ustrated Biography 1916-1941 •
BRUCE TAYLOR Illustrations by Thomas Schmid
Foreword by Vice-Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly
The Battlecruiser
HMSHOOD
The Battlecruiser
HMS An Illustrated Biography 1916 -1941
BRUCE TAYLOR B.A. Manc. D.PHIL. Oxon.
Illustrations by THOMAS SCHMID
r In memory of His Majesty's Battlecruiser
Hood 1916-1941
II glorious ship, a great ship alld a happy ship'
Half title: The sealed pattern of Hood's badge, designed by Major Charles ffoulkes and approved by the Ships' Badges Committee on 6 September 1919. The badge is derived from the crest of Admiral Viscount Hood (1724-1B16) and shows a Cornish chough (Pyrrhocorax graculus) holding a golden anchor. Beak and legs should be bright red. The motto Ventis secundis is also Viscount Hood's, meaning 'With favouring winds'. The date 1BS9, usually omitted, alludes to the first major ship of the name, the BO-gun Edgar converted to screw propulsion and launched in that year; she was renamed Hood in January 1B60. The badge, less the Navy crown, was used to adorn the ship's boats and guns (in the form of tompions) along with other artefacts and areas of the ship, including the Commander's lobby. The largest version, over 22 inches in diameter, was set on the bridge. Frontispiece: Officers and men on the forecastle of HMS Hood as she passes through the Pedro Miguel Locks, Panama Canal, 24 July 1924.
Death closes all: but something ere the end, Some work of noble note, may yet be done, ot unbecoming men that strove with Gods. The lights begin to twinkle from the rocks: The long day wane: the slow moon climbs: the deep Moans round with many voices. Come, my friends, 'Tis not too late to seek a newer world. Push off, and sitting well in order mite The sounding furrows; for my purpose holds To sail beyond the sunset, and the baths Of all the western stars, until I die. It may be that the gulfs will wash us down: It may be we shall touch the Happy Isles, And see the great Achilles, whom we knew. Though much is taken, much abides; and though We are not now that strength which in old days Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are; One equal temper of heroic hearts, Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
TENNYSON, Ulysses, II. 51-70
Text e 2005 by Bruce Taylor Colour illustrations e 2005 by Thomas Schmid
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Taylor, Bruce HMS Hood : an illustrated biograph)' 1916-1941 I.
Great Britain. Royal
First published in Great Britain in 2005 by Chatham Publishing,
I. Title
Park House, I Russell Gardens, London NWt1 9NN
623.8' 253' 0941
and
1SB, 186176216X
avy 2. Hood (Ship)
in the United States of America and Canada by Naval Institute Press, 291 Wood Road, Annapolis, Maryland 21402-5034
Library of Congress Control No. 2004116081
Chatham Publishing is an imprint of Lionel Leventhal Ltd
ISBN 186176216X
Illustrated London News
All rights reserved. No pari of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocop}ring, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without either prior permission in writing from the publisher or a licence permitting restricted copying. The right of Bruce Taylor to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. Printed in China by Printworks International Ltd
Contents
ote
6
Abbreviations
6
Foreword
7
Introduction
8
Author's
Chapter 1
Genesis, Design and Construction
10
Chapter 2
A Tour of the Ship
20
Chapter 3
Glory Ship
60
Chapter 4
Routine, Work and Rest
80
Chapter 5
Life Aboard The Hood in Colour
114 following 144
Chapter 6
Disaster and Recovery, 1931-1936
146
Chapter 7
War Clouds, 1936-1939
122
ChapterS
To War
182
Chapter 9
The End of Glory
203
Conclusion
229
Admirals, Captains, Commanders and Chaplains by Commission
230
Scheme of Complement of HMS Hood, 12 December 1919
231
Appendix III
Composition and Family Attachments of HMS Hood, c.1934
231
Appendix IV
Daily Routines in Peace and War
232
Chronology, 1915-1941
234
Roll of Honour
242
Sources
248
Glossary
251
Index
252
Acknowledgements
256
Appendix I Appendix II
6
Author's Note
Abbreviations
In preparing the pages that follow I have been confronted with the problem of presenting frequent citations from disparate sources in a consistent yet intelligible manner. Every effort has been made to preserve the character and intent of the originals but spelling errors have been corrected and punctuation inserted or adapted for clarity. The reminiscences of Boy Fred Coombs (1935-8) deposited in the Imperial War Museum (91/7/1) proved particularly challenging in this respect, much confusing detail and grammar having to be stripped away without sacrificing the qualities that make it uch a unique memoir. In order to help orientate the reader dates are provided after names to indicate an individual's period of service in the ship. Similarly, a man's rank or rating is usually indicated where appropriate. The variety of forms resulting from the use of this system seemed to me balanced by the value of the information imparted in what is a thematic rather than a chronological study, and in what was a highly stratified community. Readers will decide how effective this has been. It may be helpful to remind readers of the traditional currency of the United Kingdom before decimalization in 197 I: there were twelve pence to a shilling (known as a 'bob') and twenty shiJlings to a pound (also known as a overeign or a 'quid'). Among the many coins engendered by this system was that known as 'half a crown', worth two shillings and sixpence. The epigraphs at the head of each chapter are of course from William Blake's 'The Tiger' of c. I789. Citations from documents in the Public Record Office are Crown Copyright. The copyright of much of the remainder rests either with their authors or their descendants. Credits are given after each photograph where it has been possible to establish either the source or the copyright with certainty. Extensive efforts have been made to locate copyright holders in the remaining cases and these are invited to contact the author with proof of copyright. Citations from books and articles are acknowledged by means of a reference in the footnotes.
Able Seaman Admiral Commanding Battle Cruiser Squadron Admiralty Fleet Order AFO APC Armour-Piercing Capped (shells) Battle Cruiser Squadron BCS British Empire Medal B.E.M. Churchill Archives Centre, hurchill CAC College, Cambridge Captain Capt. CB. Companion of the Order of the Bath CB.E. Commander of the Order of the British Empire Cdr Commander CERA Chief Engine Room Artificer CO. Commanding Officer CPC Common Pointed Capped ( hells) CPO Chief Petty Officer (D) Dental Director of aval Construction o C Distinguished Service Cross D.S.C Distinguished Service Medal D.S.M. Distinguished Service Order D.S.O. (E) Engineering Electrical Artificer EA Engineer Officer of the Watch EOOW Engine Room Artificer ERA (G) Gunnery HA High Angle High-Angle Control Position HACP High-Angle Control Station HAC His Majesty's Australian Ship HMAS His Majesty's Canadian Ship HMCS His Majesty's Ship l-IM His Majesty's Submarine H~'IS 1 Imperial War Museum, London IWM IWM/ A Imperial War Museum, Sound Archive King's College, London KCL LHCMA Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives, KCL LS Leading eaman Lieutenant Lt Lieutenant-Commander Lt-Cdr Midshipman Mid. Military Medal M.M. Manuscript MS ( T) avigation AAFI Navy, Army, and Air Force Institutes non-commissioned officer CO ational Maritime Museum, MM Greenwich AB ACQ
U.S. aval War College, ewport, Rhode Island Ordnance Artificer OA Ordinary eaman 00 Officer of the Watch OOW Ordinary Signalman OSig. OTel. Ordinary Telegraphist PO Petty Officer PRO Public Record Office, Kew pounds per square inch p.s.i. Qualified Ordnanceman or QO Qualified in Ordnance R.A . .R. Royal Australian avy Reserve R.A. .YR. Royal Australian Naval Volunteer Reserve Capt. Rory O'Conor, Rllllning a Big RBS Ship on 'Ten Commandments' (With Modem ExeClltive Ideas and a Complete Organisation) (Portsmouth: Gieves, (937) R.C . Royal Canadian avy Radio Direction Finding R.D.F. RFA Royal Fleet Auxiliary R.I.N. Royal Indian avy R.M. Royal Marines R.M.A. Royal Marine Artillery R.M.L.I. Royal Marine Light Infantry Royal Mail Steamer RMS Royal Navy R. . Royal Naval Division R. .0. Royal Naval Museum, Portsmouth RNM R. . R. Royal Naval Reserve R. .V.R. Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve R.N.Z. Royal ew Zealand avy r.p.m. revolutions per minute Regulating Petty Officer RPO Sick Berth Attendant SBA shaft horsepower s.h.p. Signalman Sig. S.O.D.S. Ship's Own Dramatic Society Steamship SS Sub-Lieutenant Sub-Lt SWWEC The Second World War Experience Centre, Horsforth, Leeds (1') Torpedoes Telegraphist Tel. Temporary Temp. Transmitting Station TS nrotated/ nrifled P Project ile/Projector nited States avy .S.N. nited States Ship uss WC
7
Foreword by Vice-Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly, K.B.E. C.B. O.B.E.
s PPOSE I MUST BE the last of HMS Hood's ship's company to have erved in part of each of her four final commissions between August 1932 and ovember 1939. From Cadet through Midshipman, Sub-Lieutenant and Lieutenant, I gazed with reverence at Admirals James, Bailey, Blake, Cunningham, Layton and 'A'hitworth. And I served Captain Binney, Tower, Pridham, Walker, Glennie, and Commanders McCrum, O'Conor, Orr-Ewing, Davis and, in the Engineering Department, Commanders (E) Sankey, Berthon and Grogan, the last of whom went down with the ship. Each one in his own way was a great man; some greater than others. Few can have been so consistently lucky as I at being permitted to watch such a posse of inspirational leaders. I did not recognise it, of course, but history was being made. As a result of failures in the First World War the Royal Navy, led by poor Boards of Admiralty, reversed much of Lord Fisher's work, ruthlessly discharged officers, and by inept handling of pay cuts created in 1931 the first major naval mutiny since 1797. The officers under whom I was so lucky to serve, together with Kelly, Chatfield, Henderson, Backhouse, Ramsay, Drax, W.W. Fi her, Fraser and dozens of others I never knew, led the avy and all its intricate elements spiritually from its nadir at Invergordon to war readiness only eight years later. It was they who made it such an unconquerable element of our fighting forces as its numbers rose from 161,000 in 1939 to 750,000 in 1945. Crowned as the greatest warship ever built, HMS Hood was an icon. For two decades from her cradling at John Brown's until 1939 she was used unsparingly in all her beauty and power as a political pawn sustaining the Pax Britannica before two years of war took her to a silent grave. It was when she was called on to fulfil her fighting role and ride the stormy northern seas as the backbone of the fleet in the winters of 1939 and 1940 that her company suffered such unspeakable hardship. Hood's peacetime role had denied her the refit that would have made her watertight and the reconstruction that would have made her proof against plunging fire. And so when battle was joined she was gone within a few minutes leaving just three of the 1,418 men whose equable spirit had defied the elements since she left Portsmouth for the last time in August 1939, three weeks before the Admiralty made that general signal TOTAL GERMA y. With the losses in the Battle for Crete mounting by the hour and the Hood sunk, May 1941 was probably the worst month for naval casualties in the whole war. The three Dockyard Towns of Portsmouth, Devonport and Chatham, already reeling from air bombardment, became very quiet as summer drew near and many tears were shed. 'Stick it oul. avy must not let Army down. It takes three years to build a ship but three hundred to build a tradition' signalled Cunningham in the Battle for Crete as one after the other the carrier, battleships,
I
cruisers and destroyers of his fleet were lost or damaged by air attack. Though none could have foretold it, it was this simultaneous naval, land and air battle stretching from Greenland to the Eastern Mediterranean in May 1941 which cost Germany the war. In the West it was the sinking of the Bismarck, at the expense of the Hood, which put an end to German surface operations in the Atlantic. In the Eastern Mediterranean it was the resistance of British and imperial troops in Greece and Crete, of pilots who flew what aircraft could be found against the might of Axis air power, and of the Royal avy which, at terrible cost in ships and men, delayed the inevitable and decimated Hitler's only complete airborne division. The removal of the Atlantic surface warship threat gave safe passage to a miJlion An1ericans to their D-Day jumpoff position in Britain. The battles for Greece and Crete caused Operation 'Barbarossa', the German attack on the Soviet Union, to be postponed by six weeks. 'Barbarossa' planned to destroy the Soviet by first taking Moscow but the Germans, like apoleon, failed to reach the city before the terrible Russian winter set in. HMS Hood lies 9,000 feet at the bottom of the Denmark Strait and through the marvels of technology her wreck has been filmed and shown to a worldwide audience. Nevertheless, the cause of her disintegration remains shrouded in mystery. Perhaps in another decade or so closer inspection will determine how came the end. There have been many books about HMS Hood but until man can exist and move 9,000 feet down on the ocean bed I doubt if there will ever be such a history, such a biography, such an obituary as Bruce Taylor has written. The astonishing volume of research he has managed to achieve brings alive not only Hood's irreplaceable years of ervice in the cause of peace, but also the neglect to update her fighting potential and the pattern of her operations in war that led to almost unbearable conditions for her gallant company who somehow kept her going against all odds. It has been a privilege watching Dr Taylor knit together a vast and varied theme into what must surely be, for many years to come, the definitive account of an awe-inspiring piece of Britain's naval history. St Tudy, Cornwall St Valentine's Day, 2004
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
8
Introduction
HIS BOOK HAS BEEN WRITTEN to address two longstanding needs in the field of British naval history. First, to give due treatment to the greatest warship to have hoisted the White Ensign since the \fietory, one that explains how she acquired her exalted status, why her loss temporarily shattered the morale of the British people; why, perhaps, she retains the hold she does over the imagination of those who never knew her. econd, in doing so, to provide a new perspective on the genre of ship biography, one that for the first time marries the technical reality and operational career of a vessel with the experience and mentality of those who breathed life into her, made her what she was in all her vast complexity. To provide, in short, the first integrated history of one of the great capital ships of the twentieth century, the ultimate expression of a nation's power, the summit of technology and innovation, and the most evolved community in military society. Any historian attempting a 'total history' of a warship must gird himself for prolonged research among widely scattered sources in many fields. As with most recent ships in the Royal avy, the fabric and structural history of HMS Hood has been the subject of considerable investigation. This is just as well since naval history requires of its practicants an unusually firm grasp of the immediate physical and technical environment of their subject if they are to do it justice. Indeed, it is hard to imagine how the present volume would have evolved without the benefit of John Roberts' remarkable 'Anatomy of the Ship', first published in 1982.' But the fabric of a ship is one thing, its operation quite another. To be afforded a plan or photograph of a 15in turret is not, alas, to be given any significant idea of its functioning, much less the impact ii bad on those who worked in it. Indeed, to study the Hood's engine spaces in particular is to be made aware that certain items of equipment acquired a character all their own, one intimately associated with those given responsibility for serving or maintaining them. an any member of the Engineering Department have thought of the boiler room fan flats without thinking also of Chief Mechanician Charles W. Bostock? For the Hood, which had the rare distinction of being the only ship of her class, this becomes an important consideration, one which among other things implied extended periods of service for a core of speciali t ratings. Equally, while the Hood's career is either well known or readily traced in official sources, the tenor of her shipboard life-hitherto largely unstudied-is far harder to follow or reconstruct. For here lies a nearinsuperable challenge to any who would write the social hi tory of a warship: where they survive at all the overwhelming majority of documents are in private hands, though increasing numbers are becoming available to researchers in one form or another; long and richly may this flow continue. In times past it was common for naval writer to exhort their readers to join the Navy League; this one will confine himself to exhorting his readers to entrust their
T
I
John Roberts, The Balfl(,CTuj~r Hood
[Analomyofthe Ship] (2nd cdn, London: Conway, 2001; 1st edition, 1982). 2
Department of Documents, Imperial War Museum, Lambeth Road, London SE 16HZ.
documents or memoirs of service to the Imperial War Museum.> However, the richest source for the life and being of the ship has come through personal contact with the dwindling band of survivors of her successive commissions. In this the Hood is, numerically at least, much less well provided than other ves els of comparable size. On 24 May 1941 she was 10 t with over 99% of her company and perhaps 70% of those who had sailed in her since the outbreak of war, including many who had given her five, ten or even 20 years of service. A high proportion of those who knew her best therefore succumbed either in the Denmark Strait or to the savage attrition suffered by the Royal Navy during the conflict as a whole. onetheless, the author has been able to uncover significant information from surviving crewmen dating as far back as the 1933-6 commission. The atmosphere of the 1931-3 commission, which comprehended the Invergordon Mutiny, has been reconstructed mainly from oral histories along with the testimony of a single veteran. For obvious reasons the World Cruise of 1923-4 is a well-documented interlude in the history of the ship but the scythe of time has deprived this writer of any truly detailed or first-hand information on the four commissions of the 1920s. Further investigation would no doubt attribute this not only to generational factors-it was the 1970s before the preservationist movement set in-but to the poor morale among both officers and men that increasingly characterised the avy as the 1920s wore on. For the material that survives, in whatever form it is transmitted-letters, diaries, memoirs, oral histories or direct contact with veterans-further obstacles and pitfalls remain where its interpretation is concerned. To read the memoirs of an officer and a rating of the same commission is to appreciate the gulf-like gap in outlook and prospects separating the two sides. There was mutual respect, collaboration and comradeship in adversity, but to pretend that HMS Hood was 'of one company' is to ignore the fundamental realities of service afloat. Both then and since, the opinions voiced are invariably bound up in the assumptions and realities of class which continue to characterise British and particularly English society generally. The views range from those of Boy Fred Coombs, frequently marked by a morbid bitterness and disgust, to those of officers such as Admiral Sir William James in which a supposition is made of harmony and satisfaction which existed among only a small proportion of ratings. Between these extremes are memoirs offering penetrating insights into the life and atmosphere of the ship, among which those of LS Len Williams and Vice-Admiral ir Louis Le Bailly stand out. Nor are these the only considerations. The war years are much the best documented period in the history of the ship but, with a few notable exceptions, censorship at the time and restraint thereafter have conspired to make this material comparatively less candid and valuable than that from earlier cOlnlnissions.
9
Introduction
Some 15,000 men served in the Hood between 1919 and 194 I and this book is based on the partial records of 150 of their number-a mere 1%. Inevitably, citations are often made which reflect the very decided opinion or agenda of their author, either at the time or later. In the pages that follow the present writer is careful to draw a distinction between opinions purely those of their author and those which can be taken as representative of the views of a wider community of men; between those written at the time and those the product of memory, more reasoned and ordered in their perceptions but less accurate in their detail or emotional tone. Then there is the matter of confidentiality and withholding of information alluded to just above. The 'Silent Service; whose members set down and publi h their memoirs rather less frequently than those of the other armed service, yields its secrets only with the greatest reluctance. The sense of a world apart which only those who lived it can share or understand remains strong. Beyond this, service in a ship usually implies a bond of loyalty and attachment to be broken only by death. In preparing this volume the author has become aware how much information about the Hood-inevitably concerning her less agreeable aspects and episodes-is known but neither revealed nor admitted. This of itself has something to say about the mentality of those studied in thi book, about the values of the community in which they served and about the self-perception of the avy of the time and since. The following pages therefore contain many stark revelations about life aboard, particularly in wartime; many more are no doubt passing into oblivion. Personal enormities of one sort or another are part and parcel of any large community but the general condition of the ship, both structurally and in terms of her morale, is another matter. The Hood was undeniably in a state of advanced dilapidation by 1939 and her crew were to suffer for it in the months and
years to follow. Many British warships required their men to serve in conditions similar or worse, but few were as hardpressed as she while at the same time operating under the rigours and discipline of big-ship life. The morale of the ship was never broken but it is clear that by late 1940 and early 1941 many were finding the strain of war service intolerable. Naturally, some men bore their lot easier than others. If the view offered in Chapter 8 alter the prevailing impression of 'the Mighty Hood' then it is fair to her last company that it should be written, as it would have been written had she survived to be scrapped and they to enjoy the fruits of peace. Commemoration cannot be allowed to efface reality. The achievement is the greater for the suffering endured. The ultimate end of historical research is to understand a society or community with the same clarity and richness with which we grasp our own. On that criterion the present volume must be regarded as falling some way short. Nonetheless, with its limitations, this study offers a vision of the Hood and her world which goes far beyond anything previously available for this vessel, or any other for that matter. Moreover, it offers a tentative methodology and approach upon which others might build if warship history is to progress beyond the uninhabited corridors of technical data and conjectural analysis in which it is now largely conceived. Above all, these pages cannot fail to demonstrate that the culture and community of a capital ship was even richer and more imposing in its order and design than the structure which enclosed it. If nothing else, they demonstrate that those wishing to grasp the essence of a ship must approach her first and foremost through her people. It was iron men not steel ships that made the Second World War the swansong of the Royal Navy, victorious in terrible adversity. Let that never be forgotten.
Hood alongside the South Mole at Gibraltar in 1937 or 1938. lengthy interludes in Mediterranean waters kept her from the reconstruction she so
desperately needed. HMS Hood AMoc~r;onI~rcMfCoIl«tlOlt
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
10
1
Genesis, Design and Construction Did He smile His work to see? Did He who made the lamb make thee? HE BATTLECRUISER HMS Hood was the fine flowering of a shipbuilding industry that had lead the world in technology, capacity and innovation since the early nineteenth century. Above all, she was born in the crucible of war and in the context of the greatest naval building race in history. Despite the tragic fate that awajted her, the Hood remains a monument to an era of naval and industrial organisation then reaching the height of its powers. How she came to be built and readied for service is the subject of the following pages.
T
........>
I
See Northcott, HMS Hood. pp. 1-14, Roberts, Barrlecruisers. pp. 55-62, and Brown, 71,e Grmfd
1
Fleet, pp. 98-100. The other two w~re Howe (Cammell Laird, Birkenhead) and Rodm!)' (Fairfield. GO\'an). A fourth was ordered on J3 June: A"so1J (Armstrong \Vhit'Worth,
Newcastle-upon-Tyne). ) The battlecrui.ser debate is framed by James Goldrick in 'The Problems of Modern Naval HislOC},' in lohn B. Hattendorf (ed), Doing Nnml History: EsS(1)'s Toward Impro\'emeru (Newport, RI:
3v31 War College Press, 1995),
pp.15-19.
The immediate origins of HM battlecruiser Hood can be traced to a note sent by the Controller of the Navy, Rear-Admiral Frederick Tudor, to the Director of Naval Construction, Sir Eustace Tennyson d'Eyncourt, in October 1915' In it Tudor requested designs for an experimental battleship based on the successful Queen Elizabeth class but incorporating the latest advances in seakeeping and underwater protection. Central to the Admiralty's brief was a higher freeboard and shallower draught than previous construction, features that would not only permit more effective operation under wartime loads but lessen the threat to the ship posed by underwater damage. Between ovember 1915 and January 1916 d'Eyncourt evolved five designs, the most promising of which had a greatly enlarged hull and beam in order to achieve the necessary reduction in draught. However, these studies were rejected in a lengthy memorandum by Admiral Sir John Jellicoe, the Commander-in-Chief of the Grand Fleet. Whereas the Royal avy had a marked superiority in battleships over the High Seas Fleet, it had no answer to the large Mackensen class battlecruisers then under construction for the German avy. Accordingly, six more design were produced in February, based on the earlier studies but emphasizing speed over protection. Of these one was selected for development, resulting in a further pair of designs in March. It was the second of these, Design 'B', which received the nod from the Admiralty Board on 7 April 1916 and upon which the ship that came to be known as HMS Hood was based. The final studies had been evolved under d'Eyncourt's supervision by E.L. Attwood, head of the Battleship section of the Royal Corps of Naval Constructors, assisted by S. V. Goodall. What did this design consist of? On a standard di placement of 36,300 tons--over 5,000 tons more than any other ship in the Royal Navy-Design 'B' promised a speed of 32 knots through the use of the lighter small-tube boiler. A length of 860 feetapproaching the length of two and a half football fields--meant that there would only be three graving docks in Britain capable of accepting her, those at Portsmouth, Rosyth and Liverpool. There were to be eight 15in guns in a modified turret design along with Su.1een of the new 5.5in mountings. An 8-inch main armour belt was believed to offer better protection than the 10
inches of the Queen Elizabeth class thanks to the introduction of a sophisticated arrangement of sloped armour. However, horizontal protection showed no improvement on earlier designs, being restricted to a maximum of 2.5 inches, and that only on the lower deck; elsewhere it was no more than 1.5 inches. On 17 April orders for three hips were placed by the Admiralty, one, eventually called Hood, at John Brown & Co. of Clydebank.' Then came Jutland. On 31 May and I June 1916 an action wa fought 100 miles off the Danish coast which was to have far-reaching consequences for the Royal avy. Of these only one need concern us here: the fate of the British battlecruisers, three of which blew up under German shellfire. The battlecruiser was a product of the fertile mind of Admiral Lord Fisher, the mercurial genius who transformed the Royal avy in the years before the First World War. Fisher's intentions are not readily divined, but he evidently recognized that a guerre de course, a concerted campaign on British merchant shipping, would form a key element of German naval strategy in the coming war.' To counter this he took the principal innovations of his other brainchild, the Dreadnought, and created the battlecruiser, a ship which married the size and fighting power of a battleship with the swiftness of a cruiser. However, ship design is a science based on compromise and in order to anain speeds in excess of 25 knots major sacrifices in armour protection had to be made. The first generation of battlecruisers therefore represented a risky and prodigiously expensive solution to the problem of commerceraiding and cruiser warfare, but the expenditure was vindicated fir t at the Battle of the Falkland Islands in December 1914 and then at the Dogger Bank in January ofthefollowing year. In the first action the main units of Vizeadmiral Graf von Spee's Deutsche SiidseegescJnvader were sunk by Invincible and I"flexible 8,000 miles from Britain, thus ending German hopes of a sustained offensive against imperial trade. In the second the armoured crui er Bliicher was overhauled and crushed by weight of fire from Vice-Admiral Sir David Beatty's battlecruisers. However, there was another side to Fisher's concept, that of fast scout for the battle fleet, and for this role the battlecruiser was to prove significantly less well equipped. Inevitably the moment came when the battlecruiser began trading salvoes with ships of similar firepower and at ranges which presented a severe danger to her thin horizontal protection. The First World War, it turned out, was fought over ranges far greater than had been anticipated by ship constructors when they designed the armour layout of their ships. Whereas most capital ships had been optimized to absorb hells fired from 4, 6 and 8,000 yards, the ranges at which Jutland in particular was fought-I 0, 12 and 14,000 yards-brought shells to target on a far steeper trajectory than their protection had been designed to resist. This was particularly true of the British balllecruisers, much of whose horizontal plating was no more than 1.5 inches thick.
\
Genesis, Design and Construction
The first indication of vulnerability to plunging fire came at the Dogger Bank when Lion was disabled after repeated hits from Konteradmiral Franz von Hipper's battlecruisers. But it was not until jutland that the inherent weakne of British battlecruiser design and operation became fully apparent. By the time the Grand Fleet turned for home three of the nine battlecruisers engaged that day had been sent to the bottom with all but a handful of survivors. It is clear that inadequate measures against flash and poor cordite handling contributed to these disasters but the stark reality is that, unlike their opponents, British battlecruisers proved unequal to the demands presented by combat over long ranges. For all this, the battlecruiser was one of the great offensive weapons in naval history. Though flawed in concept, she possessed the quality other vessels of her generation ignally lacked: the ability to force the enemy to battle in an age when technical advance made it far easier for a commander to decline action if he chose. Appalling as the events at jutland were, no commander would very well have exl'ected his forces to emerge unscathed from an encounter with the main body of the enemy. It was in the way of war at sea for men to be killed and their ships to be destroyed. Admiral Lord Chatfield, captain of the Lio'l at jutland, captures the sentiment of the officer corps: Beatty decided on a burial at sea, and a signal was made to that effect. I assembled the ship's company aft, and in the presence of the Admiral, and my officers and men, 1 read the funeral service. It was a hard task. So, we cast into the deep, in their hammocks, our many shipmates, those whom I had commanded for over three years and whom I knew so well. But what finer end could they have had or wished for? They had served for many years their country, not themselves, and we left them on the battleground, as perhaps their forefathers in elson's time had been left.' Even after jutland the fact that the battlecruisers were the spearhead of the fleet gave them a prestige unmatched by any other squadron in the Royal avy. For the fighting officer burning to engage an elusive enemy, this was a time to live and these the ships to serve in. In this respect there is little to choose between the mentality with which Beatty and his men went into battle at jutland and that which governed Vice-Admiral Holland's attack on the Bismarck 25 years later. Whatever the judgements of history, however deficient in tactics or design, however disastrous the outcome, it was in this cast of mind that the battlecruiser was traditionally taken into action. But for now the Battle of jutland presented the designers of the Hood with a number of severe challenges. Proposals for increased protection were tabled in june but on 5 july d'Eyncourt submitted a revised version of Design 'B' which was eventually accepted on 4 August. The armament was unchanged from the March legend but belt armour was increased to a maximum of 12 inches and barbettes from 9 inches to 12. The angled 12-inch belt now provided the equivalent of 14 or 15 inches of vertical armour while a 460-foot long bulge packed with steel tubing offered torpedo protection the equal of any prior to the Second World War. However, horizontal protection saw relatively little improvement and was still no better than 2.5 inches despite the addition of 3,1 00 tons to the displacement. This might just have sufficed had the
II
Hood's magazines not been placed over her shell rooms as was hitherto the norm in British de ign. As it was, this amount of protection was regarded by both jellicoe and Beatty as inadequate and within a few weeks improvements had been made to both turret and deck armour, which had reached a maximum of 3 inches over the magazines when the final design legend was approved in August 1917. The governing criterion was that at least 9 inches of armour would have to be penetrated in order for a shell to reach the magazines, but numerous thin decks offered considerably less protection than one thick one. Put simply, the Hood did not have an armoured deck and in this lay the fatal weakness of her design, however superior her arrangements to previous construction. Though occasionally classified as a fast battleship, by later standards the Hood failed to make the transition from a battlecruiser and ultimately proved incapable of meeting the requirement that had sooner or later to be made of any warship: the ability to withstand punishment from ships armed to the same standard as herself. It has long been supposed that Hood's keel was laid at Clydebank just as the battJecruisers were steaming into action at jutland on 31 May.s Star-crossed she may have been, but work did not begin on ship 0.460 until I September 1916. The origins of the John Brown shipyard lie in the engineering firm of j. & G. Thomson founded in Glasgow in 1847. By the time the business was purchased in 1899 by john Brown & Co., owners of the Atlas plate and steelwork at Sheffield, the yard had established itself as one of the world's premier shipbuilders. Among its many notable contracts were the Servia (laid down in 1880) for Cunard and the City of ew York (1887) for the Inman Line, the largest liners of their day, together with the battleships Jupiter (1895) and Asalri (1897) for the British and japanese navies respectively. To these the new century would add the Lllsitania (1904) and the Aqllitania (1911) for Cunard and the battleship Barlra'lI (1913) for the Admiralty. Later came the liners Qlleen Mary (1930) and Quem Elizabeth (1936) and the battleship Vanguard (1941). But john Brown made a particular speciality of battlecruiser construction and five were built there fTom 1906, more than in any other yard: Inflexible, Australia (1910), Tiger (1912), Repulse (19J5) and finally Hood. The keel-laying of the Hood was the crowning moment in a programme of warship construction dating back to the tum of the twentieth century. At stake was the preservation of Britain's maritime supremacy against the formidable threat posed by German naval and industrial power. In order to secure victory British industry had to draw on a wellspring of experience, technique and innovation which makes the 'Great aval Race' the final expression of the Industrial Revolution. Then as now the building of a capital ship was among the most challenging of human endeavours. The process required the skills and labour of thousands of men and women, of architects and engineers at the Admiralty, smelters and forgers in Sheffield and tracers and drillers in the yard itself. From across the country the output of dozens of mills, factories, mines and workshops poured in by ship, rail and lorry, over 40,000 thousand tons of materiel from hardened plate to turned cabinetry. The construction of the Hood will, it is hoped, one day form the subject of a book in its own right." In the meantime perhaps the following pages will suffice to give an impression of the enormous feat of ingenuity, work and organisation repre ented by it.
Chatfield, TIU! 1m')' and Defe"ee. pp.149-5O. 5 See Jan Johnston, Ships for a Natiorl: 101m Brow" & Company 4
etrdeballk. t847-1971
(Glasgow:
West Dunbartonshire Libraries & Museums, 2(00). I am most
grateful to Ian Johnston for his assistance with this section. 6 By Ian JohnslOn.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
12
1
Roberts, The Battlecmiser Hood, pp. 10-13. Thomas & Patterson. Dreadnoughts jrl Camera, pp. 5-13 & 24-30, Johnston, Beardmore B"i[l, pp. 3 9, and Talbo'-Booth,
All the l\'orld's Fighting Fleets. 3rd cdn, pp. 57-9.
The design of a ship began as we have seen with a brief from the Admiralty to the Director of aval Construction.' Accordingly, the D C and his team started by calculating the proportions and characteristics of the hull and the balance of propulsion plant, armour and armament which would govern its design. After a preliminary hull form had been worked out it was tank-tested at the Admiralty Experiment Works at Haslar near Portsmouth to establish the metacentric heights, centres of gravity and buoyancy, wave resistance and coefficient of the vessel as well as the optimum shape of propellers and submerged surfaces. Then came detailed plan showing the arrangement of armour and machinery spaces and the projected weight, structure and dimensions of the completed vessel. Once approved by the Admiralty Board these were dispatched to the shipyard contracted to build the vessel so that copies could be made and the preparation of working drawings initiated. It was u ual for armament and machinery contractors to produce their own working drawings but where Hood was concerned the Admiralty placed far greater reliance on John Brown's own draughtsmen and those of the other three builders than had hitherto been the case. Work began in the mould loft, at John Brown's an immense room over 375 feet long on whose floor the frames of the ship were traced in full size onto black scrieve boards. Each set of scrieve boards contained not only the shape of the frame but also the position of every rivet, bolt, heer line, buttock line and deck to which it would allach. These were taken to the plate shops where metal for frames and bars of different types was selected, cut, heated
The keel plate and double bottom of Ship No. 460 taking shape on NO.3 slip at John Brown & Co. towards the end of 1916. The box construction which formed the basis of the hull can just be made out. This photograph has been taken from the stern of the ship looking forward. The baulks of timber upon which the hull will rest are gradually being assembled in the middle distance. N.tlONl Arch/11ft of SCo~nd. Edmburgh
and then bent on steel slabs until they conformed perfectly to the prescribed contours. This done, the shipfitters began punching holes in the places indicated so that every frame and bar reached the building slip ready to be bolted and then riveted in place. A similar procedure was followed with plates, which were drilled, sheared, planed, flanged, bevelled and pressed to the de ired shape and curvature ready for positioning on the hull. Meanwhile, beams were being imparted their correct camber and moulds made for major components such as shaft brackets. The first constructional step was the laying of the keel plate, the backbone of the ship, in a carefully selected and prepared berth. Then the transverse and longitudinal frames were joined to the keel to form the watertight compartments which were the ship's first defence against the sea. The box-like construction which resulted had originated with the Rel/owlJ class battlecruisers and over it were fixed the bulkheads that divided the Hood into 25 watertight sections. Though pierced with huge gaps for funnel uptakes and turrets, longitudinal strength was preserved with girders running the length of the ship, the forecastle and upper decks forming the upper part of a slopesided box to which the ship owed her structural integrity. While the bow and stern frames were being assembled the blacksmiths' shop was busy turning out forgings of every shape and dimension as electricians began laying the first of many hundreds of miles of wiring. Then came the installation of shafts, screws, bulges and bilge keels before the paint shop dispatched squads of men to apply the coats of red lead paint which announced the ship as ready for launching.
The Hood's rudder frame at William Beardmore's Parkhead Forge. Glasgow, c. 1918. It will be packed with wood (fir) and plated over before being fitted to the ship. N.tlOMl Archiws of ScorJ.rwt EdInburgh
Genesis, Design and COl1strtlctiOIl
The reputation for toughness of'Clyde-built' ships rested to a considerable extent on the quality of their riveting. Ian Johnston describes the work of the riveting parties and the caulkers who followed them: These could be either machine or hand squads. A hand squad comprised a right and left handed riveter to alternately hammer the rivet, a 'holder on' who was positioned behind the plate to hold the heated rivet in place with a tool called a 'hobey, and a 'heater boy'-who could be 50 or 60 years of age. The heater boy was important as he had to arrange his fire in such a fashion that he had an adequate supply of different types of rivet likely to be required properly heated and ready for use. The riveter could call out to the heater boy-'efter four a long yin' or it could be 'a wee yin'. In confined or awkward spaces an additional member of the squad, known as a catch boy, could be employed to insert the rivet. Where a riveting machine was used, the squad comprised a riveter to operate the machine, a holder on and a heater boy. When the riveters had completed their work, caulkers took over. They finished the shell by caulking each plate overlap with a pneumatic caulking machine to ensure an absolutely watertight seam.' Though laid down in September 1916, constant design alterations meant that construction work on the Hood would be significantly delayed. On 2 November a shipyard report noted that
13
Sufficient information is gradually being obtained from the Admiralty to enable more material to be ordered for this vessel and to employ a few more men on her construction, but in view of the alteration in her design, comparatively low progress can only be made until beginning of next year' Alterations were still being made but on I March 1917 John Brown & Co. was 'Informed by the Admiralty that Hood is to be pushed with all despatch'. However, the pressing need for merchant shipping in view of the German submarine offensive against British trade now prevented the yard devoting its full resources to the project. Satisfactory progress was reported on 22 June 1917 but construction of the hull was being hindered by a shortage of manpower. 0 further shipyard reports are available on the Hood until January 1919, by which time she had been launched and was in the process of fitting oul. This absence can only be explained by the need to preserve secrecy as requests continued for improved protection in the light of test firings and battle experience. These resulted in May and June of 1919 in the removal of four of the sixteen 5.5in guns and then four of the eight above-water torpedo tubes, the last major changes to be made to a design whose construction was by now far advanced. Already in September 1918 the first barbette plates of face-hardened steel had been lowered into place in the fitting-out basin, part of an armour scheme that would eventually require 14,000 tons of plate. The manufacture of armour plate was a highly evolved process
• Johnston, Beardmore Built, p. 39. 'Thi and the succeeding citations
from Glasgow Uni\·crsit)· Archives. Upper C1rde Shipbuilders 1/5/15-21.1 owe them to the
kindness of Ian Johnston.
Hood's four propellers being transported the 400 miles separating the Manganese Bronze & Brass Co. of london
and John Brown of Clydebank. <.191B. The propellers. weighing over 20 tons each, are being hauled
by traction engines
supplied by Messrs H. Bentley & Co. of Bradford. The endeavour of building the Hood was the work of dozens of companies across the United Kingdom. Mrs
M~rg.'~[ ~ry
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
14
Above: The Hoods main deck nearing completion in the autumn of 1917. On the right is the round-down of mostly 2·inch
plating (l-inch deck plating in double thickness) which constituted an important element in her horizontal protection. Further aft the arrangement of brackets supporting the rest of the main deck can be made out. National Archivt!J of SCar/,md. Edinburgh
Ie Thomas
& PaHerson, Dreadnollghts
in Camera, pp. I 11
23.
Ian Johnston, (-mail to the author, 21 June 2003. It should be added
that Sir John Brown had no family connection to the company to which
he gave his working life.
requiring plant of a size and complexity unknown in any other field of steel production.'· It began with a steel ingot weighing 80-100 tons. Because of the nickel and chromium content in armour plate, extremely high furnace lemperatures were required to prepare the ingot for forging. Once heated, the ingot was forged under a 10,000-ton hydraulic press before being returned to the furnaces and rolled in an enormously powerful mill. Heated again, the plate was then straightened under hydraulic pressure and planed down to bring it to the required thickness. These plates, some weighing 30 tons, were then hardened in bogie furnaces for periods of up to three weeks during which carbon was absorbed onto the face. In the case of barbette or conning tower plates, the armour would be given its desired curvature under the remorseless pressure of another IO,OOO-ton press. Urged on by Beatty and others, work on the Hood picked up after the Armistice. By the end of january 1919, five months after launching, the final work was being done on the hull. On 27 February the second funnel was reported as up and the 600ton conning tower under construction. A month later the armour belt was being fitted and the bridge structure taking shape. The turbines were all ill situ by May Day and the end of that month saw the mainmast erected and the ship largely decked over. After some delay the first 15in turret reached Clydebank from the builders, Vickers, Barrow, on 29 july, the ship being hauled out into the river so that it could be transferred from the coaster Horden by the 200-ton fitting-out crane. Delivery and installation of the turrets wenl on until the beginning of December. However, the Admiralty was increasingly anxious for the Hood to be completed and in August the decision was taken to suspend construction of the cruiser Enterprise so that she could be expedited without delaying merchant work in the yard. Work proceeded apace with perhaps 1,000 men aboard and by the end of October the joiners and electricians were fitting out the living quarters of the ship. Also
Above: The quarterde
completed in October was the additional plating on the main deck abreast the magazines requested in May, the final addendum to the Hood's protection. By ovember the rigging was under way and on 9 and 10 December basin trials of the engines took place in preparation for her departure for builder's trials in the new year. The work was nearly completed. Only one personal memoir has so far come to light of the construction of the Hood, that gleaned by Ian johnston of the Glasgow School of Art during an interview with Sir john Brown, Deputy Chairman of the company, in 1997. It concerns an illicit tour of the ship made by Brown, then an apprentice draughtsman, one day in 1919: He had been having lunch as usual in the drawing office when he thought he would take a stroll down the yard to see what was going on. He walked down to the litting-out basin and there was Hood tied up against the east wall under one of the big cranes. It was the biggest ship he had ever seen. He thought he would try to get on board even though entry onto this warship was forbidden. They were very strict about things like that and he would be reprimanded if caught. Trying to look as if he was on business, he walked up one of the gangways secured to the ship and started to explore. He had a look round the quarterdeck and then worked his way forward and started to climb to the bridge. Having got that far without being topped he decided to press on upwards to the spotting top. Once there he admired the view over the yard and the surrounding hills to the north but stayed only for a few moments for fear of being caught. lI
Genesis, Design and Construction
The construction of the Hood had proceeded with little fanfare and a fair degree of secrecy. Her keel-laying in September 1916 seems not to have been accompanied by the ceremony usually accorded these occasions but it was wartime and such events were in any case more subdued in commercial shipbuilding than they were in the Royal Dockyards of Portsmouth, Devonport and Chatham. The launching in August 1918 was another matter but even this was tinged with sadness. On the Western Front the Allies were defeating the German army but the previous four years had cost Britain and her empire the lives of a million men. Among the dead was Rear-Admiral the Rt Hon. Sir Horace Hood, killed at Jutland in the battlecruiser ll/vil/cible, whose American widow performed the launching ceremony. The name Hood first appears in a communication from the Admiralty to John Brown on 14 July 1916. She was intended as the lead ship of her class, to include Howe, Rodney and AI/sol/, four great admirals of the eighteenth century. The man after whom the subject of this book was named was a vicar's son of Thorncombe in Dorset, Samuel Hood (1724-1816). In a career spanning 55 years Hood acquired a reputation as a master tactician, making his name at St Kitt's, Dominica, Toulon and Corsica before being granted the title of Viscount Hood of Whitley in 1796. Nor by any means was he the last member of his family to distinguish himself in naval service. Samuel's brother Alexander (1726-1814) also made his career in the wars against the French, becoming Viscount Bridport in 1801. Then came their nephews Alexander (1758-98) and Samuel Hood (1762-1814), the former killed leading the Mars in a desperate action with the French Hercule and the latter one of elson's captains at the ile in 1798. Others followed, including Admiral Lord Hood of Avalon, First Sea Lord from 1885-9. The Hood family therefore had a record of service going back 175 years and the selection of the name for Britain's latest battlecruiser may have owed something to Rear-Admiral Hood's acrifice at Jutland. However, it was his great-great grandfather the first Viscount whose name, device and motto she bore. The badge was of an anchor supported by a Cornish chough, the rare coastal bird of the crow family with a popular reputation for fire-raising. The motto was Vel/tis seClllldis, 'With favouring winds'. The Hood was not the first ship to carry the name. In 1797, just two years after he had hauled down his nag, the avy commissioned a fourteen-gun vessel named Lord Hood which, however, was stricken in December of the following year. It was not until 1860 that the name was revived, in this case when the 80-gun Edgar was converted to screw propulsion during the naval scare of the late 1850s. Rendered obsolete by Warrior and her successors, the Hood spent a dismal career in the reserve and then as a barracks ship at Chatham before being sold out of the Navy in 1888. The next Hood, however, was a first-rate unit, launched in 1891 as the eighth and final member of the Royal Sovereign class of battleships. Though designed by Sir William White, a naval architect of genius, the ship was marred by the insistence of her namesake, the First Sea Lord Admiral Sir Arthur Hood, that she carry enclosed turrets rather than the open barbettes of her half sisters. These not only made Hood the Royal avy's last turret ship but greatly reduced her freeboard and consequently her effectiveness in anything other than a nat calm. In 1914, to the delight of later generations of scuba divers, she
15
was expended as a blockship at the entrance to Portland Harbour as a mea ure against German submarine attack. If the name Hood had a ring to it this therefore owed more to famous men than famous ships. But all that was to change. At five minutes past one on Thursday 22 August 1918 Lady Hood shattered a bottle over the ship's bows and the Hood slipped stern-first down the ways and into the Clyde. The act of launching came at the end of a lengthy process of work and calculation dating from before the laying down of the ship." During construction the weight of the hull was borne on massive baulks of timber and shored up under the bilges with numerous beams and wedge. In order to launch the ship a continuous platform of'ground ways' was laid on either side of the keel. Resting on these was the 'sliding way' and atop this two wooden cradles or poppets, one at the point where the 5-inch armour belt ended approximately 75 feet from the bows and the other abreast the brackets of the outer propellers. The purpose of the cradle was to carry the weight of the hull as the stern entered the water and until such time as the ship had come to rest in her own element. As the hour of launching approached the sliding ways were greased and supports withdrawn until only the locking of the hull to the fixed ground ways held the ship in place. By this time, too, a launching platform had been built before the bows to accommodate the dignitaries attending the spectacle. The tradition of a lady christening the ship seems to date from the time of the Prince Regent and the ceremony performed by her was usually in three parts. Having wished good fortune on the ship and all who sailed in her, she smashed a bottle against the bow and then pressed a button knocking out the securing trigger of the last cables securing her to the land. With this the band struck up Rille Britannia and the Hood began to slide down the ways in a crescendo of sound, of smashed timber, roaring chains and cheering spectators. It was required of those planning the launch to afford the ship sufficient motive force to reach the water but never so much as to render her uncontrollable once she got there. To restrain this movement enormous drag chains were fixed to the hull so as to check her way and bring her up sufficiently for the dockyard tugs to take charge of her. Since the Hood had a launch weight of21,920 tons it can readily be understand how exacting this task was. In the event, the launch passed off without a hitch.
I!
Tl1lbot.Booth, All the Worlds Figllfj"8 Fleets. 3rd edn, pp. 59--61.
The forepart of the hull ready for launching in the autumn of 1918. To the left is the port side of one of the cradles or poppets on which the ship will slide down the ways on launching. The small ovoid shape nearer the camera is
that of the port submerged torpedo tube. The bulge is
complete but the belts of 5-, 7and 12-inch armour will not be fitted until she is launched. ~t~1 Archl~
of SCotl.nd. EdInburgh
16
Above: The Hood dominates John Brown's East Yard on 21 August 1918. the day before her launch. The hull is complete except for the armour. Boilers are fitted but not turbines.
Clyde on 22 August 1918. the Union Flag flying from the jack staff and the John Brown company flag from the stump of the conning tower.
~t;on.1 Archl~ of ScotJ.tnd,
NClf/ONl1 Archl~ of SCot/Clod. Edmburgh
Above: Hood thunders into the
Edinburgh
Right: Twelve·inch barbette armour for 'B' turret being hoisted aboard in the fitting-out
basin at John Brown's towards the end of 1918. Armour was tongue and grooved on its butt
edges to interlock with adjacent plates and then secured on its inner face by an arrangement of
bolts. Note the protective cover to keep the weather out of 'A'
turret. ,qtJONl Areill,," of SCotl.tnQ. Edinburgh
Above: Hood in the final stages of fitting out on 2 December 1919. The lSin guns of 'A' and 'B' turrets have been installed but the plating has yet to be completed. The armoured director is missing its hood and the aloft director remains to be fitted.
