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War Time Convoys
Capt
Len Evans recalls his war service in a speech delivered at NUMAST’s
Battle of the Atlantic 50th anniversary commemorations in Mariners' Park.
Many
of you present today will have served at sea during the war, and you will
have memories which, although dimmed by the passage of time, need little
re-kindling to live it all again.
I
was 17 and the junior midshipman, as cadets in Blue Funnel were called,
aboard their ship Ixion on their North Pacific service from
China and Japan to the Canadian US Ports on the Puget Sound. We were
berthing at Union Bay, a small bunkering port when Chamberlain announced
that we were now at war with Germany.
A
more tranquil scene one could not imagine, the pine trees swept down from
the mountains to the waters edge and the limpid sea seemed almost black in
the dawn haze.
I
recollect small groups quietly discussing what might be ahead, and
breakfast that morning was a solemn affair, and of course some of our
Senior Officers and the Master had seen it all before.
We
thought that perhaps we would be withdrawn from the N. Pacific but no; we
continued to carry capper and lead, lumber and paper to Japan, and as we
discharged in Kobe and Osaka, we’d be told “Bime bye you makee die”,
and we had no illusions. The saving grace was the parcels of parachute
silk we loaded in Yokohama for transshipment at Hong Kong for London…
The
next voyage our 4” gun, Japanese circa 1906 was fitted at the Canadian
Naval Ease of Esquimault on Victoria Island. The Chief Officer announced
that we would go on a five day gunnery course, together with what Junior
Engineers who could be spared - we had an all Chinese crew. We were
supplemented by 3 young DEMS gunners, Canadian reservists. We learned how
to deal with misfires and to tire by lanyard, and so now fully trained we
sailed on Saturday for Gun Trials off Vancouver Island. All went well.
Most of. the doors on the poop collapsed, but we were judged proficient.
We
did one more round voyage before being transferred to a homeward bound
ship at Hong Kong - Ixion followed shortly after. We had our
first intimation of the real war when a torpedo narrowly missed us off
Cape Verde. Nine months later this fine ship, Memnon, was
sunk in that vicinity.
(Photo: The Ixion)
That
summer of 1940 escorts and weapons were in short supply. The Royal Navy
had suffered heavily in the evacuation from France, and one of the two
rifles supplied to Memnon was landed in Glasgow because the
Army needed every weapon it could get.
Convoys,
which might have an escort of one or two armed trawlers or perhaps
corvettes, would disperse about 150 miles West of Ireland to proceed
independently and I recall that our 12 pound AA gun was removed at Cape
Town for installation aboard a homeward bound ship. On our return three
months later we received, in exchange, a Hotchkiss machine gun. This was
fitted into a steel pipe, which in turn fitted into the teak wood rail
each side of the wheelhouse. Too bad it was on the wrong side when the
plane came in. Thus armed we came home, independently, proceeding to 66N
27W before turning East and then South through the Minches to Liverpool.
This
fine ship Orestes had a charmed life. In May 1942 she was
attacked off Madras by a Japanese seaplane which she drove off by accurate
AA fire, and the next month she was attacked by three Japanese submarines
90 miles South of Sydney. She was hit by two shells but responded by
dropping depth charges over her stern damaging one of the subs and they
broke off the chase.
Ships
were routed as far as possible away from known danger areas, so that
voyages were increased in length. Instead of proceeding North from Cape
Town in September 1941, my ship, Nestor, was routed across
the South Atlantic, up the Brazilian coast to Newport News for bunkers and
then up to Halifax for the homeward convoy.
We
were the Commodore of a 44 ship convoy, and were escorted out of Halifax
by one corvette to rendezvous with one American merchant ship and five
destroyers. The destroyers assumed escort duty, the merchant ship - which
was bound for Iceland - slotted into the, convoy and we proceeded
Eastward, while the corvette returned to Halifax.
About
six days later, at 0600, one of the destroyers, Reuben James,
was torpedoed and sunk with the loss of two thirds of her crew. The US was
still neutral at that time - October ‘41 - and we were saddened at this
loss of American life.
Later
that day the RN escorts arrived, but the Americans stayed with us until we
were almost home.
