The Hellenic Navy’s historic destroyer “Velos”, a ship-museum, was towed last weekend from a berth on the exposed Thessaloniki waterfront to the nearby commercial port, after sustaining significant damage to its stern.

Rough seas and gale-force winds battered the inadequately moored vessel on Saturday, with television footage – widely circulated on social media – showing breaches of its metal hull. The ship’s stern repeatedly struck the waterfront’s concrete quay off the northern Greece metropolis.

Docking at a pier at the Thessaloniki port is temporary, as the vessel will have to be towed to a shipyard for permanent repairs.

In May 1973 most of the officers and crew aboard the Hellenic Navy destroyer, under the command of Nikos Pappas, mutinied during a NATO training exercise in protest over the military junta then ruling Greece.

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The warship was renamed “Velos”, Greek for arrow, after being transferred from the US Navy in 1959. The Fletcher-class USN destroyer valorously served as the USS Charrette (DD-581) in the Pacific theater during World War II, after being commissioned in May 1943.

The vessel was retired from active service in 1991, and is still on commission as a Hellenic Navy Museum ship.