IUrioNl ~ of SCo~nd. Edinburgh
Right: The conning tower and bridge structure seen on 9 January 1920. the day the Hood departed for Greenock under her own power. IUt~1 ArchlW'S
of SCotJ.nd. Edinburgh
Below: Hood's first 1Sin gun. the right-hand barrel of 'x' turret, is swung into position on 9 August 1919. NClrioMl Af(hl~ of SCot/.od. Edmburgh
Genesis, Design and Construction
Above, right and centre: Three views of Hood preparing to leave the fitting-out basin at John Brown's for the last time, 9 January 1920. The photographs were taken from the West Yard's 150-ton cantilever crane. Nation.1 Ar(hi~$ of SCofl"nd, Edinburgh
Above: Four tugs haul the Hood out into the Clyde on 9 January 1920. There is no particular fanfare but a good crowd has gathered on the edge of the East Yard to see her off. "'arroNl Arch,ws of Scorl.ifld. Edinburgh
J7
18
Hood as the public first knew her: funning trials off the Isle of Arran in March 1920. N.r;on.1 Arch;1/('j of SCorJ.nd. EdintxJrgh
Cited in Johnston, Ships for a Nation, p. 166. "Northcott, HMS Hood, pp. 14-\9. IJ
IJ
Sir Eustace H.W. Tennyson d'Eyncourt, 'H.M.S. Hood' in E"gi"eeritrg ILondonJ. 109
(January-June \920), pp.423-6.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
Even after her launch the Hood retained a remarkably low profi.le. As the Dumbarton Herald noted on 15 January 1919, 'very few people have hitherto been aware of her existence, and yet the Hood is a far more wonderful vessel than the Hush! Hush! ships which made such a sensation IGloriolls, Courageous and Furiolls]'." However, the ship received the wrong sort of publicity on 19 May when a build-up of gas in an airtight compartment exploded, killing two men and injuring six more. It was therefore in a curiously muted atmosphere that John Brown's last major warship contract for several years left the yard under her own power on 9 January 1920. Things were different at Greenock later that afternoon where the Hood received the first of many rapturous welcomes from crowds lining Custom House Quay and Prince's Pier. A.Iready advance parties of stokers and sai.lors had been arriving from the battlecruiser Lion, the ship whose company would eventually commission her. The Executive Officer, Cdr Lachlan MacKinnon, arranged for numerous signs to be put up to help them find their way round. Twenty years later MacKinnon would have the misfortune of being Commodore of Convoy SC7, the first to be subjected to the Rudeltnktik, a massed attack by U-boats. For now he had to cope with a different order of chaos as the Hood began the long process of becoming a commissioned ship in the Royal avy. It had been decided to finish the work at HM Dock)'ard Rosyth so as to clear John Brown's fitting-out basin for the urgent completion of merchant contracts." The voyage round Scotland was to give the crew an early taste of the Hood's seakeeping qualities as a
Force 8 gale buried her forecastle and quarterdeck and vibration made life in the spotting top unbearable at speed. Once at Rosyth the ship had to wait six days before wind and current permitted her to be drawn into No.2 Dock for the fitting out to be resumed. Before the Hood departed an inclining experiment was carried out to establish her final displacement, revealed as 46,680 tons at deep load and 42,670 tons at load1,470 tons above the final 1917 legend and no less than 17.5 per cent above the original 1916 design, most of it armour. After preliminary testing of her torpedo armament the Hood returned to Greenock in early March for full builder's and gunnery trials. These, as both d'Eyncourt and RearAdmira.l Sir Roger Keyes were aboard to confirm, were a conspicuous success. All the innovation of her design now stood revealed." Advanced boiler and turbine technology permitted the Hood to develop over a third more power for the same weight of plant than the Renown class completed in 1916. During full-power trials off the Isle of Arran the Hood reached a speed of 32.07 knots on 151,280 s.h.p., making her by some distance the most powerful ship in the world. At this speed the four propellers-20 tons of forged manganese bronze apiece-were making 207 r.p.m., giving her a margin of several knots on any foreign capital ship. However, this margin of speed cou.ld only be obtained with an extremely high fuel consumption. The Hood's oil capacity was 3,895 tons of which over 70 needed to be burned each hour for her to maintain 32 knots. On the other hand, only 7 tons per hour were required to keep her at her economica.l speed of 14 knots, which could
Gellesis, Design and COllstructioll
19
Another view of Hood running trials off the Isle of Arran in
March 1920. N
be reached on a mere 10,000 s.h.p., barely 7 per cent of her capacity; she could make 25 knots at only two-fifths power. Needless to say, the ship's endurance varied greatly at these speeds, which extended from 7,500 nautical miles at 14 knots to little more than 1,700 at 32. At full speed oil consumption was 9 feet to the gallon.'· Besides her engineering plant the trials, which went on through the whole of March, were designed to test lhe Hood's fittings and equipment to lhe very limit of their operational use. Extensive steering and turning exercises were performed in every condition of sea and speed. Her tactical diameter (i.e. turning circle) was found to be 1,400 yards when the rudder was thrown hard over to 38 degrees." Then there were exhaustive gunnery trials of both the main and secondary armament. Apart from difficulties in two of the shell hoists and a back-flash incident in 'A' turret, the 15in firings were carried out satisfactorily and by the end of March the Hood was back in dry dock at Rosyth for a detailed examination of her hull and structure. Though commissioned under Capt. Wilfred Tomkinson on 29 March, it was not until 15 May that she was accepted from the builders and officially received into the Royal Navy. Her initial peacetime complement, drawn from Devonport barracks until 1929, came to approximately 1,150. or was this all. The trials yielded a series of photographs of the ship at speed which captured the imagination of all who saw them. Here was a warship, the largest and mo t powerful of her day, possessed of an elegance never before seen and never since surpassed. I-lMS Hood had arrived. At what price? The final cost to the British government of its greatest ship was £6,025,000, of which John Brown drew £214,108 in profit." This sum was almost twice that of any previous ship, Ref/OWl/ having cost £3,117,204, though wartime inflation and lhe sheer size of the vessel must be taken into consideration.'" At £142 the adjusted cost per ton made Hood 25 per cent more expensive than the Rel/owl/. To this must be added an annual peacetime upkeep of £274,000 in 1934 rising to about £400,000 by the outbreak of war." Payroll in lhe 1920s was approximately £6,000 per month." eedless to say, the concept and above all the expenditure invited criticism from several quarters. Writing in lhe Naval Review, an
anonymous officer argued that the Hood, whose specifications otherwise compared with the Queel/ Elizabeth class battleships, had required an additional £2,030,000 to obtain her 7knot margin of speed." Others, reflecting a view widely held in the years following the Great War, believed the entire sum to have been squandered. The Australial/ Worker had this to say when the Hood reached the Antipodes in 1924: The amount of money expended in building a batlleship like the Hood would have built 10,000 comfortable cottage for British one-room slum dwellers. The idea that a state of military or naval preparedness is any factor in lhe ecurity of a nation is A MYTH THAT HAS La G 51 CE BEE EXPLODED." But there were other concerns, too. Perhaps Rear-Admiral Sir Ernie Chatfield was only half joking in March 1920 when he quipped at a meeting of the Institution of Naval Architects that 'if the Director of Naval Construction was going to design a ship to-day he would not design the Hood'." Certainly, the 'G3' battlecruisers designed that same year bore little resemblance to her in eilher appearance, armament or protection. In his memoirs the D C, Sir Eustace Tennyson d'Eyncourt, present on that occasion, made plain his own views on the matter: The Hood had a great deal added to her in the way of protection, but there was more to be done, and ... the Second World War proved her armour to be still inadequate. [... J It was a terrible tragedy that the Hoocfs improved protection was not fully carried out between the wars." But this was over 20 years in the future. For now lhe Hood was, to all intents and purposes, the greatest capital ship in the world. The cancellation of her sisters in February 1919 and the limitations on warship construction enshrined in the Washington Treaty three years later saw to it that she would hold this status in splendid isolation while peace lasted. That peace was now hers to enjoy.
'6
H.M.S. Hood: NOles for Visitors
(c. 1925), p. 4. 11 Pridham, Notes or, Hatrdli,lg tile
Hood, p. 3. An edition of these prepared by the present writer is forthcoming.
I' Peebles. Warshipbllilding 0" the Clyde, p. 91.
Brown. Tllf~ Grand Fleet, p. 6). " Bradford, The Might), Hood, p. 93. 11 H.M.S. Hood: Noles for Visitors (c. 1925), p. 4. II Anon., 'H.M.S. Hood and After: The Value of Speed in Capi,aJ Ships' in Naval Review, 8 (1920), pp. 176--82; 178. 2J Cited in Bradford, The Mighty Hood, p. 79. Capilals in original. 19
The Naval and Military Record, 31 March 1920. II d'Eyncourt, A Silipblliider's Yarn, p.96. 24
20
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
2
A Tour of the Ship What immortal hand or eye Dare frame thy fearful symmetry? Hood impressed for her beauty. Though her pedigree extended hardly more than a dozen years she was by no means the first British dreadnought to excite admiration for the purity of her lines. The earliest of her breed, the batUecruiser II/yil/cible of 1908, at once captured the aggressive tension that Admiral Sir John Fisher brought to the Royal avy in his first term as First Sea Lord. In 1912 came the Lion class which looked every inch the part for a punitive war against the upstart German Navy. Armed with the 'fearful thirteen point five', the largest naval ordnance then mounted at sea, they were dubbed 'the Splendid Cats' by a press urgent for war. Then there was the Queen Elizabeth class, the Ile plus ultra of British battleship design prior to the First World War, whose strength and character made a powerful appeal to the dominant aesthetic of professional sailors and interested civilians. But the Hood was immediately in a different category. More than any British warship before or since, Hood captured the power and innovation of her design in a symmetry of grace and beauty, and did so in a way that almost anyone could appreciate. A dozen ships had been fitted with the superb 15in gun, but none, not even Repulse and Renowll, had managed to convey the same synthesis of speed and power within such an immense frame. Hood, it turned out, succeeded in marrying the rakishness of a destroyer, the sleekness of a cruiser and the simmering menace of the greatest men o'war. Appropriately, where others earned nicknames that were by turns affectionate (,One-Funnelled Baa-Ram'), jovial ('Billy Ruffian') or derogatory (,Refit and Repair'), there was nothing effacing about 'The Mighty Hood', the sobriquet which soon attached to her.' For a nation still bitterly disappointed that the avy had failed to deliver the crushing victory that had so fervently been expected, here was tangible proof that the sinew of Britain's seaborne empire had emerged strong and vigorous from the test of war: 'God that made thee mighty, make thee mightier yet .. .'. The sense of Hood as embodying the survival and perpetuation of the empire was one she immediately acquired and never surrendered. The notion is nowhere better or more romantically expressed than in V.c. Scott O'Connor's account of the world cruise of 1923-4: OVE ALL ELSE, HMS
A
I
The ships are, r~pecti\'el)', Ramillies. Bellerophorr. Rerrown and Rep'"se. Hood's earlier namesake, the Royal Sovereign class baHleship completed in 1893, was known as "ood'\,c thought it?'
O'Connor. The Empire Cruise, pp.25&-9. 'Ibid., p. 37 • HMS Hood Association, Newssheet no. 1 (1975). Fred IVhile (1937-8). ~
In her mass and speed and perfection of armament, the Hood symbolises the valorous determination of war-weary Britain to maintain intact for the good of mankind the farflung Empire she has built up through the centuries. It is this symbolism that lifts Hood out of the machine, and irradiates the great grey hulk with a halo of splendour' Her loss years later was thus all the greater for the symbolic power that had been vested in her throughout her career. But whatever the heady patriotism of the age or the flaws inherent
in her design, there is little doubt that d'Eyncourt's last work was a masterpiece of theatre and aesthetic refinement. In heavy weather her immense size and speed allowed her to carve her way with majestic ease, but, for O'Connor at least, her power and beauty were never more apparent than when cruising wraith-like through a gentle night in the tropics:
Hood ... moved upon her course, like the stars themselves, without a sound or murmur. Upon her quarter-deck one stood, for all her greatness, very near the sea. Above its smooth levels there rose, as if to remind one of the ship's dread purpose, her colossal turrets, the long straining muzzles of her guns, like ghosts of Armageddon, her tiers of decks.' But it was as the embodiment of Britain'sstatus a a great naval power that the Hood owed her fame, and the following passage, written years after the event, captures the intense pride and excitement caused by her brooding presence off the coast: One felt secure in South Dorset as the Hood's guns spoke for Britain, and to see the foretop of her above the hotels on Weymouth Front from the hills inland as she lay at anchor in Weymouth Bay. And for the thousands of holiday-makers who lined Weymouth Pier and watched the ... bluejackets pour ashore, it was a delight to watch the boathook drill and to note picket boats from the Hood, Repulse, Rellowl/ and the battleships, and in the darkness the skI' being criss-cros ed by dozens of searchlights.' or was all this lost on foreigners. Here is the Ditlrio de otlcias of Lisbon for 29 January 1925, the height of the Vasco da Gama celebrations at which Hood represented the Royal Navy: The great Hood, the mo t powerful war hip in the world, ... has been lying in the waters of the Tagus for a week, rigid, secret and impenetrable. Until yesterday the sleeping monster had kept her decks closed to the curiosity of all who have been passing round her in boats, seeking to discover what there might be within this extraordinary fortress. It was a hopeless task. The Hood, in the usual British manner, remained insensible, unapproachable. ow the curiosity of the people of Lisbon has at last been satisfied. [... ] One could at last examine the formidable guns at close quarters, and admire the hidden beauties of the great ship at rest. What, unexpectedly, was admired above all was the great amiability and formal and correct affability of the Admiral and his officers towards the hundreds of guests who visited the ship. One enters, it is true, with difficulty into an English home, but once there one leaves a portion of one's heart behind.
A Tour of the Ship
21
So it was that for 20 years the Hood dominated every harbour and anchorage from Sydney to San Francisco, a potent reminder that while Britannia might no longer be the one standard of power, her ships were still the yardstick by which all others were mea ured. As in other ways, Hood's appearance was a mixture of old and new. She was the last British capital ship to be fitted with the tripod mast and spotting top of the dreadnoughts, and the last to mount a secondary armament of hand-worked guns. On the other hand she was the first to carry an enclosed bridge and two main fire-control positions; the first also to wear a clipper bow since her distant progenitor, the battleship Warrior of 1861. It was with Hood that the ram bow was finally dismissed from the repertoire of naval architecture and the result, noted one of her captains, was the most graceful capital ship since the age of sail. All round, the message was quite clear. The Hood was an instrument of peace, but if the moment came for war then she would run her enemies down with an irresistible turn of speed and shatter them at long range with her enormous guns.
'......111>_Hood was One of the few ships with the power to inspire an urge to join the Royal Navy. To a vacillating young Louis Le Bailly, destined for flag rank, here was all the confirmation he needed: Returning from a visit to my Jersey great aunts in the ss 51 He/ier we sailed into storm. Misery enveloped me from the moment we passed the Corbiere Lighthouse until we reached Weymouth harbour where, for the first time, 1 saw HMS Hood at close quarters. As the 51 He/ier tied up, the Hood's brass-funnelled picket boat, driven by a young midshipman seemingly little older than me, dirk at hip, cut through our wash to come smartly alongside the harbour steps. 1 needed no more and never wavered again.' In 1932 a nine-year-old Ted Briggs first beheld 'the Mighty 'ood' from the sands at Redcar in what was to be the defining moment in his life.
I stood on the beach for some considerable time, drinking in the beauty, grace and immaculate strength of her. 'Beauty' and 'grace' seem rather ludicrous words to describe a vessel of such size, particularly one whose primary function was for destruction. But 1can honestly say I never could, nor indeed can even today, think of more suitable words to describe her.· In the last summer of peace Boy Signalman Briggs, newly emerged from HMS Gmlges, the boys' training establi hment at Shotley, found himself drafted to the Hood. The anticipation was almost more than he could bear: The excitement was making me queasy; my stomach seemed empty, although I had just breakfasted, and my lips were dry where 1 had been biting them in expectation. And then we saw her. This time there was no mistaking her. That enormous forecastle could belong to no other
Speed and power. The Hood in full cry, guns and rangefinders trained to starboard during a speed trial off the eastern United
State,. August 1924. U.s. Nof'4l Hisronal CMt6, Wotshjngron
S
Lr Bailly, The Man Arolmd tile Engine, p. 12.
6
Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, xii.
'Comparisons with other ships are odious.' HMS Hood serene in Bighi Bay, Grand Harbour, Malta,
c. 1937. A steam picket boat lies at the port boom while Maltese
dghaisas ply the harbour. To the left is the Royal Naval Hospital,
Bighi. HMS
HoodAnoc:,.tionl~son
CoIl«fion
22
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
Hood along,ide. The flying-off platform on 'B' turret dates the
photograph to the mid-1920s. She is in light condition and the tapered cutwater is just visible where the stem meets the water.
ship. She was awe-inspiring. She dwarfed everything around her. I had never felt so small and insignificant, yet at the same time there was a surge of pride and patriotism through me. I truly believed that at sixteen I had achieved my lifetime ambition.'
Above right: A party of officers leaving the Hood's quarterdeck at Melbourne in March 1924. The second figure on the gangway is
J.M. Pipon, Flag Captain of the light cruiser Delhi. The square port above the ship's name gives onto the Admiral's dining room. HMS Hood Association/Mackie Col/Petion
, Ibid., p. 132. • Le Bailly, Ti,e Mati Around tile Engine, p. 37. 9 This
chapler owes much
10
John
For Sub-Lt (El Le Bailly, returning to the Hood after a fouryear absence, it was an equally magical moment: The journey from the dockyard to the great assembly of ships for the Coronation review re-awakened something that had slept during my Keyham years. Here, once more, was the navy and a ship I knew and loved. Although I had only one stripe on my arm, this time I stumbled up the gangway far more confidently than when as a cadet I had first boarded her five years earlier.'
Roberts. Tire Batt/ecruiser Hood IAnatomy of the Shipl (London: Conway, 1982). Aston's diary of his visit and tour of the ship in January 1926 is in KCL, LHCMA, Aston 1/10, pp. 51-61.
10
Reaching the top of the gangway or brow, an officer turned to salute the White Ensign as he stepped onto the quarterdeck, the ship's gleaming tread plate beneath him.- Here he was met by the Officer of the Watch and taken to the Commander, the
executive officer. At nearly 300 feet the quarterdeck of bleached teak was the longest of any warship afloat. Daily in peacetime it played host to two of the avy's most cherished rituals, Colours in the morning and Sunset at dusk. Covered by a third of an acre of canvas awnings, an incomparable setting was provided for dances and receptions under guns burnished and enamelled to a mirror finish. Sloping six feet up towards the stern, the quarterdeck was dominated by the brooding mass of 'X' and 'Y' turrets and pockmarked by an assortment of unsightly vents, hatches and bollards, the largest of which the shipwrights covered with wooden gratings. Around them officers would play impromptu games of deck hockey whenever weather or sea conditions permitted; Hood's quarterdeck may have been the biggest in the Navy but at sea none was more frequently awash. From here the eye would be drawn to the ship's name emblazoned in polished brass on the aft screens, and here too on tompions and decorative plaques might one first encounter her heraldic device, the Cornish chough derived from the arms of Admiral Lord Hood. From the quarterdeck an imaginary visitor-perhaps the journalist George Aston in I926--might then climb a ladder to the starboard side of the forecastle deck, pass through a balcony into the Commander's lobby and so enter the inner world of the ship for the first time.'· Here a row of gleaming show cases filled with trophies bore witness to the Hood's status as the finest sporting ship in the fleet. Under them the ship's defaulters and requestmen gathered each morning save Sunday to receive the Commander's justice. A few steps further would bring another assault on the senses as air heavy with the smell of paint, polish and fuel oil entered his nostrils. To this pot-pollrri the staleness of damp recirculated air and occasional funnel fumes might well be added when at sea. Bulkheads and deckheads, kept a brilliant white, contrasted with the red corticene flooring of the decks which a legion of sailors were destined to scrub into a dull brown colour. Behind it all was the incessant whirring of the air vents, the occasional rumble of machinery and the thousand other sounds issued by a living warship in the course of her sleepless day. Entering a lengthy passage, Aston would find himself in the rarefied world of the senior officers' living spaces. On his left hand a door opened on to the Admiral's lobby and thence to the flag officer's suite of cabins, the first of over 1,000 compartments in the ship. Across the gleaming lobby was the admiral's dining room, a lofty space lying 50 feet athwart the ship. Here, waited
23
A Tour oJ the Ship
on by Royal Marine attendants serving food from an enormous buffet, the admiral either dined alone or in the compan)' of up LO 4S guests. Heated by two coal fires and lit by a pair of scuttles and four square ports, an impressive venue could be created for entertaining guests, but for all the comfort and amenity a visitor had only to glance up at the unadorned trunking and cabling to remember that he was in a ship whose principal business was war. Still, with tables and chairs cleared away it was possible for Vice-Admiral Andrew Cunningham to have two eightsome reels going at one time during his St Andrew's ight celebrations at Malta in 1937." A single door aft led to the admiral's day cabin, a large triangular room overlooking the quarterdeck which the admiral could decorate as his tastes or pocket dictated. Pelmets and chintz cretonne curtains and fender covers (in a poppy design in Keyes' case), desks and chairs of several kinds, side tables awash with silver-framed photographs and china along with the occasional potted plant constituted the usual decor, never too masculine nor too modish. The cabin was presided over by a large mantelpiece and coal fire making it one of the few truly personal spaces aboard. As Cunningham, who occupied them in 1937-8, was to remember, To one who had spent most of his life in small ships my quarters in the Hood were palatial, large, airy cabins on the deck above the quarterdeck with great windows instead of the ordinary portholes. Even my cabin in the Rodlley was small in comparison. J2
Top right: The immense quarterdeck dominated by 'x' and 'Y' turrets; autumn 1940.
The Officer of the Watch and his men are on duty on the starboard side. The open hatch leads down to the officers' cabin flat. Blbliothelc fUr Zeitgesc.hlchre. Stuttgart
Above: Vice·Admiral Field's dining room during the World
Cruise of 1923-4. Note the large buffet on the right and the ventilation trunking at the
deckhead. "'urtr.f~ T.~ni4;n Mail
Above: Vice·Admiral Field's day cabin, c.1924. Pelmets, curtains. potted plants and a club fender
round the coal fire. lIIunf.red
~SITYni.n Milil
Left: Royal Marines passing a quiet dog watch in the starboard battery, one of the main thoroughfares of the ship, in the late 1930s. A game is under way beside Starboard No.6 S.Sin gun. Above them someone has slung a hammock. Odd bits of dhobeying are hanging out to dry. The structure between the pillars is the head of the dredger hoist serving the gun. HMS Hood AnocMrionlH'99InSOll CoIl«tlOfl
II
Cunningham, A Sailor's Odyssey,
p.187. "Ibid., p. 182.
The Banlecruiser HMS HOOD
24
Deck Plans The plans that follow show the Hood's internal arrangements in the 1920s. The interior of the ship was never substantially altered but the uses to which spaces-especially messdecks-were put varied as time passed, particularly after the outbreak of war. The numeration of the spaces is approximately that of the route of the tour on each deck, which is indicated by a line of arrows. These plans owe much to John Roberts"Anatomy of the Ship' volume, to which acknowledgement is hereby made.
,. BOAT OR SHElTER DECK
J.
,.
.
,
Up to Flag Deck
,.
,. FORECASTLE DECK
----
Up from Quarterdeck
FORECASTLE AND BOAT OR SHElTER DECKS
44 Capstan
67 Subordinate officers' heads
2 Commander's cabin
position and hood (on Boat
45 Hawsepipe
68 Commissioned officers' heads
(Midships searchlight
3 Gunnery Officer's cabin
Deck)
46 Port No.1 5.5in gun
69 Squadron commander's cabin
platform above)
1 Commander's lobby
24 5.5in Officer of Quarters
88 Coppersmith's house
4 Gunner's ready·use store
2S Urinal
47 Gunner's ready· use store
70 Paymaster Commander's cabin
89 Starboard 5.5in director
S Billiard room (converted by
26 Potato store
48 Support of Port No.2 5.5in
71 Chief of Staff's bathroom
90 Port 5.Sin director
1931) 6 Admiral's lobby
27 Main galley
gun (on Boat Deck)
72 Chief of Staff's sleeping cabin
91 Forward expansion joint
73 Chief of Staff's day cabin
92 Emergency signal tube
28 Drying store
49 Port NO.3 5.5in gun
7 Admiral's pantry
29 Starboard NO.3 S.5in gun
50 Cooks' kitchen
74 Engine Room vent
93 Starboard NO.2 5.5in gun
8. Admiral's dining room
30 Support of Starboard No.2
51 Ready-use oilskin store
75 Boiler Room vent
94 Port No.2 5.5in gun
52 Gunroom kitchen
76 Funnel hatch
95 Foremast
9 Admiral's day cabin
5.5in gun (on Boat Deck)
10 Admiral's sleeping cabin
31 Boatswain's ready·use store
53 Gunroom galley
77 4in Mk V high-angle gun
96 8ridge lobby
78 4in ready-use ammunition
97 Signal house
11 Admiral's bathroom
32 Gym gear store
54 Air compressor compartment
12 Admiral's spare cabin
33 Paravane gear store
SS Port battery
13 Secretary's cabin
34 Starboard No.1 5.5in gun
56 Port No.4 5.5in gun
14 Secretary's clerk's office
3S Bakery
57 Officers' drying room
15 Engineer Commander's cabin
36 Bread·cooling room
58 Wardroom kitchen
16 Surgeon Commander's cabin
37 Electrical Artificers' workshop
17 Starboard battery
38 Gyro compass adjusting space
18 Starboard No.6 5.5in gun
39 Conning tower (at
61 Wardroom pantry
83 Mainmast
103 Reading Room
lockers 79 Torpedo control tower and 15-foot rangefinder
98 Signal officer's cabin 99 Watch officer's cabin 100 Navigating officer's cabin
80 Marines' store
101 Chaplain's cabin (alternative)
S9 Wardroom galley
81 Oilskin room
102 Conning tower (at Signal
60 Admiral's galley
82 Night defence control station
Distributing Office level)
62 Wardroom
84 Secondary battery room
104 Library
20 Starboard NO.4 5.5in gun
40 'B' turret
63 Wardroom anteroom
85 After expansion joint
105 Wire rope bin
21 Admiral's kitchen
41 'A'turret
64 Port NO.5 5.5in gun
86 Disinfector house
106 Watch keeper's store
22 Beef screen
42 Paravane house
6S Port NO.6 5.5in gun
87 Blacksmith'sshop
107 After funnel
23 Warrant Officers' galley
43 Torpedo embarkation hatch
66 Flag lieutenant's cabin
19 Starboard NO.5 5.5in gun
Intelligence Office level)
108 Forward funnel
2S
A Tour of the Ship
The Hood raising steam before leaving her builders, John Brown & Co.• C1ydebank for the last time on 9 January 1920. Heavy black smoke, as here. suggests insufficient draft or too much oil on the boiler burners. N~lion.Jl Arch~
of SCotl.lnd. EdInburgh
The Hoods boat deck seen at John Brown, Clydebank on 9 January 1920. The ship's two 50foot steam picket boats (or
pinnaces) sit on crutches to starboard of the main derrick. their funnels hinged back. On
the other side the 36·100t sailing pinnace is nested inside the 42· foot sailing launch, which was equipped with an auxiliary motor. Further forward a 32·100t
cutter hangs on its davits abreast the funnel. Carley floats in two
sizes await stowage in the foreground. The structure
beneath the derrick is the after vent of the Forward Engine Room. Nation,al ArcniVfl of kot/and, Edinburgh
The BattLecruiser HMS HOOD
26
Down from Forecastle Deck
Down from Upper Deck
UPPER AND MAIN DECKS 36 Master-at-Arms' and
20 Torpedo office 21 Secretary's writers' office
3 'X' turret
22 Telegraph office
37 Scullery
54 Magazine flooding cabinet
4 Port torpedo adjusting space
23 Ship's office
38 Topmen's messdeck
S5 Petty Officers' pantry
24 Printing office
39 Canteen
56 Canteen staff's mess
75 Watertight compartment
2S Main derrick hoisting
40 Cooks' lobby
57 'A' turret
76 Stoker Petty Officers' pantry
41 Fox'lemen's messdeck
58 Sick Bay flat, spare messdeck
77 Stoker Petty Officers' mess
42 Regulating Petty Officers'
59800kstall
78 Chief Stoker's office
60 Dispensary
79 Chief Petty Officers' and
and tubes 5 Armoured torpedo warhead
box 6 Gunroom pantry 7 Gunroom
compartment
26 Gunroom and Warrant
Officers' stewards' mess
S3 Cooks' and Supply Branch
72 Shipwrights' ready-use store
1 Quarterdeck
2 'Y' turret
Secretary's writers' mess
messdeck
mess
8 Officer's cabin
27 Post office
43 Engineers' store
61 Sick Berth Attendants' mess
9 Captain's lobby
28 Starboard torpedo adjusting
44 Issue Room flat
62 Torpedo embarkation hatch
10 Captain's day cabin 11 Captain's sleeping cabin 12 Captain's bathroom 13 Confidential book store
space and tubes 29 Admiral's stewards' and cooks'
mess 30 Marine barracks
45 Chaplain's office
63 Sick 8ay
46 Issue Room
64 Isolation ward or 'Rose
47 Hammock stowage
Cottage'
48 Conning tower (at level of
wrr
73 Chief and Petty Officers' heads 74 Main heads
Artificers' pantry 80 Chief Petty Officers' and Artificers' mess 81 Engine Room Artificers' pantry
6S WC
82 Engine Room Artificers' mess
66 Flag lieutenant's cabin
83 Chief Stokers' and
14 Captain's pantry
31 Marine Sergeants' mess
Auxiliary Coding and 3rd
15 Captain's office
32 Topmen's messdeck
offices)
16 WfT officer's cabin
33 Chief Petty Officers' mess
49 Petty Officers' mess
17 Senior Engineer's cabin
34 Wardroom stewards' and
50 Barber's shop
69 Examining room
51 Stokers' messdeck
70 Shipwrights' working space
85 Torpedomen's messdeck
52 'B' turret
71 Cable locker
86 Quarterdeckmen's messdeck
18 Chaplain's cabin (alternative) 19 Gunnery office
cooks' mess 35 Ship's police office
67 Ablution cabinet 68 Operating theatre
Mechanicians' pantry 84 Chief Stokers' and Mechanicians' mess
A TOllr of the Ship
27
87 Ship's cooks' mess
103 Warrant Officers' bathroom
88 Engine Room vent
104 Warrant Officers' heads
89 Boiler Room vent
105 'X' turret
90 Funnel hatch
106 'yo turret
91 Port ammunition passage
107 After cabin flat
92 Engineers' workshop
108 Chapel
93 Subordinate officers'
109 Midshipmen's study
bathroom
94 Subordinate officers' dressing room 95 Secondary light store 96 Warrant Officers' flat
110 Starboard ammunition passage 111 Commissioned officers' bathroom 112 Commander's bathroom
122 Electrical Artificers' ready-
use store 123 Electrical Artificers' workshop
124 Ordnance Artificers' workshop
138
'f(
turret
139 Awning room 140 Torpedo body lift 141 Torpedo body room 142 lamp room
143 Clothing issue room
125 Armourers' workshop
144 Paint room
126 Band instrument room
145 Diving gear store
127 Cells
146 Spare messdeck (for Seamen
128 Canteen store
by 1931)
161 Auxiliary spare gear store
131 Seamen's bathroom
149 Stokers' dressing room
115 Engineers' ready·use store
133 Chief Petty Officers'
150 Stokers' bathroom
space
bathroom
117 Admiral's cook's cabin
134 Petty Officers' bathroom
118 Wardroom steward's cabin
13S Fox'iemen's messdeck
119 Captain's steward's cabin
160 Enginesmiths' shop 162 Coding office
132 Marines' bathroom
100 S.Sin ammunition working
dressing room 159 Boiler Room lift
148 Searchlight transmitting
113 Central store
116 Admiral's steward's cabin
bathroom
158 Engine Room Artificers'
130 Emergency signal station
114 wrr store
space
Mechanicians' dressing room 157 Engine Room Artificers'
147 Stokers' messdeck
97 Midshipmen's chest room
99 4in ammunition working
Mechanicians' bathroom 156 Chief Stokers' and
129 Coal bunker
98 Warrant Officer's cabin (single or double)
155 Chief Stokers' and
(Stokers by 1931)
101 Warrant Officers' pantry
120 wrr office
136 Boys' messdeck
102 Warrant Officers' mess
121 Engineers' office
137 '8' turret
station
151 Boys' bathroom 152 Stoker Petty Officers' bathroom 153 Stoker Petty Officers' dressing room 154 Stokers' urinals
163 Engine Room fan vent compartment
28
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
A kip on the forecastle in the late 19305. The hatch leads down to the Sick Bay flat on the upper deck. The box-like structure beyond is the torpedo embarkation hatch with its attendant crane. A 'County' class cruiser is obscured by the forward breakwater. HMS Hood AnociuionJCI.rk CoIl«rion
of Hood's design and equipment could be appreciated:
The forecastle and bridge structure seen from the eyes of the ship. The stripes painted in red, white and blue on 'B' turret
date the photograph to 1937 or 1938. 'A' and 'B' turrets are
trained to port, along with the armoured and aloft directors.
The capstans, anchor cables and hawsepipe covers have been painted. HMS Hood AJJocYtKKl/~fCIV.1CoJl«t,on
U
l~
KeL. LHCMA,Aston 1110, p. 57. 'At Sea in the "'Hood'" in The ,val)'. February 1920, p. 13.
The admiral's suite was completed by his sleeping cabin and bathroom and by a pantry fitted with an electric hot-cupboard and sink for washing-up. Round about were the cabins of his staff. On the seaward side moving forward lay the Commander's cabin from where in 1933 Rory 0' onor had initiated his celebrated 'open-door' policy of greater accessibility for ratings. Adjacent to it was the Gunnery Officer's cabin and two doors down the officers' billiards room where Aston was instructed in the finer points of five-ball 'Scoff' by members of the wardroom one night in January 1926.)j Beyond the Surgeon and Engineer commanders' cabins the passage opened out onto the Starboard Battery where until 1940 stood three 5.5in guns of Hood's secondary armament. Inboard were the ship's galleys, including the main galley between the funnels and the bakery just forward, issuing its warm aroma. As much as anywhere in the ship, it was in the galleys that the innovation
In the first place, she is the first big ship in our avy to be fitted with oil-burning kitchen ranges. There are three in the men's galley on the forecastle deck, immense things, stretching half across the beam of the ship and capable of cooking 1,400 meals at a time. There are also great steamheated boiling and stewing pots for the making of soups, boiling vegetables and so on, and one interesting new feature is the hot water boiler specially fitted for the making of tea, coffee or cocoa by the cooks of the messes on the mess deck. The kitchen, which adjoins the galley, is fitted with all modern labour-saving devices, such as potato peelers and chippers, sausage-makers, bacon slicer, and so on. And presently, 1am told, there will be a:fish and chips' range added to the equipment. 14 avy food remained of doubtful quality even with the benefit of every modern convenience, but few complained of the bread, over three-quarters of a ton of which was produced in five bakings each day. Indeed, during the visit of the Spanish
29
A Tour of the Ship
royal family at Malaga in March 1928 Queen Ena had occasion to avour a bun in the bakery along with a spoonful or two of soup in the galley. IS History does not recount what impression this degustatiolJ made on her. Among a host of ancillary compartments was the beef screen, which, under the charge of a Royal Marine butcher, refrigerated several days' supply of meal. Another was the ship's potato store from which 1,500 pounds were drawn daily. Having passed the gun crews' urinal and the large drying room provided for laundry or the use of men coming off watch in foul weather, a bulkhead door would then be crossed to reveal the Starboard O. 3 5.5in gun and a fleeting glimpse of the forecastle. ext came the Boatswain's ready-use store tacked with the shackles, marline-spikes, serving hammers and the other equipment he and his men used to carry out their many duties around the ship. Beyond lay Starboard O. I 5.5in gun and from here a good view of the 350-foot forecastle, the eye moving past the paravane stowed on the bridge screen, past the enormous conning tower, the forward turrets and the pair of breakwaters flanking them, and on to the capstans, cables and hawsepipes up to the eyes of the ship where the Union Flag fluttered from the jack staff. Beneath it crewmen were to gather amid the cable shackles to sing and hear speeches during the Invergordon Mutiny of September 1931. But under a canvas awning the forecastle could also be the most restful of leeping places. AB Leonard Williams recalls unforgettable nights at Malta in the summer of 1937: On nights we were not ashore, Doug and I slept on the upper deck under the huge forecastle awning. We both had camp beds and we would lie and watch the signal lamp, high up on the mast of the Castille Signal Station, flashing its messages to the fleet lying in the Grand Harbour. It was the limit of our vision before the awning blotted out the stars. It was pleasant lying there, listening to the bells of the horse-drawn carozzins or gharries, as we usually called them, and watching the lights of the waterfront bars and cafes a hore and the bobbing lights of the dghaisas going about their business. We would talk until the lights ashore began to go out one by one, and soon we ourselves would grow tired and fall asleep.
I.
Turning left, Aston moves athwart the vessel, passing the bread-cooling room adjoining the bakery and, in the lee of the conning tower, the Electrical Artificers' daytime workshop and the adjusting space for the gyro compasses. Here he would encounter Port o. I 5.5in gun and, stepping through another door, begin moving aft along the port side of the ship to find himself once more in the officers' quarters. A series of lavatories, hierarchically arranged for commissioned and subordinate officers, was followed by cabins for the Paymaster Commander and two staff officers. The officers' heads caught the attention of Lt-Cdr Ernest M. Eller, the U.S. Navy's official observer in Hood in the spring of 1941: The head was equally unique. It was out on a sponson just outside the wardroom, hanging over the side. I... ]Instead of being on deck level, though, you walked into this 'throne room' as the British call it, and then you walked up two steps. They were sitting well up high, up to six feet above the deck.. "
Tearby was the admiral's guest cabin where another U.. avy observer, Lt-Cdr joseph H. Wellings, was accommodated over Christmas and ew Year 1940-1. Beside it was a hatch descending to the upper deck where much of the ship's company lived. Reaching the upper deck, Aston finds him elf outside the midshipmen's Gunroom and, further forward, the Port Torpedo Tubes, identifiable from outside the ship by the pair of heavy mantlets fitted to the hull. Inboard was a large compartment containing the hoisting engine for the ship's derrick on the boat deck. Turning aft, Aston makes his way into the Captain's quarters overlooking the quarterdeck. Like the admiral's directly above, these reflected the extent to which his life was spent apart from the wardroom officers. The Captain's lobby, reached through a pair of arched openings and guarded day and night by a Royal Marine sentry, was a marvel of gleaming paint and polished brightwork. Here the captain sat in judgement over the most serious cases of crime and indiscipline in the ship. Among the fixtures were two magnificent models of the ship in I:64 scale, each over thirteen feet long. On one, produced in time for the jubilee Review of 1935, the detailing extended to a likeness of Cdr O'Conor's West Highland terrier, but neither was to survive the war. Landed just before Hood ailed north in August 1939, they were lost in the Portsmouth Blitz of 1940-1." Also kept in the lobby were a pair of benches used for divine service on Sunday mornings and now preserved at the Church of St john the Baptist at
The port battery looking forward some time between 1925 and
1927. Capt. Harold Reinold', AC Tourer sports car lies near Port No.4 and No.5 guns. The requirement to keep officers' private property not only clean but also in good repair was a source of some resentment before Invergordon. HMS Hood A»oo.tKInIR~moldCoIlKtion
IS OrereT. TI,e Sea Heritage, p. 288. .• Williams, Gone A Long joumey,
p. t23. 11
Eller, Reminiscences, II, pp. 463-4.
'1
lowe this detail to Vice-Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly, letter to the author, 23 NO\'ember 2001.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
30
19
M
Rea, A Curate's Egg, p. 120. Cited in Coles & Briggs, Flagship
Hood. pp. 10-11. January 1920. Halpern (ed), The Keyes Papers; II, p.26. 12 The Navy, February 1920. p. 13. 21
The ship's canteen on the upper deck amidships in about 1924, stacked high with supplies and provisions to augment the sailor's diet and cater to his dayto-day needs. A NAAFI canteen
assistant stands by. Illustrated Tasmdnian Mail
Boldre in the ew Forest. Here too in glass-fronted cases were the keys to the vital compartments in the ship including the magazines and transmitting stations. Radiating off the lobby were the captain's office, pantry and the Confidential book store where orders, ciphers and other material of a sensitive nature were locked away for safekeeping, all weighted with lead for the day they might have to be ditched over the side. Then came the extensive day cabin in which the captain dined and entertained his guests. The suite was completed by a sleeping cabin (for use in harbour only) and a bathroom. Exiting the lobby on the starboard side, a door led forward to the administrative heart of the ship in the shape of a cluster of offices lying off the passageway. Here was the Secretary's writers' office, the Telegraph office and the Ship's office itself, and then those concerning her armament: Gunnery and Torpedoes. Finally there was the Printing office where, among other things, The C/lOugh, the ship's magazine, was produced. Further along was the Post Office manned by the Royal Marines which daily in harbour collected letters from nine boxes distributed around the ship and sorted all incoming mail, the record haul of which appears to have been the 57 bags Hood received when she reached Sydney in April 1924, seven months into the World Cruise. Sorted mail was collected by the duty men from each mess and distributed to their companions; letters to crewmen stated his name, his mess number and finalIy'HMs Hood, c/o GPO London'. Opposite, on the seaward side, was a row of cabins including that of the Senior Engineer, who here found sanctuary from the infernal din of the engine spaces, and that usually occupied by the ship's Chaplain, though in 1936 the Rev. Edgar Rea managed, with some controversy, to obtain an adjoining pair in the bridge structure, 'One to sleep in during the night and one to rest in during the day' as one of his messmates unkindly described them.'" Moving forward past the Starboard Torpedo Tubes, Aston
now stepped into a world exclusively of artificial light and forced ventilation. The space in question was the flat or messdeck containing the Royal Marine barracks, 70 feet long and 30 across, the deckhead supported by three slender pillars and a column of ventilation trunking ten feet high. It was home to perhaps 160 men, their possessions and much of their equipment, stowed between the frames marking the ship's side. To a landsman the messdecks would appear cramped and oppressive, but in the early days the chief impression was one of spaciousness, though for some at least size came at a price. AB L.E. Brown: Even though she was still in dockyard hands and not properly clean, the Hood was a delight. I had just come from a coal-burning cruiser, grimy with dust, dingily lit, with restricted headroom and overcrowded. Now I found myself in a roomy, clean ship in which you could get lost. She was so big that notices giving directions to the upper deck were posted.'· His admiral, Roger Keyes, though delighted with his own quarters, would not have agreed with Brown's assessment: These cabins are palatial and I feel ashamed to have so much space while the men are so appallingly crowded." Though Hood's is still the largest hull in the history of British naval construction, it also contained some of the bulkiest engineering plant ever fitted in a British warship, with a consequent loss of crew living-space. The labyrinth of whitened passages and sealed compartments festooned with trunking and wiring evidently took some getting used to, but there can be little doubt that after the coal-fired veterans of the Grand Fleet or the slums of industrial Britain, the Hood of 1920 was a miracle of comfort, space and amenity. In this, as the correspondent of The Navy recognised in February 1920, she was quite unprecedented: ... In the past I think we have always been too prone to dwell in the material side of the avy and to ignore the personnel. The design of the Hood marks a change in that respect as in many others ... 22 In the corner of the Marines' flat lay the first of the small enclosed messes for senior ratings and NCOs, the Sergeants of Marines' mess. Moving forward, a bulkhead door opened onto another equally large mess where the bulk of the Hood's Topmen were quartered. In one corner stood the ship's canteen, a general store providing the men with cigarettes, tobacco, newspapers, toiletries, medications, stationery and such supplements to the General Mess diet as fruit and confectionery. Here too and in sub-bars around the ship were dispensed the non-alcoholic sodas and cordials the men derisively called 'goffers', a term of abuse for anything soft or inadequate. Operated by the AAFI and staffed from 1921 by civilians of the Naval Canteen Service, merchandise was sold tax-free and the profits mostly ploughed into the Ship's Fund administered by the Canteen Committee. Lying between the funnel uptakes inboard was the Cooks' lobby to which food for the messes was conveyed in lifts from the galley above and kept warm in steam-heated cupboards until it was ready to be
A TOLir of the Ship
served. Through this system the entire ship's company could be served within half an hour. Aft was the mechanical scullery, another miracle of labour-saving technology where plates and utensils from the messes were cleaned in electric washers and then stowed in preparation for the next meal. A third mess on the starboard side, that of the Fox'iemen, led via a bulkhead door into a passage which curved round past the Issue room (from where the daily rations of tea, sugar, milk, margarine and butter were drawn at 12.30 p.m.), the Chaplain's office, past the first of two adjoining Petty Officers' messes and on between the lowest stage of the conning tower and the trunk of 'B' turret to the port side of the ship. Here, amid several hammock-stowage compartments, was the barber's shop where Stoker Bill Stone plied his trade for 4d. a cut between 1921 and 1925. At this point the narrowing of the ship towards the bows and the obstruction created by the trunks of the forward turrets prevented the continuation of any passageway forward. The forward compartments were therefore reached by passing directly through a succession of messdecks on the port side, beginning with one for stokers, then that of the Cooks and Supply Department and finally the Sick Bay flat. The Sick Bay, described elsewhere, consisted of a large suite of rooms on the starboard side forward off': turret." The Hood's company increasingly looked to reading as one of its main recreations and by 1926 the nearby bookstall was selling over 400 volumes each cruise." The bookstall also provided stationery and the various guides, postcards, mounted photos and trinkets which are among the few tangible links to survive from the ship." Clearly, some found the prices cheaper than others. Whereas Aston 'spent about 13/- on knives, ashtray, matchbox, a book about Hood' in 1926, two years earlier neither S.M. Ghani nor his Malayan school friends had felt able to stretch to any of the goods on offer. 26 A further bulkhead door gave access to the Shipwrights' working space and store, into which three large cable lockers intruded. It was from here that the 'chippies', as shipwrights continued to be known, undertook the endless maintenance of hull, masts, yards, pumps, paint and woodwork. A final door opened onto the heads, the main toilets aboard, whose presence had been announced on the insalubrious air breathed below decks in the Hood. Against this odour none of the ventilation systems installed during her career were to prove adequate. For time out of mind ship designers had placed the heads in the forepeak of their vessels and, excepting the watertight compartments, those in Hood occupied the forwardmost space in the ship. Presided over by the 'Captains of the Heads', the amenities offered reflected the privilege of rank aboard. Thus, while senior ratings were afforded the privacy of a full steel door, their juniors had to make do with half ones. Ted Briggs: My most anxious moments were going to the lavatorythe 'heads'. I found it embarrassing to sit on the throne with only my genitals covered by the tiny cubicle doors and being able to see over the top the straining faces of my shipmates, squatting in long rows like roosting birds. I was too shy to have discussion with other matelots, which was the general practice, and in heavy weather tried to contain my motions, otherwise one risked a sudden dowsing of urine from a neighbouring lavatory as the ship rolled."
31
However, things could get even worse. OD Jon Pertwee, who later found fame as an actor, has left the following graphic account from his time aboard in 1940--1: In these lavatories, to prevent the sea flowing back up the soil pipes when she dipped her bow down deep, nonreturn flaps were fitted under the water-line. Unfortunately, in orth Sea waters, we dipped so deep, and so rapidly, that the flaps were lifted instead of closed, allowing the water to surge back up the pipes. So if you were one of the uninitiated, the following would happen. You entered the doorless 100, sat upon the seat, and with trousers around the ankles, did your business. The ship would then commence its downward plunge, causing the sea to by-pass the retaining flap and surge up into the bowl. The water level would then rise, until before you knew it, your offering had been deposited into the unsuspecting trouser below. This disaster caused riotous laughter from the cognoscenti, who would then instruct you in the ancient art of'dodging'. For this method, you advanced trouserless and under-pantiess to the bowl, hovered over its port or starboard side, until the water level had begun to subside, swung your buttocks quickly over the porcelain to make your deposit, then whipped the bottom back again out of immediate danger. This procedure could be continued as required and when all was done, the defecator would dart for safety." Though urinals were sited around the ship, these were the only heads available to seamen and a visit at sea could often be a tiring and somewhat lengthy undertaking. The heads thus viewed, Aston's path takes him aft through the two messes by which he has come and then along the port side of the upper deck past the enclosed messes and pantries of the Stoker Petty
lJ See ch. 5, pp. 125. " KCL, LHCMA, Aston 1110, p. 61. " Ibid., pp. 60-1.
u. www.forcez-
survivors.org.uklschoolboy.html. n Coles & Briggs, FlagS/lip Hood, pp.134-5. :!A Pertwee. Moorl Boots and Dinner Suits. p. 150.
An unusual record of dinner in one of the petty officers' messes, perhaps that of the Chiefs on the
upper deck amidships, c.1924. The austerity of the surroundings is apparent. Despite the ventilation trunking above, the sides and bulkheads were often running with condensation. Illustrated numanian Mail
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
32
Officers, the Chief Petty Officers and Electricians, the Engine Room Artificers, Ordnance Artificers and Shipwrights and finally the Chief Stokers and Mechanicians. Though similar to the open messdecks in most respects, these were much less crowded and generally more comfortable with their curtainedoff wardrobes and easy chairs gathered in a lounge area at one end. At this point the passage along which he is moving ends in a bulkhead door opening onto another large mess, that shared by the Quarterdeckmen and the Torpedo ratings. In the corner of this flat lies a hatch, its armoured cover opened and closed on a pulley system. Through it he descends to the main deck. The main deck was the first to run the whole length of the ship and the lowest on which members of the crew were quartered. Alighting from the ladder, Aston finds himself outside the Engineers' workshops, turns aft and passes the Central Store and the Gunroom Officers' bathroom where, bent double over the ejector pump, Mid. Blundell received a dozen cuts for 'insolence' from the Sub-Lieutenant of the gUI1foom in 1923." Here he comes to a bulkhead door patrolled day and night by an armed sentry of the Royal Marines, an infallible sign that officers' accommodation lay on the other side. Beyond it a large lobby running beneath the quarterdeck gave access to both sides of the ship. Between here and the stern were quartered the balance of the Hood's officers, despite the fact that her low freeboard made it one of the least comfortable parts of the ship. The Rev. Edgar Rea explains: Most of the officers slept under the quarter-deck where, only in harbour and under the most favourable conditions at sea, they were able to carry their scuttles. This meant that all the air for their cabins had to be sucked in from the inboard passages. This was quite a satisfactory solution so long as it was possible to keep the air in the inboard spaces fresh but at sea this was often impossible. In even a mildly disturbed sea the water came splashing over the quarterdeck with the inevitable result that the ventilators providing the fresh air for the officers had to be covered with thick canvas to prevent the water from finding its way below. As a result the air, both in the cabins and the compartments, became unspeakably foul at times and every bad smell in the ship seemed to drift aft and make it worse. JO Coupled with this was the severe vibration experienced aft when the ship went on to full power. Boy Frank Pavey: At high power she would throb like the devil. I felt sorry for the midshipmen because their flat was right aft-the very after part of the ship, right above the screws. So they had a massage every time they turned in, I should think!"