We
remember those Atlantic convoys ploughing on in those grey green seas, the
sloops and corvettes which rolled and pitched, their way across the
Atlantic. Those standard oil tankers and others, squat sturdy ships
pressing on come what may, manned by men who knew - I wonder how many
others did - that without their cargoes of aviation spirit and fuel oil,
Britain would not survive. Brave men indeed, and how often do we hear of
those who went up the St. Lawrence for their cargoes of iron ore, and
should they be torpedoed would have a life expectancy measured in seconds
not minutes. And the rescue ships such as the Rathlin, so
far from home and who saved so many from the stricken convoy PQ17, and
those ships, which because of stress of weather would straggle and become
easy prey. We remember those very brave young RAE pilots who would be
catapulted off their merchant ship in our defense, and who could not
return to their ship, invariably having to bale out into the sea,
hopefully to be rescued by the escort.
Much
has been written about the convoys to Malta and Russia. These were major
naval actions which resulted in appalling losses in men and ships. 360
merchant seamen were lost in operation Pedestal, the Malta convoy of
August 1942. Some might say it was a small number to preserve Malta, and
indeed wherever else, but it was 50% greater than all the losses in the
Falklands Campaign.
A
great friend of mine, an apprentice and later Junior Officer with Eagle
Oil, made three trips to Malta and two to Russia. In Murmansk his ship was
hit three times, but the bomb which hit the aviation spirit tanks failed
to explode. Time and again one reads of specific ships taking part in
those actions, and perhaps those of us who were not there, wonder
why we also did not take part. I suppose the answer quite simply is that
we went where we were sent, and took our chances elsewhere.
In
May 1942 the first soldiers of the Maritime Anti-Aircraft Regiment joined
a ship in which I served, but no doubt they had been at sea before this.
Up to that time one or two Naval ratings, usually a leading seaman or a
Marine would perform the duties of gun layer of our 4” gun, and the rest
of the gun crew would come from our own crew. But in 1942, with the
increase in armament these soldiers were a most welcome supplement to our
own men. The Maritime AA lost 1,222 men at sea, while the DEMS Royal Navy
personnel 2,713. Merchant navy losses amounted to 32,000. One if five
killed.
Do
you remember the gunnery courses at HMS Eaglet in Liverpool, and our trips
out to Armsdale for live firing at a target drone? It was a couple of days
off, and extended our leave. We were easily satisfied.
That
voyage, on our way home, we picked up 38 survivors from the Glasgow ship Glendene. They
manoeuvered their boat alongside Agapenor and painfully
climbed the pilot ladder. Quiet and undemonstrative, at least they had a
good meal and a few hours sleep before we ourselves were sunk twelve hours
later. How the flower class corvette Petijiqia coped with over one hundred
survivors less than three days after they had rescued 250 survivors from
the Blue Star ship Andulacia Star, one will never know, but the welcome
aboard was genuine and generous, and we will never forget her hospitality.
(Photo: The Agapenor. John Clarkson
Collection).
By
now, increasing numbers of “U” boats were threatening the trade routes
to the Middle East and India around the Cape, and Japanese subs were
operating in the Gulf of Aden. German subs serviced by mother submarines
known as 'Milch Cows', and from bases in Pewang were credited with sinking
more than 170 ships in the Indian Ocean.
Despite
this virtual world wide activity, many ships sailed with impunity. During
Christmas
1942 I joined Perseus, and we sailed at the end of January 1943 deep laden
with boom defense gear for Darwin. Our route took us to New York, through
the Caribbean and the Panama canal to. Sydney. We discharged our cargo,
part. loaded for home, and also with supplies for American forces on
Western Australia. Having discharged the American cargo in Fremantle, we
topped up the remaining space, and left fully laden, across the Southern
Ocean to Durban, thence to Freetown and home, and as far as I can
recollect this voyage was completely without incident.
We
attended the usual gunnery course at HMS Eaglet and the PC instructor
there told
us of a new weapon, the Glider Bomb, which he dismissed as dead easy
saying “You need no aim off, just wait until it is within range and
shoot it down!”
We
signed Articles in Birkenhead and the Shipping Master explained that
because the invasion of Europe was imminent they hoped that the Merchant
Navy crews would volunteer to take part. This was a national campaign, but
I think we were slightly skeptical, believing we’d go wherever the ships
were sent. However we did volunteer and the letter V was written on our
Identity Cards. I still have mine.
