Exterior of the chapel. The building was created using the skills of Italian POWs including a blacksmith, stonemason, electricians, bricklayers and joiners
Some of the men who built the chapel, pictured in 1944
The story of the Italian chapel on the tiny uninhabited island of Lamb Holm has, as its beginning, the tragic events of 14 October 1939, when three torpedoes tore into the side of HMS Royal Oak and 833 men lost their lives. The ship had been anchored in Scapa Flow, used by the Royal Navy as a safe harbour during both world wars. Only it wasn’t safe. German U-Boat U47 entered via a gap in the defences between mainland Orkney and Lamb Holm and escaped the same way after achieving its deadly mission.