"IW 1,90/38/1, \'01.111, no. 3, p. 3. JO Rea, A Curate's Egg. pp. 119-20. Cited in Mearns & While, Hood and Bismarck. p. 12. )l Eller. Remj"isceflces. II. p. 463. )J CAe, LEBY 1/2, MS of The Mall ArOlmd tIle Engine, ch. J2, p. I. Chief loker W.J. Biggenden was lost with lheship in May 1941.
'I
The first compartment on the port side was the midshipmen's chest flat, designed for smaller numbers than were usually borne. Beyond this stretched a dozen warrant officers' cabins, the last demarcated by the 4-inch bulkhead running between 'Y' turret and the ship's side. On the starboard side, across a flat dominated by the enormous trunks of'X' and 'Y' turrets, lay the Warrant Officers' mess, pantry, bathroom and lavatories together with a further range of cabins. The only means of getting aft was through a door piercing the armoured bulkhead to starboard of'y' turret beyond which a number of officers' cab-
ins, the ship's chapel and, right aft, the midshipmen's study lay grouped round a succession of lobbie . Near the chapel was an armoured hatch leading to the steering compartment two decks below. Shut at sea in wartime, it could only be opened by the Damage Control parties from above. Retracing his steps, Aston moves forward until, passing through another door guarded by a Marine sentry, he reaches the starboard ammunition passage, running almost 300 feet amidships. The ammunition passage, of which there was a second on the port side, owed its name to the 5.5in shells which were transferred along it for the hand-worked guns on the forecastle and boat decks, the ordnance being raised by a series of six dredger hoists in each passage. The inboard spaces were largely absorbed by funnel uptakes and vents from the boiler and engine rooms, but on the seaward sides an array of compartments contained many of the principal working, administrative and ancillary spaces in the ship. The first of these was the Commissioned officers' bathroom, fitted with a private compartment for the Commander who had nonetheless to descend two decks from his cabin to use it. Unlike the men, who were limited to showers, this consisted principally of 'long baths' filled with water heated by a steam main. Lt-Cdr Ernest M. Eller U.S. ., who spent a fortnight in the Hood in the spring of 1941, has left this description of the Officers' bathroom and the etiquette for using it: They had a huge bathroom. It must have been 30 feet across. In here were great enamel tubs. Every officer had a bath every morning, I think. If you wanted a bath, your man would draw it at, say, 7: 15. So this tub was yours at this particular time. You would go in and see all these bodies lying in scalding hot water. Everybody would just lie there saying nothing. After soaking a while, they would get out these loofa sponges, big rough sponges used in cleaning boilers to some degree. They would scrub with these till they were several degrees pinker than they were already from the heat. Then they would come out, rub themselves vigorously with the towel, and go to breakfast, never saying a word." A number of workshops, offices and stores followed, including the Engineers' office of which Vice-Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly has left this memorable description: This small emporium contained a desk for the Commander (E), a slightly smaller one for the Senior Engineer, quite a large one for the Engineers' Office Writer, Chief Stoker Biggenden I... J, a small spot for me (part of my departmen t was 'The Office') and nothing at all for the other seven watchkeepers. Whatever space remained was occupied by a repository for the ship's drawings, two telephones and the important boiler- and feed-water testing chemicals and impedinlenta. Overhead there was a large bookshelf with a series of enormous tomes in which my many predecessors, like me, had had to enter the details of every examination and repair to each of the 1,000 or so machines, ranging from dough mixers to main turbines, for which the Commander (E) was personally responsible." Three compartments forward was the Ordnance Artificers'
33
A Tour of the Ship
workshop where spare parts for the ship's gunnery installations and equipment were produced on an array of lathes, power drills, grinding and milling machines. A couple of doors away was the storeroom in which the Royal Marine band kept its instruments. Adjoining it were the ship's cells, five in number, where offenders could be incarcerated under Marine sentry for up to fourteen days. Sets of keys were kept both in the Regulating Office and in a glass-fronted ca e in the cell flat itself for a timely e cape in the event of underwater damage. Each prisoner was allowed a Bible in hi cell and the ship's chaplain might well take the opportunity to relieve hi boredom with such morally improving titles as YOllr Better Self, Religioll ill Plaill Clothes and As Mall to Mall.'" Inboard and accessible only from the upper deck were two of the most sensitive compartments in the ship: the Coding office and the main Wrr office." Continuing along the passage, Aston passes a row of ratings' bathrooms before entering the first of two large seamens' messes along the starboard side, that of the Fox'iemen and, forward of it, the Boys' messdeck where Ted Briggs first slung his hammock in the summer of 1939. A complementary pair lay to port, first the Stokers' messdeck and then a spare flat used as overflow accommodation. All four were designed round the massive trunking of 'N and 'B' turrets. Forward of these Aston cannot go, the remaining stores and compartments-including the Torpedo body room-having vertical access only. He therefore turns aft and, passing the Searchlight transmitting station and the ammunition working space of the 5.5in guns, enters the port ammunition passage. Almost its entire length was taken up with bathrooms and dressing rooms of one kind or another, all of them fitted with lobbies and secondary doors and most destined to lose their tiles when the Hood was bombed in the orth ea in September 1939. Passing the bathrooms Aston reaches the two main Engineers' workshops from whence he started. From here there is no way down save by one of the four eledric lifts lining the passage along which he has come. Entering one via an air lock, he presses the 'go' button on a brass panel and descends to the lower deck proper, the domain of the Engineering Department. If the main deck was the first to run the full extent of the ship it was also the last that could be traversed readily along the greater part of its length. ot so the lower deck which was largely taken up by boiler and engine spaces that could only be reached from above. So it is that, stepping out at the first stop of the lift, he finds himself in an enclosed space running 50 feet athwartships, the fan compartment of'Y' boiler room which supplied air to the boiler furnaces. All about were vast pipes clad in heavy white lagging taking saturated steam to and from the surrounding spaces. If the ship were lying quietly at anchor then perhaps only the stifling atmosphere and incessant noise of high-pressure fans might impress itself on his senses. But if she were under way then the heat would be unbearable, the din indescribable and the air pressure several inches above atmospheric as vibration hook every dial, cylinder, wheel and panel. At full power the fans sent a gale of wind into the working space though with no great improvement in the temperature. Returning to the lift, he descends to the upper stokehold and his first clear view of the six boilers of which 'Y' boiler room was composed, these facing each other in rows of three. The upper stokehold consisted of a pair of platforms to allow monitoring of the water
levels in the upper section of each boiler. A few steps down a ladder or another ride in the lift brings him to the lower platform and the stokehold itself, filled with a confusion of pipes, pumps, gauges, dials and oil sprayers serving the boilers. This arrangement was replicated in each of the four boiler rooms lying fore and aft for 170 feet amidships. Further aft and, again, accessible only from the main deck, were the ship's three cavernous engine rooms occupying four decks along 125 feet of their length. Of all her internal paces none were more impressive. The view from the ladders descending from the main deck was of a bewildering accumulation of machinery, of pumps, turbines and condensers intertwined with elephantine tubes and pipes of every dimension. From these spaces, against the high-pitched whine of fourteen geared turbines, four propeller shafts up to 300 feet long drove the vessel at over 30 knots. The two outer shafts were driven by a pair of turbines in the forward engine room, the middle room containing the inner port unit and the after room the inner starboard. The minutiae of life in the Hood's engine spaces is discussed elsewhere, but for now Aston has experienced all he care to and gratefully returns via a series of steep ladders to continue his tour from the main deck. From the main deck numerous hatches gave access to the machine and storage compartments which filled the lower deck aft. Among them were the dynamo and turbo-generator compartments for electricity, the hydraulic engine rooms which supplied power to the main armament, along with a variety of stores, including those of the captain and admiral. Several of the machine spaces extended down to the platform deck which, again, could only be reached from above. On this level were the Spirit Room where the ship's rum was kept under a double lock, the steering compartment over the rudder and the magazines and handing rooms for 'X' and 'Y' turrets. Then came the hold where the sheUrooms for the 15in guns were laid out between turret trunking and revolving propeller shafts. Here, 25 feet below the waterline, Aston completed his descent into the lower reaches of the ship. Beneath him was the ship's double bottom with its sturdy box construction,
j.4
Beardmore,
Tile Warers of
Uncertainty. p. 54.
n The lauer is described in ch. 4, pp. 93.
An exceedingly rare view inside the Hood's upper conning tower, (.1924. The main steering position stands before a beech grating. Orders were transmitted to the helmsman through the voicepipes in front. Other voicepipes and telephones can be seen all around. Slender viewing slits offered limited light and vision. I/Iurtr.t~
T.JnWlrn.ln Mail
The BattlecrLliser HMS HOOD
34
" RES, p. 134.
her first and chief defence against the ocean. Forward of the boiler rooms and, again, reached from hatches on the main deck flats beneath the forecastle, was a similar arrangement of decks and compartments. Those on the lower deck included a pair of motor generator rooms extending down to the platform deck, the main electrical switchboards, and the exchange for the ship's 380 telephones. The telephone exchange, kept permanently manned by at least one operator, was nonetheless in Cdr Rory O'Conor's view a somewhat undertaxed amenity, a result of the reluctance to use modern equipment where traditional means were readily to hand: The ship's telephone service is not always used to the full extent to which it might be. If fuller use were made, much running backwards and forwards by messengers could be avoided, and perhaps the number of messengers reduced. [... 1 For everyday use there are about fifty numbers that matter in a big ship, and an increased use of the telephone might result from these being issued in a small frame to hang by the telephone.'" Here also were the transmitting rooms for the Hood's torpedo and 5.5in armament. Directly beneath them on the platform deck was the 15in Transmitting Station where a crew of28 provided aiming instructions to the main armament. Descriptions of the TS are few and far between but, the Dreyer Table apart, there was one feature which no visitor was likely to forget: a bicycle to provide motive power for the fire-control table in the event of an electrical failure. Also on the platform deck, forward of the magazines and handing rooms for '1\ and 'B'turrets, were a pair of submerged torpedo tubes destined to be removed in 1937. As aft, the deck arrangement was completed with the shellrooms and shell bins in the hold and lower platform.
The port side of the boat deck in 1923. An assortment of boats and floats can be seen nested and on crutches while a 32·100t cutter hangs on its davits. To the
left is Port 4in Mk V High-Angle gun. Opposite is the Night defence control station with its viewing slit and beside it a ready· use ammunition locker for the 4in gun. Just forward is the port tripod support of the mainmast along with an exhaust pipe from the after diesel dynamo on the
platform deck. Cribb
The tour of the lower decks complete, an exhausting climb up four ladders is now required to regain the main deck and the 5.sin ammunition working space abaft the trunking of'B' turret. From here, and here alone, could access be gained to the Hood's great armoured citadel, the conning tower or 'Queen Anne's Mansions' as the men called it. The conning tower consisted of an ovoid cylinder rising in seven stages from the upper deck to a point level with the Admiral's bridge. Crowned with an armoured director and pierced by viewing slits of sinister aspect, the tower, though faired into the bridge structure, was not accessible from any part of it. Built of increasingly massive sections of curved armour plate ranging from 3 to 10 inches thick, the entire structure weighed 600 tons. The purpose of the conning tower was to protect the ship's most critical battle functions in a casing impervious to all except a catastrophic internal explosion. Accordingly, the first stage at upper deck level was taken up by the Third WIT and Auxiliary coding offices. Next up was the Intelligence office followed by the Signal distributing office at boat-deck level. It was in the former that German and Italian signals were first intercepted during the Spanish Civil War. Then came one of the torpedo control positions, the first level to be lit with viewing slits. Above this was the split-level upper conning tower containing, in concentric circles, the admiral's tower and telephone exchange, the 15in control position and, on an immaculate beech grating, the steering position that gave the structure its name. Over it all sat a revolving director protected by an armoured hood. The conning tower explored, Aston retraces his steps to the main deck where he follows the port ammunition passage to the Warrant Officers' flat aft. Emerging through a hatch forward of 'X' turret, he reaches the quarterdeck and inhales his first lungful of fresh air in several hours. Thus revived, he returns up the ladder on the starboard screen to the forecastle
A Tour of the Ship
35
deck before taking another to the open boat deck occupying the middle third of the vessel. Stepping out he finds himself overlooking the starboard battery a deck below. Looking up the view is dominated by the two funnels and, forward of these, the bridge structure and foretop. Behind him, the after section of the boat deck is presided over by the mainmast, at 150 feet the ship' tallest and the place from which, in war, the White Ensign fiew from the gaff. It fell to boy seamen, trained on the famous 120-foot mast at HMS Gallges or its counterpart at Sf Villcellf, to retrieve a lost halyard or strike the main- or foretop whenever the ship passed beneath the Forth Bridge. Ted Briggs describes an excursion up the latter: The masts were not difficult to scale, and only the last six feet of the main one, which was a sheer pole, had to be hinned up. One day when a halyard had been blown away on the starboard forward upper yardarm, I was ordered to go up for it. I had inched my way to the end of the yardarm to retain the Inglefield clip when the safety valves in the engine-room were blown. A large cloud of steam swirled up towards me. I clung on grimly but decided that, if the white mist spiralling upwards was hot, I would let go and drop into the sea. I preferred drowning to being boiled alive. But by the time it inlmersed me the steam had turned into a cold shower." Against the mainmast was rigged the ship's derrick, operated on a pulley system secured in the hoisting compartment two decks below. It required 80 men on four guy ropes to work, and only the cry of'derrick topping' as the arm neared the perpendicular to provide a ripple of amusement to an otherwise exhausting evolution." Boy Jim Taylor of Portsmouth (1939-40) remembers the drudgery: ... the Hood was a bit old fashioned in that she did not have a proper crane. Everything that came aboard had either to be brought on board by hand or by means of the main derrick. Christmas 1939 sticks in my mind as we had lots of crates of turkeys to hoist aboard four at a time and iltook half the night to get them all aboard.'" Abaft the mainmast was the ight defence control station and over it the Searchlight control position with its four lights (reduced to two in the 1930s). Aft again was the torpedo control tower, capped with an armoured rangefinder. earby sat a quartet of 4in high-angle gun mountings, destined to be removed in 1939, and the skylight over the admiral's sleeping cabin through which a prankster shoved Bill, the ship's goat mascot, one day in the summer of 1921. If the starboard side of the quarterdeck was the Captain's domain, then the starboard after end of the boa I deck was the Admiral's, his to use and enjoy without fear of interruption. Around the Secondary battery room and a series of large engine-room vents were ranged the Hood's flotilla of boals, never less than fourteen trong. Then came the funnels themselves, 50 foot high and each capable, so the ship's guide book said, of accommodating two London tube trains abreast. Between them sat the Midships searchlight control platform, largely dismantled in 1939. Nestled about the after funnel was the Sick Bay's Disinfector house, the coppersmith's and blacksmith's shops and outboard a pair of 40-foot derricks for hoisting the small-
Above: The after superstructure draped in splinter protection in
September 1938. The newly installed Mk II porn-porn director
sits between the two 32-inch searchlights; its mounting can be seen further aft. To the right is the mainmast with one of its
tripod supports on the left.
/
Between them is the main vent of the Middle Engine Room. This area of the boat deck was the
object of close scrutiny by the Boards of Enquiry investigating
the loss of the ship in 1941. HMS Hood A»o
Left: The boat deck seen from the spotting top in the late
19305. The Midships searchlight control platform lies between the funnels. Visible on the mainmast halyards are the two helm signals. a green ball to starboard and two red cones to port. Beyond is the after superstructure and the quarterdeck. A steam picket boat is being attended to on the right.
See the photograph on p. 212 for a wartime comparison. HMS Hood As.socJ.itionlPwcival CoII«tiofl
" Coles & BriSSS. Flagship Hood, p. 136. jf See ch. 4, p. 104 for an explanalion of this. )9
HMS Hood Association archives.
.. 36
"IWM. 90/38/1, vol. Ill, no. 3, p. 2. ·41 Tile Chougll, April 1936. p. 14.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
er boats stowed forward. It was in the coppersmith's workshop that a kindly artisan sat up all night to repair the funnel of Mid. George Blundell's picket boat after he had snapped it off against the ship's boom in a heavy swell off Sierra Leone in December 1923.'· The blacksmith, meanwhile, enjoyed a reclusive existence surrounded by his anvil, forge and bellows until the moment came for the ship to secure to a buoy. Then for a few minutes he became the most important member of the ship's company, for none could get ashore until he had hammered the retaining pin into the shackle of the mooring buoy. The boat deck ended with a 5.5in mounting on either side of the forward funnel, thus completing the ship's twelvegun secondary armament. It is perhaps with some trepidation that Aston now contemplates the bridge structure and foretop, rising in stages up an immense tripod 100 feet above the boat deck. However, he pres es on and enters the open lobby of the bridge structure in the lee of the conning tower. Along the starboard side lay some
of the best-lit and most agreeable cabins in the ship, including those of the duty watch, navigating and signal officers, the latter connected by a small hatch to the Signal Distributing Office, one of the most critical compartments in the ship. The port side was largely taken up by a spacious Reading Room, the first of its type to be filled in a fighting ship of the Royal avy. Lit by five scuttles and open to all ranks and rates, the Reading Room was evidently one of the most popular spaces aboard. In 1936 it was the subject of the following atrocious doggerel by 'Rosslynite', one of the ship's bards: Re. improvements to the Reading Room, everyone agreed That the more important items should be carried out with speed. Tiddley tables, chairs and curtains and lots of Pusser's baize, Where re-entries can lay their weary bones and lie of bygone days"
Left: The starboard side of the bridge structure in the spring of 1936. The photograph is taken from the level of the flag deck. The signalling searchlight visible above it is on the Admiral's bridge. The projecting tub is part of the Fore bridge and the edge of the Compass platform can be seen further forward. Next up are the Foremast searchlight platform (removed in the autumn of 1936) and the Torpedo lookout platform (removed in 1941), and finally the spotting top itself on its starfish base.
Above: The Hood's bridge structure and conning tower seen from the air off Hawaii in June 1924. The flag deck and its saluting guns are protected by an awning. A semaphore and the aerial trunk from the Auxiliary wrr office can be seen on the Conning tower platform. An officer waves at the camera from the door of the compass platform. Above him are the Foremast searchlight platform and the Torpedo lookout platform with one of the range clocks for concentration firing just visible. The mass of voice pipes connecting the various levels can be seen in the centre of the picture. u.s. N.".I HrstOflU1 C~tt'r. W.shinglon
A Tour of the Ship
Leading off it was the Subscription Library, another amenity catering to the increasingly educated men of which Hood's crew wa composed. On commissioning the Hood was provided by the Admiralty with a library of some 700 books 'consisting in great part of the standard classical novels of the past and present'." By the 1930s this stock, which was kept in the Schoolroom off the Warrant Officers' flat, was clearly regarded as somewhat stodgy fare and Cdr Rory O'Conor applied his characteristic zeal to the launch of a Ship's Subscription Library." Beginning with a £50 loan from the Canteen Committee, the Subscription Library purchased 500 new books and then charged borrowers a penny per volume for a week's loan. The scheme was an instant uccess and by the end of the commission, two years after its inception, the Library boasted 5,000 title with an average weekly issue of over a thousand books. As for the men's tastes, these ran to the following: 40 per cent Westerns, 25 per cent crime, 25 per cent general fiction, 10 per cent military. A ladder beside the Reading Room takes Aston up to the first level of the bridge structure, the Flag deck. Isolated in the centre was the admiral's sea cabin and forward of it, abutting the conning tower, was the Signal House. From a range of lockers on each side of the platform signalmen hoisted the flags that controlled the movements of ships in company. Also here were the director towers for the 5.5in guns, repositioned from the spotting top in 1934. The next level was the conning tower platform, taken up by the captain's and chief of staff's sea cabins. Further up was the enclosed Admiral's bridge, extended in 1939 to wrap around the control tower and containing his chart and signal houses. Here, on decks kept immaculately clean by the bridge sweeper, a peacetime admiral might direct his ships in tactical exercises, operations and manoeuvres. However, battle would likely find him in its main command centre, the Fore bridge, surrounded by his flag captain and staff.... Reached by a ladder from the Admiral's bridge, the Fore bridge consisted of a compass platform, charthouse, WIT office and Admiral's plotting room connected via numerous voice pipes to the conning tower and engine rooms. These two levels were the subject of considerable rearrangement between 1929 and 1931, the aim of which was to improve aUround vi ion and eliminate the appalling draught that swept through the Fore bridge whenever the rear doors and forward windows were open, as they had to be to avoid being shattered by the ship's own salvoes. However, if the letter written by Vice-Admiral Geoffrey Blake to the Controller of the avy, Admiral ir Reginald Henderson, is anything to go by, then little had been done to rectify this by 1936." or could it have been without a complete reconstruction and Blake had to content himself with the installation of armoured glass and c1earview wipers at Malta the following year. Set above the Fore bridge was the searchlight control platform, transformed to an air-defence position in 1936, with the Torpedo control position added in 1927 aft. The next stage, reached by a precarious set of rungs on the main tripod support, was the foremast searchlight platform, removed in 1936. Above this was the slender and enclosed shape of the Torpedo lookout platform, reclassified as the Searchlight manipulating platform after 1927 and destined to be removed during the Hood's final refit in 1941. Last came the large and imposing structure of the control or spotting top, crowned by a Is-foot director rangefinder 120 feet above the waterline. Reaching it
37
could be something of a trial at sea. Boy Jim Taylor: Whilst I was in Hood my action station was in the aloft director. This was right at the top of the foremast above the spotting top. What a journey it was to get up there. formally one would have to climb up the ladders on the outside of the mast struts. These could get very hot indeed from the gasses coming from the funnels. On one occasion I remember that the hood of my dufflecoat blew down off my head and the back of my neck was singed. Of course, apart from the risk of burning there was the problem of staying on the ladder. Anyone who served in Hood will tell you how the ship pitched and rolled. I can testify to how bad that was when you were towards the top of the mast. Sometimes I would make my way up the inside of the mast struts. There were numerous electrical cables, wires and iron junction boxes in there as well as the internal structure of the mast to get round. Having arrived at the spotting top I had to get through its roof to finally arrive at my action station .... Once there severe vibration and the exaggerated motion of the ship often made life hellish for many of those who had it as their station. But for others, with perhaps only the ocean and its birds for company, there was no more invigorating place aboard. Two such were Fred and Frank Coombs (1935-8) of Sheffield, boy seamen and twin brothers: Whether it was an attempt to take some of the cockiness out of us as the motions of the ship are exaggerated up the mast, we could not know, but the job suited us and we found it [sol exhilarating that we stayed up there for the dog watches too, helped by one of us nipping down to our mess at teatinle for a plentiful supply of corned beef sandwiches" An enclosed triangular structure set on a large star-shaped support, the spotting top contained some of the principal gunnery direction and control equipment in the ship. From here the Gunnery Officer commanded the monstrous weapons that were his ship's principal raisoll d'e/re. Over it, high above the Is-foot rangefinder, stood the foretop mast bearing the admiral's flag.
. . . . . . .111> __ Where her internal design was concerned, the Hood was therefore laid out on lines that had become traditional for big ships in the Royal avy, though with a somewhat ungenerous allocation of living space where the men were concerned and, being a battlecruiser, a deck less than the battleships. The elongated plan that resulted meant that whereas battleships accommodated their senior officers on the main deck aft, in Hood they resided in considerably greater comfort beneath the boat deck and in the bridge structure. The Marines occupied their traditional buffer space while the balance of the ship's company messed on the upper deck amidships and forward, with the exception of stokers and boys who were accommodated on the main deck. Meanwhile, the Hood's sea-keeping qualities meant that the majority of officers lived in only moderate comfort on the main deck aft. On completion in 1920 she enjoyed amenities unmatched by any save the latest American battleship designs, but as the years pa sed and the peculiar conditions of life aboard began to assert themselves these received less fre-
4l RBS. p. 154. .. Ibid., pp. 153-4. +4
Vice.Admiral Sir James Somerville was an exception,
usually retiring to the conning tower in action; Simpson (ed), The Somerville Papers, p. 120. .u NMM. HMS Hood, ship's cover, Ill. no. 35, Gibraltar, 23 December 1936.
... HMS Hood Association archi\"es. ., IWM. 91/711. p. 47: 1935-8.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
38
quent or favourable comment. For senior officers, however, conditions remained unequaLled in every respect but one: the Hood had no stern walk from which the admiral and his guests might contemplate the ship's wake in serene privacy. This relic of an earlier era only Queen Elizabeth, Warspite, Barham and Revenge would take with them into the Second World War. Four hours after it began Aston's tour is over. In penetrating both above the compass platform and below the upper deck he has already departed from the ship's standing orders which, in addition, expressly barred visitors from entering the conning tower, torpedo flats and other sensitive compartments. The complete tour of the engine spaces and the internal arrangements of the main armament wiLl have to wait. For now, nursing a bruised head and a pair of barked shins from failing to stoop or step smartly enough through the dozens of doorframes and coamings he has passed, he retires to his cabin for a bath and a change of clothing before repairing to the wardroom for the avy's staple pick-me-up: the brandy and ginger ale concoction known as a Horse's Neck.
·.......11>. .. Guns and Engines Warships are defined by two irreducible elements: weaponry and mobility. Since its refinement during the sixteenth century the capital ship had emerged as a vessel capable of asserting its power and that of the nation she represented on a worldwide stage. The tactical and technological apogee of the wooden warship came during the French Revolutionary Wars when the British Navy gained command of the sea, broke Napoleon's Continental System and laid the foundation for his defeat on land. Within a few decades, however, the ship of the line had been swept away by another revolution which replaced her sails, timber and cannonbaLls with steam, steel and sheLlfire. For aLI this, the fundamental role of the battleship, that of a mobile gun platform, remained unaltered and by the early twentieth century two elements of her design had become critical to the fuLl realization of that purpose. The first, which the Navy had occasionaLly neglected but never ceased to recognise, rested in the enormous power of her guns and the ability to use them with consistent speed and accuracy at long ranges-to 'hit first, hit hard and keep on hitting' as Admiral Fisher bluntly put it. The second, the permutations of which it took the Service rather longer to embrace, lay in mechanised propulsion, in the ability of a ship to reach her station and then keep the seas long enough for her tactical or strategic purpose to be accomplished. A ship's guns might be a marvel of power and technical precision but they were meaningless unless the Engineering Department could deliver them to her fighting officers at the decisive moment. On these two elements a great ship's effectiveness depended, both as a fighting unit and as a tool of diplomacy. Deprived of one or the other she was nothing.
This section owes much to the advice and assistance of Vice· Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly. <19 O'Connor, The Empire Cruise. p. 43
37. so 'H.M. Battlecruiser Hood' in Engi"eeri"g ILondonJ, 109 (January-June 1920), pp. 397-9.
Propulsion In Achtung! Pallzer!, the revolutionary tract on mechanised warfare he published in 1937, Colonel Heinz Guderian impressed on his readers the need to regard the engine of a tank as a weapon no different from its gun." An engine is not perhaps the first thing one associates with a tank, any more than it is with a battleship. On the contrary, to visualise a cap-
ital ship is to see, in V.c. Scott O'Connor's words, 'her colossal turrets, the long straining muzzles of her guns ... , her tiers of decks' and her huLl coursing through the water." Though the smoke issuing from her funnels might serve as a reminder, the engineering plant is frequently neglected when the fighting power of a capital ship comes to be assessed, too often reduced to the bare bones of speed, power and range. In its own way, this state of affairs reflects the view long held in the upper echelons of the avy, that the Engineering Department, battened down in its heLlish domain, was best kept out of sight and out of mind. Not until the I950s was it finaLly recognised that the fount of a warship's strength, endurance and flexibility lay in her engine spaces. On them rested that ability to project their power and symbolism which distinguishes warships from aLI other engines of war. For much of her career two things above all set the Hood apart from other capital ships: her speed and her appearance. From a tactical point of view, it was speed alone that distinguished her from such unregarded mastodons as Resolution and Malaya, from Lorraine, Wyoming and Hyuga. It was speed that kept the Hood in the vanguard of the Royal avy in peace and war, that made her what she was. That speed came from her engine spaces and the 300 men who worked in them. 50 The basis of the Hood's propulsion rested in her 24 Yarrow smaLl-tube boilers, a design first fitted in the 'large light cruisers' of the Courageous class. These were carried in four boiler rooms set fore and aft in the middle section of the ship and offered 30 per cent more power for the same weight of plant than the largetube models. Each boiler, 17 feet wide, 16.5 high and 13 deep, contained a large furnace fed by eight oil sprayers, the fuel being drawn from tanks adjacent to each boiler room by a system of pumps and heaters. Since the stability of the ship depended on a uniform distribution of oil in the tanks, dials were monitored to verify that she was on an even keel and adjustments made as necessary, a highly responsible job since these had in turn to be fiLled by more distant ones. The requisite furnace temperature was reached under forced draught from six 90-inch supply fans in compartments over the boilers. The resulting inferno heated water supplied from the four main feed tanks in the engine rooms to a working pressure of235 p.s.i. From this came the saturated steam which, by means of four I9-inch pipes, provided power to the geared turbines in the engine rooms aft. Each of these sets was attached to one of the 24-inch shafts on whose propellers the ship was powered through the water. Rather than the Parsons turbine fitted in most dreadnoughts before the Great War, the Hood was equipped with a modified version of the American Curtis design for which her builder, John Brown of Clydebank, held the British licence. Each set consisted of one high-pressure and one low-pressure turbine, an astern turbine and, in the case of those in the forward engine room, a cruising turbine for each of the two outer propeLler shafts. Single reduction gearing was used to harness the revolutions of the turbine shaft to the optimum rate of the propellers. In Hood this entailed reducing the 1,500 r.p.m. of the HP and 1,100 r.p.m. of the LP turbines to a shaft speed of about 210 r.p.m. at maximum power of 32 knots. Geared drive of this sort depended on MicheLI-type bearing blocks to carry the thrust of the shaft. The supply of steam and therefore the speed of the ship was controlled from platforms in each of the three engine rooms as well as by nozzle valves on the turbines themselves.
39
A Tour of the Ship
Once it had passed through the engines the steam was exhausted into a condenser fitted beneath each of the low-pressure turbines. The purpose of the condenser wa to improve the efficiency of the turbine by increasing the pressure differential between the incoming and outgoing steam. This it accomplished by creating a vacuum in which the exhaust steam was cooled by being passed over a series of pipes bearing sea water drawn into the condenser by a pair of pumps. The by-product of this process, a condensate of distilled water, was then transferred to the main feed tanks from where it returned to the boilers, thereby repeating the process. eedless to say, this cycle used rather more water than was eventually returned to the feed tanks, the shortfall being made good by the evaporators and the II O-ton reserve feed tanks which resided under each of the Hood's four boiler rooms. The evaporators, of which Hood carried three, used a honeycomb of tubes filled with exhaust steam to boil sea water, a process which yielded up to 240 tons of distillate per day. Most of the distillate was reserved for boiler feed, the rest-though never more than 70 tons-being allocated for washing and drinking in the living spaces. But it was in the reserve feed tanks and above all in the condensers that the Hood's Engineering Department faced a critical problem from the mid-1930s. Louis Le Bailly, an engineer officer between 1937-9, explains the situation: The other nightmare affecting the ship's mobility wa the feed water's worsening impurity which corroded our boilers. The tubes in the ship's main condensers under the great turbines were aged and rotting. Salt sea water drawn by vacuum into the condensing steam contaminated the water on its way back to the boiler, a constant problem in ships during World War One known as ·condenseritis'. In addition the reserve boiler feed water tanks in the double bottoms were leaking at their seams, causing more contamination. And these two problems fed on each other. When the boiler water became contaminated it was necessary to ditch it and replenish supplies from the evaporators which were ometimes of insufficient capacity to cope with the amount needing replacement. Then water, probably contaminated, had to be pumped from the reserve tanks." At the best, if permitted to continue, such salt contamination would damage the boilers; at the worst. 'priming', the passage of water droplets in the steam, would cause damage to steam joints leading to further loss of boiler feed water and sometimes explosions in steam valves, with fatal results to those nearby. In either case, the only remedy was to ditch the contaminated water which would somehow have to be replaced by evaporating machinery or the provision of a water boat or some other conveyance with distilled water." Problems of this magnitude left the Engineering Department with little margin for equipment failure and the severe damage done to the Hood's dilapidated condensers by the bomb hit of 26 September 1939 came close to leaving her dead in the water. Though few have survived to record it, it took heroic efforts on the part of her engine room staff to bring their ship into harbour and then make her seaworthy." Indeed, ub-Lt (El Brian cott-Garrell was to spend most of the nine months he served
in the Hood between 1940 and 1941 working on nothing else but her corroded condenser tubes." This problem had a longterm effect on the crew at large since the need to draw on the evaporators for boiler feed not only reduced the amount of fresh water available for washing and bathing, but prevented operation of the ship's leaky steam heating, the haemorrhage of water being too great in view of critical shortages elsewhere." Even during the 1933-6 commission bathing water was rationed when the ship was at sea, while the wartime Hood was fated to spend two winters in northern waters with unheated messdecks. The events of26 September 1939, related in detail elsewhere, provide a grim snapshot of life in the Hood's engine spaces as her career drew on. 56 At the best of times the engineer's world, particularly at sea, was one of deafening noise from fans and turbines, ear-popping air pressure and brutal heat, reaching 140°F in places. uch conditions made it very hard for men to give of their best over long periods of time, a fact overlooked by the majority of the ship's company who never ventured into the engine spaces. In December 1940 a damage-control exercise took Mid. Philip Buckett to the control platform of the forward engine room. As he subsequently noted in his journal, 'I soon realised their difficulty to work properly in such terrific heat and foul atmosphere'." Apart from the nature of the work carried on there and despite the provision of extensive ventilation systems, these conditions were often due to basic flaws in engineering hardware. Louis Le Bailly: ... The change to oil-fired installations opened the way to higher pressures and steam temperatures [but] lagging techniques and heat removal had not kept pace nor had jointing techniques, so steam leaks were frequent. Heat and humidity below, always bad, had worsened so that heat stroke and exhaustion were common. To lead in such conditions required superlative fitness. 58 But leaders there were aplenty among both engineer officers and the long-service stokers, mechanicians and artificers who kept the ship steaming come hell or high water. How was this machinery controlled and operated? The
Four engine room artificers on
the control platform of the After Engine Room, c. 1931. Two are on the throttles (ahead and astern) controlling the revolutions of the starboard inner shaft. The desk on the left houses the engine· room register, written up hourly.
By it are the telegraphs to the Forward and Middle Engine Rooms and from the Forward Engine Room and the bridge.
The latter reads 'Full', 'Half', 'Slow' and 'Stop' (Ahead and Astern). The structure dimly seen in the background is an evaporator. The oil lamp in the centre is for emergency lighting. S
Le Bailly, Tile Man Around tile E"gine, pp. 49-50. 52 Id., From Fisher to the Falklar,ds, p.23. "See ch. 8, pp. 191-2. "IWMlSA, no. t674t, reel I. 55 See, respectively, RBS, p. 210, and Le Bailly, The Marl Around the Engine, p. 54. "Seech.8,pp. t9t-2. "RNM, 1998/42, 10 December 1940. 51 I.e Bailly, The Man Arou"d the Engine, p. 32. SI
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
40
utter to the author, 11 January 2()().l. 60 Le Bailly, Tile Mall Arolwd tire ElIgi"e, p. 44. )9
A detail of the throttles and gauges of the Forward Engine Room showing the ship's {hough badge. Throttles for each propeller shaft were opened and closed in accordance with the
desired speed and helm of the ship and the supply of steam power from the boiler rooms. An exceedingly delicate balance. The horn·like objects are voicepipes through which instructions were passed to the engine room artificers controlling the throttles. HAtS Hood Auoci.rlOftls.ir Coll«tion
Hood's engine rooms can be divided into four levels. The lowest of these, with a clearance of no more than five feet, was the 'dungeon' in which maintenance was performed on the air and lubrication pumps serving each turbine set. Above these, on the lower platform, rose the bulk of the high- and low-pressure turbines themseh'es, each connected to the gear casing which drove the propeller shaft. High above, flights ofladders and lofty gangways in the vault of each space gave access to valves on the steam mains which periodically needed to be opened or closed with an immense three-foot wheel spanner. Built into the deckhead itself were large exhaust fans drawing heat up from the engine rooms and venting it out onto the boat deck, but temperatures in the upper reaches could still approach 140°F. Spanning these levels were lengths of vast bulbous tubing bringing steam to the machinery below. The critical level from an operational point of view was the control or starting platform lying against the forward bulkhead of each engine room and overlooking the lower platform from a height of about fifteen feet. From here the various turbines were each regulated by a pair of throttles ('Forward' and 'Astern') which were turned in response to orders received from the bridge via the engine room telegraphs. In the case of the forward control platform there was a third throttle for each set, that for the cruising turbine. These throttles took the form of large handwheels operated by an engine room artificer, though the increased reliance on auxiliary machinery required tokers to be trained for this duty after the outbreak of war. Presiding over the entire operation was the
Engineer Officer of the Watch on the forward control platform, the nerve centre of the Hood's propulsion. The EOOW (in the shape of a commissioned officer) wa required to translate bridge orders into appropriate in tructions for each turbine, these being rung through to the control platform in question and entered in the engine-room register. To him also fell the duty of operating the boiler room telegraph so that the oil sprayers could be regulated accordingly. Demanding as it was, his task was greatly complicated when sudden bursts of speed were required in action or when entering harbour. In the following passage Louis Le Bailly draws a comparison between the Hood and the light cruiser aiad (to which he transferred in I ovember 1939) which gives an idea of the judgement, foresight and composure required to handle a big ship: When a dive bomber started its dive the Captain would order'Full Speed' (emergency) and put the helm hard over port or starboard. In the engine room on receiving the order 'Full Speed' (and hearing the pompoms start firing), I would ring through to Boiler Room who would put on all sprayers; BUT I would count to ten slowly before allowing the throttle watchkeepers to swing open the throttles as fast as they could. That was to make sure that the steam pressure was ri ing BEFORE the throttles were opened. Othenvise the open throttle would take steam away from the boilers too fast; all dynamos would slow down or stop and a whole series of disasters would occur, perhaps losing steam altogether as fans would slow down and steam fall back. In a ship like Hood all this would be much slower. But steam always had to be going up when the throttles were to be opened, and sprayers taken off when Bridge ordered 'Slow'.5O Almost as fraught was the operation of the boiler rooms themselves, a task entrusted to a Chief Stoker, his PO Stoker assistant, and a stoker for each of the six boilers under the overall control of the Boiler Room EOOW. Louis Le Bailly: The chief stoker was 'orchestral' conductor in a boiler room usually at a temperature of 90°F-100°F, dimly lit by shockproof lamps and the flickering of furnace flames. Fans suppl)~ng air for combustion made normal conversation impossible and ears popped badly with 10 inches or more of varying air pressure. While controlling the steam to the fans, the chief stoker would keep hi eye both on a periscope to watch for funnel smoke, and the steam to the oil fuel pumps whose speed was related to the number, up to eight, of sprayers on each boiler. This he would orchestrate by hitting a shell case with a spanner to attract each boiler operator's attention and manually indicate whether to open up and flash further sprayers or shut them and close the air flaps. Incorrect operation by a single stoker. .. could cause smoke to billow from the funnels; or if sprayers were shut slowly as the turbine throttles were closed, the safety valves would lift with a roar. .. 60 A look through the boiler room periscope would soon tell him how he was doing, white smoke if too much air in proportion to the oil upply and black if too little. aturally, there were risks inherent in operating high-performance plant of this sorl. The possibility of a dangerous
A Tour of the Ship
oversupply of water or oil to the boilers kept a Leading Stoker 'Water Tender' busy on each galler)' of the upper stokehold: Those who have boiled over milk in a saucepan are only too aware of the froth that spills onto the stove. Similarly, automatic valves regulate the water level when more sprayers are opened and heat is applied (as water level rises so supply is cut off) or sprayers are shut and heat reduced (water level falls so supply opens up). There was one watchkeeper to every three boilers by the water gauge glasses, as any failure of the automatic water regulators required an instantaneous changeover to hand operation or a major disaster, with casualtie ,would ensue.·' Then came the arduous labour of cleaning and repairing boil-
ers and condensers. Thanks to the refusal of successive Engineers-in-Chief at the Admiralty to sanction the addition of chemical compound to the feed water, the Hood's Engineering Department, like those of every ship in the aV)', was condemned to a regime requiring each boiler to be cleaned after 2\ days' steaming. Louis Le Bailly describes the undertaking: To prevent corrosion of boiler drums and tubes it was frequently necessary, depending on sea time, to remove all heat-insulating I.agging, open up each boiler, clean and blacklead the internal fitting and then, through a small manhole, perform the same rite inside each of the three boiler drums, brushing through every tube. By dropping carefully counted balls down each of several thousand individual tubes we ensured that there was no blockage which, when steaming, could inhibit the water's circulation and cause the tube to melt and explode into the furnace with probable casualties. Leading toker bricklayers with their unskilled mate would be breaking up damaged fire brick walls in the furnace and removing the rubble before building and cementing new ones. Yet another gang would be inserting lOft aw between the tubes to remove soot and clinker and sweeping down and oiling the inside of Hood's huge funnels. Meantime artificers and mechanicians would be refitting steam, water and oil valves, repairing steam leaks, resetting safety valves and refitting associated auxiliary machinery. Finally, each boiler would be pumped up to its working pressure and tested for leaks. With 24 boilers in four boiler rooms this job was never ending. Asbestosis had not been heard of and we all lived for long hours in a fog of brick dust, a bestos fibre and soot. Work went on round the clock in six- or eight-hour spells, depending on the heat and urgency, until completed." A day of steaming, it should be noted, was defined as any during which feed water had been admitted to the boiler for however long or short a period. Even between cleanings the boilers required constant attention to remove the soot which gathered on the water drums and clear the clinker accumulating around the oil sprayers. Although fitted with straight water tubes to facilitate cleaning, the Hood's small-tube boilers therefore paid for their improved capacity and reduced weight and volume with increased maintenance. On the other hand, the Brown-Curtis geared turbine proved to be a superb design whose output of
41
144,000 shaft horsepower in Hood was not exceeded in British construction until the completion of the carrier Eagle in 1951. Propeller shaft bearings would occasionally run hot during prolonged bursts at speed or, as during the pursuit of the Strasbollrg after Mers-el-Kebir, one or more turbine wheels would be stripped of its blades requiring it to be shut down and steam from the boilers redistributed. But this was rare and the Hood's engine plant stands among the finest of its era. The work of the Engineering Department was not limited to propulsion. In his capacity as hief Engineer the Commander (E) was responsible for over 1,000 machines in the ship, ranging from meat slicers in the galley to the CO, compressor on the lower deck and the hydraulic engines supplying power to the main armament. To take one major example, the basis of the ship's electricity-generating plant consisted of eight 200kW dynamos, their output controlled by the Torpedomen on the main switchboard but each operated and maintained by the Engineering Department. In addition there were dozens of smaller dynamos driven by electric motors to supply power for guns, searchlights and fire-control installations etc., many with one or more stokers in attendance. There were also pumps of every size and description, ranging from the 50-ton model served by Stoker Ken Clark in the base of'X' turret to tlle 1,000ton turbo bilge pump fitted in each boiler room. 63 Even when the ship was in harbour the need to maintain such essential services as the production of water and electricity required boilers to be permanently lit and tended by the Engineering Department. Then there was the matter of oil, the consumption of which was strictly rationed in the cash-strapped 1930s. It was one of Chief Stoker Biggenden's unwritten tasks to ensure that, whatever the reality, as far as Their Lordships were concerned HM battlecruiser Hood never exceeded her stipulated allowance. Louis Le Bailly: Chief Stoker Biggenden slaved away with two registers in the stuffy engineer's office, one recording, inter alia, the actual oil consumption and the other the permitted consumption. The latter, kept uniquely for the inspection of the fleet engineer officer showed, mysteriously, that we abided strictly by the rules, whatever the true facts. How the books were reconciled was neither sought nor divulged." Part of the problem was that the Hood's fans could not always provide sufficient draught to burn the oil sprayed into the boilers, particularly if the thicker Western Hemisphere fuel were being used in tead of the premium-grade Arabian crude for which they had been designed.·' This design fault could well result in vast quantities of smoke roiling out of her funnels, a tactical disadvantage at sea and an embarrassment in harbour. Clean as she was in comparison with the coal-fired dreadnoughts of the Great War, it still fell to the men of the Double Bottom party to perform the filthy job of cleaning her oil tanks with rags and buckets for an extra 6d. a day. The task required the supervising officer to make a very careful head count of those entering and eriting in case any were overcome by fumes. Stoker Ken Clark: Once the oil tanks were empty they had to be cleaned by the stokers. Men would go inside the tanks and clean them up with cotton rags. There was a special kit for this duty-
" Ibid., pp. 44-5. " Ibid., pp. 43-4. 6J HMS HO
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
42
rubber suits and clogs-but the suits leaked and many men felt that they were better off without them and would go into the tanks naked to clean them." For such occasions one hopes there was sufficient hot water in the Stokers' bathroom to wash themselves clean when their work was done. Nor was this the worst of it. Occasionally severe damage to boiler brickwork caused by high furnace temperatures would require relays of men in wet asbestos suits to enter the very maw of hell to effect repairs for as long as they could stand it before collapsing. To be sure, an engineer's was often an unenviable existence. The following description of a typical day in harbour by Sub-Lt (E) Peter tokes of the Howe could stand for any capital ship in the Royal avy:
66 6?
HMS Hood Association archives. Cited in Coward. Battleship at
War, p. 95. "Le Bailly, 'Rum, Bum & the Lash', p.56. .. See ch. 8, p. 19S. 70 Le Bailly, The Mati AroIHld the Engine, pp. 38-9. The Senior Engineer was Lt-Cdr (E) LanceJol Fogg-Elliot. Reginald F. Edmiston. John Snell and Bert Hemmings were lost with the ship in 1941. 71 Details in this paragraph from ibid., p. 39, HMs Hood Association archives (Stoker George Donnelly, 193f>-8) and
Vice-Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly. letters to the author, 12 July 2002 and 1 February 2004. Apart from \\I'alSOo
the following were lost on
24 May 1941:)ohn E. Binnie, Sydney s. sloyles, Charles R.
Bostock and Walden J. Biggenden. Le Bailly, The Man Arolmd ti,e Engine, p. 82. 7l Bradford, The Mighty Hood. p. 112. n
In harbour, the Engineer Officer of the Day has unparalleled scope for involvement in chaos-a turbo-generator will trip (all lights start dimming), a 'Red Alert' will require the flashing up of an extra boiler, the laundry machinery will 'fall over', the firemain will develop a leak, the possibilities are endless. The day will culminate in Engineer's Rounds which, if carried out according to the book, will involve visits to every space manned by the Department, concluding with the writing up of the register. It is after such exertions that testing the Wardroom gin for purity, instead of the boiler feed water, will provide a brief relaxation before the Duty Picket Boat is towed in with a damaged propeller. Despite the hazards lurking in the Harbour Machinery Room, it's really more peaceful being at sea..." The implications of this labour in war are to be imagined. Unlike the Hood's seaman complement which kept a two-watch ystem, the Engineering Department worked in three eight-hour watches. With regular boiler cleaning this meant somewhat more than an eight-hour day even in peacetime in harbour. But in war it translated into a daily sea routine of not less than eight hours
on Steaming Watch and eight at Damage Control or Ammunition Supply Stations, quite apart from the dawn and dusk action stations that required every man in the ship to be at his post." The return to harbour heralded not a few days' comparative rest but the resumption of boiler cleaning in the most overworked capital ship in the avy. No wonder the Hood's stokers apparently came close to mutiny in December 1940.69 Evidently, it tooka special type of man to endure this regime. Until the Invergordon Mutiny the Hood's stokers were drawn largely from the mining communities of the British Isles. However, by the mid-1930s this sort of man had little interest in a naval career and the Admiralty even less in exposing the Navy to the militant politics he threatened to bring with him. The Admiralty therefore began to recruit teenage stokers from the traditional forcing grounds of the avy in southern England. Despite concerns for the poor standard of education among recruits no steps were taken to improve the literacy of the new intake. Rather than the year or more that boy eamen spent under training in one of the shore establishments, stokers received no more than eight weeks' drill followed by two months' mechanical instruction before being drafted for sea service as Stoker 2nd Class. Progression to Stoker 1st Class came by means of a test to demonstrate competence in handling various types of machinery. For the ambitious a threemonth period as an Auxiliary Watchkeeper was followed by an examination which, if successful, would grant him a certificate and the chance of further training ashore. Others would take advantage of the Mechanician Scheme which allowed stokers of above-average ability to specialise in equipment maintenance with the prospect of warrant rank. But, her eight (E) officers and three warrant engineers apart, the key figures in the Hood's Engineering Department were the 35 engine room artificers, men who entered the avy after a challenging written examination and spent no less than four years under training before going to sea. Louis Le Bailly, then a Sub-Lieutenant (E), has this unforgettable reminiscence of his first visit to the Hood's engine spaces on rejoining the ship in May 1937.
