, Second World War, the Great War, World War 1, World War 2, WW1, WW2, WWI, WWII






