New warship to be named HMS Sheffield decades after namesake lost in Falklands

Computer-generated Image of the future Type 26 ship. Credit: Ministry of Defence

A new multi-million pound military warship will be named the HMS Sheffield, more than three decades after its namesake was hit by a missile in the Falklands.

The state-of-the-art Type 26 frigate will be built in Scotland as part of a ship building scheme that will secure jobs for more than 4,000 people over the coming decades.

Defence Minister Stuart Andrew announced the ship's name at an event at Chesterfield Special Cylinders in Sheffield. The firm supplies high pressure gas storage systems for the ships.

It will be the fourth ship to carry the HMS Sheffield name. The second, a Type 42 destroyer, was lost during the Falklands War.

Twenty people died and 26 were injured when a missile hit the vessel in 1982.

Twenty lives were lost on HMS Sheffield in 1982. Credit: ITV Yorkshire

The news came as the Defence Secretary announced he will retain three of the Royal Navy’s patrol ships to bolster Britain’s fishery protection capability.

HMS Tyne, HMS Mersey and HMS Severn, which currently support the Fishery Protection Squadron, had been in the process of being decommissioned.