Members of the Double-Bottom
Party pose by Starboard No.1 S.5in gun, c. 193B. Stoker Ken 'Nobby' Clark on the left. HMS Hood ~tionKJ.fk CoIl«fIQn
On my first morning the Senior [Engineer] took me into all the machinery spaces including numerous glory holes known as cabooses, mostly housing ventilation machinery. But throwing open one caboose door he let me take a glance at five whey-faced elderly men in blue overalls, each holding a glass. 'Those five chief engine room artificers (Ch ERAs), Maycock, Bradfield, Edmiston, Snell and Hemmings: he said, 'are among the most senior skilled men we have. I know, and they know, they have no right to be drinking prairie oysters of rum and raw eggs in the forenoon but they would give their lives for this ship. If we had to go to sea in an emergency it would be their skills on which we would depend. Listen to them, learn from them and never mind asking them anything. If, after six months, when you come to get your watchkeeping ticket, you know a quarter of what they do about this ship, you will have done well.''" The Engineering Department was distinguished from others in the Hood by the fact that its personnel frequently gave very extended periods of service to the ship, men who over time became indispensable in their work and indivisible from her character. In the late 1930s there was Mechanician Chilvers of
A TOllr of the 511ip
the evaporators, hief Engine Room Artificer Edwards of the motor boats, Mechanician Ridgeon and Stoker PO Binnie of the steam picket boats, and Chief Stoker Stoyles, doyen of 'A' Boiler Room. Presiding over the fan compartments was the highly skilled but slightly eccentric Chief Mechanician Charle Bostock whose great claim to fame was a certificate provided by the etley mental asylum stating that he was entirely sane. There was Chief Stoker Cathmoir of the 'Hood's Harmony Boys', Chief Stoker Biggenden with his registers in the Engineers' office and Regulating Chief Stoker Abbott who from a tiny office on the upper deck handled the affairs of 260 stokers. Then there was Harry Watson, the 'Double Bottom Chief loker' responsible for all fuelling and fuel supply arrangements and the only man to have visited each of his ship's 500 watertight compartments, and Stoker PO Watson (no relation), for many year entrusted with the spare gear store above the forward engine room control platform. Four years after Le Bailly's tour of the engine spaces half of those mentioned in these lines did indeed give their lives for her. Among them was Chief Stoker Harry Watson who on the morning of 24 May 1941 ended 21 years' unbroken service in the ship, the only man to have served her all her days." The Royal avy was equipped with ships whose performance and reliability often owed less to their design than to the skill and endurance of those who operated them in what were often terrible conditions. To the ordinary hazards of life below the waterline the onset of war added its own miseries. There was the threat of scalding by ruptured steam mains, of disintegration by torpedo, mine, bomb and shellfire, of drowning in sealed compartments thick with oil and black with smoke, and always the hideous clanging of every concussion and detonation against the ship's side, like 'the inside of a giant's kettle against which a sledge-hammer is being beaten with uncertain aim'." Some of the finest men the avy ever produced did their ungrateful work in the engine spaces of her vessels, 'men who, deep in the hot heart of the ship, have little room for hope if she is overwhelmed'." Although it is the gallantry of fighting above decks that captures the imagination,
43
naval historians will always have to contend with the accomplishment of those who, in bringing their ship into battle, afforded her commander the one weapon he could never dispense with: mobility.
A large party of stokers gathered in the eyes of the ship at Malta
on Christmas Day 1938. The Engineering Department saw proportionately little turnover in personnel before the los5 of the
ship in May 1941.
Gunnery The turn of the twentieth century saw a revolution in naval gunnery which was to transform the nature of war at sea. By 1914 improvements in rangefinding, fire control and ordnance were giving ships the capacity to engage each other at far greater range than had seemed possible ten years earlier. ntil 1908 British gun designers had looked to increase the range of their weapons by accelerating the muzzle velocity of their shells, which they accomplished by extending the calibre of the gun and increasing the weight of the propellant charge. However, it was soon realised that this improvement wa
HMS Hood Auo<~t/Ol1'~rciv.1CoJ1«tJOfl
Hood's forward battery trained to starboard for the camera in
July 1932. The left-hand sighting ports can be seen in the glacis of each turret. Wrl9ht • LogMI
44
~~
Roberts. The Battlecruiser Hood, p. 16. See also Addendum to
MafluaJ for Power \\'orked Mo"nti"gs: 15·j",h j\lou"';"g5. H.M.S. 'Hood' (restricted circulation, Adrniraltr' 1920) IPRO, AD~I 186/249 . a Thomas & Patterson, Dreadnoughts i" Camera, pp. IOI~.
., Roberts. Battlecm;sers. p. 89. -:- The blast bags \,'ere painted grey in wartime. . Hogg & Batchelor, Nm'aJ GIHI.
p. 121.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
boughl only at the cost of severe wear to the inner lining of the barrel with a corresponding loss in accuracy. The answer wa not therefore to increase the velocity of the shell but to augment its size and destructive energy, while the desired improvement in range would be achieved by greater elevation of the barrels. The result was the 13.5in gun with which much of the Grand Fleet mobilised for war in 1914. The success of the 'fearful thirteen point five' as it was known led to the design of an even larger weapon on the same low-velocity/heavy-shell principle: the 15in Mk I gun, the finest heavy ordnance ever produced for the Royal avy. Designed by Vickers, the42-calibre Mk I gun measured over 54 feet in length and weighed exactly 100 tons including the breech mechanism." At a maximum elevation of 30 degree it was capable of firing a projectile weighing 1,920 pounds a distance of 30,180 yards (over 17 miles). A 15in shell with an armour-piercing cap could penetrate 15 inches of Krupp Cemented plate at a range of 14,300 yards. 0 less impressive was the time, skill and engineering planl required to manufacture it. 1S A single 15in gun barrel was perhaps two or three years in the making, almost as long as the ship herself. Manufacture of the Hood's eight barrels (plus spares) was shared among the handful of firms with the resources to engage in such work. The process began with molten steel being poured into an octagonal mould to create an ingot weighing up to 500 tons. Once cooled, the ingot was transferred to a mill where the bore hole was painstakingly trepanned through il. In a process that might take up to a month, the ingot was then repeatedly heated and forged to the desired proportions under a 10,000-ton hydraulic press, a water-cooled mandrel being used to maintain the dimension of the bore. Thus compacted, the tube forging was then planed and moothed down on an immense lathe before being returned to the furnaces. Having been heated it was then annealed by prolonged immersion in a vertical oil bath. I ext the barrel wa hifted to a second lathe where it wa first wound with 170 miles of rectangular steel wire and then smoothed, tempered and smoothed again. leanwhile, an outer casing for the barrel was produced with a bore slightly less than the diameter of the wired forging. Once heated, this was fitted over the main barrel, the two fusing as it cooled. This process was repeated to form a composite barrel of no less than six layers of tubing, wiring and jacketing. Finally, the barrel was transferred to a rifling machine which, with a precision belying its enormous power, incised a total of 76 grooves into the inner lining, each making one and a half right-hand turns before exiting the muzzle. With a diameter of 15 inches the bore was broad enough to admit a slender body, and many was the schoolboy or junior rating who inserted him elf in the muzzle like the opening mOve in a circus act. Though the rifling was occasionally inspected by a diminutive ordnance artificer hauled through on a strip of canvas, the barrels were the turret crews' responsibility to clean by means of a pullthrough drawn along the bore. The completed gun was transported on specially-designed rolling stock to Vickers, Barrow, which had the commission to build the Hood's Mk II mountings. Here it was tried out on its mounting in a gun pit before the entire tructure was loaded onto the converted coaster Horden for transfer to Clydebank. Whereas the Hood's Mk I gun barrels differed hardl}' at all
from those fitted in the Queen Elizabeth class from 1915, the Mk II mounting to which they were added was the product of a significant redesign, one from which only she benefited. Like its predecessor, the Mk 11 mounting consisted of a revolving turret weighing a total of 890 tons including the barrels. First came the turret or gun house itself, then the gun well and beneath it the working chamber. This tructure, which traversed on a roller path lubricated with argolene oil, was attached to a revolving column of trunking--40 feet deep in the case of'B' and 'X' turrets and 30 in the case of'A' and 'Y'up which projectiles and cordite were brought to the guns. The gun turret was protected by armour up to 15 inche thick, the barbette by curved sections. of plate ranging from 12 inches above deck to five at main- and lower-deck level. Power for the mountings was provided by four steam-driven hydraulic pumping engines on the lower deck and in the hold which supplied pressure to a ring main common to all four turrets. The hydraulic medium was an opaque mixture of vegetable oil, potash and water, the purity of which it was one of the ordnance artificers' many tasks to monitor. A bad leak would give the mounting the aspect of a dairy at milking time. Pressure was transferred from the fixed structure up to the turret by means of two pairs of'walking pipes' on either side of the barbette. Joints in these pipes beneath the working chamber permitted them to follow the turret as it traversed across its 300-degree arc of fire. Internally, it was in the middle section of the turret-the gun well-that the redesign of the Mk II mounting was most apparenl. The Mk II improved the elevation of the guns from 20 to 30 degrees, a modification which not only called for the well to be deepened to accept the recoil of the barrels, but for the turret roof to be raised in order to provide the necessary clearance at maximum elevation.'· However, because the allangle loading mechanism remained unaltered, the chain rammers could not operate beyond the 20-degree elevation of the Mk I mounting. This meant that high-elevation firing required the barrels to be depressed to permit reloading. Externally, this arrangement afforded the Hood's Mk 11 mountings a squarer appearance than their predecessors, and the S-inch turret roof a flatter profile with improved protection against plunging fire. Nor did the differences end there. The IS-foot rangefinder of the Mk I was replaced with a 30foot model intended to improve accuracy across the range of the weapon. The armoured hoods which had proved a liability at Jutland were also abandoned in favour of three sighting ports in the IS-inch glacis of each turret, the apertures being concealed in peacetime with decorative fittings in brass. The appearance of the turrets was completed with a pair of white canvas blast bags and by the addition of a brass tompion to the muzzle of every barrel, each bearing the ship's chough device." Brooding over it all was the terrible aspect of the guns themselves, destined to be burnished, polished and enamelled to a high glos b}' a generation of sailors and then puckered and blistered by the heat and blast of gunfire. Larger and more advanced weapons appeared but none lent themselves to the refinement of the ISin mounting of which the Mk 11 variant fitted in Hood holds its place as 'the acme of British turret design'." Heir to a design history stretching back to the 1860s, it remains one of the great achievements of British engineering.
A Tour of the Ship
45
Left: Ammunitioning ship in the late 19305. lSin shells are being hoisted up from an ammunition
It took over 70 men to operate one of the Hood's turrets and there was no more complex procedure in the ship than that designed to dispatch her ammunition at targets on the horiZOll. That procedure originated in the magazines and shell rooms serving each turret on the platform deck and in the hold. Manned by a party of 2 I ratings under a chief or warrant officer, in 1931 each shell room housed 160 armour-piercing (A PC) projectiles, 40 high-explosive (CPC) shells, 24 practice and 12 shrapnel rounds, though these proportions varied as time passed. The latter seem to have been fired in anger only once, during the rescue of HMS/M Spearfish in the orth Sea on 26 September 1939. Vice-Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly:
Having met Spearfish we turned for home whereupon two shadowing aircraft appeared well out of gun range. Ark Royal kept her fighters on deck anticipating the arrival of German bombers. Lieutenant-Commander 'Tiny' Gregson, the Hood's gunnery officer, conceived a magisterial rebuke to the shadowers. One of Hood's after turrets was told to load both 15in guns with shrapnel shells, a few of which Hood carried for shore bombardment. No hits were obtained but there was a spectacular explosion on the horizon and thereafter the shadowers kept their distance.'· The APC shell was fitted with a delayed fuse beneath an armoured head designed to penetrate and then explode in the vitals of a protected warship. The CPC, by contrast, was fused to detonate on contact against unarmoured vessels or land targets. The shells, all over five feet long, were stowed on their sides like double magnums in some unearthly champagne cellar. Above them, kept at a constant temperature by refrigeration plants installed solely for this purpose, the magazines stored cordite propellant packed in pink shalloon cartridges'O The cartridges, each weighing 107 pounds, were kept in cylindrical brass cases, two cartridges to a case. The nineteen members of the magazine party did their work in special clothing and felt boots to avoid the sparks that might bring disaster on the ship. The catastrophic instability of early British cordite had resulted in the loss of four significant units during the First World War and their destruction cast a long shadow on magazine procedure in the Royal avy'l Elaborate cooling and ventilation systems were provided and standing orders required temperature readings to be taken six times daily in the Hood's magazines. The paramount importance of temperature stability is reflected in the following passage of the GII//Ilery Gllide produced for the Hood on commissioning in 1920: If it is found when taking temperatures that the temperature of any Magazine is 68 degrees and has risen 2 degrees or more compared with the watch before, a chit is at once to be placed in the Engineer's Office by the Petty Officer taking the temperatures, stating that the cooler is required for that Magazine. A similar system is to be employed for stopping the Cooler as soon as the temperature commences to fall." It should be added that cordite became dangerously unstable at temperatures above 70D F.
barge by a 40-foot derrick. A second grab is being used for cordite charges. HMS Hood A5sociaflonlhrcival Cofl«tJon
/
/
/
."
19
Le Baill)', The Aifatl Arollnd the Engine, p. 52. Edward Gregson, heavyweight boxing champion and evenluall)' a Commander (G),
was lost with the ship in 1941. so Shalloon, a light cloth used 10 line garments. had the virtue of burning without leaving a solid residue.
'I Bulwark, Natal, Vanguard and
Glntron were all lost to magazine explosions. 12 Glinnery Guide: H.i'YI.S. Hood (restricted circulation, Admiralty, c.I920) lNMM,
H~IS
Hood,ship's
cO\'er,II, no. 1101, p. 33. Bold type in original
Below: lSin shells coming aboard at Malta in the late 1930s. Notice the rope grommets protecting the driving bands of each shell. HMS Hood Associarion/Mason Collection
46
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
U Hodges, Tile Big GUtl, pp. 70-8 &
t28--34. "IWM/SA, no. 22t47, reel 3. 15 Details in this paragraph from tbid.
The business of firing the Hood's main armament began in the shell rooms 50 feet beneath the turrets, the first stage in a procedure that could be performed simultaneously for each gun." Controlled by an operator, a shell was lifted from its bin by a hydraulic grab mounted on the deckhead of the compartment. By this means it was transported to a trolley and then to the revolving bogie resting at the base of the turret trunking. Meanwhile, the magazine party were selecting two brass cordite cases, the contents of which they passed to the handing room, a flashtight scuttle closing behind them once they had done so. In the handing room the cartridges, two of them bearing red igniter pads, were deposited into a pair of flashtight hoppers above the waiting shell. 'A'hen bogie and hoppers were ready they were clamped to the inside of the main hoisting cage, thus connecting them to the revolving strllCture of the turret. This done, they were raised together by hydraulic power up to the working chamber beneath the gun house. At jutland inadequate armour, insufficient measures against flash and poor cordite handling had accounted for three baltlecruisers together with almost their entire complement, over 3,300 men all told. Another, Beatty's flagship LioIT, came within an ace of suffering the same fate. The Navy responded with exhaustive measures and procedures to prevent a repetition of this disaster. These extended from the addition of hinged covers to all voice pipes to the installation of flashproof scuttles throughout the structure. While the latter had taken the form of elevating shutters in the Mk I turret, in the Hood they consisted of radial doors three quarters of an inch thick. The
redesign had been prompted by the alarming tendency of the elevating shutter to jam in action, though the radial door proved susceptible to alterations in the flow of hydraulic pressure and 'B' turret's suite kept OA Bert Pitman busy during his time aboard in 1939-41. 84 In addition, enormous care was taken with the electrical circuitry which was wired to magazine standards; indeed the whole turret structure was classed as a magazine compartment and supposedly treated a such. The working chamber which the shell and cordite now reached was a confusion of hydraulic pumps, valves and levers manned by seven men including a cage operator and an ordnance artificer, on hand to attend to any mechanical problem that might arise.'; Among his assistants were the characters of many a turret crew, the QOs (Qualified Ordnancemen) or'turret rats', long-service ABs with no interest in promotion but sufficient guile to leaven their work with those pleasures which made life bearable. The Navy might issue stringent rules against smoking in the turrets but these could hardly top a man lighting up among the ready-use shells kept in the working chamber. Neither could it prevent him igniting lengths of cordite 'spaghetti' under metal strips carefully arranged on the deck plating, the enormous heat taking an instant to weld his initials for posterity. Nor, for that matter, could it stop AB 'Tubby' Barney, a Scot, slaking his thirst with a ruinous concoction of white spirit and pusser's lime juice after a hard morning's work. Off duty, there was sufficient room in the confines of'B' turret's working chamber for the QOs to operate the tailoring and cigarette-roiling firms upon which they relied to augment their
ORDNANCE ARTIFICERS
One of the main sources for the Hood's gunnery systems is the taped memoir of Albert Pitman who joined the ship as an Acting Ordnance Artificer 4th Class in january 1939." The ordnance artificer owed his existence to the zeal and vision of Admiral Sir john Fisher. Before the Great War the Selborne-Fisher scheme had begun training talented young men to perform the tasks of maintenance and repair which were to keep the Royal avy steaming and fighting through two world wars. It took four and a half years to train an ordnance artificer at HMS Fisgard, first at Gosport and then from 1932 at the new Mechanical Training E tablishment at Chatham. To the ordnance artificer fell the task of maintaining the ship's gunnery and firecontrol systems and for this he was initiated both in their operation and in the various metalworking techniques which made him rather more than a skilled technician. A ship relied on her artificers not only to keep her essential systems in working order but to manufacture the parts necessary for repair in the event of damage or breakdown. Training in ordnance was carried out first in the 15in monitor Marshal Soult at Chatham and then at HMS Excellent, the gunnery school in Portsmouth Harbour where Pitman got a first
taste of the resentment directed at artificers by seamen. Their training afforded the 'tiffies' the rank and uniform of a petty officer and rates of pay well in excess of most on the lower deck, a source of some disgust afloat. Robert Brown, artificer in the cruiser York around 1931: If you asked the rest of the lower deck they would have said we were very snobbish. Well, I think we were the first people to use tennis racquets on the lower deck-l remember seamen referring to them as 'wanking spanners'. But we weren't considered to belong with the officers, although in some cases we were getting more than the junior officers, because of our trade pay and so on. 87 Certainly, Bert Pitman must have been among the very few Hood ratings to have fenced with officers on the quarterdeck. Another source of jealousy was 'Guard and Steerage', the right of artificers and artisans to stay in their hammocks until 06.00 or 06.30. After breakfast in the artificers' mess the OA's working day began at 08.00, stripping down machinery or performing routine maintenance in the turrets and on firecontrol apparatus from rangefinders to the Dreyer Table itself. Perhaps one of the gun
breeches would be dismantled, cleaned and oiled, or part of the turret hydraulic system opened up and lubricated. In his toolbox Pitman-quickly appointed OA of'B' turretkept pliers, files, adjustable spanners, a hacksaw and hammer and chisel but on the main deck amidships lay the Ordnance Artificers' workshop, fully equipped for the moment a part needed to be made or modified. OAs never stood watch in peacetime and unless they had night duty would be free to sleep ashore when the ship was at her home port, resuming work at 08.00 next morning. Any OA having kept night duty wa entitled to a 'make and mend' half-holiday the following afternoon. With dawn and dusk action stations and the responsibility of keeping his turret at war readiness, Bert Pitman's wartime routine ,vas no doubt considerably more taxing but he was not to share the fate of his shipmates. In january 1941 Pitman was drafted to the Barham whose sinking he survived that ovember, spending the next two years in the cruiser Glasgow. He retired from the Navy as a Lieutenant-Commander in 1968. Il6IWM/SA no. 21147, reel 3. "Cited in Ereira, Ti,e Im'ergordoTl Mutiny, pp. 16-17. What type of artificer Brown was is not stated.
47
A Tour of the Ship
meagre income. In the way of this or any other navy, its work co-existed with the lives of those who made it what it was. The chief purpose of the working chamber was to transfer the shell and cordite cartridges from the main hoisting cage to the gun-loading cage which would take them up to the gun house. On arrival the cordite was automatically tipped out into a waiting position while a bewildering concert of flash tight scuttles opened and closed about it. Once the gun-loading cage was ready the cordite was forced in by a pair of rammers, to be followed by the shell itself which again occupied the lower stage. The cage operators' ability to perform these actions was controlled by some of the 37 interlocking systems which governed the operation of the entire turret. These arrangements, which took the form of mechanical obstruction to the operating levers, were designed to regulate the passage of shells and above all cordite from magazine to breech and so minimise the possibility of a disastrous explosion in the event of a hit or accident. At a given moment there could never be more than three shells in the system for each gun, only two of them accompanied by their propellant during the clearing phase of the operation. The Hood's Gunnery Guide spelt it out in bold type: o charge is to be taken from the Magazine until it is required for loading in the Main Cage, and the Main Cage is not to be brought up with a new round until the preceding round in the Gun Loading Cage is required at the gun." Thus, when the order 'Load' was passed, the first round was sent up to the gunhouse, the second was brought up to the working chamber, and the third loaded onto the main hoisting cage once it had returned to the base of the turret trunking, the cordite joining it in the hoppers above. We are following the progress of the first round which now travelled up the rails of the gun-loading cage, through another flash proof scuttle and so into the turret itself. A ISin gun turret had a crew of around 20 men under the command of the Captain of the Turret. Four of them occupied the control cabinet behind the guns: the range taker at hi 30foot rangefinder should the turret pass into local control, a periscope observer, a communications rating with headphones and the turret captain himself, protected by an additionallayer oD-inch plate. The rest worked the guns under the Second Captain of the Turret. Each gun was served by a gun layer seated against the IS-inch face plate to the left of the barrel, his eyes glued either to an electric pointer in the case of director control or to a telescopic sight adjusted for range and deflection by the sight setter in the event of independent firing. By turning a brass handwheel he caused the barrel to be elevated or lowered on its trunnions by an immense hydraulic cylinder beneath the gun. The sights were individually calibrated to the ballistic characteristics unique to each gun. On the right of the gunhouse sat the trainer who operated the hydraulic swash-plate engines which traversed the turret by rack and pinion at a speed of two degrees per second, so smoothly that few of the turret crew were ever aware of it. Under director control, however, training of the turret was carried out from a position in the working chamber, the operator 'following pointers' transmitted remotely. The gun crew consisted of a pair of loading numbers, the ram operator, a breech worker and an ordnance artificer in the event of
mechanical failure, all supervised by the Captain of the Gun. There was also an interceptor operator whose job it was to break the circuits of the gun in the event of a local emergency, isolating it from director control until it was ready to resume operation. Others like LS j.R. Williams (1939-40) stood by with emergency generators in the event of any failure in the circuits themselves" The turret was dominated by the usual warship smell of oil and metal, often cold and dank and always poorly lit by lamps in steel enclosures against the turret roof and sides." Few spaces in the ship were more dominated by steel and machinery, the men hemmed in by sloping plating and dwarfed by the monstrous weapons before them. Around the breech slender mesh barriers kept them from the gaping hole of the gun well into which the cage guide rails disappeared. To all this was added the squelch and hiss of the hydraulics, the racket of the cages and the dreadful concussions of the loading process once the turret came into action. It was no place for claustrophobia. The shell has now come level with the breech of the gun. A pull on a lever activated a hydraulic chain rammer which thrust it along the loading tray and into the breech until the copper driving bands around its rim bit deep into the rifling of the barrel. The driving bands not only settled the shell into the chamber but activated the fuse on the explosive. Another lever brought half the cordite charge onto the tray, this also being forced into the gun by the ram operator. Seconds later the remaining 214 pounds were on their way into the barrel. A single problem was sufficient to stall the entire procedure from magazine to breech, and it only took a cordite cartridge with its red igniter pad facing the wrong way for precious seconds to be lost in the rhythm of firing the guns. Occasionally, too, the operator's failure to reduce the length of the rammer stroke after the shell had been loaded caused the cordite to be crushed into the base of the projectile on the next ram, the ensuing mess bringing the entire turret to a halt. But otherwise the process was well nigh complete and the breech block would now be closed with a mighty slam, the interrupted screw turning to engage the barrel lining against the enormous energy that would shortly be unleashed against it. The loading process was completed by the breech worker inserting a small firing tube into the lock of the gun. At this the gun layer and trainer, following pointers from the remote director, fixed the target on their instruments. Once they were both 'on', the electrical circuits were closed and the weapon reported as 'Ready!', a light burning before the layer in the aloft director to indicate this. The moment had come. A shrill 'Ding! Ding!' on the fire gong warned the ship to brace itself for what was to follow. With a shudder and a blinding flash the shell was hurled out of the barrel at a speed of over 2,400 feet per second as a sheet of flame engulfed the decks. In the turret the explosion was felt more than heard. The pressurised atmosphere of the gun house kept the sound to a muffled roar but the concussion of the firing created a momentary vacuum that emptied the lungs of many in the ship. In salvo firing the passage of a few seconds would bring a further assault as the left-hand gun thundered into action, the barrel recoiling on its cradles deep into the gun well. The recoil was absorbed by a recuperator controlled by a set of recoil cylinders, the barrel then being returned to its starting position on a pneumatic run-out system unique to the Mk II mounting. The breech, lately exposed
Gunnery Guide, p. 12. HMS Hood Association archives. 90 Though white in peacetime, the turret interiors were repainted in dark grey on the outbreak of war. The reason has presumably to do with the need to reduce light
83
19
emanating from the sighting ports.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
48
'X' turret at the limit of its firing arc, 1926. The right-hand gun is at maximum elevation of 30 degrees. The tall structure on the left is the wireless trunking from the Second wrr office on the lower deck. Repulse astern.
us. N.v.' Hntooul C~nr~
•. The Hood's turrets did, however, suffer from a number of early teething problems; see the journal of Mid. Robert Elkins, M~I, Elkinsll, 29 September 192!. .lIW~t/SA, no. 22147, rcel2. HMS £'(cellem on Whale Island, Portsmouth Harbour, was the
'avy's principal gunner)' school. Sumida, 1" Defelice of Noml Supremacy, p. ) 53. ,. Padfield, TI,e Battleship Era, p. 185. fl Sumida, III Defelice of Nm'a/ Supremacy, pp. 79-80. The 9}
interpretation of the development
of fire control in the Royal Navy offered in these paragraphs relies heavily on Dr. Sumida's work, to which acknowledgement is hereb}' madc. It should be noted, however, that many of Dr. Sumida's interpretations are challenged in John Brooks' forthcoming Dreadnougllt GWUle'}': Fire Control and tile Battle ofJut/arid (London: Frank Cass), to which Dr Brooks was kind enough to give the author access. .. umida, In Defence ofNam/ SupremaC}', pp. 208-15.
to pressures of almost 20 tons per square inch, was now subjected to a blast of compressed air from bottles stowed in the turrettrunking in order to extinguish any remaining fire. With this the block was opened, the turret filling with acrid cordite fumes while jets of water played over the breech in readiness for the next shell. For a trained crew, working like automata on equipment of proven reliability, the process from magazine to firing would take less than a minute" With three shells in the system at anyone time this gave a firing rate of approximately 30 seconds for each gun. Thus was Hood's main armament fired. But how did her guns acquire their target? The answer takes us back to the revolution in naval gunnery at the close of the nineteenth century. Until the I890s the firing of naval guns had no more direction than that afforded them by the intuition of the gun layer and the orders of his officer. However, from this time on the adoption of larger and more powerful guns on correspondingly fewer mountings began to lead the technically-minded officer and his civilian counterpart to consider how the accuracy and impact of the new weapons might be improved over longer ranges. Out of these concerns came a number of innovations on which the development of naval gunnery in the twentieth century was to be based. One of these was the rangefinder, the first practical example of which was a 4'h-foot model introduced by a Professor Barr of Glasgow University in 1892. Operating on the coincidence principle, the Barr rangefinder required the observer to align two separate images of the target by means of a pair of mirrors and a set of prisms, the result of his adjustments permitting the range to be read off a scale on the instrument. The calculation of range was derived by measuring the parallax angle of the object relative to the point of observation once the image came into focus or alignment. The Barr design and its longer-base successors were to provide the British with an effective means of establishing the range of a
target, but they did not compare in range, speed and accuracy with the stereoscopic models produced for the German Navy by Carl Zeiss of Jena. Though requiring highly-trained operators with superb vision, initially at least the Zeiss model left comparatively little to the range taker once he had slotted his individual lenses into the instrument, the data being simply read off from numbers in his field of view. The Barr & Stroud model, on the other hand, required constant adjustment on the part of the operator to fix the point of coincidence, though prolonged trials after the Great War convinced the Admiralty that the effectiveness of either system had more to do with base length and prevailing conditions oflight than any fundamental design element. Be this as it may, by the 1930s there seems to have been little doubt in the Royal avy-even in the hallowed precincts of HMS Excellellt-as to which side had the better rangefinding equipment." By 1900 a new breed of gunnery officer nurtured by Capt. Percy Scott was beginning to address the problem of accurately engaging targets whose range and bearing were subject to constant alteration. The first step towards olving this came in 1902 when Lt John Dumaresq produced the trigonometrical calculator which bears his name. Provided with own ship's speed, course and bearing to the target along with the estimated speed and course of the target, the Dumaresq would produce rates of change for both target range and target bearing. To this was added the Vicker Clock into which both the range and rate of change of range were fed, the mechanism at length producing an update to the indicated range and deflection based on the predicted rate of change. This data permitted salvo firing to be maintained without any more than periodic reference to the rangefinder, though with variable results. The system that made the transfer of this data to the guns and then their firing as one unit possible was Capt. Scott's own innovation, Director Firing, which he devised in 1904.93 The essence of Scott's idea was that the laying, training and firing of the guns should all be controlled and synchronised by a device called a 'director' operated by a single observer high above the fracas of battle. Here the aiming instructions would be set on a master sight and transmitted to the guns by means of a 'converger', the broadside being fired by an electrical signal triggered by the director observer once the guns were correctly laid. The director firing system has been called 'the most vital single gunnery invention of the twentieth century' but its potential could not be made good until the fire-control instruments on which the guns depended for their accuracy had proved equal to the vast problem in spherical trigonometry implied by engaging a moving target at sea" It was this, along with entrenched opposition in the Admiralty, that delayed the installation of director firing in the British fleet until 1913. The answer to the problem of accuracy in long-range naval gunnery lay in the shape of the 'Argo Clock' produced by a designer of genius: Arthur Hungerford Pollen" The Dumaresq devices had greatly extended the range at which ships might be engaged but accuracy could not enjoy similar improvement until gunnery officers were supplied with a continuous reading of the relative rate of change of the target. In 1904 Pollen addressed this problem by designing a plotting table, gyroscopically stabilised against the motion of the vessel, capable of generating a constant readout of the relative positions of ship and target." Thi it accomplished by means
49
A Tour of the Ship
of a moving roll of paper, aligned and powered to correspond with the ship's course and speed while a fixed pencil inscribed a line on the plot to match the movement of the firing vessel. Simultaneously, observed ranges and bearings sent by electrical signal from the latest rangefinding equipment were added to the plot in coloured inks to provide a record of the target relative to the firing ship. This permitted the helm and revolutions of the ship to be adjusted to match the course and speed of the target, thereby presenting the gunnery officer with a consistent range and deflection at which to engage the enemy. Alternatively, the relative bearings given by the plot allowed a prediction to be made of the future position of the target and the guns aimed accordingly. Together with a gyromounted rangefinder de igned by Pollen, the final variant of the Argo Clock, the Mk V Course and Speed Plotter of 1913, offered the Royal Navy the holy grail of fire control: helm-free gunnery, the ability to compute ranges and bearings even while the firing ship was executing a turn. But it was not to be. Already in 1908 a prominent gunnery officer, Lt Frederic Dreyer, had produced a rate plotter which, though of limited use, recommended itself to the Admiralty in that it was based on existing instruments and thus more readily assimilated than the Pollen design. In 1910 Dreyer followed this with the first model of the fire-control table that took his name, a development of the earlier rate plotter but with several critical features heavily plagiarised from the Argo Clock. The Dreyer Table was the product of considerable ingenuity but suffered from flaws both of design and conception which greatly limited its effectiveness under battle as against practice conditions. In the event, Dreyer cribbed the Argo Clock in virtually every respect except that in which its advantage might have proved decisive: automatic as against manual range plotting. Because of shifting politics and allegiances in the Admiralty and the traditional suspicion of outsiders, it was the Dreyer Table that the avy adopted and with which the Grand Fleet sailed for its fateful encounter off Jutland on 31 May 1916. Though the Pollen system was never fully tested in combat, its rejection may have had serious implication both for the accuracy of the Navy's gunnery and indeed for the Hood herself, which was completed with the Mk V model of the Dreyer Table and retained it to the end of her days." The final variants of the Dreyer Table provided a reasonably effective fire-control system under ideal conditions but without the advanced capability of the Pollen design, and it was not until 1925 that the Navy received the helm-free gunnery promised it by the Argo Clock almost fifteen years earlier. Even then, financial constraints prevented the Admiralty Fire Control Table being fitted in any save the Nelsoll class battleships and those vessels subsequently completed or recon tructed. The Hood was not of course among them but, ironically, it was during the design process of her Mk V Table that the first concerted objections were raised to the Dreyer system as a whole, and the Admiralty committee formed which led to it replacement. 98 Of what, then, did the Hood's main fire-control system consist? How did it function? First came target selection, made by the captain or one of the gunnery officers and transmitted to the directors by mean of an Ever hed bearing indicator. The aiming process began in the aloft director, perched on the spotting top 120 feet above the waterline. The chief instrument were a pair of gyroscopically-stabilised gun sights
through which the director layer and trainer acquired and held their target. As the trainer turned his handwheel, so the director traversed to follow the target regardless of the heading of the ship. Through a system of electrical circuits, each adjustment of these two gun sights actuated pointers on dials which, once aligned manually with the previous settings of bearing and elevation, provided the ship's fire-control calculator with the change of bearing and elevation of the target. Meanwhile, continual e timates of enemy speed and inclination were being transmitted via earphones to the same calculator, 140 feet below. To this data the range of the target was added by the ship's master rangefinder, a 30-foot Barr & Stroud model fitted in the armoured director atop the conning tower. As with the gun sights, the minute alterations made by the range taker in bringing the image of his target into coincidence were automatically registered on a dial which, aligned with earlier settings, provided the change of range. This equipment permitted range calculations to be issued at intervals of approximately 20 seconds, the results being plotted by a typewriter arrangement on the fire-control calculator. The armoured director was also home to a Dumaresq which delivered the rates of change for target speed and course when fed with estimates of its speed and inclination (that is, the angle of its course relative to the observer's line of ight). The resulting data was all sent electrically to the Transmitting Station, the nerve centre of the Hood' fire-control system. On the platform deck directly beneath the conning tower lay the 15in Transmitting Station, perhaps the most important single space in the ship. Lying abaft the forward magazines and encased in the ame thickness of armour, it wa here that a firing solution was computed for the ship's main armament. The TS was manned by the seventeen musicians of the ship's Royal Marine band under the overall command of a gunnery officer. Assisting him was the Warrant Ordnance Officer, a Chief Ordnance Artificer in the event of mechanical breakdown, and a handful of plotters, telephonists and messengers making a total crew of 28. The centrepiece of the Hood's TS was the Dreyer fire-control table in its Ik V variant." The Dreyer Table was essentially an enormous mechanical slide rule which worked by cross-checking theoretical data with actual observations to produce a continuous range and bearing plot; a machine that, in C.S. Forester's words, 'looked into the future yet never forgot the past'.'oo This data was e>:trapolated by differentials, geared adding machines churning out a constant stream of range and bearing calculations for the fire-control table. Fed with target range and bearing, estimated speed and inclination of the enemy along with own speed and course; with readings for barrel temperature, outside air temperature, barometric pressure, wind speed and direction; and with compensation for drift of shell and the rotation of the earth relative to the ship's heading, the Dreyer Table generated calculations of the rate of change of range. The key to the firecontrol table was the range clock or 'integrator', known colloquially as the 'potter's wheel'. This device, heavily but imperfectly plagiarised from the Pollen Argo Clock, consisted of a ring disc revolving at a con tant speed. Travelling across it were ball bearings which moved in accordance with the range of the enemy. The movement of these bearings actuated a screw to which a pencil was attached. The line thus drawn on the moving plot permitted a comparative calculation to be
"Ibid., pp. 31H. .. Ibid., p. 312. "See William Schleihauf. 'Hood's Fire Control ystem: An
Overview' on ww·w.hmshood.com. C. S. Forester, TIle Ship (Harmondsworth: Penguin. 1949;
100
1st pubd 1943), p. 114.
50
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
made which yielded the rate of change of range of the target. The resulting plots and data permitted the [lIll1re range and bearing of the target to be deduced, the re ults being transmitted to the turrets in the form of corrections to the elevation and training of the guns. These signals, sent via electrical circuits, were immediately acted on by the gun layers and trainers, each nudging his handwheel to align pointers on the master dial before him. The order to fire therefore dispatched a projectile which, though aimed at an empty patch of sea, would hopefully reach the end of its trajectory to find it filled with the bulk of the enemy. At ranges of approximately 10,000 yards this flight would last around 15 seconds, and over a minute at the maximum effective range of 30,000 yards. The Dreyer Table was capable of computing data not only from the two djrector control towers but from all four turrets simultaneously, and the following account by a young officer stationed in the armoured director of HMS Valialll gives some idea of the constant exchange of information upon which the system relied: Down below in the Transmitting Station, ... was a much larger Dumaresq and the rate it was showing was connected to a pencil which drew a line on the plotting paper on which the ranges of the target were being plotted as they came in. If then my rate produced a line which coincided with change of range shown by the mean of the rangefinder's plot, then my 'guesstimation' of the speed and inclination of the target must be fairly good. [... J To enable me to chat back and forth to the Dreyer plot, 1 had a direct and personal telephone to the Midshipman who could make suggestions to me, guiding my guesstimations from what he deduced from his plot. I was seated immediately alongside the 15in Control Officer, so I could ask his opinion of the inclination and speed and if, from his fall of shot, it seemed that my rate was not working right, he could quickly tell me SO.'O'
101
Cited in Coward, Battleship al
War, pp. 40-1. Progress in aval G"'H1er)'. 1935 (restricted circulation. Admiralty, 1936), p. 100. IOJ N\\'C, \Vellings. Reminiscences. p.73. 104 Pertwee, Moon BOOlS and Ditmer S"its, p. 149. lOS Cunningham. A Sailor's Odyssey. p. 332. referring to lhe Battle of Cape Matapan.
lel
But, for all its vast complexity, the Dreyer system suffered from several major flaws which made it rather less than the sum of its parts. In relying on estimates of rate of change of range derived from manually-operated as against automatic instrumentation, the Dreyer Table introduced an element of human error into the results of its calculations which severely compromised its accuracy, particularly over longer ranges. ot only that, but the absence of the gyroscopic stabilisation which would have allowed the Dreyer Table to produce a consistent plot of the relative rate of change of range also deprived it of the ability to generate accurate data when the ship was firing under helm. The Dreyer system was incapable of making good these deficiencies and it was the 1920s before the infinitely variable speed drive and automatic range plotting of the Pollen Argo Clock at last gave the avya truly effective system of directed firing. However, these developments came too late for the Hood, which for reasons unexplained was left [0 struggle on with her inadequate Mk V calculator. The 1935 edition of Progress ill Naval GlInllery reported that 'A method has been evolved in Hood by which the rate [of change of rangel is applied automatically to the transmitting clock', but this could hardly compensate for the limitation described above. 10' This regrettable state of affairs was not lost on Lt-Cdr Joseph H.
Wellings, the U.S. avy's official observer in the Hood over the winter of 1940-1: I remember clearly my surprise, as 1inspected the Hood's Gunnery Department on December 17, 1940, when I saw the antiquated equipment in the plotting room-heart and brains of the main battery fire control system! In my opinion, the range keepers, for example, were not as modern by far as were those in the battleship Florida (when I was a plotting room officer in 1928). Our battleships West Virginia and Colorado had far superior plotting room equipment. 'o, The intricacies of all this were of course well beyond the ordinary matelot. 00 Jon Pertwee's action station in 1940-1 appears to have been in the High-Angle Control Position on the platform deck. His description of his duty runs as follows: My battle station was down in the bowels of the ship winding a small wheel. Somehow with the aid of other wheel-winders our mutual endeavour enabled Hood's gunnery to reach a greater state of accuracy. 104 But however detached from its permutations, no crewman could abstrad himself from the reality of naval gunfire. As each gun was made ready the closing of an interceptor switch caused a lamp to be ignited on panels in the aloft and armoured directors. Once all were lit the director layer would place his hands on the master pistol grip, the target still firm in his sights. It was a moment of high excitement, even for a convinced sceptic of naval gunnery like Admiral Sir Andrew Cunningham: Never in the whole of my life have I experienced a more thrilling moment than when I heard a calm voice from the director tower-'Director layer sees the target'; sure sign that the guns were ready and that his finger was itching on the trigger.'o, Inside the director layer's telescope was a gyroscopicallystabilised prism which kept the viewer's eye on the target irrespective of the motion of the ship. The gyro also controlled an electrical gun-firing circuit which, though the layer pulled the trigger, did not close until the ship was on an even keel. Finally the moment came. The sound of the fire gong announced the pulling of the trigger and seconds later the combined efforts of 400 men bore fruit in a convulsion of fire, sound and smoke. The impact of full-calibre firing defies accurate description. Boy Signalman Reg Bragg, who joined the ship in 1922, believed the end of the world had come when 'A' turret first opened up. The turret crew were largely spared the effects of noise and blast but others would be momentarily lifted from the deck and those caught in the open had their faces slapped as if by a wet cloth. The Rev. Edgar Rea, ship's chaplain between 1936 and J 938, has this impression of what Wilfred Owen called 'the monstrous anger of the guns': Always they fascinated me, though at first they terrified me. There was the tremendous bang and burst of fire, followed by a hudder from stem to stern and the uncomfortable sensation of having been struck in the midriff with a heavy pillow. Soon, however, I got over the terror and was able to
A TOllr of the Ship
51
enjoy the excitement. From the searchlight platform, to which I often repaired, one could clearly see the projectiles setting off for their destination. Like four great birds, flying in perfect formation, they pursued their parabolic path, conveying the impression, as do railway lines, that they were swiftly converging as they disappeared into the distance. I" In the event of a full broadside men would be sent sprawling by what Mid. Latham Jen on described as'an immensesmothering explosion', the ship making a sharp lurch while the sea was heard to gurgle up the sides as she settled with the recoiL 107 Use of ear protection was corned leaving many with permanently damaged hearing. One was Louis Le Bailly, a midshipman aboard in 1933: On the way to Gibraltar someone decided to establish whether the recently fitted anti-aircraft guns abreast the mainmast could be operated with 'X' turret's IS-in guns fired full charge on a forward bearing. Inevitably a midshipman's gun's crew became the guinea pigs. The six of us selected were nearly blown overboard and the three of us who survived the war are all dean l . . 'or did the effect of the Hood's gunfire end there. During gunnery exercises off Portland the concussion rattled windows along the Dorsetshire coast, occasionally shattering those not left open. In July 1932 the roar of salvoes fired in the Channel drifted as far as Daventry in orthamptonshire, 130 miles inland. And on a May morning nine years later the calm of Reykjavik was disturbed by the sound of gunfire as the Hood issued her last salvoes 300 miles away in the Denmark Strait. The standard practice in day action was to fire four-gun salvoes, first from the right gun of each turret and then from the left a few seconds later, this constituting a double salvo. The fall of shot would be marked from the spotting top by the principal Gunnery Officer or his delegate, corrections in yards being ordered either 'up', 'down', 'right' or 'Ieft~ After Jutland the Royal , avy discarded the 'bracket' method of ranging on a target in favour of the 'ladder' system, in which the gun was effectively transformed into an additional rangefinder. Its permutations are described in the following example by John Roberts: If the estimated range of the target was 14,200 yards, the first salvo was fired at this range, to the left of the estimated deflection. The second salvo was fired to the right of the estimated deflection without waiting to spot the fall of shot of the first salvo. The fir t salvo fell to the left of the target, the second fell in line but short of the target. The third salvo was fired with the same deflection as the second but with a correction of'up 400' (14,600 yards) and the fourth salvo--which completed the second double-was corrected by another 'up 400' bringing the range to 15,000 yards. The third salvo fell short of the target, the fourth fell beyond the target, which was then bracketed; the next double being fired 'down 200' at 14,800 yards. Both salvoes straddled the larget and doubles were fired on this bearing and elevation until the target was lost. The process was then repeated, but with smaller corrections-in 200-yard steps, for example. If the target were not regained quickly, the 400-yard step was reverted to. I09
The other technique refined by the British after Jutland was the concentration of fire in which two or more ships ranged on a single target. This not only promised to bring a crushing weight of fire down on the enemy but permitted other ships to engage an unseen target through the installation of range clocks and training scales in each vessel. By these visual references-later replaced by short-range WIT transmissions-the range and bearing at which the enemy was being engaged was communicated, thereby allowing ships in company to adjust their fire onto the same target. The Hood's Mk V Dreyer Table was the first to be equipped for concentration fire, being capable of adding consorts' fall of shot to the moving paper plot by means of a typewriter arrangement similar to that used to display range calculations. This modification was unique to the Hood which wa invariably selected as master ship in fleet and squadron gunnery exercises. I 10 Heavy-gunnery exercises in the Royal avy took one of two forms. The first was the throw-off shoot or inclination exercise in which two hips engaged each other with a deflection deliberately set into the sights of each gun. This meant that shells fired from one ship would, if things went according to plan, pitch a few points astern of the other. The most notorious of these was that which ended in the collision of the Hood and the RellOWIl in the Bay of Biscay in 1935, but inclination exercises generally provided quite enough excitement on their own. AB Fred White (1937-8): When Hood put to sea for a shoot it was no joke to be at tho e action stations as X turret swung around so you were looking about four feet down those 15- barrels and seeing the black flag flying from the yardarm_ Then the almighty roar and you watched those 15- shells leave the barrel on their journey towards their far target. It was always good when the Repulse did a throw-off shoot at us. How we watched her on the horizon, then the flash,' he's fired!' Later the rumble reached us as the shells were falling astern of us. III
'The monstrous anger of the guns.' 'X' and 'V' turrets engaging in a concentration exercise with another battlecruiser, probably Repulse, c.1925. Double salvoes are being
fired. the left-hand gun of 'X' turret recoiling with the
concussion while its companion is in the reloading position. The Tshaped structure on the boat deck is the head of a section of ventilation trunking. Grouped about it are wash deck lockers containing cleaning equipment.
The hatch in the middle foreground is the skylight
through which Bill the ship's goat arrived in Admiral Cowan's sleeping cabin in 1922. HMS Hood AssomtlOfliRrinoid CoIl«tlOfl
Rea,A Curate's Egg, pp. 123-4. jenson, Tin Hats, Oilskins 6Seaboots. p. 97. lC. Le Bailly, The Man Aro'md tile Engine, p. 24. 109 Ra\'en & Roberts, British BattltShips, p. 82. 110 I am grateful to Admiral of the Fleet Si r Henry Leach for drawing this feature to my attention. 111 HMS Hood Association, ewssheet no. ) (1975). 106
107
52
112
Pridham, Memoirs, II, pp. 168-9. An edition of these memoirs prepared by the present writer is forthcoming. The vibration problem was presumably solved later in 1938 during the filling of a porn-porn director on the after
superstructure.