Once
again we were the Commodore of a 40 ship convoy out of Liverpool bound for
the Middle East and India. I’m sure everyone has a date, or dates, which
they particularly remember but mine was that highly symbolic date,
November 11th, a day of remembering the sacrifices of the first war, and
now of this, and this was 1943. Early that day the SOEO came alongside and
told the Commodore that we could expect an air attack that evening. Perseus convoy number was
51. The ship astern, a find big Dutch ship, was
52. She was bound for the same Indian Ports, with an identical cargo
except she had a 75 ton tug on deck.
We
were closed up at Action Stations, when at 1800 in the vicinity of Oran, when the eastern sky light up with 12 or 15
brilliant red flames. These were the glider bombs which I don’t think
any of us had seen before. In no time they were overhead and happily
ours fell close astern. I’m not sure that anyone did open fire. Shortly
afterwards 52 was hit, and she exploded sending the 75 ton tug
catapulting into the sea, silhouetted against the flame and smoke. Almost
as the debris was falling No. 53 closed up to take the station occupied by
this fine ship just seconds before.
The
attack continued for some time, in darkness, medium level and torpedo
bombers being used. Low flying planes seem to skim over the fo’c’sle
head, but Perseus was unscathed. Although the convoy took casualties and
ships were lost, we sailed on.
On a more personal basis
I
was reminded of this some months later.
I
met my father in Colombo and
we spent New Year 1943/44 together. He was master in a Blue Funnel
subsidiary based in Singapore and had got away to India, and had recently
returned from a spell in the Eastern Mediterranean. Now he was on his way to Cox
Bazaar on the Arakan in support of the 14th Army. The Perseus sailed on to
Trincolamlee where she discharged 5,000 tons of sea mines, before
proceeding independently to join the North bound convoy to Calcutta.
Unfortunately we met a Japanese submarine, which sank this fine ship, but
it took four of her torpedoes to do so.
My
father was on the point of sailing from Colombo to join the Calcutta
convoy when the NCSO came on board and told him that Perseus had been sunk
and that there was no news of survivors. In the event it was far too early
for news of survivors. However the convoy must proceed. I wonder what
his thoughts were two or three days later when he passed through the area
in which Perseus was lost.

We
all came home by troop ship from Bombay, and then dispersed to various
ships. I joined Bellerophon in St Johns New Brunswick. The usual
North
Atlantic weather, fog for five days during which time we followed each
others fog buoy, and miraculously were still in some sort of formation
when the fog lifted.
Then
a circumnavigation of Africa with an alarm in the Gulf of Aden, and so
around the Cape and home again to Liverpool.
I
came ashore for a couple of months to take my 1st Mates. Certificate,
studying at the Liverpool Tech.
The
War in Europe ended while aboard Arpendon on passage from London to
Liverpool. On VE Day, it being adjudged too risky to proceed further
because of U boat activity in the Irish Sea, we were directed to seek
shelter behind the Boom Defence in Milford Haven. We finally arrived in
Liverpool VE Day +
2
In
July 1945, I sailed aboard the P&O ship Chitral with a couple of thousand
service personnel and nurses bound for India, and the eventual, invasion
of Malaya and perhaps Japan. There were a few other MN personnel going 5
join
various ships. Mine was in Chittagong.
One
day in the Arabian Sea, we heard the Americans had dropped some wonder
bomb. No one knew much about it, but when the second was dropped a day or
so later, and Japan surrendered, we were delighted. The invasions
ultimately would have been bloody, affairs and many on that ship and
thousands more would have perished.
This
ladies and gentleman is my story, a tale of a Merchant Seamen who is
conscious that there will be thousands who have a much more heroic tale to
tell, but perhaps I have given some sense of what it was like to be there.
Perhaps
Kipling’s verses in 1914-18 summed up what we achieved from 1939-45.
“For
the bread that you eat and the biscuits you nibble
The
sweets that you suck and the joints that you carve
They
are brought to you daily by all us big steamers
And
if anyone hinders are coming, you’ll starve.”
And
when we talk amongst ourselves of those we have known and who were lost at
sea, we remember that other poem by Kipling, each verse ending;
“If
blood be the price if Admiralty,
Lord
God we have paid in full.”
L.R.
Evans
August
21st, 1998 |