
In the Pool of London
TheHMS Belfast served hercountry for 24 years, including firing on the beaches before the D-Dayinvasion, helping sink the German battleship Tirpitz, and more. It's now a museum ship. Forthe full story, check out: Take a tour of the HMS Belfast.
Town-class
Thewalk across the gangplank from the South Bank of the river Thames gives you a good sense of the size. It’s a lightcruiser, so it’s a lot smaller than other WWII vessels you can tour.
Ship's bell
One of the first things you see when you board the Belfast is the solid silver ship's bell.
Looking aft
Downthe length of the ship, Tower Bridge downriver.
Once enemies, now friends
Theship docked alongside the Belfast on oneof my tour days was the German cruise ship Berlin.If that’s not a sign of time and the world moving on, I don’t know what is.
Load them guns
Insidethe front turret. The shells are lifted from far below (which we’ll see later).
Anchor's aweigh
Aserious anchor.
Starboard amidships
Likemost museum ships, many passageways are filled with other exhibits. Here, areplica of one of the torpedoes the Belfastcarried.
Clean clothes
Thelaundry room from the 1950s refit. Before then the crew washed their laundry in buckets.
Meow
Yep,that’s a cat. These soulless killing machines were kept on board to do what theydid best: kill things. Specifically, mice.
Art
There was an art exhibit called "The Tourists" going on when I was there. Itwas some kind of take on Mardi Gras. It was freaky.
From this room music was piped through the ship.
Woodworking
Shipsneed to be able to repair themselves, to an extent, while on tour. Here you cansee the shipwright’s room.
Sick bay
Recovery cots dead ahead, operating room to the right.
Root canal
Can’tescape the need for a dentist at sea.
Switches
Thereis something so cool, and sort of menacing, about exposed and massive switcheslike these.
Galley
Thequite sizeable galley. It continues back farther about three rooms this size.
Soup?
Soup,anyone? Soup, everyone.
Hot cross buns
Fancya biscuit? Yep, it’s a bakery.
Transmitting station
The mechanical computers here calculated where to aim the guns.
Forward steering position
Different from what you'd expect, the main steering wheel is actually inside the ship. No windows.
Gyro compass
This gyro compass always points north, to aid navigation in high seas.
Hot water
This washroom is close to the engine room, so hot water didn't have to get piped around the ship (much).
Pipes, tubes and ducts
The forward engine room. On the right is one of the huge fans to feed the boilers.
Engine room floor
A rare open space in the engine room. The boilers are on the right.
Maze
Imagine, there were many men who knew where every one of these pipes went and what it carried.
Not hot, right now
Pre-heated fuel oil got atomized here, to get sent through those tiny holes...
Furnace
...to the furnace to make steam. The steam was used for a variety of things, including turning generators for electric power.
Lucky 7
Up to seven of the "oil fuel registers" were used on each boiler.
Full speed ahead
Literally.
Throttles
Three separate controls: one for ahead, one for astern and one for efficient cruising.
Gears!
I saw this awesomeness on the far side of the engine room. Any guesses?
Reduction gear
This is one of the huge reduction gears connected to the propeller shaft.
Not exactly an LCD
These gorgeous analog dials gave the engineers everything they needed to keep the engines running.
Canteen
I thought they did a great job stocking the canteen with cans and goods that would have been found while the ship was in service.
Hammock Town
There were few crew quarters on the Belfast. Sailors instead had hammocks stretched above areas that had other uses.
Sleep where you eat
Not a lot of daily variety.
Armory
Deep inside the ship is the armory.
Up elevator
Ignore the creepy sailor mannequin. The shells would be loaded into elevators and raised into the turrets.
VHF and UHF equipment room
The gear here, along with antennas outside, allowed the Belfast to communicate with other vessels, the shore and so on.
Not bad for some
The officers got far better accommodations, with little things like "beds" and "a window."
Radar
Radar would have been cutting-edge naval technology in the Second World War, but of course the Belfast saw service afterwards and was kept up to date.
The bleeps, the sweeps and the creeps
I didn't detect any enemy aircraft. I might have been reading it wrong.
High tech
Here an incredibly lifelike mannequin worked to figure out what caused a blue screen of death. I guess Win98 was terrible in the '60s too.
Compass platform
The bridge (or compass platform, as it was called), was exposed prior to the 1950s refit.
The view upriver
Rumor has it the guns are fixed on a gas station on the M25, the motorway that rings London.
From the Tower
If you're headed to the Tower of London, or Tower Bridge, you can't miss the Belfast, and if you're a fan of WWII ships, you shouldn't.