A salvo from Repulse falls just over a battle practice target
towed by Hood. late 1930.. HMS Hood Alloc.I.tlOll!HlgginJOfl COIIKfIOfl
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
Inclination exercises were carried out with some of the 96 subcalibre rounds embarked for this purpose by the Hood after 1931. The sub-calibre round was used both to save money (full-calibre shells cost over £100 each in 1939) and reduce wear on the rifling of the guns. They required the insertion into the barrels of sections of lining weighing over half a ton, stowage for which was provided on the plating at the rear of the gun hou e. The second of these exercises took the form of full- or subcalibre firings against a target, usually towed. In the case of a 'high- peed battle practice target' this might consist of a raft upon which a hessian-covered wooden lattice some 40 feet long was erected. Rigged with sails to maintain stability, the target was then drawn 600 yards behind a destroyer at speeds up to 30 knots. A rather larger version was the 'battle practice target', of similar design but 145 feet long. This ungainly monster was towed by a loop while the gunners set about destroying it at ranges of up to 15,000 yards. Useful practice was afforded by these targets though tactical conditions rarely approached those to be expected in combat. A somewhat expensive alternative was the radio-controlled target ship Centurion, a disarmed dreadnought of 1911, reboilered to burn oil and fitted with a multitude of aerials by which her helm and speed could be adjusted via remote control from the destroyer Shikari. However, for the officer who saw war on the horizon contrived exercise of this sort were not enough. One such was Capt. Francis Pridham who took command of the Hood in February 1936. Once he had brought her gunnery up to an acceptable standard of efficiency Pridham resolved that the ship should thereafter conduct her practice shoots only in conditions likely to be encountered in battle. With Cunningham's encouragement this meant at speed, at night and in foul weather. The following passage from Pridham's memoirs gives an idea of the technical and administrative obstacles facing this endeavour in the spring of 1938: A restriction to gunnery training which caused me some concern was the economy drive which, amongst other things, demanded a minimum expenditure of oil fuel. The consequence of this was that all exercises and firings were to
be carried out at not more than about half the speed which the ship could reach on full power. I was most anxious that all our firings should be done at the speed at which the ship would be fought, namely full speed, and often in bad weather. This combination could be a full test of the ship's efficiency with her fire control equipment and procedure. The two foremost turrets might well be, with the gun control tower [i.e. armoured director], enveloped in heavy spray obscuring their rangefinders. I knew that at speeds around about 21 knots, vibration was so excessive that the HighAngle Control Position [on the after searchlight platform] was unable to function, although at higher speeds the vibration was far less. I wanted to obtain evidence, supported by a naval constructor, to back up my recommendation for some structural alterations to this position. On receiving orders for my next full-calibre firing, I proposed to carry it out at full speed and in bad weather. This was not approved on account of the extra expenditure of oil fuel. In point of fact, the extra fuel needed, if I only used full speed during the firing, would not amount to more than about 20 tons, possibly £50 worth! In my opinion an insignificant price to pay for testing the ship's gunnery under conditions which would be encountered in battle. I had already been smarting at having been given detailed orders, which should have been decided in consultation with me, the captain of the hip, or left to my discretion, so I studied ways of obtaining my entirely reasonable objective. While discussing the question with my Engineer Commander [C.P. Berthon] he assured me that with only twenty of our twenty-four boilers alight, about the normal for entering harbour in bad weather, he would be able to work up to 281'2 or 29 knots and hold it for fifteen or twenty minutes. That was good enough; ten minutes would be sufficient, probably. The firing proved to be just the test I had hoped for. It was blowing a full gale with a nasty short sea, so that when heading into itthe ship wa washed down with heavy spray fore and aft. Only from the Fore Bridge and Fire Control Position aloft [i.e. aloft directorj could the target be seen. I had ordered the target-towing ship to steer down wind at utmost speed during the Hood's firing, while I took the ship to a position from which she would approach the target up wind and so experience the full force of the gale. It proved to be a real 'test firing'. In my report I came out in the open by stating that experience of firing practice at29 knots had proved most valuable. I was not told subsequently to give 'My reasons in writing' for exceeding the speed authorised in the C. in C's [Admiral Sir Dudley Pound] orders! I had invited the Naval Constructor on the C. in C's staff [Cdr W.j.A. Davies] to be on board during the firing, and had a ked him to note the condition of vibration, at various speeds, in the High-Angle Control Position. His report led to approval of my recommendation that the structure of this position hould be stiffened'" Needless to say, the business of operating and firing the
Hood's main armament was not without incident or accident. The commonest problem was a misfire, the failure of a cordite
A Tour of the Ship
charge to ignite and eject the hell. For this eventuality a wellpractised drill was instituted to clear the barrel and ready it for the next charge. Dangerous as this was, there was nothing quite as disconcerting as a warward salvo and of these the Hood had her fair share during her pre-war Mediterranean interlude. The first came in July 1937 in a throw-off hoot against the netlayer Protector within days of Vice-Admiral Andrew Cunningham hoisting his flag. The first run passed off uneventfully, but as she turned to make a second an error caused the deflection on the guns to be cancelled with the result that Protector quickly found herself straddled by four IS-inch shell. OD Fred Coomb was in 'B' turret: We normally did a shoot while heading on the same course as the target but this time Cutt [Cunningham] had us heading into the sea and on the opposite course to make things harder. In 'B' turret we had loaded both guns, but in salvoes only fired the left gun, waiting for a range correction before firing the right gun. This time all four shells from the turrets landed round the Protector and instead of range correction we got a' ease fire' and did not fire the right gun. That finished the shoot. According to the ship's signalmen on the bridge we received a signal from the Protector reporting that the ship's cat had shit eight of its nine Jives, but if Cutt Cunningham saw it he was not amused. He was too busy making sure that heads rolled, which suited us as we were too far down the ladder for it to reach us. The buzz went round that 15 degrees left throw-off had been set on the sights but that, when the run had been altered to the following course, some idiot had ordered 15 degrees left throw-off which had only set them straight. But whatever it was we had enough trouble in unloading the right-hand gun. 'IJ Lt (G) Nigel Henderson, in command of the Transmitting Station, was censured at the subsequent Board of Enquiry but the promotion of his superior, Lt-Cdr S.H. Carlill, came through by signal that evening. Both were to reach flag rank. 10rtifying as this no doubt was it paled along ide the S1likar; incident a year later on 30 June 1938. Sailing for Crete, a 5.5in shoot was arranged for the Hood against the Cel/tur;ou, steaming as usual under remote control from the destroyer 1likari. Regrettably, confusion in identifying the target caused a double salvo to pitch round the S',ikar; in which Admiral Sir Dudley Pound, Commander-in-Chief Mediterranean Fleet, had hoisted his flag to observe the exercise. AB Len Williams (1936-41) was another observer: I was on deck watching the firing, and looking at the direction in which our guns were pointing, it was obvious that it was not going to be Cel/lur;ol/ who was going to receive our bricks. Why this simple observation was not also noticed by the gunnery people heaven only knows, but it was a very long time before they lived it down. History does not record what the C-in-C might have said!''' In fact, Pound responded with a furious string of signals and a further Board of Enquiry. On neither of these occasions were any casualties inflicted but it was not always so in gunnery. The pages of the Squadron
53
Medical Officer's reports are full of the fractures and injuries that attended the operation of heavy machinery at speed. Men were killed or maimed by the walking pipes in the training space beneath the working chamber when the turret traversed unexpectedly. Others like LS Fred Hard fell victim to mishaps in drill. An exercise in 'B' turret ended when Hard had his arm crushed between breech and shell after accidental activation of the chain rammer." S Fred oombs recalls the gruesome scene: Freddy was rushed down to the Sick Bay sharpish and I. .. , [seeing] the purplish red and bleeding gash where the flesh had gone from under his fore-arm, could have easily been sick at my first sight of a bad wound. While some of the gun's crew took Freddy down to the Sick Bay the re t set to and cleaned the mess up, a ickening job and still well remembered even though we were to see much worse later on." 6 The ship immediately turned for Gibraltar from where the onset of gangrene required Hard to be transferred to Malta for treatment at Bighi Hospital. Successful interventions permitted Hard to make a full recovery but no sooner had he returned than the matelot's particular brand of humour began to make capital out of the incident. As Coombs recalled, it was put about that a skin graft had been performed on Hard's arm using the results of a circumcision lower down, with the disconcerting effect of bringing his arm up with a jerk whenever a young lady caught his eye. There was no idle sympathy in the avy. Presiding over this great organisation wa the Gunnery Officer, one of the most important figures in the ship. Like Lt (E) Geoffrey Wells moving through the turbine rooms as his ship reached full speed off Haiti in August 1924, to control the Hood's main armament was to be vouchsafed the ultimate expression of British naval technology. "' Capt. Stephen Roskill, a distinguished gunnery officer, captures it perfectly: To carry out a firing with an armament such as Warspite's, to speak the few quietly telephoned orders needed to set in motion the whole intricate cycle of loading and firing the eight guns, gave a sensation of controlling vast power with one's finger-tips which can hardly ever have been equalled. Though the Gunnery Officers of that era were always the subject of much good-humoured chaff from their shipmates, neither party really had any doubt as to what was the most important duty in the ship'l8 Roskill's closing remarks allude to the criticism frequently levelled at gunnery officers by the rest of the avy, namely that their discipline and bearing were not matched by the accuracy of their weapons. That they were, as the saying went in the Navy, 'All gas and gaiters'. I " But there was more to it than that, as the Rev. Beardmore, Hood's chaplain between 1939-41, couldn't help revealing to his readership: Gunnery officers are somewhat maligned people, often being thought obstructionists; there may have been a tendency that way in the past, but I trust that you will find, as I have found, that the modern Gunnery Officer, especially in war-time, looks upon you as an important member of the team. His work is destructive, and although he does not
IWM, 91/7/1, p. 67. In sal\'o firing it was actually the right gun that preceded the left. II~ '\'jlJiams. GOlle A Long jo"rnq. p. t26. ll~ Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, p.104. IW~I, 911i/l. p. 67. 111 See ch. 4. p. 95. "I Roskill, H.M.S. Warspite. p. 92. IU
II' .. 9
Gaiter refers to the shin
cO\'erings traditionally worn at HM Excdlera where parade and drill formed an important part of the curriculum.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
54
like firing his guns in anger to blow human beings to bits, War;s War, and his ta k is to be so efficient that whenever the challenge comes his ship, as an important unit of the Fleet, will not fail in its duty through inefficiency.12. In the years leading up to the Great War the Gunnery Branch had established itself as the avant garde of the avy and HMS Excel/en/the forcing ground of many of its future leaders. However, for various reasons the First World War demonstrated that naval gunnery was rather less than the decisive weapon its apostle had predicted and a distinct reaction set in again t the gunnery officer and the cliquishness that came to be associated with Whale Island and its rituals. Typical was the view of Admiral Sir Andrew Cunningham, whose opinion on the subject is recalled as follows: ABC had a healthy re pect for the gun as a weapon if properly llsed and an almost boyish delight in the sound of guns going off in a good cause; but he must have suffered much from earnest gunnery officers in the course of his Service career. As a result anything savouring of long-range gun actions with 'black magic' about curvature of the earth, and canted trunnions and all that, was anathema to him'2I This view was strengthened by the conviction among many 'salt horse' officers that gunnery specialists were often inadequate in the basic arts of seamanship, beginning with ship handling. Then there was the great matter of accuracy. The Battle of Cape Matapan, Cunningham was overheard to say, was fought at ranges over which 'even a gunnery officer cannot miss'.'" A not untypical opinion was that of Paymaster Lt-Cdr A.D. Duclnvorth, serving in the battleship Nelson at the time of Invergordon: ... We go on firing away millions of money in useless target practice. We're no better now after 15 years than we were at Jutland and still can'tllit anything deliberately.12J
110
Beardmore,
The Waters of
Uncertainty. p. 33. m Vice-Admiral SiT Geoffrey Barnard cited in Pack, C"nningham the Commander, p. 21. Italics in original 122 C.M.a. in Naval Review, 64 (1976),p.16S. m Cited in Ereira. Tile ltnrergordofl Mllti"y. p. 150. 124 Christopher M. Bell, TIle Royal
'avy. Seapower arid Strategy between the Wars (London: Macmillan, 2(00) and Joseph ~loretz. The Royal Navy and the Capital Ship in rhe ltllenvar Period (London: Frank Cass, 2(02). In Extracts from Diary of\Vorid Cruise, 1923--4, p. 46. 116 Eller. Reminiscences. II. p. 462. m Ibid., pp. 462-3. The gunnery officer in question was Cdr E.H.G. Gregson. Roskill's comment in The War at Sea, I, pp.403-4 in fact refers to P,i"ce oJ iVa/es.
These views were of course bound up with the ongoing debate as to the validity of the capital ship and the fleet action for which he was designed. This is hardly the place to broach the vexed questions of inter-war naval politics and progres in naval gunnery, both of which are currently in the throes of scholarly rea sessment.'2< The technical deficiencies of the British fire-control system have already been touched upon. More telling perhaps was the persistent shortage of funds which made gunnery exercises the exception rather than the rule. As Lt (E) Geoffrey Wells noted in his diary after an atrocious Isin shoot during the World Cruise, 'gunnery efficiency without practice is unknown'."s As the glistening showpiece of the inter-war avy this wa perhaps more true of her than of other capital ships, but even so it has to be admitted that gunnery wa rarely the strong suit of HM Banlecruiser Hood. Whatever the case, the Long Gunnery Course continued to attract some of the finest brains in the avy and, led by Jellicoe, Chatfield and Dreyer among others, the Branch maintained its enormous influence through the inter-war period, and many were the (G) specialists who held the key offices of Commander, Captain and Admiral in the Hood. Where their formation and outlook was concerned, Lt-Cdr Eller U.S.N.
made the following comparison between the two navies during his stay in the Hood in the spring of 194\: The gunnery officer ICdr E.H.G. Gregson], as in some other ships, had a different philosophy about gunnery than we. We officers tried to learn everything we could about the technical side of the gun and the equipment, as well as the control of it, while leaving the actual work to the individual assigned to the jobs. If you knew these details, you would be more expert in checking and correcting. In Hood the gunnery officer said, 'I don't need to know these things. This rating know. He has gone to school and learned it. If he's not good, I'll get somebody else to take his place.'''' Eller was probably accurate in underlining the greater technical expertise of the avy's specialist but in implying as much he also puts his finger on two of the great strengths of the British avy, which had long relied on the skill and initiative of the senior rating and trusted the rigours of seagoing service to hone the mind and technique of its officers. What, then, were the results of all this effort and sacrifice? How effective was the gunnery system fitted in HMS Hood? As the action at Mers-el-Kebir demon trated, the destructive power of the Isin shell was not in doubt. or, for that matter, wa the design and operation of the Mk II turret. That engagement, however, was fought again t static targets and provided little challenge to the Hood's fire-control system. A running battle at sea was a very different matter. Although the limitations of the Dreyer Table made hitting at the outset of a long-range engagement somewhat improbable, careful spotting coupled with an advanced system of rate control offered the prospect of sustained improvement as time passed and target information accumulated. The problem of course was surviving long enough for the advantages of the British system to make themselves felt. In the spring of 194\ Lt-Cdr Eller witnessed several practice shoots by the Hood and subsequently offered this remarkable ex post facto evaluation of her gunnery in comparing the British and American ranging systems: ... The U.S. avy got most of its early fire-control equipment and knowledge from the British in the first part of the century. We had come along on more or less parallel lines. I... J In fire control we both used a similar method which was to fire your first round and, for us, if it was short, elevate it enough to go over; if over spot down to go short. Thus, we crossed the target in a 'Iadder~ Then you'd try to spot on with the third salvo. The British had the same general philosophy. But we tried to get the first salvo as accurate as possible, and if we had made all the ballistic corrections accurately, could hit right away. In Hood the gunnery officer said being too precise for the first round wasn't so important. He planned to hit the third, fourth, or fifth salvo. He'd then stick it out and outlast the other fellow and give him more punishment than he got. Actually, according to Ro kill, Hood got the range, he thinks, on the sixth salvo. I can't see how he would figure that out. But I would estimate somewhere on the fourth or sixth salvo, because these were experienced people. They knew what they were doing. But he couldn't stick it out. .. '"
55
A Tour of the Ship
How the Hood might have fared with the Admiralty Fire Control Table or with the full benefit of gunnery radar is one of the great imponderables of her last battle. In the spring of 1941 the aloft director was fitted with a Type 284 gunnery radar which had a range of over 13 miles, though it seems not to have been used until immediately before he opened fire in the Denmark Strait, if then. ". ltimately, the Hood did not generate sufficient verifiable data for hard and fast conclusions to be drawn as to the effectiveness of her main armament, but if the shortcomings of the Dreyer Table and the problems described by Pridham in the Mediterranean in 1938 are anything to go by then the task of hitting a speeding target at long range must have been a somewhat protracted exercise. On the morning of 24 May 1941 it was one she never had the opportunity to complete.
.......11I>-The main purpo e of the Hood's secondary armament was to ward off attack from smaller vessels and aircraft, for which speed and volume of fire counted more than range and size of shell. Until they were removed in 1939-40 the Hood's outfit consisted principally of twelve breech-loading 5.5in guns disposed in two batteries on the forecastle and boat decks amidships. The 50-calibre 5.5in gun was designed by Coventry Ordnance Works for a pair of light cruisers ordered by the Greek government and subsequently taken over by the Admiralty as Birkenhead and Chester in 1915. With its lighter 82-pound shell, the manually-operated 5.5in was not only easier to work but offered a rate of fire almost double that of the 6in mounting which preceded it. Meanwhile, greater elevation gave the 5.5in a range of 18,500 yards, 3,000 further than the 6in. Besides the Hood, the 5.5in was fitted in the 'large light cruiser' Furious, the carrier Hermes and the submarine K J7, but the introduction of powered mountings in the 1920s brought an end to this line of development. onetheless, the 5.5in has secured its place in history, for it was while serving one of Chester's gun that Boy Jack Cornwell was mortally wounded at Jutland, the latter joining the constellation of Britain's naval heroes and the former passing into the collections of the Imperial War Museum. Fire control was provided on imilar lines to the main armament, though scaled down both in size and complexity. Targeting data was supplied to the 5.5in Transmitting Room by four directors, two on each side of the spotting top (moved to the signal platform in 1934) and two more on the boat deck. Each was topped with a nine-foot rangefinder. The Transmitting Room, lying on the lower deck beneath the conning tower, produced aiming instructions for the guns by means of a pair of Type F fire-control clocks. Unlike the 15in Transmitting Station, it was capable of supplying data for two separate targets, one for each battery. As with the turrets, corrections to the elevation and training of the guns were transmitted to dials in each mounting, the layer and trainer making the requisite adjustments with their handwheels. In the event of a failure of the primary system the guns hifted to quarters firing which divided the twelve mountings into four groups of three, each controlled by an officer of quarters from a nearby po ition on the quarterdeck. It was originally intended to fit a total of sixteen 5.5in guns, the extra four mountings being positioned to fire aft from the forecastle and boat decks.
However, consideration of weight required these to be eliminated and the Hood was therefore completed with a secondary armament which could not engage a target finer than 30 degrees on either quarter. As fitted, the Hood's battery was thus limited to firing arcs of D-135 degrees off the bow in the case of Port and Starboard No. I groups, and 3D-ISO degrees for Port and Starboard o. 2 groups. eedless to add, each gun was capable of independent control. The most remarkable aspect of the Hood's 5.5in battery was the means by which it was supplied with ammunition. The shell rooms and magazines for the secondary guns were located in the hold and on each of the platform decks in spaces adjacent to those for the main armament. Shells and 22-pound cordite cartridges stored in Clarkson's cases were selected and loaded by hand onto eight dredger hoists which brought them in a continuous stream up to the ammunition working spaces on the main deck. Here they were retrieved from the hoists and passed through flash tight scuttles to teams of men waiting in the lobbies with steel barrows. Loaded with shells and cartridges, the barrows were then wheeled at full tilt down the ammunition passages lying almost 300 feet along each side of the ship. Rising from these passages was a second range of dredger hoists, one for each of the six guns on that side of the vessel. Reaching the appointed hoist, the barrow man saw his cargo through the flash tight loading scuttle before racing back for more. To imagine the 5.5in batteries in action is therefore to form a picture of scores of men chasing back and forth along the main deck, dodging ladders and each other while charging at doorways wide enough to admit only one barrow at a time. Accidents were common, and at 200 pounds it didn't do to have an altercation with a loaded shell barrow. Louis Le Bailly: ... My initial call to battle came as I was luxuriating in my first bath for a week after the ship had returned to Scapa Flow. Girding my towel around my loins, I leapt over the coaming of the wardroom bathroom straight into a steel barrow loaded with two 5.5" shells wheeled by an enthusiastic sailor. I came off worst. As I tried to staunch the wound the 'all clear' sounded.'" But 5.5in ammo supply certainly had its lighter moments. As AB John Bush (I928-9) recalled, there was an irresistible temptation to use the hoists for the dispatch of other items to the guns, items that had little to do with ordnance: During my time I worked mostly as a QO [Qualified Ordnanceman) among those 5.5's, and had fun with the dredger hoist ammo supply which occasionally brought up odd socks and vests. One of the supply doors was opposite the for'd seamen's bathroom!"O The business of firing the guns began with the order 'Load! Load! Load!' with which the ammunition started its circuitous journey from the depths of the ship. A 5.5in gun had a crew of nine men, including a layer, trainer, sight setter and breech worker, the other five acting as loading numbers. On reaching the batteries (or the boat deck in the case of the Port and Starboard o. 2 guns), the shells and cartridges were fetched from the receiving tray of the hoist and prepared for loading. At the order'Commence' a hell would be thrust into the chamber,
III
See Roberts. The Bartlecruiser Hood. p. 21. RaskilJ. The \Var at Sea,l, p. 404. and id.. Churchill and the Admirals. p. 296.
". CAC, LEBY t12, MS of The Man Around the Engine. ch. 13. p. 4. lJO
John Bush to David 'Veldon, Walsall, t 9 September 1965.
56
The Batt/ecruiser HMS HOOD
Above: A S.Sin shoot by Marines manning Port NO.4 gun, (.1935. To the left of the gun men stand by with shells and cordite. Obscured inside the mounting
are the gun layer to the left of the barrel and the trainer to the right. The figure standing on the mounting in overalls may be an ordnance artificer. The breech operator stands on the right while a second man prepares to sponge out the chamber from a barrel of water. HMi Hood ADoc.I.tlOnlWillrs CoIl«tJon
Right: Stowage for ready·use shells and sponge on the bulkhead abaft Starboard NO.1 5.5;n gun, late 19305. HMS Hood Auocj.r/OftlH'99'nson CoIl«t.lOI"I
IJI
Two S.Sin guns were installed at
Coalhouse Fon. East Tilburv in 19-10 where the)' remained until the 1950,. Ull am gralefullo Mr Nigel Ling for bringing this incident to my attention. l)j Eller. Remm15Ctmces, II, p. 461.
the cordite rammed in after it and the breech slammed shU[, an electric circuit closing as the lever turned. Once his sights were 'on' the layer squeezed the trigger, the gun erupting with a yellow fla h a it recoiled on its cradle. '0 sooner had it returned to the firing position than the breech was wung open, the chamber cleared and the next shell inserted. A well-drilled crew could get off twelve rounds per minute, but for all its utility the 5.5in shell proved to have significantly less destructive power than its 6in predecessor. Trouble was also experienced loading the gun at high angles of elevation, though the fire-control arrangements were in any case unable to exploit the additional range offered by the gun. The mountings also proved susceptible to weather damage, while the one-inch splinter shield afforded the men less protection than that behind which Cornwell and his companions had been cut down at Jutland. Above aU, the Hood's 5.5in battery was extremely labour-intensive, requiring 350 men to supply and operate it-only 50 fewer than were needed for her main armament. The threat of war therefore urged the replacement of the 5.5in with a modern weapon and the result was the installation of the twin 4in Mk XVI high-angle gun between 1939 and 1940. However, the de perate shortage of naval ordnance meant that the Hood's 5.5in guns had by no means reached the
end of their ervice. At least four were assigned to shore defence on the south coast of England in 1940 and another can still be seen at T6rshavn in the Faeroes. '" Two more were dispatched to Ascension Island where they were set up as a battery overlooking Georgetown in 1941. They were soon in action, engaging U-124 on 9 December after she had surfaced to hell the island cable station as a diversion while Axis submarines rescued survivors from the supply ship Py/holl and the raider A/lalltis. 1J2 The guns, abandoned after the war, maintain their vigil over the Atlantic. The replacement of the 5.5in guns began at Portsmouth in the spring of 1939 with the removal of Port and Starboard o. 2 guns on the boat deck. This was completed in April and May of the following year with the extraction of the remaining ten gun, thereby clearing the port and starboard batteries of their ordnance. Also removed in the spring of 1940 were the four 4in quick-firing Mk V gun which, inadequate though they were, had formed the mainstay of the Hood's anti-aircraft defence until the installation of the first porn-porn mountings in 1931. The replacement for both these types came in the form of seven twin 4in high-angle mountings which were installed on the reconstructed boat deck. Fitted to a Mk Xl)( mounting, each Mk XIV gun was capable of firing 20 shells per minute at a maximum elevation of 80°. Their installation required the removal or conversion of all existing fire-control equipment for secondary or high-angle guns. Suitably modified, the 5.5in director on the signal platform were retained for surface targets, but the High-Angle Control System was upgraded with its Mk III variant, two sets being installed on the signal platform and another on the after control position. The nerve-centre of the Hood's anti-aircraft capability was the High-Angle Control Position, transferred to the space vacated by the removal of the submerged torpedo tubes in 1937. Highangle fire control operated on the same principle as the director system, though complicated by the speed and three-dimensional trajectory of it target. The HACS tachymetric calculating tables had therefore to supply not only the elevation and training pointers to the guns, but also the fuse setting for the shells 0 that they could detonate at the altitude of the aircraft. The guns were usually fired remotely from the HA directors but could also be activated by the gun layer or breech worker. In the event, the Hood did not survive long enough for any truly effective HA system to be installed and this remained a weak point in her defence. The verdict of Ltdr Ernest Eller, the U.S. avy's official observer in Hood in the spring of 1941, cannot be disputed: While on board I inspected the ship from the bottom to the top and particularly the fire-control equipment with the anti-aircraft armament. These were inadequate. The fire-control director was far behind our . The guns were the 4.5s [actually 4 inch] and they weren't as accurate as ours or as long range.'" With their increased volume of fire the installation of the twin 4in mountings required significant conversions to the Hood's secondary magazines and shell rooms. The quick-firing 4in gun used fixed ammunition so rounds could be stored in magazines and shell rooms alike, but stowage had to be provided for both high-angle and low-angle rounds of which a
57
A TOllr of the Ship
total of 500 were carried for each of the fourteen barrels. This called for the conversion not only of the old 4in HA magazine, but also the small-arms magazine on the platform deck directlyabove it and the Engineers' store in the hold. Dredger hoists continued to send shells up to the two working spaces on the main deck, but the steel barrows were done away with and new procedures instituted. The ten dredger hoists serving the batteries had of course departed with their guns, but those supplying the two boat-deck 5.5in guns were retained so that 4in rounds from the forward shell rooms could reach the boat deck. Matters were somewhat different aft where the two hoi ts supplying the old 4in HA guns were pressed into service for the new guns. These hoists had been designed to bring shells and cordite from the lower platform to the old HAs in a single step and it must be assumed that measures were taken to convert them to receive shells from the aft working space on the main deck. Whatever the case, the resulting arrangement still required the loading numbers to run back and forth across the boat deck cradling 65-pound shells for their guns.''' But these four hoists could never be expected to provide the guns with sufficient ammunition for a prolonged engagement and the Admiralty had therefore to resort to a singularly dangerous expedient where 4in ammunition supply was concerned: the installation of numerous ready-use shell lockers across the boat deck. The overdue improvement of the Hood's secondary armament was therefore bought at the expense of her integrity under battle conditions. On 24 May 1941 her boat-deck crews would pay the price. Nor, with hindsight, wa the effectiveness of the secondary armament sufficient to warrant the danger it now posed to the safet)' of the crew. In 1934 and 1935 the Hood's 4in Mk V guns had won her the first two Home Fleet High-Angle Trophy competitions but this standard of gunnery was not maintained and in the spring of 1936 Capt. Pridham bluntly informed his 5.5in crews that 'they were not fit for me to take into action against even an Eyetie ship'.us Matters had greatly improved by the time of Pridham's departure in 1938 but recommissioning, months in dockyard hands and the installation of new armament made for a very green ship on the outbreak of war. Drill and organisation left much to be desired, a successful attack by a Ju 88 in the North Sea in September 1939 going completely unchallenged by the Hood' gun crews. As late as August 1940 Vice-Admiral Sir James Somerville was reporting 'much-needed exercises and practices' in gunnery, brought home no doubt by Italian high-level bombing in the Mediterranean. I " The new 4in mounting required a crew of sixteen. A layer and trainer aimed the guns by following pointers in the usual way, but each barrel was loaded by a relay of men forcing shells into a sliding breech block, the gun firing automatically before ejecting the casing. It behoved the loading number to ram the shell home with his fi t or else ri k losing his fingers in the breech mechanism. 00 B.A. Carlisle (1940-1) recalls the procedure: We did fire our 4· anti-aircraft guns in practice shoots and most of the trainee ODs were given a stint at loading these guns. One had to pick up a 4· shell and when one's time for loading came round rush up and heave it into the breech making sure it had been driven home: these
mountings had twin guns and being very right-handed I was fortunately loading on the left-hand gun where one's right shoulder and arm gave the shell the necessary push. The noise of the firing was deafening and I don't recall being given ear plugs. 1J7 Each mounting was capable of firing 40 rounds per minute, but this rate was soon slowed by the labour of retrieving shells from lockers and hoists and the efforts of the loaders to avoid tripping over the empty casings accumulating about the gun. This apart, it seems that accuracy was never particularly good, even against surface targets. Lt-Cdr Joseph Wellings U.S.N., observing from the destroyer Eskimo, made these notes of a 4in target firing as the Hood approached capa Flow on 19 October 1940:
I~
AB Robert Tilburn's evidence to the second Board of Inquiry into the loss of the Hood also alludes to ammunition being supplied 'through the hatch abreast the after funnel', presumably that on the port side of the ship; PRO, AD~I 116/4351. p. 364. m Pridham, Memoirs, II. p. 168. 1J6 Simpson (ed), Tile Somerville Papers,p.131. lJ7 S\V\VEC, 2001/1376, p. 5.
Speed of Hood during practice: 20 knots. Destroyers continued to act as anti-submarine screen. Target a battle raft about two-thirds size of ours. Target course about Leh: Part of the crew of the
Hood', Starboard 4in Mk V HighAngle gun pose by their weapon
in ga,ma,k, in July 1932. Like all ,hip, in the Royal Navy, the Hood developed an elaborate organisation to deal with gas attack following the Great War. Vice-Admiral Tomkinson's 3D-foot gig hangs on its davits and Renown lies beyond. Wright" Log.n
Below: Preparing the launch of a kite for target practice with the pom-poms or 4in High-Angle gun" c. 1935. HMS Hood AuocMtlonlWillis ColIKrlOll
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
58
parallel to course of Hood. Target speed about 5 knots. Port broadside firing range about 7-8,000 yards. Salvo interval: 7-9 seconds; number of salvoe : 10. All but two salvoes at least 500 yard over and to right of target. Two salvoe were in line about 200 yard short. Starboard broadside range 5-6,000 yards. Salvo interval: 6-9 seconds; number of salvoes: 10. First salvo landed about 800 yards short. Target was not crossed until the seventh salvo, which was off in deflection.'''' Thirty years later and in the light of his own war service in the Pacific, Wellings offered this appraisal of the Hood's principal gun nery systems: We believed Captain Glennie of the Hood operated a smart, efficiently-run ship, and that he was very gunnery conscious. He conducted some form of gunnery exercise at every opportunity. We thought that the Hood's main battery of eight 15 guns mounted in four twin turrets fired some excellent target practices. However, we thought N
A sequence of photos showing a practice shoot at sea for the crew
of Hood's Starboard NO.3 4in Mk XIX mounting, c.1940. In the first photo the crew are waiting to go into action. The layer and trainer are out of sight on either side of the barrels while the loading numbers queue up with their
64lb shells. The white·gloved hand seen on the left side of the mounting is probably that of the Captain of the Gun. In the second photo a pair of empty casings are being automatically ejected onto the deck where a man prepares to sweep them out of the way. In the third, shells are being thrust into the sliding breech blocks. The two men in
duffel coats on the edge of the mounting are probably breech numbers. Note the shells ranged on deck and the ready-use lockers behind the gun. Cd, Jeffrey Wi!Ii.m
Cr~wford
u. \Veilings, 0" His Majesty's Ser"ice, p. 44. N\\'C, \Vellings. Remi"iscences, p. 74. The 'we' refers to Wellings and officers of the destroyer H"tS Eskimo. 1
I"
that the Hood's secondary battery, comprised of fourteen 4 guns, was at times very erratic, although on balance the secondary baltery deserved a passing mark.'" N
The evidence suggests that Wellings' closing remarks were perhaps over-generou ,but as in other areas this was an aspect of the Hood's fighting capacity which could not be tested before the moment of reckoning came. Her 3-pounder saluting guns apart, the balance of the Hood's conventional armament was made up of 2-pounder pom-poms and O.5in machine-gun mountings. The first pompoms were fitted abreast the fore funnel in 1931, a third being added on a specially constructed bandstand abaft the control po ition in 1937. These mountings, called 'Chicago pianos' in the avy, were eventually christened 'Peter' (port), 'Sammy' (starboard) and 'Auntie' (aft). Crewed by eight men, the eightbarrelled porn-porn offered an anti-aircraft barrage of about 800 rounds per minute with an effective range of about J ,800 yards. As S. Pearson (ship unknown) relates, serving a pompom was a little like riding a carousel: In action only the Captain of the gun, gunlayer and trainer and phone number were on the gun mounting. The rest were inside the steel shelter. We had to haul the boxes of ammo up from the magazine by block and tackle. When the trays on the gun needed topping up, it was quite hilarious at times as the gun was continuously revolving. We did our best chasing it to jump on and slide the belts of shells on, pushing them along and clipping them on to the adjoining ones. But even in action we could see the humorous side ... During a lull in the action we were busy clearing away empties, dumping them over the side, then topping the surrounding lockers up with more ammo."O In the Hood's case the ready-use magazines were placed under the bandstand and on the forecastle deck beneath each mounting. Simple hand-operated directors were fitted on the fore top (later moved to the fore bridge) and the after superstructure to provide laying and training instructions to the guns, though no great accuracy could be expected from an unstabilised mounting. However, the porn-porn certainly looked the part and much was expected from this ugly brute with its ear-splitting cacophony of fire. As OA Bert Pitman put it, 'the smaller the gun, the louder the noi e'.'" Almost as noi y though considerably less effective were the four quadruple 0.5in machine-gun mountings fitted on the conning tower platform and the boat deck in 1933 and 1937. The names given to the two forward mountings, 'Pip' and 'Squeak', indicates the general opinion of their worth. Surgeon Lt (D) William Wolton (I936-8) had his dental surgery on the boat deck directly under 'Squeak': Sometimes no warning was given that they were about to fire. The effect on me was haltering. But the gunners never seemed to hit any targets towed by planes'" Then there was the apparatus that Capt. Stephen Roskill, responsible for anti-aircraft defence at the Admiralty from 1939-4 J, later described as an 'abortion', Professor Lindemann's Naval "Vire Barrage, more commonly known as
59
A Tour of the Ship
Above: An important view showing the state of Hood's secondary armament in the latter half of 1938. 'Sammy', the Mk V porn-porn mounting installed on the starboard side of the boat deck, is about to go into action. Forward of it is the recuperator cylinder of one of the 4in Mk V High-Angle mountings fitted in place of the boat-deck 5.Sin guns at Malta that summer; just aft is one of a second pair installed over the 5.5in batteries in the autumn of 1937. These were no more than temporary measures until the twin 4in Mk XIX mountings could be
A quadruple O.Sin machine-gun mounting of a type not dissimilar
to those fitted in Hood. c. 1940. Each water-cooled barrel was fed by its own ammunition drum.
fitted the following year. The bell-shaped structure with its lid propped open in the foreground is one of the emergency signal tubes. part of a system that allowed signals to be hoisted from a station on the main deck in the event of the f1ag-deck crews being wiped out. Visible between this and the porn-porn is one of the two expansion joints fitted athwart the boat deck to allow for the flexing of the hull in a head sea. The large structure on the right is one of the S.Sin director towers. HMS Hood AsJoc~tlO(l/~v./CoI1«tion
the UP launcher.'" The machinations of thi device and the trials of using it are discussed elsewhere; suffice to add that ready-use projectile stowage for this weapon brought the number of ammunition lockers ranged on the Hood's boat deck to over 40. 144 The Hood's final secondary armament was therefore something of a hotchpotch, greatly improved from her pre-war outfit but still inadequate for the tasks she was likely to encounter. The installation of her Type 279M air-warning radar seems to have been completed before she left Rosyth in pursuit of the SciramllOrst and Gneisellall on 18 March 1941 but may never have become fully operational. It was no doubt felt that the long-awaited reconstruction which would overhaul all her fittings could not be delayed much longer. But time had run out for HM Hood. As Lt-Cdr Eller noted in a different context, she couldn't stick it out, couldn't last long enough to win her second chance.
Belting 2-pounder porn-porn ammunition in the port battery,
c. 1935. HMS Hood AsJoci.rlonlWilfis Col/«tion
I.' RoskilJ, CllIlrchill arid the Admirals, pp. 295-6. I~
Ch. 8, p. 205.
The Battlecrlliser HMS HOOD
60
3 Glory Ship In what distant deeps or skies Burnt the fire of thine eyes?
N 29 MARCH 1920 the Hood commissioned to full complement at Rosyth in the Firth of Forth. That a high proportion of her 1,150 officers and men should have come from the battlecruiser Lion was no accident. Under ViceAdmiral Sir David Beatty the Lion had become the most famou ship in the Royal I avy, the bloodied veteran of Heligoland Bight, the Dogger Bank and Jutland. ow that she was passing into the reserve there could be no more fitting vessel to receive her mantle than the Hood, the promised flagship of the post-war Navy. Before the year was out the Hood had assumed that mantle in full and in doing so had traced the pattern of her next twenty years. As Lior, had been a great ship of war Hood was to prove herself the great vessel of peace.
O
·....,;,11>....
~
H~IS Hood Association archives. Fairbairn, TI,e Narrat;\'e of a Nm'al Nobody, pp. 234-5.
On 15 May the Hood weighed anchor at Rosyth and steamed south for the first time. Pausing in Cawsand Bay to hoist the flag of Rear-Admiral Sir Roger Keyes, the hero of Zeebrugge, she made her way up Plymouth Sound to her home port for the nex1 decade. 0 sooner had the Hood reached Devonport than she was assigned the first in a long succession of diplomatic missions on which her peacetime reputation would be built. The Bolshevik revolution in ovember 1917 had made Allied intervention first in Russia and then the Baltic essential for strategic, commercial and humanitarian reasons. ,Vhere the Royal Navy was concerned this entailed landings at Murmansk, Archangel and elsewhere on Russian soil along with a significant presence in the Baltic from 1918, operations which stretched its resources and tested its resolve to the limit. Despite the effort expended by Britain and her allies, by 1920 the Soviets had gained the upper hand against the "''!lite Russians and the forces of intervention. As the outcome of the Russian Civil War became apparent the policy of the British government became one of preserving the sovereignty of the Baltic tates and maintaining its interests and presence in that region. To this end, the Admiralty ordered Keyes to take the Hood, the battlecruiser Tiger and nine destroyers into the Baltic to alert the oviet fleet at Kronstadt of the consequences of any offensive activity that summer. In the event, the easing of tensions with the Soviets and ongoing negotiations with her neighbours restricted the Battle Cruiser Squadron to the agreeable cruise of Scandinavia which had been planned as cover for the operation. In retrospect, the Scandinavian cruise seems very much the beginning of a newera of naval diplomacy which, while it la ted, found no greater emissary than HMS Hood, the velvet fist of British sea power. Nearing Denmark on the evening of 31 May Capt. Wilfred Tomkinson held a memorial service on the Hood's quarterdeck for the dead of Jutland over whose graves they were then passing. It was four years since an earlier generation of battlecruisers had met disaster under German gunfire. But the guns were still now and Keyes' squadron was given
a rapturous welcome in Scandinavia. Gunner 'Windy' Breeze, Royal Marine Artillery (1920-2), has this memoir of it: We were the first British ships to visit these countries after the war and what a welcome we got. The first stop was Christiania (now Oslo), up the fiord ... with many near stops to negotiate the bends, and finally into a wide open basin with the town built all round-a most splendid sight, the land of the midnight sun. We had many ceremonial guards of honour etc. King Haakon and Queen Maud came aboard; the Queen was a sister of our King George V. Free parties ashore and entertainment aboard-one whole round of festivities. ext on to Kalmar for the visit to Stockholm: we had to anchor as only the destroyers could get to Stockholm, and we went by train with a wood-fired engine with plenty of stop for fuel. Now on to Copenhagen for the final visit. Tivoli Gardens was the highlight of this visit with all the free parties and entertainment, and here we had thousands of visitors coming aboard, including the King and Queen of Sweden and the King of Denmark. [... J The quarter-deck was always rigged for dancing with the awning spread and the Marine band playing.' The Hood's midshipmen had a field day. Lt-Cdr Douglas Fairbairn (1920): All that evening the ship was surrounded by the youth and beauty of Oslo in motor-boats and canoes, while big sailing yachts with parties on board passed close by. The snotties had the time of their lives fishing for 'mermaids' out of the stern ports: by means of chocolates balanced on the blades of oars the}' lured the fair Norwegian damsels in their canoes close to the hip, and made them promi e to come on board and dance after dinner. The British Consul had rashly said that he would be able to provide at short notice at least fifty Norwegian ladies who could dance. We kept him at his word, and within a few hours of our arrival they and the 'mermaids' were dancing on our quarterdeck.' Beautiful a the land cape and people were, there was little doubt that the Hood was making an equally lasting impression on all who saw her. Fairbairn describes the passage up Oslofjorden: A few miles farther on comes the narrowest part, a strait nearly ten miles long and but half a mile wide, with 600 feet of water under the ship' bottom. With the wooded shore slipping past on either side, the Hood pursued her stately way through this narrow channel. At each little village we passed were crowds of cheering Norwegians, some of whom even swam out towards the ship. At every white flagstaff among the trees the Torwegian flag was
Glory Ship
flying, and dipped in salute to us as we went by: this continued for a whole hour. It was a wonderful welcome, and to those ashore the mighty Hood, the largest warship in the world, winding her way through those land-locked waters must have been a magnificent sight.' As a visible symbol of a nation's power the Hood can scarcely ever have been equalled. For the avy the Hood's role as its flagbearer was matched only by her reputation as the premier sporting ship in the fleet and it was for this that many of her men would remember her. The view is summarised by a member of the 1933-6 commission:
What a ship! Efficient. Fast. Happy. Beautiful lines. Good at sport. Football. Running... Good at everything. COCK OF THE FLEET!' Already on her maiden voyage south in May 1920 the foundations were being laid for a great athletic tradition, men being selected to represent the ship in each of the main sports competed for in the Navy. The emphasis on sport was one of the key elements of the Royal Navy between the wars, though ironically it was a product not of peace but of war. During its vigil at Scapa Flow the Grand Fleet had turned to organised sporting activity as one of the few outlets for its men in their long confinement. After the war a pinched economy, reduced opportunities for training and the increasing acceptance of the need for physical activity to maintain health and morale led to organised sport being placed on a permanent footing for the benefit of all ranks and rates.' In March 1920 the Royal avy and Royal Marines Sports Control Board was formed as an adjunct of the Admiralty's Physical Training and Sports Branch to provide financial and other support, and with this sport in the Navy never looked back. A year later the Hood received her first Physical and Recreational Training Officer. For the avy, par-
61
ticularly after the Invergordon Mutiny of 1931, it was a case of
Mens sana in corpore SallO and sporting activity was pursued with increasing vigour as the 1930s unfolded. The basis of shipboard sport was the inter-part competition, the organisation of games by Division, Watch, Branch or Department, in Hood's case usually seamen, Marines, stokers, artificers and artisans, Supply and Communications ratings. These teams competed in several sports and from them were drawn the sides that represented the ship in fleet events. The organisation of each sport at both inter-part and fleet level was entrusted to an officer and on his zeal and the morale of his men depended the ship's chances of victory. Among the most popular was football, played both in organised competitions ashore and as a gesture of goodwill at home and abroad. During the coal and rail strikes of 1921 the Hood's seamen had eased tensions with rioting miners at Cowdenbeath near Edinburgh by challenging them to a game.' The result of the match is not on record but there were certainly some upsets during the Hood's long sporting career. At Vancouver in 1924 her team was defeated by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police by an undisclosed margin. However, the Battle Cruiser Squadron went down only 7-2 to Brazil's national side in 1922 and Santos, Pele's future team, they beat 2-1. . .' By the 1930s tlle Hood was able to field a dozen sides for inter-part football from which the ship's team was selected for the King's Cup, the fleet trophy competed for each year. Another important sport was cross-country running in which ships provided teams of 30 men for the Arbuthnot Trophy, known as 'The Bronze Man'. As Rory O'Conor, Commander of the Hood from 1933-6 and the driving force behind her sporting success, noted, Running is a healthy exercise possessing the great advantages of needing no special pitch and of being unaffected by bad weather. It is not everyone's idea of fun, but it has an ever-increasing number of adherents'
Hood glides into Devonport wearing the flag of Rear-Admiral Sir Roger keye" c. , 920. The lattice structure abaft the after superstructure appears to have
been a prototype wrr set. Bibliorh~k
fur Zeitgei
, Ibid., pp. 233-4. ~ HMS Hood Association, Newssheet No.2 (c. 1975). ~ On this sec the essa)'s and debates in Nm'ol Review, i & 8 (1919 & 1920). 6' Coles & Briggs, Flagsllip Hood, p. 19. - Brazilian details frolll Connor, To Rio al/d Back, p. 19. RBS, pp. ) 49-50.
----------------------------------------"""'Il!.I
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
There was certainly no shortage of adherents in the Hood which won the Arbuthnot Trophy three years running between 1933 and 1935. However, as O'Conor indicated, cross-country running was something of a trial and with this twin brothers Fred and Frank oombs (1935-8) would certainly have agreed. It is the autumn of 1935:
Below: Hoods athletes pose at Malta in the winter of 1938-9
with the Arbuthnot Trophy for cross-country running, probably the last major sporting competition she ever won. One of the ship's liferings hangs from a length of ventilation trunking beside 'X' turret. capt. Harold Walker in the centre. M,John#W~
... To make a change, we took the opportunity to get ashore by taking parr in a cross-country running race. It was a mistake to be regretted for a long time. All the runners were landed on Weymouth Pier to wait the starr and, unfortunately, found a nice fresh water tap which was nectar compared with the Aat, stale water aboard, 0 took in a bladder full which was a mistake as a toilet could not be found before the start. After a lot of milling and pushing about 150 of us set off... but we soon became separated. Frank thinking that Fred was up in front increased his pace and Fred thinking that Frank was behind slowed down and we never did meet up till it was too late ... Frank, seeing that he had caught up with the ... well known figure of Leading Steward Barnes, the avy runner, in front, decided that if he stuck near them there wa more chance of stopping to relieve himself when the country bit was reached. nfortunately that bit was never
reached and he wa still suffering from the effects of a bladder full of beautiful tap water when the finishing line was reached. Also, unfortunately, seeing a sign for toilets he was encouraged to make a sprint for them and in doing so passed a Leading Seaman, Potts, a promotion-seeking experienced runner who took offence at being pushed into 5th place by a common Boy and was heard to be casting parental doubts on a crafty Boy... Frank, on returning aboard, attended the Sick Bay where he was found to have a temperature and was kept in. On being visited by the Doctor he was told that he had strained his stomach muscles and was confined to bed for a few days' Running was one of the activities in which officers competed alongside the men but others like cricket, golf, squash and polo remained very much the preserve of the wardroom. However, rugby was increasingly played by ratings of the Devonport Division after the Great War, many of whom no doubt saw it as the perfect opportunity to get some of their own back on officer. In this they were not alone. Mid. Ross Warden (1940-1) recalls a physical match between the Hood's wardroom and gunroom officers in the autumn of 1940: This was a golden opportunity to settle any outstanding scores. Anything goes was our motto, but alas we found our senior officer more than able to return elbows, knees and (when the referee was not looking) the occasional fist. Twice our Commander, who was referee, threatened to call a halt. However, there were no fatalities, and a good time was had by all.'O The avy had a great tradition in rugby and in 1933 there were no fewer than 50 living members of the Royal avy and Royal Marines Rugby Union with international caps, among them W.j.A. Davies, Constructor Commander in the Hood in 1937-8 and still regarded a one of the game's finest players. The other sport offering the chance of beating hell out of an officer was of course boxing. AB Fred Copeman, Invergordon mutineer and champion pugilist:
Right: The captain of Hood's victorious 1926 Battle Cruiser Squadron Cup football team poses with Capt. Harold Reinold on his left and Rear-Admiral Cyril Fuller on his right. They are on the starboard side of the Night defence control station, its viewing slits closed off with louvre shuners. HMS Hood AssociafionlReinold ColIKrion
'I\¥!ol, 91/711, p. 46. 10 \-Varden, 'Memories of the Battle Cruiser H.M.5. "Hood": p. 84. II IWM/SA, no. 794, reel 12. Copeman did not sen'e in Hood.
Mind you, I was a bit of a boxer and a footballer. I was all sport. And I was well known in the avy, you see, especially in [the championships]. And I was lud:y because in the ... championships I always met a big fat commander. And there's nothing better than the thrill of thumping an officer. And I used to thump them good and proper. I really had a good one there. I used to take a pasting, you know. But once I got that on they didn't last. And they always used to wait for old Fred. 'Right. p we gO!'1I But it wasn't one-way traffic by any means. Cdr (G) E.H.G. 'Tiny' Gregson lost in the Hood in May 1941, won consecutive heavyweight boxing titles between 1925 and at least 1931. Regrettably, this was another sporr in which the Coombs twins came unstuck. Malta in the spring of 1937: Between us we brought the crowd to its feet when it was Fred's turn to go in the ring. The fights were being staged in the Corradino Canteen in Malta, which was packed with the normal complement of sailors on shore for their
63
Glory Ship
usual few pints ... and a lot of boxing enthusiasts ashore to see the fights. At that time Service boxing was pure amateur with no fancy boots or gum shields. The only difference being that the boy from the red corner tied a red sash round his waist and the other wore green. Other than that it was navy blue socks and white blancoed gym slippers below the ordinary white sports shorts and vest up top. There was no need for a boxer's hair cut as our instructors and the ship's barber made sure that we still had the Boys' hair cut of short back and sides which could mean nearly bald. As in amateur boxing, no shouting or cheering was allowed when the fight was taking place, this being reserved for in between round breaks. There was a fair buzz went up when the difference was seen between the two boys' sizes. Most of the support was for Fred as the underdog is always the favourite but, as usual in boxing, a 'good big 'un' will always beat a 'good little 'un'. After the success of his first fight in going in under a bigger lad's guard he had been advised to do the same and was getting away with it and we thought he was ahead on points in the first round. Whether his opponent from the battleship Barham had used his first round to practise in was not known but half-way through the second round ... saw Fred still keeping out of his way with long left jabs and, occasionally catching his opponent with what we colloquially described as 'hitting him in the shitlocker' and getting away with it. He did it once too often and, as he went down and under with his right the other lad went up and over with his short left timed nicely to catch Fred's chin going down as his left came up and sitting Fred on his backside. The whole hall was deathly silent as Fred sat there trying to move his head to find out if it was still on his neck. At the back [I] broke the spell by shouting 'Gerrup, Fred!' ... Fred was not listening but all the rest heard it and proved that pathos is next door to humour by breaking out into uncontrolled laughter,leaving just Fred and [I] with tears in [our) eyes. That finished the twins' boxing career as hard hitters. We found that there was always someone who could hit harder but it stood us in good stead and we proved that there was more in our make-up than the ability to get into trouble." Like rugby and football, boxing was one of the few organised sports to survive the onset of war in 1939. On the evening of 29 July 1940 a match took place in the Ark Royal at Gibraltar with Hood's men in the green corner and their hosts in the red. The Hood won by six. bouts to four. Other sports included tug-of-war, fencing, shooting, field hockey, tennis and water polo. The latter enjoyed considerable popularity and games are recorded against the battleship uss Maryland at Gibraltar in March 1922, against the Mayor of Hartlepool's XI in September J 932, and against a Yugoslav naval side at Split five years later which swam out to the ship, thrashed the Hood's team and then swam back to shore after tea on the messdecks." Then there was bayonets, a form of fencing in which the Hood excelled under O'Conor, her men carrying off the Home Fleet's Palmer Trophy between 1934 and 1936. However, the blue ribband events were the sailing and particularly the pulling regattas. On these much of the ship's energies were expended as spring turned into summer.
From the moment of her commissioning in March 1920 rowing was a sport in which the Hood had a head start on the competition. Among the men bequeathed her from Lion was the cutter crew which had triumphed in the inaugural challenge forthe Rodman Cup in 1919. j eedless to say, they had little difficulty in repeating the performance at Portland that autumn, or in winning the Battle Cruiser Regatta at Lamlash on the Isle of Arran in August. Enormous prestige was attached to the Silver Coquerelle, the trophy which awaited the victor in the fleet pulling regatta in June each year. Rory O'Conor, Commander of the Hood between 1933-6, explains why: The Pulling Regatta is the principal sporting event in the Fleet, and for good reason. Eleven men only can represent their ship at football, and at cross-country running the largest team is thirty, but in a big-ship Regatta a team of nearly three hundred officers and men goes forth in the boats to do battle for their ship, and it is no wonder therefore that the Cock is the most highly prized of
Top: Boys boxing in an improvised ring on the forecastle, (.1935. HMS Hood Assoclat/onlWil/is ColleCfion
Above: Hood's marksmen pose with their trophies and weapons on the quarterdeck at Portsmouth, (.1935. With them is Capt. F.T.B. Tower, Cdr Rory O'Conor and Judy, O'Conor's West Highland terrier. Notice the brass tampions with the ship's (hough emblem decorating the muzzles of 'V' turret. HMS Hood /wociiJrionlCloJrk Collecrion
12
1\\';"1,9117/1, p. 59.
" Ibid., p. 70.
.... 64
The Battlecrlliser HMS HOOD
trophies; it is the reward of arduous training and of massed effort on a grand scale. [... 1 There is nothing in this world to surpass the heartfelt satisfaction and delight of a ship's company when the Cock comes on board-it is a moment worth living for and worth working for." Victory, as O'Conor demonstrated in 1935, required an enormous organisation: a large committee chaired by the Commander; an officer in charge of each of the twenty boats; picked racing coxswains to drive the men to the limit; a stockpile of oars, and above all weeks of arduous training. Fred and Frank Coombs were among O'Conor's oarsmen: At that time ... our only worry was that we had been caught up in the hard work of training to meet the needs of the Boys' cutters' crew. We did not mind the hard work of going out in a cutter at varied times during working hours, ... but [having to spendl at least one hour of each day, in our own time, ... pulling on our length of oar handle to raise the weight was sheer unadulterated hard work, particularly when the Instructor was walking round us giving us the occasional clip across the shoulders with a short length of knotted rope or stonnid,l' as it was called to encourage us. [... j After what seemed hour upon hour of boat pulling in practice and on the exercise frame came the honour of being named as bowmen in the Second Boys' Cutter's crew ... Almost every single hour of daylight was spent by some crew of the different divisions out in a pulling boat, practising and practising for the big day which seemed never to come." The gunroom also had its part to play. Vice-Admiral ir Louis Le Bailly recalls the regatta campaign of 1933:
14RBS,p.141.
91/711, p.44. I."IWM, le Bailly, Tire Mall Around the Engine. 26. Mids. Richard p.
Beckwith (1933--4?>. R.P. Thurstan (l933-4?>, R.CP. Wainwright (1933-4?l, Paymaster Mid. J. Chari.. (l932-3?), ,\Iids. T.). ~lacFarlan (1933-4'), A. Gra)' (1932-41) and Sub-Lt C.K.S. A)'lwin (l933-4?). "IWM, 91/7/1, p. 44. 1 'M~I, Elkins/I, Journal, 21 October 1921. 19 Pridham. Memoirs, II, p. 162. Cdr David Orr-Ewing. Executi\'e Officer of the Hood, 1936-9.
Admiral James and Captain Binney... set out to imbue the ship's company with the idea that the Hood should win the forthcoming fleet regatta. The gunroom soon discovered that we had a vital role to play in this. Traditionally the fleet gunrooms raced gigs for the Battenberg Trophy the day before the main regatta. A win by Hood's gunroom would be taken as a good augury for the following day. Failure however would be regarded as a bad omen against the ship becoming Cock of the Fleet. Then short and lean I was, I suppose, the obvious choice for coxswain. But for those who were to undertake the hard work we gathered a formidable crew; Beckwith as stroke, Thurstan, Wainwright, Charles, MacFarlan and Gray. [... 1 But we were young and enthusiastic and how we trained. The chaplain, the Rev J C Waters, himself a notable oarsman was in charge and the new sub, Aylwin, urbane and highly civilised, also took a hand. Even the messman's food improved (subsidised by the wardroom I heard many years later). We practised at dawn and dusk and some afternoons too. I found my duties involved taking charge of the methylated spirit for bli tered hands and bottoms. Gig's thwarts, however well polished, were not far removed from sandpaper." Both attempts were rewarded with victory. Le Bailly:
Hood's gunroom won the Battenberg Trophy: and next day
we raced again and won again. Much money changed hands as Hood became Cock of the Fleet. That evening Captain Binney sent down a case of champagne to the gunroom. Later I have a faint recollection of an invading posse of midshipmen from one of the battleships carrying me forcibly to our wardroom and casting me through the door, when I knew no more. The ne:\1 morning I awoke with the first in a lifetime of hangovers, recovering sufficiently to go over with the rest of the crews to HMS elsoll to receive our trophies from the great John Kelly himself. Fred Coombs: When [the day finally camel it was soon over but the taste of success and jubilations as we... proclaimed to the whole Fleet that the Mighty Hood was now Cock of the Fleet was to be ta ted for a long time." Equally, to surrender the Cock was the greatest of disasters. On 19 October 1921 the Hood lost the Battle Cruiser Cock to Repulse at Scapa Flow. Two days later it was handed over in a funereal atmosphere, the Marine band leading a proces ion consisting of the ship's goat mascot Bill and a party of midshipmen bearing the trophy, all to the strains of Chopin's Deatlr Marclr. However, once Capt. Dudley Pound had received the Cock on behalf of the Repulse he was piped over the side to the Squadron's own air, Tire Barrie-Cruisers.'· Also very popular were the sailing regattas though not as much prestige attached to the e as to their pulling equivalents. They were Francis Pridham's reigning passion during his tenure as captain of the Hood in 1936-8. His description of a race at Gibraltar in March 1938 reveal the skill, hazards and excitement which attended these occasions: During an assembly of the Home and Mediterranean Fleets at Gibraltar for a 'Stand Easy', the Hood created a record by taking all three places in the Gibraltar Cup Race, an annual evenl. The race was sailed in a full gale, and was full also of excitement, since boats were being dismasted and were capsizing aU round the nine-mile course. At one time my White Galley was the only boat of eighty-two competitors not reefed down. I had faith in my fully trained crew and good rigging. But my luck was out. I had taken an extra hand in the boat as 'live ballast', much needed until the gale eased. This otherwise excellent man, being strange to racing with me, failed to hold himself tight up the windward when we were hit by a heavy squall. He fell down to leeward causing the boat to heel over and ship water nearly up to her thwarts. At that time we were well in the lead, but now fell behind while we bailed out for dear life and got going again, steadily catching up all those boats which had passed us, except two. At the finish, Orr-Ewing was first in a cutter, Admiral unningham was second in his galley and I was third in my White Galley. A fine enough performance, but oh! if only I had not got half swamped and had held on to my lead, it would have been even better. I had been keen to beat the Admiral, a renowned boat-sailer, and was within an ace of doing 0" The sailing regattas had a particular hold on those who prized
65
Leh: A water polo match in the Mediterranean in the late 19305. Among the boats at the starboard boom are a whaler and one of the ship's steam pinnaces with her crew. HMS Hood A»oc.~rlonlPrt'cJv./Colimton
Leh: Bayonet practice on the quarterdeck, c. 1935. The Marine detachment was always represented in the Hood's bayonet teams. Notice the decorative brass plaque on the screen door. HMS Hood Association/WiIIl$ CoIIKr'Qn
Above: The conclusion of a race in the 1934 Home Fleet Regatta, during which Hood lost the Cock to Nelson, seen opposite. HMS Hood AsSOClartonlWillis CollKrion
Leh: Capt. Reinold poses with one of his boat crews in the Hood's successful challenge for the title of 'Cock of the Fleet' in 1926. the first of three consecutive victories in the Atlantic Fleet Regatta. The Silver (oquerelle sits before him. The commander to his left is presumably Arthur J. Power, Hood's Executive Officer from 1925-7 and later a distinguished admiral. Behind them is Port 4in Mk V High-Angle gun. HMS Hood AssooatlonlR~noJdCoIlKtJO(l
66
The Batt/ecruiser HMS HOOD
H_... .s.
~HOOO.-
-,...,. .t 1Ut4
"..
.....
-
The Chuffiosoaru5. Hood's mascot for the 1935 Regatta campaign. The name is a pun on ',hough' and ·oar'. The diminutive figure below is George, spirit of the Hood's sporting accomplishments. These two caricatures show the unmistakable influence of Cdr Rory O·Conor. Mn
Nut~ ToIWI"M'f"
Arnold.Forsler. TII£ Wal's of the Nm?" pp. 116-7. ~l Dreyer, The Sen Heritage. p. 276. u R8S, p. 149.
shiphandling as the truest test of seamanship and who felt a profound nostalgia for the lore of sail just as it was disappearing from the life of the avy. Rear-Admiral D. Arnold-Forster, writing in about) 930, captures the sentiment perfectly: In a really stiff freshening breeze a boat-sailer with confidence in himself and his crew will 'carryon' to the utmost limit before shortening sail, despite the solid water which is almost lapping over the lee side. With an eye glued on the 'luff' of the sails, the sheets firmly tended by the most experienced men of his crew, and eased slightly to the heavier puffs, he hangs on to the straining tiller, and steers so as to ride at an easy angle over any particularly nasty wave that would overwhelm the boat if taken direct. The wind often drops to a gentle breeze before the end of the race, and the midshipman of a boat may see their hated rival, whom they have outsailed fairly and squarely, creeping up with a local slant of wind. lothing could be more exasperating. Every eye in the boat scans the surface of the sea for ripples marking the approach of a puff of wind. The sheets are trimmed and everything done to make the most of every breath: the midshipman whistles softly to encourage the wind to come his way, whilst the foremast hands scratch the mast and stick knives into itan old sea superstition. It is not unusual to see two rival ships' cutters drifting down between the columns of ships towards the finishing line, each with twelve clasp-knives stuck like hedgehogs' quills in their masts!'o
ZO
" Tire CIIollgh, April 1936, p. 25. "See ch. 6, pp. 163-4.
However, there were many who believed that athletic excellence was being bought at the expense of fighting efficiency. One of them was Rear-Admiral Frederic Dreyer who flew his flag in Hood from 1927-9:
with great advantage before the First World War.' The Royal Artillery were better advised-they went on with their annual competition firings with coast-defence guns." It should be noted that Dreyer's tenure coincided with a hat trick of Cock and Rodman Cup victories for the Hood's oarsmen between 1926 and 1928. Rory O'Conor, as can be imagined, took quite a different view in Rllllllillg a Big Ship, the manual on ship husbandry he produced in 1937: It is easy to decry as pot-hunting the efforts of the enthusiastic to lead their ship to victory in sporting events, but those who say these things are often the ones who lack the spirit of leadership, or the ability (0 organise, and the will to carry things through. It is in many cases a facile excuse for slackness or indifference. Opportunities to prove ability to lead are too few in times of peace for any to be neglected. Can there be any reasonable person who would sooner be in a dull and apathetic ship as far as sport goes, as compared with being in one who is always keen and spirited? A good ship is one who is always 'there or thereabouts' in the achievement of anything to which she puts her hand. There is no substitute for going all out for your ship whether in work or in play, unless, of course, you are prepared to toddle complacently towards your pension."
lore impressive even than his results was the enormous spirit O'Conor was able to instil in his ship's company. 0 stone was left unturned. The embodiment of this spirit was 'George', a caricature in singlet and shorts who made his first appearance in the run-up to the 1935 Regatta. Here he is a year later in his footballing persona: GEORGE
'Not Eleven-Eleven Hundred.' Spectators from the Hood complete with cheerleader and banner before a football match against the Barham, c.1938. HMS Hood AsJod.rionKt.,1c CoIl«t;on
We carried out excellent and instructive practices by day and night, in which we did very well. But we would have done even better if there had been competitioll not merely in each Fleet but for the whole avy. It seemed to me so odd to say, 'Yes, we will have a terrific competition in our Bisley rifle meetings, but we will not have all- avy competition for guns of larger calibres as were carried out
George is the spirit of the Hood. Everyone in the ship carries a little bit of him and therefore he is only able to go full steam ahead when all the Hoods are present in support. Only eleven men can play for us on the field (not counting the Referee), but eleven hundred can support them! 'Not Eleven-Eleven Hundred' is the Hood's motto, and when all hands are manning the touchline, George will be there too. 23 O'Conor's first campaign for the IGng's Cup in the autumn of 1933 was accompanied by a chough mascot on a pole, borne at all matches. Ties were produced in the ship's colours for officers to wear ashore, green with the chough emblem. To this O'Conor added preferential treatment for his players, the Hood's football team being assigned a separate mess with specially designed kit lockers. By the time it was all over George had been transmogrified into a tax.idermal chough in a glass case, taking his place in a Commander's lobby awash with trophies. For all this, it is clear that by the late 1930s port had done its work in healing the wounds of Invergordon and as war clouds gathered far greater emphasis was needed on fighting efficiency. O'Conor's prescriptions for sporting victory would die with him in the bitter waters of the Mediterranean but the spirit which infused them lived on." Operational demands caused severe disruption to the avy's sporting calendar as the 1930s wore on, though the mantle of victory was one the Hood shrugged off only reluc-
67
Glory Ship
tantly. Patrol duty off pain prevented her competing for the Cock at Alexandria in 1938 but the record of trophies accumulated during her career outshines that of any other ship. Between J 920 and J 938, the last full year of competition, the Hood won the King's up once, the Rodman Cup at least four times, the Arbuthnot Trophy on at least four occasions and wa Cock of the Fleet on no less than five. During the 1933-6 commission she won virtually every competition in the Home Fleet at least once. This success engendered enormous pride in her ship's company. AB Len Williams (1936-41): She was probably the best loved ship in the service, and J, her latest, and very humble torpedoman, was very proud to be of her company." However, as the premier ship in the fleet the Hood had always been given a more than even chance of succeeding in anything she set herself to. As Pridham recalled when assuming command in 1936,
Above: Hood and Admiral Graf Spee about to meet on the football field at Tangier in September 1938. Hood's team colours consisted of green shirts and white shorts; they won 4-1.
J well remembered how Portsmouth had been cleared of all the best runners, boxers and footballers in order that the Hood should excel in any sports. 2'
HMS Hood Astoci.tronlCl.rk Coflfilion
Left: A team of stoker dart
But favoured she was from the very beginning. In November 1920 the Hood's Marine detachment was called on to supply the guard of honour at the burial of the Unknown Warrior in Westminster Abbey on Armistice Day, the men lining the Mall with bayonets fixed as the body passed on its way. As can be imagined, this did not go down well with the rest of the battlefleet which looked on the Hood as the only vessel in its ranks to have escaped service in the Great War. A few pint in the canteen ashore and certain men would be passing loud opinions on which was the best or worst ship in the fleet as the liberty boats cleared the jetty. Cdr eville Cambell was a cadet in Hood in the 1920s: When I was returning in a launch at Cromarty, an egg was thrown and burst at my feet. Then a voice yelled from a nearby ship: 'Yah! And what did the Mighty 'ood do in the bloody war?'27 Frequent brawls reflect a degree of resentment and no doubt the swagger of men who believed their ship to be a cut above any in the avy. As AB Bob Tilburn (1938-41) put it, The majority of people who joined the Hood believed they were lightly above average because it was the flagship of the fleet." However, much of this rivalry was essentially good-humoured in nature, the result of high spirits, a release of ten ion and the competitivene s that always existed between hips of different home ports. After months of arduous wartime service Hood and Rodlley viewed each other as 'chummy ships' but this did not prevent a good measure of ribaldry between the crews at Scapa Flow, and not just because the one was manned from Portsmouth and the other from Devonport. Over the winter of 1940-1 a rating in the Rodlley was court-martialled for committing an enormity with a sheep, an event which naturally
players triumphant at Malta. 1938. Darts was a popular messdeck activity and keenly contested in inter·part competition. HMS Hood A1.soc•• rlOfl1CJ.rk CoIl«!1OfI
persuaded the crew of the Hood that,follte de m;ellx, his shipmates all indulged the same proclivity on the windswept braes of Orkney. aD Jon Pertwee (1940-1): That night in the company of a phalanx of boozed-up Hood shipmates, I was weaving down the jetty prior to boarding our liberty boats, when we spied fifty or sixty liberty men off the Rodlley, waiting to be picked up by their boats. 'Let's see if the sheep-loving bastards can swim: cried a primed torpedo-man. With unanimous agreement we linked arms and advancing slowly, systematically swept the poor unfortunate men straight off the end of the jetty into the sea. Inevitably a few of us up front went in the 'oggin' with them, as the pushers at the back couldn't differentiate in the dark between Rodlley's crew and ours and didn't know when to stop. The drop from the end of the jetty was some fifteen feet and the resulting shouting and general hubbub from the tumbling men was tremendous. Apart from that the water was freezing and we realised that if we didn't get out quick, someone was going to drown. Suddenly the feud was forgotten, albeit temporarily, and everybody started helping everybody else to safety. Strange how immersion in cold water will kill off passion, in all its forms. The serio-comic end to the foray was that quite a few of the more drunken participants being capless and therefore
n WiJliams, Gone A LOl1g Journey, p.116. 16 Pridham. Memoirs, 11, p. 146. :1 Cited in Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, p. 47. "IWM/SA, no. 11746, reel I.
The Battlecrlliser HMS HOOD
68
unidentifiable, ended up in the 'Lions' Den' by finding themselves aboard the wrong ships_ From thai night on the crews of Rodl/ey and the Hood were understandably never allowed ashore at Ihe same time."
Perrwee. Moon BoolS mId Dinner Suits, p. 158. JO H~IS Hood Association archi\'es.
l'
memoir of toker Bill Stone
(1921-5). The joke alludes to the package tours for holidaymakers introduced by Thomas Cook in the 18505. " See ch. 6, pp. 165-8. "NM~I, Chalfield/4/1-3, fr.
57r-60r. James (0 Chatfield, Churt, Surre)'. undated but c.February 1936; f.6Or. "IIV~I, 91/7/1, p. 68. ).4 Royal Navy and Royal Marines ports Handbook 1933 (Royal ~larines Sports Control Board, Admiralty, 1933), p. 263. The citation is from Rear-Admiral Rodman's lener of donation. l:SS
New ),(),k, Scapa Flow, 10 October 1918. NM~l,
Elkins/I, Journal, 21 January 1921. )0 See W. Connor. To Rio (wd Bark wi,h H.M.S. Hood (London: The Westminster Press. 1922).
35
All this should of course be taken with a grain of salt but there was one rivalry which assumed a more serious dimension,thal between Hood and another battlecruiser, the Rel/owl/. The Hood might be the greatest ship in the 1 avy but only ReI/OWl/ could claim for herself the attribute of a royal yacht. In 1919,1920 and again between 1921-2 the Renown had carried the Prince of Wales on his wildly successful cruises of lorth America, Australasia and finally India and the Far East. In 1927 he took the Duke and Duchess of York on a state visit to Australia, making her at least as eligible as Hood to the nickname 'Cook's Tours' which had attached to the latter during the World Cruise of 1923-4.30 Though relations were never particularly close, this did not prevent the Battle Cruiser Squadron being welded into a unit of formidable morale and efficiency during the tenure of Rear-Admiral William James (1932-4). However, the great falling out came in the spring of 1935 when Hood and RenolVl/ collided following an inclination exercise off the panish coast. The incident, which is covered elsewhere, reflected badly on James' successor, Rear-Admiral Sidney Baile)', who took a thoroughly partisan line in his attempts to exculpate himself and the Hood's officer of any re pon ibility in the affair" This was quite naturall), resented in the Rel/olVl/ which felt itself the injured party ),et had to carry the can at the subsequent courts-martial. As James later put ii, 'After the courts-martial would have been jusl the moment for the Admiral to have gone on board Rel/olVl/ ... and shown a big, generous spirit', but it was not to be and the incident served to rekindle the age-old rivalry between Portsmouth and Chatham, which RenolVl/ had as her home port." In the event, the Admiralty dissented from the findings of the courts-martial and shared the blame among them but the damage was done and ill-feeling prevailed between the two ships until Rel/owl/ was taken in hand for reconstruction in the summer of 1936. The falling out expressed itself in various ways, from Ret/OWl/'S failure to offer congratulations to Hood on her regatta victor)' in June 1935 to the petty animosity that developed between the two hips' companies_ If the Hood's wartime company decided that Rodl/eyhad a taste for sheep then those of her 1933-6 commission concluded that Re'IOIVI/'s men had a penchant for each other. Boy Fred oombs (1935-8) recall an incident in the spring of 1936: ... The big laugh was to come later on when we tied up astern of the Rel/olVl/ on the orth Mole at Gib. Our crew had to march past the Rel/olVl/ to go ashore and after a few leave-takers had gone ashore a party fell in for in pection. Their station cards were taken and traight away mixed up so that nobody could be identified as to have been in that particular party, which made us think that some senior rates had something to do with it. ome of u were advised to watch the proceedings which meant that there was plent)' on the forecastle looking over the side when the leave-takers went over the gangwa)'_ Ashore, they were marched smartl), past the ship by a killick but when they came to the Ret/olVl/'s quarter deck, he gave another order
and they all started a slow, knee-high trot with one hand clasped firmly over their duck run. They kept it up all the way past the Rel/owl/ then they broke into an ordinary double march and kept it up till they had got out of the dockyard gates. They got a big chuck up from us aboard but not from the Renoll'n, where signals were flashing and telephones rung to complain, but the culprits were ashore and out of it. Our officers must have had a laugh about it too but aU we got wa a warning notice on the notice board and after fruitless enquiries as to who had been in that particular party, it was forgotten." However, rivalries of this sort were not confined to the 1 avy. In the early 1920s the conclusion of the Washington Treaty and the realization that the Royal Navy had lost the predominant position she had held for over a century was the cause of much tension between it and the nited States Nav)'. To this was added the jealousy of the British matelot for the superior pay of his American counterpart, flaunted now in ports all over the world. Rear-Admiral Hugh Rodman U.S.N. may have presented the cup which bore his name in recognition of the 'tie of friendship and brotherhood which have been formed and ripened into maturity between the officers and men of the British and American Navies in the Grand Fleet' but the Grand Fleet was no more." Already in January 1921 the Combined Fleet exercises off Gibraltar had pitted the Royal Navy against the 'American Battle Fleet', and not for the last time either." ow in September J 922, just seven months after the signing of the Treaty, the centennial celebrations of Brazilian independence at Rio de Janeiro provided both navies with an opportunity to show which was the first among equals." The first indication that Hood had been selected to represent the avy came during a vi it to the ship by King George V at Torquay in July. Soon after it was announced that she and the battlecruiser Repl//se would be sailing to Rio where a sports competition would be held for the attending navies. Throughout much of July and August preparations went on at Devonport which made it clear that this was to be rather more than a goodwill cruise. ational prestige was at stake and neither expense nor effort was spared to equip the Battle Cruiser Squadron for the voyage or to strip the fleet of her finest portsmen. On 14 August Hood and Repulse sailed from Devonport, reaching Rio by way of Gibraltar and Cape Verde on 3 September. On 29 August the Hood crossed the Equator for the very first time, celebrating the fact with time-honoured relish. Not even Bill the ship's goat was spared the attentions of Neptune's court. W. Connor: As we were due to cross the Equator on this portion of our journey, preparations were made for carrying out the ceremony of' ro ing the Line.' Various meeting were held by those responsible, though the details were shrouded in mystery, and the novices, of whom we carried a good few, began to get somewhat nervou as the time approached, due principally to the exaggerated rumours which were flying about as to the 'punishment'they would receive. Four days after leaving St. Vincent we arrived at the Equator, crossing the 'line' at nine p.m. A short time previous Father 1 eptune, accompanied by Amphitrite and their 'court: assembled on the fore end of the ship, which was shrouded in darkness;
Glory !zip
the lower deck was cleared, and the guard and band paraded to receive them. uddenly the look-out on the bridge reported 'Line right ahead, Sir'; the Captain gave the order, 'All hands clear away the "line':' Engines were slopped; a voice was then heard on the fo'c Ie hailing the ship, searchlights were switched on, and eptune and hi court were discovered on board in full regalia. After asking the name of the ship, whither bound, the entire court, escorted by the band, marched in stately procession to the quarterdeck, where they were received by the Admiral. Greetings were exchanged and officers were presented to Father Neptune, who announced to all and undry that he would return on board the following morning and hold his court, when various honours would be presented and all novices were to be ready to be initiated in the 'Order of the Bath.' Neptune and Amphitrite, the latter leaning on the arm of the Admiral, then departed. Punctually at nine a.m. the next day Neptune and his court again appeared and proceeded to the quarter-deck, where an investiture was held, the RearAdmiral, Captain, and other officers receiving various decorations, after which Neptune gave orders that all novices, irrespective of rank or rating, who had not previously 'crossed the line' should be at once initiated; for this purpose a huge canvas bath had been erected. The candidates lined up and were inspected in turn by eptune's Physician and his assistants. After swallowing some extremely vile 'medicine' they were passed to the barbers, who lathered them with soap and flour applied with a whitewash brush, finally being 'shaved' with a large wooden razor. Whilst this portion of the operation was in progress the 'victim' would suddenly find himself canted on to a greasy slide which led to the bath, where some twenty lusty 'Bears' gave him a severe ducking, after which he was received by Neptune and presented with a certificate. This was carried out throughout the whole of the day without interruption; no one escaped the ordeal, even the ship's pet, a somewhat hefty goat, being the final candidate." Already at Rio were the battleships Millas Gerais and Slio Paulo of the Brazilian Navy, three cruisers of the Imperial Japanese , 'avy led by the elderly IdzlllllO, and a pair of sloops representing Portugal and Mexico. Then on the 5th the American representation arrived in the shape of the battleships Marylalld and Nevada. Mid. Robert Elkins' journal conveys the bellicose mood of the Hood: The Marylal/d, which is one of the most modern battleships afloat, looked very small compared to ourselves and Repulse. She was also very dirty." The Hood seems to have crossed swords with Marylalld once already, at Gibraltar in March when the Americans had referred to her as 'some fine picket boat'." So there were evidentlya few scores to settle. The first opportunity for getting even came on the 7th when each ship landed a naval battalion for a parade through the city, Elkins declaring Hood's to have been 'by far the smarte t'. Though no points were at stake, Elkins also judged the Battle Crui er Squadron to have provided the best illuminations that night 'since we were the only ships which darkened ship before switching on the circuits'. So
69
to the athletics and on the 8th a day of triumph for the British. Elkins could barely contain himself: In every race our competitors walked through, the Japanese and Americans being nowhere. That is the ort of thing which raise British prestige, which has suffered here just lately at the hands of the Yanks. During a review of the assembled fleet by President Pessoa of Brazil on the 9th only the British Tavy 'cheered ship'. And so on. However, on the morning of the 10th came the first setback for the Squadron. In a result that in retrospect could surprise no one, the Brazilian Navy defeated the British 2-nil in the football final. Worse was to come. In the Regatta that afternoon the Brazilians won the skiffs and, of all humiliations, the Americans took the seamen's cutter race, though a measure of pride was salvaged by the midshipmen's cutter. Things were different in the athletics finals on the J Ith, the Squadron winning nine of fifteen events and, crowed Elkins, 'knocking the Yanks into a cocked hat. The tug of war was an absolute walkover.' But it was the boxing competition that brought the 'Naval Olympics' to a truly memorable climax. That same evening 4,000 British and American matelots crammed into a marquee pitched on the outskirts of the city. There were eight bouts on the programme and on its outcome depended overall victory in the Games. By the final bout the British were leading by four wins to three. The Squadron had reason to be confident since their last boxer was none other than the Navy and British Amateur champion, Stoker Petty Officer Spillar of the Hood. Mid. Gerald Cobb (1921-3?) takes up the story: Spillar advanced to touch gloves with his rival-as all boxers in previous bouts had done-when the American immediately struck Spillar with a straight left, followed by a right hook. Curtains for Spillar. Uproar!'" Only prompt action by Rear-Admiral Walter Cowan, who stepped into the ring and ordered his men to give three cheers for the US Navy, prevented the situation turning ugly. In the event, the bout was declared null and void, Cowan's counterpart apologised and the quad ron won the tourney, but it had been, as they say, a close-run thing. The following day Marylalld weighed anchor and left for New York, cheered as she went by the Hood' company, though what they muttered under their breath is anyone's guess. On the quarterdeck that night the Hood hosted a Grand Ball attended by President Pessoa and the cream of Rio society, probably the most sumptuous event ever celebrated in her. The centre-piece was a huge fountain surrounded by a grove of palm trees hung with coloured lights. As Elkins wrote in his journal, 'Preparations were on a most lavish scale and must cost hundreds of pounds'. The following day, having collected three magnificent trophies for their sporting achievements, the Squadron took part in the closing act of the centennial celebrations, an illuminated water pageant in Botafogo Bay in which the Hood's hief Painter played the part of Britannia. In all the Hood's career, in all her great voyages, there can have been few spectacles to match this. On 14 September 1922 the Squadron swept out of the anchorage and into the Atlantic leaving a flotilla of Brazilian destroyers trailing in its wake. For all its splendour the Brazilian cruise was only a taste of
J71bid., pp. 12-13. The admiraJ and captain referred to were Rear-
Admiral Sir Walter Cowan and Capt. Geoffrey ~lack\\'orth. JI N~H\'I, Elkin I, Journal, 5 September 1922 and successive entries. "HMS Hood Association archives. memoir of Gunner '\\'ind)" ..0
Breeze. R.~I.A. (1920-2). Cited in Coles & Briggs. Flagship Hood,p.2S.
70
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
.. PRO, ADM I 16/22 I9, ff. H, Leo Amery to Admiral of the Fleet
Earl
Beatty, 24 April 1923. ., PRO, ADM 116/22 I9, ff. 9r & 24r. "PRO,ADM 116/2219,ff. 29-30. .. PRO, ADM 1/8662, Capt. John K. 1m Thurn to Vice-Admiral Sir
Frederick Field & Rear-Admiral the Hon. Sir Hubert Brand, HMS Hood. Devonport, 8 O\'erober 1923. ~s
Extracts from Diary of World Cruis<, 1923-4, p. 4.
... The main published sources for the cruise are O'Connor. TIle Empire Cruise. passim, c.R. Benstead, RoutJd the \\'orld witll the Battle Cruisers (London: Hurst & Blackett, 19251), Bradford, The Mig/II)' Hood. pp. 64-88, and Coles & Briggs, flags/lip Hood, pp. 2~2.
Ten months and 38,000 miles: the World Cruise of 1923-4 showing the routes taken by the Battle Cruiser Squadron and the 1st light Cruiser Squadron. Empu. Photogr.phic Publishing
things to come. On 29 lovember 1923 a quad ron of ships embarked on the greatest circumnavigation undertaken by the Royal 'avy since Commodore Anson's heroic feat of 174G-4. The World Cruise of the Special Service Squadron as it came to be known was first mooted in the spring of 1923. At the Imperial Conference called for that autumn the Admiralty intended not onl). to emphasise the dependence of the Dominions on Briti h ea power, but to encourage them to participate in its maintenance through the creation of their own naval staffs and by contributing to regional and trade defence with money, ships and base facilities. The World Crui e had therefore a far more overtly navalist agenda than the three cruises made by the Prince of Wales in the Reflowfl between 1919 and 1922 which preceded it. It was also far larger and more ambitious than these, to which the First Lord's proposal to Beatty, the First ea Lord, in April 1923 bears witness: I am considering the desirability, pending the proposed redistribution of Fleets, of sending a really representative Squadron of our most modern ships round the Empire (a) in order to follow up any agreements for co-operation made at the Imperial Conference by creating Dominion interest and enthusiasm so that such agreements may be really carried out; (b) to let the local forces in Australia and elsewhere not only see our standard of work etc. but have an opportunity of doing joint exercises etc., and getting in touch generally, as a prelude to some more permanent system of interchange and co-operation; (c) to give our own ships more experience of long distance cruises and of waters practically unvisited by the avyat large for nearly 20 years. [... 1 My present idea is that the Squadron composed say of Hood and Repulse and a Squadron of modern light cruisers should during or immediately after the Conference, say ome time in November, go (I) to South Africa, staying there three or four weeks; (2) India-Bombay or Trincomalee-stopping for a few days only; (3) Singapore (4) Australia and lew Zealand where they should spend say two or even three months doing joint exercises etc.; (5) Vancouver (6) Panama Canal, and W. Indies and Bermuda; (7) Eastern Canada and ewfoundland for say a month before returning home. I should like you to consider the possibility of. .. taking an Australian cruiser with our Fleet
OCEAN
REFCReNCe
0_._._. Comtllne'O Squ.. "rons _ _ _ a.We Cruisers
__ ... _ .... L,qt'll
CfUI~rs
to Canada and W.l.-this not only as experience for Australians but in order to show Canada what the Australians are doing. There is also the question of paying courtesy visits en route at San Francisco and Seattle on the .S. West Coast and one or more .. east coast ports." With a few alterations this indeed proved to be the itinerary of the main units of the Special Service Squadron, which was to sail over 38,000 miles in ten months. It remained to carry out the immense organisation needed to make the cruise possible: assessing the safety of over 30 anchorages in the season in question; verifying the availability of oil and provisions; arranging events and entertainments in concert with local authorities; above all, budgeting for the enormous cost of sending half a dozen ships and 4,600 men around the world. At an economical speed of 11 knots the squadron's fuel requirement was assessed at 110,000 tons at approximately £3 per ton." Total additional expenditure of refitting, fuel and stores above ordinary service including a generous £8,000 allowance for shipboard entertaining was calculated at £239,000." There was to be a Squadron 'At Home'laid on by the Hood at every major port of call while her companions were to host children's parties, dances and other entertainments at any location visited longer than a week." Sports events were to be participated in ashore. As before the Brazilian cruise two years earlier, the Hood was taken in hand for refitting at Devonport, first in August and then in 'ovember 1923. The final act was the landing of known troublemakers before the battlecruisers sailed without fanfare on the morning of 27 ovember. For most it was the beginning of an unforgettable adventure, the zenith of the peacetime avy. For others like the newly-married Lieutenant (E) Geoffrey Wells (I92~) it was a desperate wrench: We were casting off the wires and by 07.30 hrs we were clear of No.6 wharf, Keyham Dod:yard. As the engines started I felt a pang of realization of the fact that I was here, Inez in London and that realization only grew greater as we steamed past Plymouth Hoe and turned seawards. Just to think of 10 months ahead, 30,000 odd miles teaming! I can't.'" The Special Service Squadron consisted of Hood, Repulse and the 1st Light Cruiser quadron under Rear-Admiral the Hon. Sir Hubert Brand, including Del"i, Dauntless, Dnlwe and Dragoll. With them sailed HMS DUlledill, on passage to join the ew Zealand Divi ion of the Royal avy. In overall command of the Squadron was Vice-Admiral Sir Frederick Field flying his flag in Hood. Field's reputation rests on his disastrous tenure as First Sea Lord during the Invergordon Mutiny but his tact and diplomacy during the World Cruise earned him the headline 'Freddy Field Proves Reg'lar Guy' in San Francisco in July 1924 and he was to prove an inspired choice for this command. A truly gifted speaker, Field's skills as a conjurer (he was a member of the Magic Circle) were guaranteed to break the ice at any dinner party. The initial top on the cruise was Freetown, Sierra Leone where the Hood received a silver-mounted elephant's tusk, the first in a succession of big-game curios which were to enliven her wardroom for the next fifteen years." Then came Cape Town where the pattern for the re t of the crui e was set: an official reception ashore; the landing of the Squadron's naval
71
Glory Ship
battalion for a march through the city with fixed bayonets; banyan parties and excursions into the hinterland; an outpouring of generosity and patriotic fervour reciprocated with tours of the ship and lavish entertainments aboard. Introductions made, gifls exchanged, engagements sealed. It was here, too, that the Squadron suffered the fir t of over 150 desertions, but the cruise as a whole upheld the British matelot's reputation for good behaviour in foreign climes. After South Africa came the Briti h protectorate of Zanzibar. A small island off the mandated territory of Tanganyika, the Sultanate of Zanzibar was perhaps an unlikely destination for the Special Service Squadron but the Royal avy had something to exorcise in these waters. On 20 September 1914 the mall cruiser Pegasus had hauled down her colours under heavy fire from the German light cruiser Konigsberg. ot only was it the first occasion in over 100 years that a British ship had urrendered, but her humiliation had played out in full view of the citizenry of Zanzibar. The KOlligsberg had been dealt with on the Rufiji River in Tanganyika in July 1915 by monitors sent out from Britain but the Admiralty no doubt felt that prestige needed to be restored. Besides, the Sultan had loyally stood by Britain in a territory just 50 miles off German Tanganyika. Reaching Zanzibar on the morning of 12 January 1924 the Squadron was received by the Sultan Sayyid Khalifa ben Hamid in his yacht with a string of war canoes in tow. ot for the first time the 3pounder saluting guns on the Hood's flag decks boomed out, 21 guns for the ultan and then fifteen in reply to the light cruiser uss COl/cord, also in harbour." A landing party of Royal Marines and field guns was put ashore for a ceremonial march-past and there was instruction for non-swimmers in the Zanzibar Channel. There were trips to the orchards from which 75 per cent of the world's cloves came or, in the case of Lt Wells, a futile allemptto repair the Sultan's electric generator." The Squadron refuelled from a waiting oiler and Hood was in receipt of twelve tons of fresh meat and vegetables. Then on the 15th the ultan arrived aboard for lunch in oppressive heat, the crews of the saluting guns busy once more. The following day he led the
Two of the Hood's
fOUf
3-pounder Hotchkiss saluting guns in action on
the flag deck, C.1935. HAAS Hood ~rlOtllWl/llSCoIl«tJon
Squadron out to sea in his yacht and, after hearing another 21gun salute, watched it di appear over the horizon. Next came the tropical splendour of Trincomalee in Ceylon and then Malaya where officers gagged down a Chinese banquet in Kuala Lumpur while their men toured the rubber plantations. Then Singapore where, in token of its broken alliance with Japan, the avy wanted to build a fortified base for its hips in the event of war. Off the same coasts seventeen years later, Repulse would herself be a victim of the catastrophic failure of British planning in the East. On 17 February the quadron weighed anchor and embarked on a ten-day voyage down the east coast of Sumatra, through the unda Strait where the Exeter would likewise meet her fate at the hands of the Japanese avy in March 1942, past the extinct cone of Krakatoa and at length to Fremantle in Western Australia. In Australia and New Zealand awaited the greatest reception for the Special Service Squadron. At Fremantle there was a new mascot, Joey the wallaby. At Adelaide the quadron received nearly 70,000 visitors, at Melbourne 486,000. Lieutenant (El Geoffrey Wells:
•. Details from PRO. ADM 53/789 I4, deck log of HMS Hood, January 1924. .. Diary o(\\'orld Cruise, p. 21. .. Ibid.. p. 29.
We remained at Melbourne for seven days and enormous crowds besieged us. umbers unprecedented percolated into every place in the ship. Women fainted on the gangways which almo t gave beneath the weight. To get ashore became a feat of no mean skill and elbow power. The Repulse also suffered. The little boys of the crowd fared best, they could queeze where their sisters could not and could deal more rapidly with the ladders" Half a million people lined Sydney Harbour to watch the Squadron glide in on 9 April. But here, amid the hysteria, sports and festivities, came a major setback for the avy: the announcement in London that the Singapore base would not be built. onetheless, the Australian government ordered a pair of heavy cruisers from British yards and detached the light cruiser Adelaide to join the quad ron along with ten midshipmen from the aval College at Jervis Bay. After eleven days of
The crowds disperse after another open day at Melbourne.
March 1924. HMS Hood AssocMtJonIM«/ur CoI1«r1On
The Battlecrlliser HMS HOOD
72
'A' turret's guns at maximum elevation, Wellington, April or May 1924. The Squadron was exhausted by the time it reached New Zealand.
sport and entertainment Field's battlecruisers sailed for Wellington, their crews exhausted. Mid. George Blundell: I was running a picket boat, which meant solid work from 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. or midnight. And on my day off it meant entertaining visitors or being el1tertained ashore. The hore entertainment was a terrible duty. The official dances were a nightmare at which one had to stay until about I a.m. ometimes I could hardly stand up, having had little sleep for several days. The job of laundering and keeping our clothes potlessly clean was also a nightmare."
)(I
'1
Cited in Coles & Briggs. Flagship Hood,p.36. Lt (E) Geoffre)' Wells, Diar)' of
World Cruise. p. 35. " Ibid., p. 39.
A trying passage of the Tasman Sea left officers and men so drained that all civic functions in Wellington had to be cancelled. However, time and energy wa found for one of those shipboard children's parties for which the avy was famous. Perhaps it was the prolonged separation from their own families, but sailors always went to enormous lengths to entertain children aboard. Merry-go-rounds rigged on the main capstan; slides swishing down from the bridge to a cushioned landing below; a 'flight' in an improvised gondola dangled from a derrick; the ~larine band in full swing; 'Aunt Sally' in the form of a bluejacket dodging missiles being hurled at him from all quarters; tours of the ship and vast teas served out on deck by matelots dressed up as pirates. On 8 ~lay Earl Jellicoe, now Governor-General of New Zealand, joined the Hood and, hoisting his flag beside Field's, volunteered to ease the burden by taking the Middle watch (midnight-04.00) on the bridge
for the run to Auckland" Here another 78,000 visited the Hood but as Geoffrey Wells noted, the ship's company had had enough of the World Cruise by the time she sailed for Fiji: It is very noticeable on board that now passed New Zealand everyone seems to be getting bored with the cruise. I certainly am. Going round the world is alright. In fact being paid to go round and under such circumstances as thi is great but one needs a fortnight's holiday at home in the middle of it. Everything moves at such a pace"
pirits were no doubt revived with draughts of kava, the intoxicating drink of Fiji, and then by the Polynesian beautie of Western Samoa where Hood dropped anchor for a few hours on 29 Mal'. But by the time the quad ron reached Hawaii on 6 June a gradual suspension of the issue of alcohol had left Field's ships 'dry' in deference to the Prohibition laws of the United States. Still, a dance for 1,100 gue ts given by the Hood at Honolulu, though it toasted the King and President Coolidge in water, was remembered as the finest of the cruise. Then to British Columbia and perhaps Field's most important remit, to encourage Canada to mail1tain a pair of crui ers on each coast, a suggestion which raised a storm of protest in Onawa. At San Francisco the quad ron was given a truly remarkable reception, though it must have proved a great disappoil1tment to the apostle of air power, Brigadier-General Billy ~ IitchelI. Learning of a plan to use an aircraft to drop a symbolic floral key 'to unlock the Golden Gate' onto Hood's quarterdeck, Mitchell
73
Glory Ship
Left: Vice-Admiral Field's flag
superimposed by the Stars and Stripes at San Francisco in July 1924. This photo provides a particularly good view of the rig of the foremast. What appears to be the Church Pendant is triced up to the starboard signal yard. Above this on spurs projecting from the starfish and fore top roof are pairs of manoeuvring lights. Rigged to the fore topmast is the 40-foot signal yard supporting further halyards and the four 'flat roof' aerials for long-range wireless communications. Stepped to the fore topmast is the flagpole on which the ship wore the admiral's flag. On the right is Starboard 4in Mk V High-Angle gun.
us
Above: The Hood anchored off Honolulu, June 1924. This photo shows the distinct flare of her hull. designed to lessen the angle at which a shell might strike her side. She is moored with both her bower anchors. their cables joined with a mooring swivel. Author's COIIKfIOfl
N.~.'
HIstOriC.' CMt~r. W.shington
Below: The Hood approaching Honolulu on 6 June 1924. Men off watch are formed up by divisions and the cable party is fallen in on the forecastle ready to drop anchor. Not a drop of alcohol had been served since midnight on the 5th.
u.s
~~.I
HntOfK.1 CMt~ w.thmgton
Tile Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
74
took the controls himself inlent on making a further demonstration of the vulnerability of the capital ship to air attack." However, his efforts resulted only in the key pitching unceremoniously into the bay as the guns of Fort Scott boomed out in welcome. It was the first time in 40 years that a British squadron had dropped anchor in American waters and Field's ships made a lasting impression not only on the city but on relations between their two countries. As Mayor james Rolph put it, Your presence with us today will, we trust, make a pact between the British-speaking races even closer. We take a pride in your magnificent ships, which we feel will never be used except in the defense of the world's peace. We surrender our city unto you. We capitulate.... Meanwhile, it was quite clear that the Squadron's efforts to adhere to Prohibition greatly outstripped those of their hosts ashore. Geoffrey Wells has this memory of the Bohemian Club in an Franci co: 'I guess you boys will have a drink' said one of our hosts producing, as the conjurer does the rabbit, a bottle of whiskey which he passed to the bar attendant who therewith dispensed whiskey and sodas. We received sympathy for our stocks on board being locked up and it became apparent that the only dry community in the district was the British ships. There were some that did not believe we were dry and could not understand that we had no bottles in our cabins. Our reason for not having any was that it wa not allowed. This absolutely baffled the American mind!" On 11 july the Hood began the longest leg of her journey, the 3,440 miles that separated San Francisco from Balboa and the navigation of the Panama Canal. Almost immediately the Ist Light Cruiser Squadron parted company with Hood, Repulse and Adelaide and steered for Callao, the first stop in a lengthy tour of South America. Field's ship reached Balboa on the 23rd, took in mail and a few stores and then proceeded towards the Canal which Hood would become the largest vesselto traverse. Here is Lt (El Geoffrey Wells' commentary of the passage through the Pedro Miguel Locks, which afforded Hood' bulges a clearance of only 30 inches on each side:
II Gruner, Blue \\'tU" Beat, p.
n.
Cited in Bradford. n,e Mighty Hood,p.85. )S Diary of World Cruise. p. SO. "Ibid., pp. 51-2. S4
S7
Ibid., p. 54. The Senior Engineer was Engineer Lt-Cdr Ernest C.
Plant. The Panama Cmmi Record, 17 (1924), no. 51, pp. i31-2. )9 Diary of World Cruise. p. 54. .. Ibid., p. 60. Y
The rule of the road being 'au droit' we entered the starboard lock. In each case there are two locks and the centre wall runs out some 1000 feet clear from the outer gates either end. We approached with our bow well towards this wall and as we closed a small boat brought ropes which we hauled in to get the ends of the wire hawsers from each of four electric mules. These four mules then spread out, one well forward, two between and one abaft midships. They took orders from the pilot which were given by hand signal. Wires from the outside wall were then brought to the ship which still made steady way while her bow, well toward the centre wall, was slowly centred. Thus we glided into the lock. On either beam lookouts were stationed on overhung wooden platforms-they had flags to indicate the clearance twixt ship and lock while the po ition in which the flag was held showed whether that clearance was opening or clo ing. Under I foot a red flag came into use. We had not much to spare but we
sure had a great pilot.' I foot closing-red flag' was shown by the port lookout. The little man of unassuming airs in a small grey suit just waved a hand to one of the mules and whispered down a voice pipe 'half ahead starboard'. Then he rolls his cigar round his mouth. The lookout hovers with the flag ready to drop it if we touch. There is barely an inch. Then, quickly to the voice pipe, the little grey man says 'amidships--stop tarboard'. A wave to another mule and a wire becomes taut. One foot is indicated, then the bow slides slowly back to the centre line off which it had deviated in order to keep our quarter clear. By this time we were up to the safety chain which runs across the lock to protect the gates from any ship that might rush at them. The double gate behind us closed and a similar safety chain rose below our stern. Then the luices opened and we rose rapidly for, being a large ship, little water was required to lift us 31 feet. Our decks now well above land, the lock level with the water in the Galliard Cut, the inner gates opened and the chain dropped beneath the water. We gave a kick ahead and the mules led us out into the cut.'" The pilot, for his part, commented on the kill with which the Hood's engines had been handled in the locks. The following morning the Squadron set off down the eight miles of the Culebra Cut, the greatest feat of civil engineering in history. Wells: We tried main engines at 5.30 am and half an hour later we cast off from Pedro Miguel and started down the Culebra Cut. A tug assisted. The Senior [Engineer] and ltook turns to nip up on deck to see the cut. In fact we so arranged it that not one man in the engine room failed to see one part or another of this great excavation. We proceeded at four knots which meant slow and stop alternately all the while and the cut is not straight. At one part, a sharp bend to the right, where it passe Gold Hill, it is a truly magnificent sight with high banks of either side but a few feet away made even a 42,000 ton ship feel small so close to solid land." Having passed through the Gatun Locks the Hood at last reached the Caribbean. The cost of her passage to the Admiralty was 22,399.50 at 50 cents per ton plus towing fees--a little over £5,000 in the currency of the day.'" In Hood 'General subdued cheers were lead by the Constructor Commander on sighting what he described as the same sea as our wives see' but there remained stops at Jamaica, ova Scotia and Quebec before the Hood could return down the St Lawrence to ewfoundland and make for home" At Halifax, ova Scotia Field had to deal with the consequences of his earlier remarks in Victoria, B.C. but on 21 September the Hood, Repulse and Adelaide finally quit Topsail Bay, 'ewfoundland to the longed-for strains of Rollillg Home. A week later and with exquisite timing they were reunited with Brand's cruiser squadron off the Lizard before Field took his ships into Cawsand Bay and thence to Devonport. In his diary Lt Wells wrote joy such as this is too great to describe by words alone. Ten months ago I left my new possession and now I am with her again.'"
75
Glory Ship
Large-scale cruises continued to be made, notably those of to Australia in 1927 and Engle to outh America in 1931, but nothing would ever approach that of the pecial Service Squadron. To these the battlecruiser type was to prove perfectly suited and for a fleeting moment the World Cruise united technology, treasure, organisation and opportunity in a spectacle never to be repeated, the high point of British sea power between the wars. For the 4,600 men who took part, the two million who visited the ships and the million more who witnessed their passing, the World Cruise left memories and experiences only now fading into oblivion . ReIIOW"
.......
Although the Hood became known for her great cruises, these were the exception rather than the rule. More often than not the pattern of her life followed the ordered routine of the naval year. This began with the Spring ruise in January which required the Atlantic Fleet, or Home Fleet as it became in 1932, to muster at Portland and proceed to Gibraltar for exercises with the Mediterranean Fleet. After what was often a rough crossing of the Bay of Biscay and a welcome pause at Arosa Bay in north-we tern Spain the fleet reached Gibraltar towards the end of January. Admiral Sir Frank Twiss recalls the atmosphere: Gibraltar would be the forum for many events and weekly practice programmes. In this period examinations for higher rate would vie with fleet boxing, fencing, running, hockey, football and tennis, to say nothing of a day or two with the Calpe Hunt, visits to Algecira to sample the Reina I ristinaJ hotel, or to La Linea to see a bull fight or for less creditable enjoyment. There was also the Fleet concert to be put on, if not in the coal sheds or even the ibraltar theatre, then in one of the battleships during a visit to Pollensa Bay in Majorca. But Gibraltar was the busiest period and the time when rivalry was most acute; Commanders of hip were most anJCious about their paintwork or the behaviour of their liberty men, while girls, who had somehow arrived Above: Hood descending the
Gatun locks in the Panama Canal, 24 July 1924. She took two days to make the traverse, mooring for the night at Pedro Miguel. vs Naval Hlttorical C~nr~,. Washington
Left: Hood emerges from one of the Gatun Locks on her way to the
Caribbean. Notice the wind scoops fitted to the scuttles to improve ventilation of the living spaces. u.s Nallal HI$fori,al C~nfer; Washington
The Battlecrl/iser HMS HOOD
76
T\\'i~i, Sodal Clwtlgf.' in t/rt Ro)'a! SmJ"p.18. ~ Ibid.
"
Below: The Combined Fleet at Gibraltar for the spring exercises
of 1938. Ships of the Home Fleet are in dark grey (shade APSOJA), those of the Mediterranean Fleet
in the lighter shade (APS07C). Hood is berthed at the Detached Mole. Astern of her is a Nelson class battleship, probably Nelson herself, with Repulse beyond. HMS Hood Associ.won/Hlgglnson Col/Krton
Bottom: British capital ships perform the gridiron manoeuvre,
(.1934. HMS Hood AssoC'l<JtlOnlCtOU COII«t,Ofl
out from England, were most active in their search for young men and the excitement and fun of the chase"' However, the main event was the Combined Fleet exercises in March. The aim was to test the training of each fleet and the tactics of their commanders in the expectation of bringing on a major engagement in the Atlantic or the Mediterranean. The exercises, 'of immense boredom to the sailors and Junior Officers but of great interest and anxiety to Flag and Commanding Officers', were performed over a period of days under battle conditions, the ships darkened and closed up at action stations"' The exercises usually passed unnoticed by the general public but all that changed in 1934, and not to Hood's advantage. In February the senior officers of the two fleets were informed of the tactical problem they were to face that year. The Home Fleet ('Blue') under the monocled figure ofAdmiral ir William Boyle, Earl of Cork and Orrery, was to escort an imaginary expeditionary force 800 miles east from the Azores and land it at a point on the Atlantic seaboard of Spain and Portugal. It was the task of the Mediterranean Fleet ('Red') under 'the Great Agrippa', Admiral Sir William Fisher, to prevent this happening. On 10 March 'Red' sailed from Gibraltar to take up patrol positions off Portugal. Fisher and his staff had determined that 'Blue' would make either for Lisbon or Arosa Bay 250 miles to the north. Most regarded the former to be Boyle's most likely destination but the
admiral disagreed and di patched his crui er and light forces north to cover the approaches to Arosa, which they did in enormous seas. Meanwhile, Boyle had ordered the Battle Cruiser Squadron consisting of Hood and Renown under Rear-Admiral William James towards Lisbon to act as a decoy while the main bodyofhis force, including the convoy, made for Arosa Bayalong a northerly route. The weather not only caused severe damage to ships of both sides but prevented aerial reconnaissance playing any part in the affair. With visibility reduced to a quarter ofa mile James failed to make a rendezvous with a 'Blue' cruiser squadron and SO lost all hope of carrying out an effective sweep for Fisher's battleships, already well to the nOrlh. At daylight on the 13th Hood and Renown were sighted by a 'Red' submarine and subsequently shadowed by four destroyers, Fi her making no effort to engage them. Shortly after, Boyle's main force was reported making for Arosa Bay by a 'Red' cruiser. Fisher immediately steered his battleships north to intercept while Rear-Admiral Andrew Cunningham made contact with the bulk of Boyle's force with a flotilla of destroyers. In the early hours of the 14th Fisher closed with the Home Fleet, ordered Cunningham to attack from astern and then opened fire himself from only 7,000 yards. Far to the south, James in Hood was making a forlorn effort to rejoin his commander. The Hood's bard, Paymaster Lt J.T. Shrimpton, recalled her predicament in verse: The day was long, the waves were high, The quarterdeck wa far from dry; The Force controlled by A.C.Q. 1ade slowly for the rendezvous To meet the vessels of Force 'A'But when we reached it where were they? We sought them with binoculars, With telescope and Zeisses, We scanned the clouds with Barr and Strouds And similar devices; But no uccess repaid our toil, We could not find Sir William Boyle. The breakers bursting, swift and strong, Were watched by an admiring throng; But it was not so pleasant for Destroyers of the Commodore, Maintaining with embittered smiles
Glory Ship
A VIS touch for eighty miles. And in a score of spotting tops In many different classes, Each captain stood in fiery mood Re-focussing his glasses, Till ships became so tempest-tossed That even VIS touch was lost. Noon passed; 3.30 came and went And still we are not on the scent Was our commander far or near' We could not use our wireless gear For wireless silence was imposedAnd so his lair lay undisclosed. We do not seek them any more; The laugh's on us-the trickers! Smile and be bright; it's Sunday night, Cold supper and the flickers. Order your drinks and let's forgetThe war doe not begin just yet·' The press proclaimed Fisher the master naval tactician of the age though wartime conditions would likely not have afforded him the same opportunity. Still, as Cunningham recalled, These bold and masterly tactics not only put an end to the exercise; but settled once and for all the much-debated question as to whether or not British heavy ships could and should engage in night action against corresponding enemy units." James, for his part, had little doubt where the cause of'Blue's' defeat lay: One of the axioms of strategy was not to employ forces for diversions or feints that could not be spared from the main fleet if the enemy main fleet was encountered. The plan to which I was working ignored that axiom .. Y After a lengthy post-mortem and more junketings the fleets would disperse, individual ships making goodwill visits to a Mediterranean or Atlantic port before returning home at the end of March. In Hood's case home was Devonport in the J 920s and Portsmouth in the 1930s, where varying degrees of refit and repair were needed after the strain of the fleet exercises. The Navy's refitting procedure until the late 1920s is described by Admiral Lord Chatfield: ... It was then the universal practice for a ship to be refitted in a dockyard each year. Thus, ten months after commissioning, she would go to a Royal yard. The prospect was pleasing; two months 'alongside the wall' meant home and leave. The defects accumulated in advance; it was no use tinkering with them, let them wait to be properly done by the dockyard. After two months in the yard, during which time the fighting efficiency of the men had suffered, much money had been expended, and the ship was in a thoroughly untidy tate, her decks black, her paintwork stained and greasy, she would go to sea. Tot less than a month was necessary to regain efficiency, discipline and smartness. Thus, for two or three months
77
out of the year, a flag officer would lose each of his ships as an efficient and instantly ready unit. Moreover, this system was extravagant financially." In Hood's case this invariably took the form of a month (usually April) refitting at her home port followed in July or August by docking at Portsmouth for the ship's bottom to be scraped and painted and her underwater fittings overhauled. During his tenure as Controller of the Tavy (1925-8) Chatfield introduced an extensive regime of self-maintenance for the fleet which brought many more artisan ratings into the complement of HM ships. The intention was to reduce ships to a single major refit in each commission but this appears not to have had any great impact on the Hood which continued to dock for a month or so each spring and summer. Ian Green of Glenshee, welder at HM Dockyard Rosyth, gives an idea of the work undertaken during these refits: Should a repair or major refit be necessary gangs were formed with several shipwrights, some labourers and two or three welders. Sometimes if hull plates were replaced the gang would consist of platers, riveters and caulkers with a burner and welder called in when needed. Whoever was in charge of the gang was responsible for ensuring that no combustibles or vulnerable equipment were the other side of bulkheads or in the line where sparks might fly. A shipwright was always a likely candidate. 1... 1 On the Hood I guess there was anything up to 150 workmen on board with probably another 20 on the dock bottom, so it was a veritable hive. [... ] There were 20 workshops or bays as they were called which housed the machinery for the various trades. Some had railway lines through them for steam-driven cranes to bring steel plates and sections in from the plate racks·'
[ShrimplOnJ, \'t.'rses. pp. 18-19, though this earlier and longer version is in RN~I. 1993/54. A.CO. is the code for 'Admiral Commanding Battle Cruiser Squadron'; Barr & Stroud was the principal British manufacturer of optical and rangefinding equipment; V IS stands for 'visual signalling'; 'the flickers' refers to the Sunday.night wardroom film. fH Cunningham, A Sailor's Odyssey. p.161. 6' James, The Sky \Vas Always BilIc, pp.liI-S. Ill> Chatfield, It Might Happen Agai", p.17. 61 Leiter to the author, 30 January 2004. 681\V~t. 92/4/1. ~Iid. H.G. Knowles. Journal, 9 June 1939. 6)
Bottom leh: Hood in the Admiralty Floating Dock at Parlatorio. Grand Harbour, Malta in the autumn of 1937. HMS Hood AssocliwonlHlgginson Collect, on
Below: Another view of Hood in the floating dock at Parlatorio in the autumn of 1937. Her entry was a delicate operation for both ship and dock. Navy constructors trained telescopes at markers on the dock to monitor its stability as the water tanks were pumped out and it rose with the ship. Failure to take these precautions might result in a severe hog or
sag in the hull of the ship or major damage to the dock itself. HMS Hood Assoc.i.t,onli>Prcill.1 Collection
As Chatfield indicated, except for those blissfully on leave the business of refitting caused major disruption to the life and work of the ship, suddenly 'full of noise, pipes and dockyard maties'." Mid. Philip Buckett's (1940-1) journal records a typ-
78
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
AIRCRAFT
The value of air power at sea had been demonstrated during the First World War but the practical difficulties of stowage and recovery along with the unreliability of the aircraft themselves served to limit their operation from British capital ships until proper arrangements were made in the 1930s. 0 provi ion wa made in the design of HMS Hood for aircraft but they soon made their appearance with flying-off platforms being installed on 'B' and 'X' turrets for Fairey Flycatchers as early as 1921. These platforms consisted of ramps which could be unfolded along the barrels when air operations required it, the turrets being trained into the wind to assist take-off. However, until aircraft were equipped with floats and recovery gear their radius of operations was limited by the need for them to put down on an airfield or else effect a ditching liable to claim both crew and machine. ot surprisingly, all this inspired as little enthusiasm among most naval officers as could be summoned for that other contraption, the aircraft carrier. At best air power at sea was regarded as being in a formative stage. Here is the opinion of Lt (E) Geoffrey Wells in ovember 1923: Inez came on board this afternoon and we went round the ship. (... ] I'm not sure she thinks much of it. I suppose none of us will in 1945; we shall have electric ships half as large again or perhaps no big ones at all. Besides, something may come out of these airplane carriers besides bee-like airplanes."
He was, of course, more than half right. The nex"t serious attempt to provide the Hood with an air capability came during the major refit of 1929-31. With the need for spolting and reconnaissance aircraft now fully recognised, the Hood's quarterdeck was fitted with a Fairey III F seaplane, the new Mk IV folding catapult to perch it on and a handling crane to recover it with. The FlIIF was a capable aircraft but its installation in Hood proved to be ill-conceived. Things got off to a bad start when it crashed and sank on take-off in Weymouth Bay on 26 June 1931. The three-man crew was rescued and the aircraft salvaged the following day but the ten members of Hood's RAF detachment would not be sailing in her much longer. The additional weight added during the refit reduced the freeboard of the quarterdeck even further and the West Indies cruise of early 1932 demonstrated the whole apparatus to be
unworkable at sea. The diary of S.V. Goodall of the Royal Corps of aval Constructors says it all: 'Hood's catapult is a washout literally'.'" Within a few months it had all been removed. The installation of a catapult on 'X' turret was mooted in 1937 and again in 1940 while the planned recon truction provided for a double hangar and athwartships catapult. But HMS Hood had shipped her last aircraft and she was among the few capital ships to enter the Second World War without this capability. As Lt-Cdr Joseph H. Wellings .5. . noted following her fruitless patrol in search of the slayer of the Jervis Bay in ovember 1940, either the Hood nor the cruisers carried ship-based aircraft. The weather was definitely suitable for ship-based aircraft for one day and perhaps suitable on another day. Shipbased aircraft would have been very usefuL"
Right: The Fairey IIIF seaplane of 444 Flight RAF with its folding catapult and handling crane on
the quarterdeck. (.1931. A tank for aviation spirit lay abaft the crane. Unfortunately, the Hoods
low freeboard made flight operations untenable and the entire installation was removed
in 1932. s.#ficb
Below: Hood under way off Portsmouth around 1926, a Fairey Flycatcher on 'B' turret. Training of the turret allowed the aircraft to be directed into the wind for take off. BibilOthH fUr l~~ SMtgMt
" Diary of World Cruise. p. 2. 7e Cited in Brown. elson to Vanguard, p. 76. 11 Wellings, On His Majesty's Snvic~, p. 62. The armed merchant cruiser Jervis &y had bttn sunk by the Admiral Schur on 5 November. Sailing with Hood in pursuit of her were the cruisers aiad and Ph"""..
Glory Ship
ical incident one Sunday at Plymouth in April 1940: The Morning Service was held in the Quarterdeck-Olen's Mess deck and was taken by the Chaplain. This service was interrupted by loud sounds of pneumatic drills by the dockyard people working above. Eventually it was stopped by the Duty Lieutenant Commander after the Sermon was started." Inevitably, there were tensions between dockyard workers and officers in particular. Ian Green: There was a certain amount of antipathy between some Navy officers and maties as docloes were called. They thought we were idle. A bit unfair I thought. With that number of people there were bound to be some scroungers and of course it was inevitable that there were times when you had to hang around waiting for work or someone to arrive." As the war progressed these tensions turned to open resentment at the high wages and comfortable lives led by dockyard workers in comparison with their naval counterparts, but this sentiment the Hood and her crew did not live long enough to share. Between the two refits came the summer cruise, always dominated by the Pulling Regatta at Scapa Flow or Invergordon but for Hood particularly a chance to show Britons the Service at its finest. How many boys gazing at her from clifftop, beach or pier must have set their hearts on a career in the avy? Here is Sir Ludovic Kennedy's boyhood memory of the Atlantic Fleet entering Invergordon in the I920s: But I have left to the end the most thrilling event of the holiday, and one to which I always looked keenly forward. This was the avy's annual visit to Invergordon. Early one morning someone in the household would shout out 'They're here!' and we all ran on to the lawn to see for ourselves. There in line ahead, ten miles away across the Moray Firth, standing out sharply against the high ground of the northern shore, and with their grey paintwork glinting against the morning sun, were the ships of the [Atlantic] Fleet-battleships, battlecruisers, aircraft carriers, cruisers, destroyers, submarines, almost like toy ships, all slowly and sedately mal
79
a time when it was struggling against reductions in its strength. By the early 1930s Navy Week had become the main vehicle of Admiralty propaganda and a spectacle to rival the Aldershot Tattoo and the Hendon Air Pageant. The centrepiece in each year she attended was the Hood, which at Portsmouth in 1935 received over 100,000 of the 161,000 visitors attending." Attendance at Navy Week itself grew from 48,000 at Portsmouth in 1927 to 415,000 at all three home ports in 1938, the last year it was celebrated. Having recovered from this invasion the Hood headed north for the autumn gunnery cruise off Scotland, the most demanding part of the naval year. For two months the fleet carried out practices and exercises in increasingly dismal weather with only golf on the links and the King's Cup and Arbuthnot Trophy competitions to distract it. Then it was back to the Channel for further gunnery and tactical exercises, usually off Portland, before the ships retired to home ports for Christmas leave by watches. So ended the naval year. This routine was of course subject to disruption and over her long career the even tenor of her life was frequently broken by protocol, unrest of one sort or another, and then by the onset of war. The Rio celebrations of 1922 replaced the autumn gunnery cruise but the World Cruise had kept the Hood from her duties for IS months by the time she was ready to rejoin the fleet in January 1925. Even then she and the Battle Cruiser Squadron spent a week in Lisbon representing the Navy at the Vasco da Gama celebrations. The General Strike had her sitting in the Clyde for nearly two months in the summer of 1926 while the Invergordon Mutiny cancelled the autumn gunnery cruise of 1931 altogether. But much worse was to come. The Spanish Civil War upset the training and manning regime of much of the Navy and after 1936 the Hood never regained the ordered pattern of earlier years. It is sometimes said that the life of a peacetime navy is uneventful. Certainly it lacks the terrors and ala rums of battle but likewise is it spared the grinding monotony which is the predominant characteristic of war at sea. This monotony Hood would come to know intimately but for now there was all the richnes of her life and experience to savour as the greatest warship in the world.
"RN~I,
1998/42,21 April 1940. The Chaplain was the Rev. Harold Beardmore. Mid. Philip Buckett was lost with ship in May 1941. n Letter to the author, 30 January ;'4
2004. Kennedy, 0" My \fay to tile CII/b, pp. 47-8. Kennedy served in the
R.N.V.R. during the war. His father, Capt. Edward Kennedy, was k.illed in command of the armed merchant cruiser Rawalpindi in November 1939. n Bell, The Royal Na,,}'. pp. 174-8. " RNM, 1993/54.
Visitors coming aboard during
Navy Week, August 1931. The Hood has just emerged from her long refit. A prominent addition to the after superstructure is the Mk I High-Angle Director. Note the ship's name done in large letters along the boat deck rails. A month later she was in mutiny.
The Battlecrlliser HMS HOOD
80
4 Routine, Work and Rest What the hammer? what the chain? In what furnace was thy brain? HE TECHNICAL ACHIEVEMENT of building the Hood was matched by the immense powers of organisation required to give her life, to transform her Ihousands of tons of steel plating, machinery and equipmenl into the formidable instrument of war and peace she was meant to be. How this was accomplished and maintained by her crew over a period of months and years, how her days and nights were filled wilh conSlanl labour and unceasing vigil, and how her men unwound from their exertions ashore, is the subject of the chapter that follows.
T
· . . . . .11'. .-
I
HMS Hood Association, Newssheet
no. 2 «.1975). • RBS, pp. 3s-8. 'Grog' or 'Temperance' refers to a man's choice not.
10
take up his rum ration or
'Talbot-Booth, All tile l\'orld's Figllting Fleets, 3ed edn, p. 63. ~ Beardmore. nU! l\'alers of Urrurlai,,')'. p. 26.
'Chatfield, The Nav}' and Defe"ce. pp.41-1. 'RB ,p.17.
For most the answer to this question would not be long in coming. The arrival of the last contingent permitted the White Ensign to be hoisted, the commissioning pendant to be run up the masthead and the Captain to reporI his ship as duly commissioned to the Commander-in-Chief of the port and, if he was present, to the admiral whose flag he was flying. The nature of the relationship between an admiral and his flag captain was one of the nodal points in the life of a great ship. The technical distinction is nicely made by the Rev. Beardmore, ship's chaplain between \939 and 194\: The Captain ... looks upon himself as the 'Father' of the hip-he commands it; the Admiral is a passenger, in that he is in command, not of the ship, but of the Squadron or Fleet of which the ship is the flagship'
Battle or mishap aparl, no episode in a warship's life could ever be quite as fraught as ommissioning Day. Weeks or months in advance the ommander, First Lieutenant and departmental officers would come aboard, lists in hand,to prepare for the most complex evolution of their tenure. The first priority was fixing the Walch and Quarter Bill by which each of over \, \00 men might know 10 which division and watch he belonged, what his duties were and where he performed them both on and off watch, where he messed and stowed his hammock and gear, and above all what his action station was. The end product of this fiendi h task wa the Commis ioning ard handed 10 each man on arrival. Joining the Hood in 1933, a piece of cardboard told Boy X that he was in Top Division, and that hi duties were to be performed in First Pari of POri Watch; that he was to reside on the Boys' Messdeck and find his Action Station at the Deflection Calculator for the 5.5in guns in Ihe spolling top; that his lation for Ammunitioning Ship was in one of the 15in magazines, and for abandoning her by No.6 Carley Raft.' And likewise for virtually every man inlhe hip. Earlyon ommi ioning Day fleets of lorries began arriving from barracks, ships and shore establishments to disgorge parties of men and their gear onto the jetty. Other appeared singly or in groups from training or a spell of leave, all loaded with the hammocks, kit-bags, cases, gas masks and ditty boxes with which they would make their life aboard. At the head of the ship's brow they reported to a regulating petty officer, informing him whether they were 'Grog' or 'Temperance', and then fell in by Divisions at their allotted spot on the upper deck.' Once mustered, the divisional officer led them down to stow their kit and sling their hammocks on the messdecks which would in all probability be their home for the next two or three years. Having shaken down, a man would be ordered to find a seat at his cramped mess table and wait for the noisy crush of men settling in around him to subside. [t was often a nervous moment:
The famous naval writer 'BarIimeus' (Capt. Lewis Ritchie) described the nature of that responsibility in the following terms:
All officers and men are feeling rather like new boys at school, unused to their new surroundings and wondering if they will find any old friends; wondering if the hip will be a happy one.'
The captain of a battleship carries the ultimate responsibility for every word spoken by, and for every action of, an individual on board his ship. His also is the more immediate responsibility for her safety and war
But there was more to an admiral's role than that. Admiral Lord Chatfield: The limelight shines more fiercely on an admiral than on his contemporaries in the other fighting services, because he lives continuously among those he commands. [... J His duty in war is to lead his fleet in the forefront of battle and to fit himself to do so he must in peace, also, be among, and personally intimate with, tho e whom he i going to lead and inspire. As he paces the quarter-deck he is as visible to all and sundry as are the captain and commander. The officers and men value this; they know their admiral, so to speak, intimately, they feel it is tlreir flagship, that it is tlreir duty to bring honour on the flag she flies.' As a flagship, the nature of the captain's authority in Hood was almost always conditioned by the reality of this attachment. The following terse description of his responsibility by Rory O'Conor, Commander of the Hood between \933 and \936, captures the essence of the captain's command, dependent on the ship yet curiously divorced from her until the moment of reckoning: The Commanding Officer is at all times the Senior Executive Officer on board-he is the man who takes charge and gives decisions in emergency and who, when necessary, must shoulder the responsibility of command.-
Routille, Work alld Rest
efficiency. For conduct in war he is guided by the articles of war, which enjoin that he shall 'use his utmost exertion to bring his ship into action, and during such action, in his own person encourage his inferior officers and men to fight courageously.' Here you will see that two of his responsibilities, the safety of his ship and the taking of her into action, must be balanced one against the other. [... 1 In as much as he must take every decision himself, and has to bear full responsibility for it, he is completely alone. The ship is moving through the water at whatever speed he alone has ordered. The guns' crews are all at their stations. When he gives the order they will open fire. When they fire, whether they hit the enemy or not will depend upon the training he has ensured these crews have had, and whether the whole enormously complex mechanism of fire control and guns has been maintained to produce its maximum efficiency at this moment. And lastly he has to consider the moment ahead when the enemy's shells will burst on board his ship. How his ship's company will react to that almost inevitable moment, how much or how little it will affect their morale, will depend upon things almost indefinable, upon 'all their yesterdays,' upon the spirit that he has instilled throughout the ship. The loneliness of high command accompanies him wherever he may be, on board, at sea or in harbour, in peace and in war. He lives alone in fact as much as in spirit.' It was the Commander's duty as Executive Officer to deliver into the captain's (and implicitly the admiral's) hands a ship capable of meeting every demand that circumstance and tactical necessity might make of her. To this every facet of her life and the life of every man embarked in her was subordinated. The ship commissioned, the first full muster of'Division ' heralded the stirring of her routine and organisation. If the captain and his officers were the head of this organisation then its heart was the divisional system. By it the Hood's crew was
81
separated into thirteen divisions based on their trade and the part of the ship for which they were responsible, each numbering about 100 men. eamen were gathered into three divisions-Forecastlemen, Topmen and Quarterdeckmen-each of which manned one of the ship's \5in turrets, the fourth being crewed by the Royal Marine detachment which formed a division in its own right. There were separate divisions for Torpedo and Communications ratings, along with those for Boys, Engine Room Artificers and Mechanicians, the Supply Department and another for Miscellaneous ratings including artisans, Ordnance and Electrical Artificers, cooks and Sick Berth Attendants. Like the seamen, the stoker complement was split into three divisions, in their case by watches: Red, White and Blue. And in war a fourteenth division was added: Hostilities-Only Rating. Each division was placed under a lieutenant or lieutenant-commander who was charged with its discipline, training, clothing and organisation, and who in turn placed the greatest reliance on the chief and petty officers who made up the heart of the Hood's company. On this system turned the organisation of the entire ship and its ultimate purpose as a fighting unit of the fleet. So it was that early afternoon on Commissioning Day found much of the crew mustered once more on the quarterdeck and in the port and starboard batteries. At the bugle call they laid aft to hear the Captain's address. AB Len Wincott, who served in Hood in 1926, recalls the anticipation which always attended this occasion: It was an event which set the tone for the future life of the ship's company. 'To be or not to be' was the que tion, and in this case a much more worrying one than the young chap from Denmark ever faced. The point at issue was whether this would, or would not, be a 'happy ship'-the alternative to which was a 'hell ship~ True, that term was generally reserved for the merchant service and naval ratings rarely used it; but that did not stop them from thinking it.'
"Life on Board a Battleship' in Bacon, ed., Britain's Glorious Nav)'. p.25. \\'incolt,lm'ergordotJ Mutineer,
pp. 75--{;.
Hood alongside at Portsmouth in early September 1933. On 30 August she had recommissioned under a new Captain and a new Commander, Rory O'Cancr. Bibljoth~1c
fUr Z~itg~hkh(~. Srutfgdrt
82
• The ship's routine described in th~ paragraphs is based on the rev~ schtdules laid out in RB • pp.229-34 which obtained during lhe 1933-6
commission; Stt Appendix IV.
1. \\'incon, l"vergordotl Mutitleer, p. 76. "Ibid.
Below: 'Hands scrub aft.' A party
of barefooted sailors scrub the quarterdeck with heavy brushes while a petty officer supplies them with seawater from a deck hose. <.1935. HMS Hood AssocybOfl!Wilirs CoI/«tIon
Below right: A reminder that the Marines also took a hand in
cleaning the ship. This party, perhaps the crew of one of the 4in high-angle guns. are
enjoying a breather and a smoke on the boat deck during a 'Stand Easy'. Men were responsible for
cleaning their 'part of ship' and some of the implements of their daily work are arranged in front
them. HldS Hood AM«~tKJt'llH'99mSOl'lCoI1«ftOll
The Battlecrlliser HMS HOOD
Reassured or otherwise, the Cooks of the Mess would then draw their comrades' 'mess traps' or utensils from one of the storerooms and hasten to serve the first meal aboard: tea at 15.30. Afterwards the Commander would likely drill his men in such evolutions as 'Collision Stations' or 'Fire Stations'. If the hip were already fully ammunitioned then the only call on the Gunnery Department would be to assume the duty of recording the magazine temperatures. Otherwise the crew would begin the dangerous ta k of ammunitioning ship from an assortment of barges and lighters loaded with shells, torpedoes, cordite cartridges and detonators. But this was unusual and for most the last official act of Commissioning Day would be a medical inspection of all new ratings in the Sick Bay. Then to the messdeck and animated discussion over supper on the prospects for the new commission with messmates or with those remaining from the old. For some 'Pipe Down' at 22.30 would confirm their choice or fortune of hammock berth. For others, bumped by heads or tormented by lights or ventilators, the night would provide a somewhat different realisation. Shortly after 05.00 a bugle call would herald the beginning of the first full day of the commission.' By 05.30 the duty petty officers were passing through the messdecks bellowing the old refrain 'Wakey, wakey, rise and shine. Sun's scorchin' yer bleedin' eyes out' under decks lashed with rain or caked with snow. A mug of 'k,.' inside them, 05.45 found the Duty Boys of the Morning watch hard at work, to be followed at 06.00 by the bulk of the ship's company fallen in to 'Clean Ship'. Over the next hour or so the entire quarterdeck would be scrubbed down from the stern forward to the aft screens and the brass bollards and other brightwork polished to a brilliant sheen. In the engine spaces, especially on the control platforms, this took the form of cleaning the steel deck plates, white-washing the more prominent stretches of lagging and polishing the array of brass voice pipes, steel ladders, dials and indicators which filled every space. If, as was often the case, the ship was emerging from a period of refitting then the greatest call on the time and energy of the crew wa in getting her to an acceptable degree of cleanliness. Under certain circumstances this might require special measures on the part of the ship's officers. AB Wincott:
ow, to achieve the high degree of cleanliness desired, an unofficial tradition was practised by some captains which meant, in brief, roping in a large number of men for extra work in their free time. The captain simply passed the word to his commander who ... gave instructions that conditions be created to rope the needed numbers in. Everything was done verbally and nowhere was there written proof, but every man on the ship was aware what was happening. The regulating staff under the command of the master-at-arms moved into action. ot one little infringement was passed up, and if no infringements existed they were invented. Consequently, every day, at commander's defaulters, there was a large crowd of men, mostly seamen of course, waiting to be punished.
I.
W'hether this was resorted to or not, the duties themselves were unchanging: . .. Scattered round different parts of the ship, some with emery paper, scrubbing away at the dock,.ard-painted steel deck to make it look like a mirror; some with wash-cloths and buckets of'suji-muji', a liquid concoction of five parts water and five parts any kind of powerful cleanser guaranteed to remove unwanted marks more effectively than flames; and of course a large body with the inevitable 'holy stone', called by the men 'the sailor's bible'." To this desultory work the British sailor gave a fair proportion of his existence until time or higher rating exempted him from it. Boy Fred Coombs:
83
Routine, Work and Rest
... It was no surprise that our lives were to be spent not in being sailors but in endless, meaningless jobs such as chipping paintwork, washing it, and any time-consuming job that could be easily monitored. Of the jobs that we fancied, such as smacking paint about with a brush, the nearest thing we got to painting was to go round on our hands and knees scraping up after the painting party; their time was more important than ours. 12
At such moments the imprecations came thick and fast: 'Join the aV)' and see the world' and especially 'Roll on me fuckin' dozen', a reference to the twelve years of a man's first term of service. By the 1920s a new generation of naval officer was beginning to recognise the senselessness of requiring a man to devote the better part of his time to work of this sort as the aV)' began to fall astern in technology and fighting efficiency. But tradition dies hard in the Royal aV)'o Admiral Sir Frank Twiss, eventually Second Sea Lord, admitted as much in his memoirs: The number of officers and men in ships was dictated by the number required to fight ships in action. [... 1 This meant that when you weren't at war there were far more people living on board than were actually needed to keep the ship afloat, clean and working. It was, of course, accepted as gospel that men must be kept busy. People who weren't occupied became troublemakers; there was nothing else for them to do. So the routine in the aV)', particularly in big ships, was strictly designed to keep men working and keen. Looking back on it now, it was an astonishing performance. For example, a battleship in the Atlantic Fleet before the Second World War, might have nine hundred to a thousand men on board, of which only a proportion could regularly polish all the brass-work, clean all the paintwork, pick up the oil in the engine room or whatever it was, quite easily, in the first couple of hours. So what did they do for most of the day?" The answer is that, in the Hood particularly, they continued to polish and clean until the coming war required their skills to be applied elsewhere. Still, there was no denying the pride of seeing an expanse of stained teak decking brought to a lustrous manila finish. A fortnight before his death at 98 in June 2003, CPO Harry Cutler, who went to sea in the Hood in 1922, recalled these lines for the author: A few drops of water, A few grains of sand, A sailor with a holystone Makes a deck look grand." The 'holystone', a sandstone block, was supplied by the Admiralty, but the silver sand favoured for scrubbing decks and woodwork had to be obtained in the traditional manner. Among the Coombs twins' first ta ks on being selected to crew one of the ship's cutters early in 1936 was to sail her from Portsmouth Harbour to Hayling Island to collect a boatload. The expedition resulted not only in them missing the tide as they returned up the Solent but in their being eaten alive by sand-fleas shovelled up in the cargo as they did so. 'There was always something to learn at sea.'''
At 06.50, just as the men were drying down the upper deck, a bugle call summoned the Cooks of the Mess to the galley lifts bearing breakfast for the crew. Ten minutes later a mass piping by Call-boys with their Bosun's whistles had the men gratefully heading for the messdecks to tuck into the offerings of the galley. Then a chance to wash and change into the 'rig of the day' before the order was passed for 'Quarters Clean Guns' at 07.55. At the same moment a party of signalmen was gathering round the ensign staff on the quarterdeck for the fir t of the aV)"s great rituals, morning Colours. On the stroke of 08.00 (09.00 in winter) the signal was given to a Marine corporal to ring the ship's bell eight times. At the same moment a dozen buglers on 'X' turret sounded 'Attention' as the band of the Royal Marines struck up 'God Save the King'. Men stiffened, officers saluted and all faced aft as the ensign was slowly hoisted up it staff, reaching the gold crown just as the final bars crashed out. Meanwhile, a similar ceremony was being performed with the Union Flag and seaman buglers on the forecastle. The tolling of eight bells indicated not eight o'clock but the start of the Forenoon watch, one of the six four-hourly segments into which the naval day was divided. At noon came the Afternoon watch and then at 16.00 the two dog
"IW~I, U
14
911ilI, p. 42. Twiss, Social Change in tire Royal ,val)'. p. 23. The Second Sea Lord is entrusted with naval personnel and manning. Com'ersation in Devonport, 23 ~Iay
2003. "IWM, 911711, p. 51.
Below: The youngest member of
Hoocfs company and a corporal of Marines pose beside Hood's bell on 31 December 1928. The former will ring it sixteen times at a minute to midnight to herald the new year. 1IIusr'.t~ London News
THE SHIP'S BELL
If the spirit of the
Hood resided anywhere it was in her bell. On it the naval day was intoned in unbroken sequence while her life or the life of her commission lasted. The Hood's bell seems to have been presented to the ship by Lady Hood in memory of her husband RearAdmiral the Rt Hon Sir Horace Hood, killed at Jutland in 1916. About 18 inches high, it was cast in brass and mounted in an impres ive wooden stand topped by a crown; the whole structure, kept immaculately polished, stood about 10 feet high. Attached to the tongue of the bell was a decorative lanyard done in fancy ropework. In harbour, and except in foul weather, the bell was placed on the quarterdeck; otherwise it was kept in one of the lobbies outside the captain's quarters. Until the early twentieth century a single bell had sufficed for each vessel, but the din of machinery and the increasing size of ships eventually required a second to be placed in the forward section of the ship so that the men could follow the progress of each
watch. This arrangement was followed in the Hood until the mid-1930s when the introduction of the tannoy allowed the main bell to be broadcast throughout the ship. The ship's bell was largely in the care of the Royal Marines. Only a corporal of Marine could move it and it was a Marine sentry who struck the bell every half hour in accordance with the clock on his beat. It was also used to summon the men to morning prayers and Church on Sunday, and clattered out noisily to announce fire or collision drill. However, the most important moment came on 31 December when the bell was used to ring in the new year. Placed on the quarterdeck, it was struck sixteen times at a minute to midnight, eight for the old year and eight for the new. This ceremony was traditionally performed by the youngest member of the crew but on 31 December 1940 it was a junior midshipman who rang in the new year, no doubt on the same bell found lying among the debris of his ship in 2001.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
84
" RBS, p. 94. " Ibid., p. 97. 'WiLliams, Gone A Long /ourne)', p. 117. .. SWWEC, 200111376, B.A. Carlisle, 11
p.6.
Painting ship, in this case in
APS07C (Mediterranean Fleet light grey) for service 'up the Straits', (.1936-8. The men are
sitting on adjustable stages doing a 'fleet' or strip down the side before moving aft to do another. Balsa rafts were
provided to assist with this task though none are in evidence here. Advice and encouragement are proffered from above. HMS Hood AuocI.rlonlHiggmson Col/«tion
watches whose purpose is described lower down. These were followed by the First watch at 20.00, the Middle watch at midnight and finally the Morning watch at 04.00 with which the cycle was completed. Since few men carried timepieces, most relied on the ship's bell to tell them what time it was, which it did by tolling off the half-hours incrementally through each watch. So it was that a man going on duty in the Morning watch might well ask a mate to 'shake me at seven bells' of the MidcUe one (3.30 a.m.) so that he could have half an hour to rouse himself for work. The dog watches were divided in order to permit a daily change of watch for a ship working a two-watch routine. This routine, which the Hood observed throughout her career, was called 'watch and watch', and under it most of the ship's company was divided into two identical watches, known as Port and Starboard; the Engineering Department, however, had three watches: Red, White and Blue. These alternated duties so that every essential function was being attended to by a full complement of men at any given moment. In most cases this provided an individual with an eight-hour day of work, rising to twelve hours at sea and probably sixteen or 20 in war as need or circumstance dictated. Since a ship on war patrol required her entire crew to go to action stations at dawn and dusk each day regardless of other duties it will be understood what the impact of leep deprivation was on their morale and efficiency. But this was exceptional and in the ordinary run of things 'watch and watch' represented a perfectly tolerable lifestyle. Thus, if the divisional system formed the basis of the ship's organisation then the watch sy tem provided the rhythm of her routine. Colours over, work continued about the ship. For many this meant more cleaning and polishing, a dose of compulsory 'physical jerks' under a PT instructor or, for the more expert seaman, the splicing of wire and rope, maintenance of blocks and tackles and forming of grommets and heaving lines which kept his vessel seaworthy. But for others it signalled the resumption of that other labour which filled the hours of Britain's bluejackets: care of the ship's paintwork. This was not 0 much the adding of fresh layers as the scraping, chipping, polishing and scrubbing which provided the perfect surface for paint to be applied. The actual application was left only to the most skilled practitioners. Cdr Rory O'Conor, doyen of Hood painters:
The correct way of applying paint is with horizontal strokes, finishing off with upward strokes. All strokes must be firm and the brush not overloaded. Painting is an art acquired with practice, and it is waste of paint to put a brush in inexperienced hands.'· However, the ultimate touch lay not in paint but in enamel: If a ship has some very special lobby or surface which it is decided to enamel, with a finish so perfect as to take away the cat's breath when he sees his whiskers, then the work must be done by the most expert painterY or did it end there. Fine paintwork had to be protected not only from the assaults of the elements but al 0 those of brutality. This translated into punishments for those who wantonly ill-treated paintwork and, more commonly, in the necessity for exterior surfaces to be washed down with fresh water if splashed while scrubbing decks or following rain or periods at sea. The other enemy was rust, which required the surface to be scraped down to the metal and the offending patch treated with oil. About four times a year ordinary wear and tear, a special occasion or a change of assignment would require the entire ship to be painted. This evolution, which usually took a day for the sides, masts and yards, required the ship to go 'out of routine' and as such wa a welcome change for the crew. Such a moment came in September 1936 when the ship recommissioned for service in the Mediterranean Fleet. AB Len Williams: Our first job, soon after commissioning, was to change the colour of Hood's paintwork. Almost from the time she was built, her colour had been dark Home Fleet grey, and I think we all enjoyed slapping on the Mediterranean light grey, and when completed, the old lady looked more like a ballerina. I have never seen a ship look 0 different!" 'Hands paint ship' was not without its hazards. 00 B.A. Carlisle, a Hostilities-Only rating aboard in the autumn and winter of 1940-1, describes an incident while painting the aft screens: I have never showed any ability as a handyman and not surprisingly did not shine in sailors' tasks as an Ordinary Seaman. In harbour, whilst painting some of the ship's structure above the quarterdeck on a stage with a fellow seaman, I had some difficulty in easing the rope round a stanchion above us to lower the stage so I foolishly gave the rope a jerk; the stage upturned, my companion managed to hold on and I fell down unceremoniously in front of the Officer of the Watch." Of course, this zeal for cleanliness and paintwork often went well beyond the immediate needs of hygiene, maintenance and appearance. The many coats of paint slapped on in peacetime not only added to the ship's weight but represented a severe fire hazard in battle. Endless polishing could also have unexpected consequences. Vice-Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly recalls the confusion after the Hood was bombed in the North ea by a ju 88 in September 1939: ... More serious was the loss of electrical power to the port
ROlltine, lVork alld Rest
eight-barrelled porn-porn. A circuit breaker had been knocked off by the shock. The electrical repair parties were defeated by the Hood's past: brass information plates on the junction boxes detached for polishing had been muddled when replaced. Efforts to run emergency power leads to the porn-porn succeeded only in bringing some warmth to the petty officers' hot locker, not materially adding to our fighting potentiaL" In the 1930s it apparently took £ 135 and four tons of paint to cover the exterior of the ship. The is uing of paint was in the hands of the Commissioned Shipwright and his men, but its supply was the responsibility of the Paymaster Commander who presided over that other great edifice of shipboard organisation, the Central Storekeeping System. On commissioning the Hood was provided by the Admiralty with a six-month supply of 10,000 items weighing in at over 400 tons. These items, ranging from bedding to rape seed oil, were stowed in any of 40 stores and compartments throughout the nether regions of the vessel, including the Paint Store on the lower deck forward. It was the duty of the Supply Department to keep a permanent tally of the quantity and location of these, the majority of which would eventually be issued from the Central Store on the main deck. The only items not on the Paymaster's ledger were ordnance and engineering spares and equipment, which were looked after by the Gunnery and Engineering departments re pectively. The hip's stores were divided into four broad categories: Permanent Stores (such as hoses, piping and fittings for which replacement was occasionally necessary), Consumable tores (including cleaning gear, cordage, canvas and paint), Victuals or foodstuffs of one kind or another, and finally Clothing (or 'slops') and tobacco. Clothing was purchased from the Issue Room (known as the 'slop room') on the upper deck, the men's daily Kit pkeep Allowance of 3d. evaporating in the replacement of worn-out rig, largely as a consequence of the avy's inability to decide on a practical working outfit for its men. The ship could store up to four months' supply of food, but meat, fish and fresh produce would be purchased from contractors ashore as the opportunity arose. There were, in addition, fourteen days' rations of'hard tack'-biscuit and corned beef-for dire emergency. Menus for the ratings were drawn up for the approval of the Paymaster Commander by the Warrant upply Officer and then prepared in the various galleys by over 30 cooks. Immediate responsibility for victualling rested with a pair of Chief Petty Officers supported by a number of upply Assistants and a General Mess Party of seamen given the task of 'storing ship'. The Hood's last crew produced a couple of memorable characters in this particular fief of the Supply Department. First the 'Jack Dusty' himself, CPO Supply Geoff Pope, who befriended the actor Jon Pertwee over illicit tots in a Victualling Office reeking of neat rum, and then a formidable three-badge 'tanky' in the shape of AB W.E.S. 'Darby' Allen, Captain of the Hold, two men who at the time of their death in Mal' 1941 had given a total of eighteen years' ervice to the ship. The victualling party reminds us of the small groups of men who in their work and society made up the wider community of HMS Hood. Throughout her thousand spaces, decks and compartment dozens of such parties performed their duties with varying degrees of competence and enthusiasm, from the glamour of the admiral's barge to the
85
THE PAYMASTER AND HIS ORGANISATION Paymaster Commander who usually held ntil the Great War responsibility for a ship's stores and accounts had rested the post of Squadron Accountant Officer with a trio of warrant officers: the in addition. Assisting him were a gunner, the boatswain and the carpenter. lieutenant-commander, several Without any formal training in lieutenants, sub-lieutenants and midshipmen and the 60 specialist ratings accountancy and no clerical staff to assist them, these three had somehow managed listed. The captain and admiral were each attended by a further pay officer. In Hood to maintain their books and accounts in whatever spare time their technical the appointment of Captain's Secretary duties allowed. With the outbreak of that was held by a Paymaster Lieutenant conflict, however, it became obvious that whose duties included dealing with all the functioning of a modern capital ship mail addressed to the e.O. and keeping required her domestic organisation to be the service records of all officers and ratings. It was a demanding role put on a professional footing, and in 1917 re pon ibility was transferred to a requiring expertise in naval law, coding suitably overhauled Accountant Branch. and ciphering as well as the timeless virtues of tact and diplomacy. The post By 1922 a new Supply Branch was of Admiral's Secretary, similar in nature, introducing Central Storekeeping into the Royal avy, a system which, like was taken up largely with Admiralty General Messing in J 920, saw its first matters and the organisation of the trials in the newly-commissioned Hood. Battle Cruiser Squadron. As a paymaster Henceforth the paymaster's work fell into cadet in Hood from 1938-9, Keith Evans' three main areas. First came the duties thus reflected the full seagoing responsibility to which he owed his remit of the Accountant Branch: name, that for the men's pay and allowances, the records of which were I was of course still under training and maintained in ledger kept by the dozen spent time in the hip's Office (getting my Ledger Certificate), aval Stores, writers embarked before being forwarded to the Admiralty. Then there Victualling Office, the Galley (making bread and rolls) and the Captain's were the myriad stores, victuals and Office (for Captain's Requestmen, clothing supplies described elsewhere for whose acquisition, accounting, stowage Defaulters, etc.)." and preparation the Hood relied on the It was in Hood, too, that Ronald services of several officers and around 50 ratings from Chief Petty Officer (Supply) Brockman, one of the great Paymaster to the cooks in the ship's galley. Finally, Vice-Admirals of the twentieth century, for the ablest officer there was the cut his teeth as a midshipman in 1927-8 traditional post of captain's or admiral's before giving 27 years' unbroken service as secretary to Admirals Backhouse, Pound secretary. In Hood this great organisation rested under the authority of the and Mountbatten between 1938 and 1965.
filthy drudgery of the Double Bottom Party. Through their labour and character the ship acquired that distinctive quality which made her what she was, set her apart from all others, caused her men to remember her for the rest of their lives. To return to the ship's peacetime harbour routine, at 09.05 (10.05 in winter) the Bosun's call sounded 'Division ',the second daily muster of her company. Fallen in on the quarterdeck and in the batteries, the men were inspected by their officers and reported as present and correct--{)r not as the case might bebefore being led in prayer by the chaplain. It was traditional for the men to line the side two ranks deep and face inboard but Cdr O'Conor, ever mindful of his ship's eclat, had different ideas: Hands should always fall in facing outboard at Divisions and Evening quarters. taring at paintwork is a deadly dull occupation, and viewed from outboard the appearance of
:!O
Le Bailly,
II
Engine, p. 53. Hl\tS Hood Association archives.
nlt!
Mati Around the
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
86
GROG
At 11.00 the call 'Up spirits' announced a treasured moment in the naval day, the rum issue. In 1655 the capture of Jamaica from the paniards for the first time brought a copious supply of rum to the English palate and within a few decades it had replaced beer as the tipple of choice in the Royal avy. The initial tot consisted of an inebriating half pint of neat rum, a ration Admiral Sir Edward Vernon saw fit to dilute with four parts of water in 1740. Vernon's men called him 'Old Grogram' after the coat of that fabric he habitually wore and from this came their name for the frothy concoction he inflicted on them: grog. The relative proportions of spirit to water were a matter of some debate in the avy which finally settled on an eighth of a pint of rum mixed with two parts (occasionally three parts) of water for each man aged eighteen and over. Chief and petty officers, however, continued to enjoy the privilege of taking their ration neat. The rum itself, 95.5" proof and 54.5 per cent alcohol by volume, was accurately recalled by Lt-Cdr Joseph H. Wellings U.S.N. as 'dark and tasted like [the] high-grade Jamaica rum that I drank in Kingston'." In the Spirit Room on the platform deck aft the Paymaster kept a threemonth supply of 1,000 gallons double-locked and under permanent Marine sentry. Each day at 11.00 a party of men including the Master-atArms and 'Jimmy Bungs: the ship's Cooper, headed below to tap the day's ration from the oak barrel stored there: As the room is below the water-line it strikes cool, but the pungent fumes of the spirit assail the nostrils of the party. So strong is the smell that sometimes, with newcomers, it has the effect of making them slightly intoxicated, much to the amusement of the old hands."
" RBS, p. 128.
The spirit was drawn off into a small oak barrico which was eventually hoisted up to the forecastle along with the rum tub itself, a large lidded affair with the inscription 'The King God Bless Him' done on the side in gleaming brass letters. At 11.50 the bugle call 'Grog' brought
Rum issue on the forecastle by Port No.1 S.5in gun, (.1935. It is noon and the leading hands of each messdeck are ready to receive the grog in their 'fannies'. Just visible behind the barrel is the elongated barrico containing neat rum. A pair of Marines have been entrusted with the issue while a Supply rating
(with ledger) and regulating petty officer look on. HAAS Hood As.stxJ.tionIWilliJ CoIl«rion
the leading hands of each mess onto the forecastle where they lined up before the barrel in mess order. Here, supervised by the Warrant Officer of the Day and a regulating petty officer, the Cooper doled out the exact issue for each mess using the set of even copper measures provided for this purpose while a Supply rating ticked off the ration in his ledger. Once the issue was complete the warrant officer passed the order to 'See it down the scuppers', the few pints of residue being deposited into the sea by Admiralty command. A related tradition was 'Splice the Main-Brace', the issue of an extra tot
the ship is enhanced by seeing the faces, rather than the backs, of those fallen in. [... ] When the ommander brings the Divisions from the stand-easy position to properly at ease by calling the ship's name, every man should brace up and grow a couple of inches." The conclusion of Divisions was usually the signal for a spell of competitive drill between the two watches, perhaps the lowering of all boats or the rigging of the ship's awnings. This ended with the 10.30 Stand Easy, a ten-minute break during which the men could enjoy a smoke and a breather before resuming their duties until the call for'Up spirits' at 11.15 (traditionally 11.00) heralded the end of the Forenoon watch. By 11.40, just as the rum 'tanl-.l" and his men were bringing the grog up to the forecastle, the decks were being tidied and secured before the men proceeded to dinner. 11.50 would find
of rum by the sovereign or an admiral after arduous duty or a great celebration. Though proportions returned to earlier levels with the outbreak of war, relatively few took up their rum ration during the lean I930s, most choosing to devote the 3d. allowance to wives and families. In 1934 only 14.8 per cent of the Hootfs Executive Branch took grog, while the figure for miscellaneous ratings (OAs, ERAs, Artisans, Cooks, Writers and SBAs) stood at 29.5 per cent and for the better-paid and sorely tried Engineering Department 40.4 per cent; the rum ration for officers had been abolished in 1881 and for warrant officers in 1918." For those who did take their ration, however, the tot was a valuable form of currency on the lower deck. As Jon Pertwee recalled, the framework of hospitality was 'where three sippers equal one gulp and three gulps equal one tot'." Under these circumstances an eighth of pint of grog could go a long way, particularly with the older rating: After two weeks ... I had found an amenable 'Stripey' who for 'sippers' would relieve me of all future mess duties. [... ] During my time on the lower deck, for two sippers daily, my hammock was unlashed, hung in prime position, lashed up next morning and put away in the hammock nettings by a kindly three-badge disciple of Bacchus. For a further daily gulp another old rumpot would do all my dhobi-ing (washing). [... ) Two more sippers relieved me of many mess-deck chores, like washing-up, drawing stores, and food preparing. So you can see why I called anyone a fool who took threepence a day in lieu.'" 12 N\VC. Wellings, Reminiscences (MS), p. 79. n Campbell, Customs and TraditiotlS, pp. ~7. "See Appendix III. 25 Pertwee, Moon Boors and Dinner Suits, p. 147. "Ibid.• pp. 146 & 147.
men from each mess lined up to receive the rum ration while the Cooks of the Mess were in the Cooks'lobby collecting dinner from the galley lift. Fifteen minutes later dinner and grog were being served on the messdecks. Smoking was permitted outside and on fine days the Marine band might well playa medley of popular airs on the boat deck after dinner, the hands sitting about in the sunshine. One day a week-usually Thursday-a 'make and mend' half-holiday spared the men any further work until 15.40. Otherwise at 13.10, while the Cooks hurried to clear away the la t of the dinner things, the order 'Out Pipes'-extinguish cigarettes-was passed and within five minute the men were again forming up to be as igned work for the rest of the Afternoon watch. Work continued, interrupted by a ten-minute 'Sland Easy' at 14.20, until the order for 'Secure' was piped at 15.45. Throughout the ship cleaning gear was being towed in deck lockers, magazines and
ROLitine, Work and Rest
storerooms locked and lathes silenced for the night. Then at 16.00 came the bugle for Evening Quarter. ntilthe in tallation of a broadcasting system ('the tannoy') in about 1939, all general orders in the Hood were passed either by Bosun's call or bugle. The Bosun's call was used for the majority of routine orders-'Divisions', 'Secure' and 'Dinner', to name but a few-these being piped through the ship by a pair of Bosun's Mates and four Call-boys, who trilled their way across decks and along passages. The whistle was also employed on the quarterdeck in the traditional ceremony of Piping the Side whenever an officer came aboard. In RlIIlIIing a Big Ship, the manual for executive officers he published in 1937, Cdr O'Conor ruefully noted that 'Very slovenly drill is often seen at the head of the gangway when receiving officers and in piping the side'." His emphasis on the subject no doubt owed much to the appalling incident at Gibraltar one evening in March 1934 when Admiral Sir William Fisher, Commanderin-Chief, Mediterranean Fleet, arriving unannounced at the gangway, found none to receive him save a solitary Marine Bugler. When Fi her emerged an hour later with 'the quarterdeck elite' in tow, the side was of course fully manned, pipes, Marine Guard and all. The bugler in question, T. McCarthy, then only fifteen, takes up the story: Our visitor was piped over the side and all seemed to end nicely. But no; on reaching the jetty he stopped, turned and faced us all. Then he said 'Thank you, bugler, for welcoming me aboard and doing your job properly. I salute you!' And he did just that." Apart from its ceremonial function, especially at 'Colours' and 'Sunset', the bugle joined the Bosun's call in marking off the Hood's daily routine from 'Hands fall in' at 06.00 to the 'Last Post' at 21.00. The bugle was also used to pass specific orders with calls such as 'Cable Party', 'Libertymen' or 'Saluting Guns' Crew', the number of 'G's' added indicating which watch was being addressed. In war, however, its intended function was to transmit vital orders ('Clo e all Watertight Doors', 'Darken Ship') or alert the crew to imminent danger ('Repel Aircraft', 'Gas Alarm'), for which its range and urgency were better suited than the Bosun's whistle. In the event, the introduction of the tannoy sounded the death knell of the pipe and bugle in the Royal avy though both continued in use until after the econd World War. Writing around 1930, Rear-Admiral Arnold-Forster describes the new equipment being fitted into the major units of the Navy with a distaste shared by many officers of his generation: In these ships many of the orders that would have been piped on deck in stentorian tones by the boatswains' mates and repeated round the mess decks below by 'call boys' are spoken quietly into the transmitter on deck, and reproduced all over the ship in the loud raucous voice of the loud speakers." His view encapsulate the reaction of an influential group of officers to the introduction of any technology regarded as undermining the kills that had made the Navy what it was. The debate provoked by this outlook was carried into virtually every sphere of naval life, not least the Hood where the use
87
TOBACCO
Among the privileges of service in the Royal avy was the provision of dutyfree tobacco, a pound of which could be had each month for Is. IOd. By the 1930s a majority of ratings were drawing their 'baccy' in half-pound tins which they would then roll into cigarettes, but the older men preferred to receive theirs in leaf form and make up 'pricks' in the time-honoured manner. Bill Stone of South Devon, a stoker in Hood from 1921-5, explains the procedure: The first stage of the preparation process involved cutting out the black stems of the leaves-from which snuff could be made. Having done that, you then had to damp the leaves and roll them tightly into an elliptical shape which was fat in the middle and tapered to two pointed ends. Canvas was wrapped around followed by spun yam-all wound tightly all around. The leaves could be stored in this form and remain fresh. The men would cut tobacco off to use for roll-ups as they needed.'" Other recipes called for the addition of rum and the resulting plug of tobacco was also carved up for pipe smoking and chewing. But, like fancy ropework, the business of preserving leaf tobacco was a dying art in the avy and much to the disgust of his elders the younger man tended to cigarettes rolled from the lighter tinned tobacco known as 'Tickler's~ Cigarette rolling being a rather tiresome operation, 'tickler firms' sprang up on the lower deck selling roll-ups for ha'penny a time to make a little extra on the side. Ticklers were fine for a smoke aboard but when a sailor went ashore be wanted something better and for this be
turned to the 'posh' cigarettes sold in the ship's canteen. Tobacco was increasingly rationed in wartime Britain but the services continued to enjoy duty-free cigarettes, Sub-Lt John lago reporting prices of 6d. for 20 on joining the Hood in September 1939." But, cheap as it was, and despite being at last permitted to smoke, few midshipmen or boys could afford to take advantage. For reasons of safety, health and productivity the avy placed restrictions on smoking aboard, which was for the most part confined to designated areas on the open deck and limited to mealtimes, the ten-minute 'Stand easy', and off-duty periods until 21.55. Smoking below decks was permitted only in the heads, the ship's offices, the recreation space on the shelter deck and in the chief and petty officers' messesthough never in working hours. In addition, officers were allowed to light up in the wardroom after the various toasts at dinner each evening. These were the rules, but with such a high proportion of nicotine addicts of all ranks they were unlikely to be observed and smoking went on throughout the ship--even in 'B' turret where OA Bert Pitman and Commiss.ioned OA 'Sam' Sulley puffed their way through each day on pipes. JO For the legal smoker a total of 27 basinshaped spitkids were placed on deck when meals and 'Stand easy' were piped, being as swiftly removed once they were over. Spittle, it should be added, was no longer an acceptable addition to the contents of the spitkid. II
HMS Hood Association archives.
"Iago, Leiters (Loch Ewe, 3-5 Oc.ober 1939). "IWM/SA, no. 22147, reel 3 (1939-41).
Commissioned OA John C. 'Sam' Sulley was lost with the ship in 194 J.
of the ship's broadcasting system was a matter of disagreement between Capt. Francis Pridham and his executive officer, Rory O'Conor, in 1936. When entering or leaving harbour it was O'Conor's view that The Commander needs to have the upper deck under hi instantaneous control. .. for a really smart effect to be obtained, and the loud-speaker equipment. .. is invaluable in giving him this command." But Pridham would have absolutely none of this: I was expected to use a telephone for giving orders to the
" RBS. p. 128. 11 Cited in \\'el1s. The Royal fa,?,. p. 158.
n Arnold-Forster. The Ways ofthe Navy, p. 27. " RBS, p. 13 J.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
88
fo'castle. This I refused to do: I had a powerful voice and except in a gale of wind when I could use a megaphone I needed no electrical aids." For all that, Pridham and his successors made frequent use of the tannoy to broadcast information on forthcoming movements and international developments over the messdecks. The pipe and bugle therefore survived in the Hood, though firmly harnessed to the tannoy. In the handbook for naval chaplains he published in J 944, the Rev. Beardmore, chaplain of the Hood between 1939 and 1941, gives a flavour of their use in war: When you turn in at night have your clothes ready to slip on should the alarm rattlers be sounded. In day time the bugle sounds 'alarm to arms' for enemy aircraft, and 'action stations' for enemy surface craft. At night the alarm rattlers are sounded from the bridge, followed by 'action stations' on the bugle through the broadcaster. J6 But night in peacetime held few such terrors, and after Evening Quarters was sounded at 16.00 the men either went ashore or shifted out of the rig of the day and into more comfortable gear before settling down to tea. For most their day's work was done. At dusk the quarterdeck played host to the third and most cherished ceremony of the naval day, 'Sunset', when the White Ensign was hauled down for the night. Sunset was reserved for peacetime in harbour because at sea as in war the Ensign flew until it was blown or shot away. Here i V.e. Scott O'Connor's description of it off Victoria, British Columbia one day in June 1924:
Pridham, Memoirs, II, p. 167. Beardmore. The \\'(uers of Unurtainty. p. 59. J~ O'Connor. The Empire Cruise, pp.244-5. Twiss, Social Change in the Royal Na1'y, pp. 15--16. Jj
)6
At sunset the customary ceremony of hauling down the Flag was more beautiful than usual. The Olympic Mountains that had looked down upon us from their silver solitudes up in the heavens, creatures remote and aloof in their far-off beauty, became flu hed with a rosy pink; small gold clouds hung over the tops of the Canadian fir trees; and as the sun neared the horizon, the trumpeters who herald his departure, the drums that beat at the close of day, assembled for the ceremony of his pa sing. There they tood stiffly at attention, waiting for the word of command. At each of the flags, the Jack at the fore, the White Ensign aft, on each ship, two seamen stood waiting for the signal to haul down the Flag. Along the quarter-deck to port and starboard stood other seamen, holding in their hands the lateral cords. An Officer of the Royal Marines stood at attention, a telescope under his arm. All waited in silence for the signal. And then of a sudden it was given, and the whole line of flags came fluttering down to the surface of the quarter-deck; the bugles sounded the Last Post, the vVhite Ensign slowly descended, as if the proud Flag were reluctant to give way to the shadows of night. Far up at the top of each tall mast, a seaman retreated step by step down the hundred rungs of a ladder, making his departure with the same calm and unhurried deliberation. At last it was over. The snow of the Olympics withdrew into their invisible monotones in a grey sl..·),; the band struck up, its drum-beats throbbing in the clear Canadian air, and one more day closed in the life of the Empire ..."
The men passed the hours until supper at 19.00 writing letters, playing games, mending clothes, painting, reading or studying for higher rating as the mood took them. There might be rehearsals for the S.O.D.S. Opera or training for one of the Hood's many sports teams. This was also the opportunity for the trades or 'firms' to set up business in lobbies and messdecks as the tannoy broadcast the latest dance and musical hits over the hip. At 20.30 the 'Cooks' completed their day's work by clearing up the messdecks in readiness for ommander's Rounds at 21.00, a brief inspection heralded by the 'Last Post'. It took the Commander or Duty Officer about 20 minutes to thread his way through the Hood's messdecks and before he had finished the men were retrieving their hammocks and slinging them for the night. By the time the Bosun's Mate called 'Pipe Down' at 22.00 a good number of his shipmates were either in the arms of' Morpheus or counting the rivets in ti,e deckhead.
·......·tr--
Eventually the day came when HMS Hood put to sea. Four hours before she sailed the Engineering Department had begun to raise steam, flashing up boilers and opening the sectional valves on the steam main to admit power to the turbines. As the moment of departure approached curls of oily smoke started to rise from funnels rumbling like thunder as they expanded in the heat of the boilers. The last boats were brought up to their davits and the cable party gathered on the forecastle for the ship to slip her moorings. Admiral Sir Frank Twiss describes the spectacle: A battleship, especially a Flagship, leaving Portsmouth was a major event. All harbour traffic was stopped, tugs lay in readiness, special flags were flown and the great ship, with her crew fallen in on deck, the cable officer standing in the bow, the blacksmith ready to knock off the slip on a huge anchor in case of need, the Admiral on the bridge and the Royal Marine Guard and Band in white helmets paraded on the quarterdeck, awaited the moment of departure. Stationed on the quarterdeck were an Officer and a Midshipman ready to see that all was in proper ceremonial order, each wearing a frock coat or bumfreezer according to rank and equipped with a telescope. I··· J Immediately prior to the wire hawsers being slipped or the tugs secured there is feverish activity on the quarterdeck. The Admiral on his way to the bridge is possibly conferring with some Staff Officer, last-minute messages arrive, people leave the ship, salutes are rendered according to status, the Commander prowls around satisfying himself that all is properly prepared, the gangway or brow is ready for the crane to hoist it away and the Captain is on the bridge reassured by the report that the ship is ready for sea" The off-duty men formed up by divisions. The band struck up A Life 011 tile Oceall Wave. Crowds cheered their goodbyes as the ship sheared herself from the jetty. But for the Coombs twins, Boy Seamen sailing in Hood for the first time in May 1935, the event was a huge disappointment: The pride we took in our first appearance as part of the crew of the 'Mighty Hood' as she slid quietly and quite close to the fortifications guarding the entrance to Portsmouth
ROt/tille, Work alld Rest
harbour with cheering crowds waving their farewells was soon put into Iper pective] with the remark that some of the crowd were glad to see us go and the order to clean ship on leaving the land. Instead of getting a close and interesting view of the Warner Light Ship and Nab Fort with the Isle of Wight in the distance, all we had to remember that first adventure b)' was a close look at our decks as, on hands and knees, we rubbed the grime of Portsmouth away to reveal the near white wood that we had thought white." Once the ship was under way the Officer of the Watch shifted the log from the quarterdeck to the bridge where his duties assumed a far more critical dimension. Entrusted already with the minutiae of her routine, discipline and functioning, to him now fell the awesome responsibility of ensuring the safety of the ship and all embarked in her. Perched on the bridge-the first such structure to be enclosed in a Briti h capital ship-it was his task to keep the Hood on her pre-determined course and at the stipulated speed while maintaining the closest watch for hazard both of shipping and geography.'" His chief reference was the Captain's Standing Orders, a set of instructions based on a complete evaluation of the ship's capabilities and manoeuvrability by which she was expected to be navigated. Even with the benefit of these and up to eight bridge lookouts with high-powered binoculars, steering the ship presented a significant problem in foul weather or poor visibility, particularly if she was sailing inshore or with other vessels in company. In such cases the OOW would have recourse to the Banenberg station-keeping instrument, a pelorus for establishing relative bearings and a small rangefinder for measuring distances from nearby vessels.
89
But it took more than instruments to make a seaman. As Capt. Francis Pridham put it, the challenge of seamanship lay in the ability 'to foresee all that might happen. It is required of a true seaman that he shall be proof against such failure'" No circumstance te ted this ability more than heavy fog:
"
I\\'~t,
.t(I
It should be added that an air
defence platform was fitted atop the
The onset of fog or a significant alteration of course immediately required the Captain and the Navigator to be roused from their cabin if they were not already on the bridge. The first duty of the Navigator, or 'Pilot' as he was known, was to establish the exact position of the ship. For this he relied on three instruments above all: the sextant, with which he ascertained the altitude of the sun and known stars; the chronometers, stowed in a cabinet beneath 'X' turret, which gave him the mean time at Greenwich; and the ship's compasses by which he could steer and take bearings of objects. On the bridge tood the magnetic compass binnacle and forward of it one of the gyro repeats of the master gyro compass on the lower deck. By dint of these he could establish latitude and longitude and at length layoff a course for the ship in the chart house behind the compass platform. If time or weather prevented sights being taken then he would have recourse to the echo sounder
e~isting
structure in 1936.
with which she served out the rest of her career. .. I Pridham, Memoirs, II, p. 152. ..2
.. . In ordinary experience thick fog means a time of strain and anxiety for those on the bridge of any ship. J n the vicinity of shoals, especially in tidal waters, constant care and concentration are necessary to ensure safety under way, and the risk of collision with other vessels is always present. At no other time are the faculties of sight and hearing kept so taut and alert."
9 t1,/1, pp. 42-3.
Arnold-Forster, TIle \\'tl}'5 ofrhe
Nm?'. pp. 57-8.
Hood sailing from Portsmouth on 11 May 1934. Though frequently away for months at a time, her crews and their families were spared the extended foreign service routinely performed by much of the British Fleet. Other than the war, Hood's longest absence from her home port was the nineteen months she spent in the Mediterranean between June 1937 and January 1939. BlbbotMk fur ZMfje5CJllchttt.
Stutt~"
90
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
Her mainmast flagpole struck, Hood passes beneath the Forth
which informed him what depth the ship was in, the results obtained being compared to the chart for her supposed position. Another new device fitted in Hood by the late 1920s was the radio direction finder with which bearings could be taken from beacons set up along the British coast. An increasing number of these also is ued a sonic pulse which, when picked up on the ship's hydrophones, permitted the range to be calculated as weU, though the radius of these devices limited their use to coastal waters. The results of these calculations were laid out for the benefit of the flag officer and his taff on an electronic plotting table installed on the Admiral's bridge. Mid. Ross Warden (1940-1) explains its operation:
Bridge after a ,pell at Ro'yth on 15 July 1934. By the 19305 advances in wireless telegraphy
had obviated the need for lofty 'flat roof' aerials so Hood was among the last ships in the Royal Navy required to perform this evolution. HMS Hood ABoc~ttonlMuofl CoI/«t/On
At sea my station was in the plot room which was on the Admiral's deck below the main bridge. It was a small compartment roughly 8 ft. x 6 ft. The plotting table was approximately 3 ft. x 2'h ft. The requisite chart was set above the glass top, while underneath the glass was a circular light about the size of a sixpence within which was a cross, the centre of the cross representing the ship's position. The mechanism which drove the position indicator was far beyond my comprehension, and maintenance was the responsibility of the electrical branch. The whole purpose of the table was to keep an accurate picture of enemy dispositions relative to our own position. The Admiral [ omerville) was a regular visitor to the plot room." Sometimes, however, the plot malfunctioned:
U
The schoolmaster commander and I took alternate night watches which were from 10 p.m. until 6 a.m. One was aUowed to relax but not sleep soundly on the smaU leather couch. This particular night on our return from the convoy there were few reports of enemy activity and I relaxed too weU. Around 3 a.m. I was uddenlyaware I had company with an alarming amount of gold lace-no Ie than Sir James himself. He glanced at the plot, said 'Good grief, boy! We are in the Navy, not the Army. Look at this.' To my horror the ship was proceeding at 24 knots acros the French Sahara. That mechanical error wa very quickly rectified.'"
\Varden, 'Memories of the Banle
Cruiser H.M.. "Hood"; p. 83. .. Ibid., pp. 834.
Below: The pain of separation. Hood leaves Portsmouth for the Caribbean on 6 January 1932. Mrs~"Sm,th
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Once the ship's position had been determined and her course laid off, appropriate orders were passed via voicepipe to the steering position in the upper conning tower and to the engine room control platforms via telegraph if a change of speed was necessary. Keeping the Hood on a steady course was no easy task, especially in heavy seas, and no one spent longer than a 'trick'-two hours-at the wheel. A good helmsman, it was said, was born and not made and it took much skill to anticipate the effect of wind and water sufficiently to prevent the ship from yawing her way across the ocean. Mid. Robin Board R.N.V.R. spent an hour and a half conning the Hood off orthumberland one night in March 1934: It was part way through the middle watch. In the wheelhouse, a surprisingly small, dimly lit cell two-third of the way up the great steel citadel that formed her forward superstructure, an RNVR midshipman was at the wheel. The wheel wasn't very big, and it stood on a scrubbed beech grating. In front of him was a slit in the
Routine, Work and Rest
12-inch armour, about 3 inches high and 3 feet wide. Through this a narrow slice of grey ea alternated with grey sky as the bow gently rose and dipped. But his eyes were glued to the green band above it, across which a series of numbers moved in staccato jerks. His job was to keep the pointer steadily on 330°, but it kept slipping off and each time the quartermaster beside him gently gave a turn or two to correct the swing. After some time he seemed to get the hang of it. At the fir t minute sign of movement he would make three full turns of the wheel, and then perhaps twenty seconds later, when the swing in that direction was just discernible, he hastily made five turns in the opposite direction, gradually ironing out the pendulum effect of 3° of helm on 860 feet of ship. He could feel the deep heartbeat of her screws under his feet. .." The order to alter course passed and executed by the helmsman, it took the Hood's 860 feet some time to respond. At length, by means of a series of couplings, receivers and clutches leading via the after engine room to the tiller head, the rudder came round and the ship began to answer the helm with majestic dilatoriness. The principal mechanism was Napier's differential screw gearing, by which the power of the steering engine was harnessed to bring the tiller head round in the requisite direction. Back on the compass platform the movement of the gyro compass and the rudder indicator confirmed that the correct course had been shaped and the ship's log was updated accordingly. By all accounts, sailing in the Hood was a unique experience. A bulged hull form together with great beam and length gave her remarkable stability in most sea conditions:
In the Hood we don't feel the weather very much. She takes ixteen seconds in rolling her normal are, whereas in the Atlantic and most oceans the period of roll is eleven seconds. The happy result is that our broad-beamed lady is little more than half-way through her roll when the next wave catches her and steadies her. [... J It's much the same when we have a head or a stern sea-the period between the average Atlantic wave crest is about 400 feet, but the fact that the Hood is over 800 feet long means she is always on
t\V'O
9l
SIGNALLING
Until wireless telegraphy finally made them redundant in the 1950s, the avy continued to rely on flag, ignal projectors and semaphore as the chief means of communicating between ships sailing in company. The signalmen entrusted with this task were drawn from the brighter young seamen entering the avy and trained in each of the four main aspects of visual signalling: semaphore, morse flag, morse flashing and finally flag signalling it elf. Ln peacetime the signalling section of the Hood's Communications Department numbered 40 men under a Chief Yeoman of Signals, but the complement Ted Briggs joined as a Boy Signalman in July 1939 eventually reached 54. Their duties were performed on the flag deck which occupied both sides of the first level of the bridge structure, a watch requiring the presence of a yeoman, a leading signalman, two signalmen and two boys or ordinary signalmen on each side. When the Hood was cruising independently there was little for the 'bunting tossers' to do. But it was another matter when she was sailing in company, the signalmen having to maintain a keen watch for hoists and flashing from other ships while being ready to issue their own at a moment's notice. Orders for
waves) or sometimes on three.'6
These sea-keeping qualities often elicited comment and it was noted during the World Cruise of 1923-4 that Rear-Admiral Field's cabin was free of the 'fiddles' and retaining pieces usually relied on to keep items on shelves and mantelpieces. Whether this stability extended to permitting the Billiard Room to be used at sea is another matter, but the general impression was echoed by Sub-Lt John lago in his first weeks aboard during October 1939: In spite of pretty heavy seas we do not roll at all, I should never have thought such a stable ship possible. The seas ju t break traight over us, like a breakwater."
Norman, HMS Hood. p. 36.
.. Cited in Bradford, The Mighr}' Hood, p. 56. 41lago, Letters (at sea, 9-11 October 1939).
A signalman makes the letter 'J' on Hood's starboard flag deck, a 3-pounder saluting gun on each side of him. In the foreground a petty officer, perhaps a Yeoman of Signals. peers
through the telescope of a 24-inch signalling searchlight, (.1935. HMS Hood ~rionIWillisCollection
signals reached the flag deck via voicepipe from the Admiral's bridge or the compass platform. The yeoman immediately called out the flag groups to be hoisted, his signalmen selecting them from the lockers ranged about the flag deck. The Hood carried the standard set of 85 flags, burgees and pendants, each with a name, letter or number and a particular designation, and each kept neatly tucked away in its pigeonhole until the moment came for it to be bent to the halyards using an Inglefield clip. This done, the order 'Hoist' sent them up to the signal yards on each side of the ship. Once all ships in company had hoisted the answering pendant in acknowledgement, the signal was hauled down and the order immediately executed. Hoisting flags was a job for two men and periods of extended signalling made it an arduous duty, and one not free from embarrassing mishaps. Signalman Geoff Shaw: One thing to be avoided was losing your halliards-usually caused by a combination of keenness and carelessness when the chappie whose job it was to hoi t the flags did so rather too quickly and before the others had time to clip on all the flags. The flag signal would then go up, perhaps incomplete, but always not dipped on to the halliard at its bottom end. There was thus no means of hauling it down again afterwardsand the hauling down of a flag signal was its executive signal." In such an eventuality there was nothing for it but for the hapless signalman to clamber up the foremast and along the signal yard while his flags trailed out in the breeze for all to see. Occasionally a serious error in signalling procedure elicited the reprimand of'pendants at the dip', a display of the ship's pendant number at half mast, though the Hood's status as a flagship made it extremely perilous for any vessel to drag her name through the mud Like this. The Hood's pendant number was 51, her flag officer denoted 'ACQ', Admiral Commanding Battle Cruiser Squadron. .. Cited in Poolman. The British Sailor, p. 74. Shaw served in the cruiser-minelayer Adventure.
The Battlecmiser HMS HOOD
92
.9
lago, Letters (at sea, 9-11 October
1939). ~ Benstead, Roulld the World with tile Battle Cruisers, pp. 135-6. )1 HMS Hood Association archh'es. Jl Pertwee, Moon Boots and Dinner Suits, pp. ISO-I. )J Roberts, The BatrJecruiser Hood. p.9. J.I Rea. A Curare's Egg, p. 119.
But the Hood could roll heavily in a beam sea and two days later lago was reconsidering his earlier assessment: I spoke a bit oon about the ship being as steady as a rock! We are rolling and pitching a great deal now. Most of the Marines and many of the sailors are being seasick but thank goodness it does not take me that way." The most memorable and prolonged period of rolling in the ship's career came in the Great Australian Bight during the World Cruise. Instructor Lieutenant Charles Benstead: For the first time within the memory of the oldest inhabitant we rolled, harmonically, appreciably and persistently; and the phenomenon was disconcerting in the e':1reme. We all knew the Great Bight enjoyed a reputation rivalled only by that of the Bay of Biscay, but no one expected His Majesty's battle cruiser Hood to behave like a Yarmouth herring boat. Sometime during the early morning of Friday, the 7th March, 1924, we ran into a long swell on the beam and we began to roll. We rolled 17 degrees each side of the vertical and, worst of all, we were unprepared. Mild chaos reigned. Everylhing that could possibly achieve freedom of movement did so. Electric fans were heard crashing on the cabin deck. Books clattered from shelves. Tobacco jars, inkpots, tubes of tooth paste, shaving gear, framed photographs, cigarette trays and every conceivable article that could break loose reached the deck and rolled in harmony with the ship. A roll of 17 degrees is not excessive ... but our passage through the Great Australian Bight is worthy of mention solely because it was the only occasion on which we really rolled. For three days we steamed through this long swell, but after the first spasm we seldom rolled more than 10 degrees; that was sufficient to dip the quarterdeck and start the table equipment liding into our laps.so
Hood rolling in a beam sea in the Bay of Biscay in 1937. The party of men working on the aft screen must be having a difficult time of it.
The Bight certainly cleared Field's mantelpieces if his steward hadn't done so already. But such circumstances were unusual and it was not until the Second World War that operational exigencies obliged the Hood to keep the seas unremittingly and in terrible weather. A victim was 00 Bill Hawkin of
Portsmouth, aboard in 1940-1: One night it was really rough and she was rolling and pitching against some heavy waves when it was my turn to go down and get the cocoa. On the way back up she gave a bit of a lurch and I lost the lot. When I finally made it back I was told to report to the Officer of the Watch on the bridge who informed me it was one hand for myself and one for the cocoa, not
tWO..51
One of the many who suffered agonies of seasickness was 00 Jon Pertwee (1940-1): My one regret on joining the Navy was the curse of seasickness. 1... 1 On the bulkhead where my hammock was lung, there was a me cupboard for the crockery, and to make the endless journeys to the 'heads'... less frequent, I obtained a medium-sized jam tin to be sick in. This I partly filled with water and disinfectant and left on top of the cupboard where it lvould be handy during the night. A creature of habit, I removed, emptied and recharged it with disinfectant dail)', but the best-laid plans sometimes go awry. For one stormy night after using the tin to good effect I was called out on an emergency watch and inadvertently left the offending article on the top of the cupboard. An illtempered leading hand of the mess, looking for the jam, found my tin, and on seeing its contents was not very well disposed toward me for some time.;' Even at her most stable, however, there was a price to be paid for riding through waves rather than over them. The gradual accretion of armour during construction meant that the Hood entered service exceeding her designed draft b)' not less than two feet, and four feet at full loadS' At the best of times thi gave the quarterdeck a freeboard of no more than eleven feet at the break of the forecastle, a distance that would diminish as further topweight was added with the passage of years. Where her sea-keeping qualities were concerned this meant that the Hood was, to put it mildly, a 'wet ship' aft at speed or in anything other than a moderate swell. The Rev. Edgar Rea describes a full-power trial in the Channel in October 1936: The sun was shining and the sea was smooth as glass. Gradually the vibration increased as more and more power was applied. The bow waves grew and dashed away on either side but what was really impres ive was the stern wave. There the water was churned into a frothy maelstrom which gradually climbed higher and higher up the stern until eventually it flowed into a steady, regular river over the stern and down the quarter-deck where it di appeared through the scuppers into the sea again. No other ship, that I had ever seen, produced a stern wave which found its way on board ..." No wonder the Hood came to be known as 'the largest submarine in the Navy', cover one wave and under seven'. Nor were the effects confined to excessive vibration. Flooding through unguarded scuttles, hatches and vents brought perpetual damp to the officers' quarters aft and severe damage to the ship's fittings and equipment, including the roller path of'Y'
93
Routine, Work and Rest
WIRELESS TELEGRAPHY
The practical application of Hertzian waves in the form of wireless telegraphy had been pioneered by the Royal avy at the clo e of the nineteenth century. In 1896 Cdr Henry Jackson succeeded in transmitting a morse message between each end of the torpedo training ship Defiallce, thus marking the birth of the radio age. However, the Admiralty paid little attention to this development, and it was an Italian scientist, Guglielmo Marconi, who lodged a patent application for radio telegraphy in London the following year. Marconi had settled in Britain and it was with Jackson's unstinting support that the Admiralty was finally brought round to the importance of wireless telegraphy, no less than 32 sets being purchased from the Marconi Company in 1899. Significant technical and administrative developments were achieved in this field prior to the First World War, but as in other areas the avy failed to make good its advantage during that conflict. Above all, the Battle of Jutland revealed shortcomings in training, tactics and technique which, among other thing, prevented Admiral Jellicoe disposing his fleet effectively against the retreating Germans. onetheless, lessons were learnt and the years after the Great War saw an enormous expansion in wireles telegraphy and personnel. Among the early beneficiaries was the Hood, which always carried a Signals specialist as Squadron Signal Officer, often the Flag Lieutenant, together with a Squadron Wireless Telegraphy Officer, usually a Lieutenant-Commander (S). The precise details of the Hood's WIT equipment have eluded this writer but the following passage by Capt. Barrie Kent no doubt encompasses her outfit in the 1920s: The early arc and spark transmitters were gradually replaced by the first valve sets, again working in the range lOa-300kHz. The big ship sets were Types 35 and 36, while destroyers had Type 37, the latter having a working range of about 500 miles, although they could often be heard at 1,000 miles or more. Another set, the Type 34, was introduced for exchanging gunnery spotting information. There was also a low-powered transmitter known as the Type 43, which used a pair of T 1 valves-the first transmitter valves introduced into naval service. This was housed in the auxiliary office and used for harbour wave, having a range of about ten miles, though much greater ranges were achieved around dawn in the summer months."
d
In Hood's case the Auxiliary (or Third) WIT office was located in the conning tower. The Second WIT office on the lower deck aft housed the medium-range transmitting gear, but the principal long-range transmitters and receivers were in the main WIT office. Cdr (S) John Meadows gives a flavour of the equipment it would have contained in about 1930: In the later 1920s a new breed of transmitter began to come into use, the Type 48 as the main set in big ships, and the Type 49 for destroyers. These were more complex and more powerful but still operated in the L[owJ F[requency] and M[ediumJ F[requency] bands. The first thermionic valve receiver, known as the model C, which replaced the crystal set, had a number of separate coils and condensers which could be adjusted to receive a given frequency. Each unit was screwed into a silent cabinet lined with copper sheeting, the various items being connected together with number 10 gauge copper wire which was fashioned to connect either horizontally or vertically, never at any other angle. These wires were invariably polished with brasso, as were the contacts on the inductance boxes and their moving arms. This made the items on the bulkhead gleam purposefully, thus inviting communication with the outside world, but bits of dried brasso between contacts did nothing to improve the efficiency of the rig!" Communication was effected via huge 'flat roof' aerials slung over the boat deck between the WIT yards. The Hood's main WIT office contained a pair of transmitters in silent cabinets and a bank of six receivers. A WIT trunk connected the aerials to the heavy rig on the main mast. Under normal peacetime conditions the WIT office would be manned by a watch of four or five telegraphists, one for morse transmission and others at receivers tuned to the Admiralty in London for naval signals and to Rugby in Warwickshire for VLF news broadcasts, all under a Leading Telegraphi t. Dick Jackman ofVentnor, a telegraphist in the Hood between 1937-9, explains the workings of her WIT system: Hood had three main wireless offices and several point where these could be operated by remote control, e.g. bridge, intelligence office, etc. There was the Main WIT office, a 2nd Office situated back aft, and an Auxiliary in the fore superstructure. The Main WIT had the Hood's mainmast running through
its centre, and I recall the huge hatch which was closed and opened by a chain block and tackle during action stations, access then being through a small circular hatch in its centre. [... 1 There was no such thing as voice radio, and all communication had to be by morse code which was expected to be at 22 words per minute, and had to be copied in pencil long hand on a pad with one carbon copy. One of my duties which I shared with three others was that of Press Operator. This entailed reading the press reports transmitted by automatic morse from Rugby at various times of the day and night for inclusion in the ship's newspaper. It was my misfortune to have the middle watch (00.01-04.00) on the night King Edward abdicated. There was much to be transmitted in the time available 0 Rugby speeded up its transmission and for nearly four hours I wrote furiously with no time to put carbons into the next pad which somebody had to do for me." ~mmunications rntinpalw mann~ the Coding office where signals were deciphered and encrypted by a wartime staff of ten coders, and the Direction-Finding office whose low-frequency equipment was used in navigation. Then there was the Intelligence office in the conning tower, given plenty of work monitoring German and Italian signals during the Spanish Civil War. The likelihood of revealing the ship's position made transmissions rare during wartime, but the resources of the Hood's Communications Department were kept fully stretched receiving coded morse signals and her telegraphist complement increased from 20 to 40 during the course of 1939. To these and the ten coders already mentioned must be added the 20 wiremen responsible for maintenance of the Department's equipment. The Signal Branch attracted some of the best officer minds and equally the Telegraphist ratings or 'sparkers' were the pick of the boy recruits. On them would fall the great burden of technological advance in the Royal avy during the coming war. Radio telephone for short-range fleet communications was installed in the early stages of the war followed by radar in 1941, but ti,e Hood was not to survive long enough to reap the benefit of these innovation.
Kent, Signal!, p. 70. Cited in Ibid., pp. iG-1. $' E-mail to the author, I Dectmber 2003. 1am grateful to M r Dick Jackman for his assistance with this section.
II
50
---------...
,.-----------------------------------------------------94
sa lago. Leiters (Greenock, 2 No,oember 1939). ,. Correspondence in 'm'a! Review, 63 (1975), pp. 371-2, and 64 (1976), pp, 84-5. 60
E-mail to the author, l3 January 2004,
Wellings, 0" His MajestJ"s Service, p. 84. The American expression 'beat the band' translates as 'energetically' or 'abundantly: See also Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, p. 143, '-2 Godfrey. The Naval Memoirs. IV, p,62, '-' Pertwee, Moo" Bool5 and Dinner Suits. p. 149. 61
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
turret which was di covered to be rusted fast in the summer of 1938. Wartime conditions forward were almost as bad, with water pouring through fan shafts onto the messdeck and contamination of the h)'draulic s),stems of 'N turret. Occasional flooding was to be expected in heavy seas but the Hood suffered more than most a enormous waves crested over the ship and entered the living spaces. This was particularl)' the case during the war when breakwaters were damaged and several of the ship's boats smashed while 'Energy Parties' of men worked night and da)' mopping the rivers of water coursing through the decks. A flavour oflife below decks in winter is provided b)' Sub-Lt John lago, writing to his famil)' in ovember 1939: Had a hot at bu)'ing some sea boots this morning but could not get the right size. The)' are needed because the decks are nearl)' alwa)'s awash and we roll quite a bit, as much as 10° each wa)' sometimes, Leather shoes are ver)' slipper)' and one walks permanentl)' with one's feet turned out and legs apart!S8
Hood 'taking it green' during a speed trial on 25 March 1941. Not a time to visit the heads.
Butthis circumstance was more than a demoralising inconvenience. The fact that the quarterdeck was routinel), under hundreds of tons of water added to the strain on what was alread), an overloaded hull. Ln view of her great length and the 400 feet that separated her two pairs of turrets, the Hood sailed with a hog or bending movement of at least ten or twelve inches in her keel, probabl)' rather more towards the end of her career." Allowance was made for this whenever the ship went into dr), dock, the aerials being made taut on entr), and eased off again when she returned to the waler. Similarl)', the greatest care was taken to ensure that the blocks on which she rested were both
perfectl)' level and ufficient in number to avoid undue sagging of the hull. At issue was not onl), the structural integrity of Ihe ship but the condition of the 110-ton reserve tanks in the double bottom upon which the boilers relied for emergency supplies of water. B)' the late 1930s it was clear that seawater entering through the ship's plates and faulty seams in the tanks was contaminating the reserve water, with devastating consequences for the boilers drawing from them, The Hood's designers had made allowance for the flexing of the hull, the most obvious sign of which was the expansion joint separating the deck plating from the teak planking on the boat deck. This was designed to permit movement of the hull at the maximum point of stress. However, the spectacle of plates not onl), moving but overlapping provides evidence of increasing strain on an ageing hull. Telegraphist Dick Jackman (1937-9): The boat deck was timber with decking running fore and aft. However, running athwart for the entire width of the boat deck was a metal plate about 12 inches in width and secured to the fore part of the ship, the after part being free, and during [saggingl this plate could be seen riding as much as 1.5 inches over the planking of the after decking.'" Such joints could not of course be fitted on the ship's bottom so a certain amount of damage was to be expected in a vessel of this size, along with the leaking that went with it. Whether this circumstance had an)' bearing on the nature of her sinking remains a moot point. Then there was the incessant groaning of plating, frames and superstructure, As Lt-Cdr Joseph Wellings, the U.S. avy's official observer, put it in his diar)' on 27 December 1940, 'The Hood squeaks to beat the band when weather gets rough'.·' But earlier, before the travail and dilapidation that characterised her last )'ears, to be at sea with the Hood was the most exhilarating of experiences. E,L. Merrell, looking on from Repulse, describes the first rollers striking her as she emerged from the Grand Harbour at Malta one da)' in June 1937: We follow Hood and outside the sea is running a bit and her bows begin to dig into the waves-huge white plumes engulf her and her stern is awa h. It's all so indescribabl), fine.·' Aboard the Hood the sensation produced b)' this motion was never les than disconcerting. 00 Jon Pertwee: The pitch of the ship was remarkable, Doing twenty-five knot in mountainous seas, she would slowl)' rise some thirt), feet into the air, shaking, vibrating and shuddering at the effort of forcing her bows through the middle of the gigantic greenbacks before her. Once through, she would shoot forward like a gre)'hound off its leash, to a point where there was no sea immediatel)' beneath her bOllom, This caused the 42,000 ton man-o'-war to drop like an elevator out of control and land smack on the surface of the sea far, far below. The amount of water thrown up b)' the massive ship's impact was past belief and indelibl)' imprinted on the minds of all those from other ship who had ever witnessed it 63 The volume of water corning inboard occasionall)' had unex-
~
95
Routine, Work and Rest
peeted results. During a wartime storm in the North Atlantic a 60-foot wave succeeded in traversing the 900 tons of'A turret on its roller path. Nor was heavy flooding the only inconvenience. OD Bill Hawkins describes the awful predicament in which one could find oneself: The heads (toilets) were right for'ard and when she had heavy pitch you had to stand up or you would have 'you know what' in your pants. Sometimes a bit of a laugh and sometimes not. 64 Tormal cruising speed was 12-15 knots, which the Hood could make on nine of her 24 boilers.·' In fog or on entering a confined or difficult harbour like Malta and Gibraltar twelve boilers would be lit in order to provide the requisite bursts of power on each of the four propellers. It needed fifteen boilers to make 25 knots and three more to reach 26.5 by which time she was approaching her best speed. AB Len Williams captures the power and beauty of the moment: To be in Hood when she was at speed was quite an experience. At about 28 knots or over, the bow waves caused fountains to shoot up each anchor hawsepipe; while the wash from her bows broke onboard at the forward end of the quarter-deck and washed aft to join the high pipe up at her stern. In the bright Mediterranean sunlight, these fountains gave off the brilliant rainbow effect of the spectrum, in a kaleidoscope of colour, the falling water bouncing off the deck like a shower of diamonds scintillating in the sun. The ship reached 31.5 knots and it gave one a thrill to see the deep blue of the sea thrown up into boiling, brilliant white foam as we sped along. After four hours, we began to ease down until our speed had dropped to 15 knots, and we resumed our more leisurely way towards Malta." Above all, there was pride in driving the fastest capital ship in the world to the limit of her speed and power. Here is Lieutenant (E) Geoffrey Wells' laconic diary entry for Friday I August 1924, the day Hood ran a full-power trial off Haiti: At 7.30 am vibrations woke me. Looking out of my scuttle I found water speedily slipping away aft. By 8.20 we commenced our last hour of working up to full power and I took my place in the After Engine Room. All 24 boilers had been connected by 7.00 so by 9.00 am we were making 25 knots and 15 minutes later 26.5 knots. The actual full power trial started at 9.30 by which time we had reached 190 revs with still 17 nozzles in hand (28.5 knots) for greater effort but since 144,000 hp is our authorised full power there is no advantage in exceeding it. We actually produced about 147,000 hp when we opened the other [turbine] sets a quarter. I visited Y boiler room and was particularly impressed by the coolness and calmness of the room. Not a sign of pulsation or irregularity. The temperature only 120° with 2'12" pressure. The engine room too remained cool while the condensers never rose above 110°F although these were only 25" vac. Except for the cabins right aft there was hardly any vibration. In these cabins however where the ship is overhung and not seaborne, pictures came down and tooth mugs got bent. I
went on deck as we passed the Repulse making about one knot more than her. We had started 1.5 miles astern and passed her in 100 minutes. At 11.30 we eased down. [... J We have been cruising around for nine months and our bottom is dirty-allow two knots and our 28.5 knots represents 30.5 knots. Allow then our reserve nozzles and the ship is probably capable of 32 knots ... All Engineer Officers now gathered in the office for lunch and beer. Soon after a casual observer might have seen about 20 empty bottles fallen in two deep on the office desk. Thus passed most of the afternoon·' Sometimes the Hood's passing would leave its mark on the land. On at least one occasion a high-speed trial in the Channel produced a spectacular wash which ended by sweeping rows of deck chairs off Weymouth beach.
.......~>. .-
For a newly-commi sioned ship the first drill at sea would be 'Action Stations', the manning of her armament, control and engineering systems for battle. This called for every man to reach his allotted post before the damage control teams, working from the bottom up, secured all watertight doors and hatches against the flooding that might result from a serious hit. Elsewhere, stanchions, flag staffs and davits were struck, magazines opened and hoses run along decks in the event of fire. Another was 'Collision Stations', a relic from the nineteenth century which required a coir and canvas mat fifteen feet square and two inches thick to be folded into a diamond, lowered over the bow and eventually draped over an imaginary hole in the ship's side. The canvas was then secured with a chain brought beneath the ship and lashed back over the deck using block and tackle. Meanwhile, worried officers paced the decks, stopwatches in hand, chafing at the laggardliness and inefficiency of their men in evolutions upon which the fate of the ship would supposedly one day depend. Shortly before noon on 3 January 1941 reports of gunfire off the Faeroes caused the Hood to clear for action in under four and a half minutes, apparently a record for the ship in wartime." A newly-commissioned ship could not hope to match this but there was to be ample opportunity for improvement. Each summer the ships of the Atlantic Fleet, or Home Fleet as it became in 1932, sailed north for a period of intensive training in the art of seamanship and naval warfare. In the North Sea and in anchorages off Scotland and Torthern Ireland crews were drilled in every eventuality that might befall their ship in war and peace. or was this the sole incentive. For an Admiralty determined to prevent a repetition of the Invergordon Mutiny, relentless work seemed to provide an appropriate outlet for the energies of the men. Whether the expedient of '[keeping] everyone unhappy by ordering strange exercises or drills at any time of the day or night' actually served this interest is another matter." The fleet mustered, its Commander-in-Chief might set the tone by passing an order such as 'Commander report to Flagship with a fried egg' or on one famous occasion 'Bandsmen report to Flagship playing popular airs' before work began in earnest. The first evolution was often 'General Drill' itself, a terrible day of which is recounted by Fred Coombs: ... We were put through a full day's general drill, which
HMS Hood Association archives. Pridham, Notes on Hand/ing the Hood, p. I. 66 Williams, Gone A Long jourtley, p.120. "Ll (E) Geoffrey Well" Diary of \-"orld Cruise, p. 57. .. RNM, 1998/42, Journal of Mid. P.I. Bucket!. 69 Twiss, Social Change in the Royal Navy, p. 30. 64
65
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
96
included all the hard manual jobs such as weighing bower anchor by use of the heavy capstan bars and capstan as of old, emergency repair and battle stations, all confused with dropping the sea boats and pulling the heavy boats for, perhaps, two miles before being recalled and hauled back on board, all by hand, all very hard work. Hard work was found for every department of some sort or another and by the end of the day in competition we were all exhausted.'" Other exercises emulated the feats of skill and stamina which had built the I avy's great reputation. There was the Naval Landing Party which recalled the part played by improvised artillery from HMS Powerful and Terrible in the relief of Ladysmith in February 1900 at the height of the Boer War. For the Hood this tran lated into using the ship's boats to land her 3.7in howitzer with detachments of sailors and Marines for manoeuvres ashore. The doyen of these exercises was undoubtedly Rear-Admiral William James who took the greatest care in making them as realistic as pos ible. 71 This enthusiasm was to have unforeseen consequences when an ill-considered landing near, of all places, 1nvergordon to round up a party of ,pirates' in red armbands resulted in reports of mutiny in the Hood in October 1933. No wonder his ideas on drill failed to recommend themselves to his brother admirals. Then there was the towing exercise conducted by pairs of ships at sea. In January 1915 the battlecruiser LiOIl, hammered to a standstill at the Dogger Bank, was brought 300 miles into Rosyth by the llldomirable in a feat of seamanship marked by the presentation of a guardian angel to her wardroom. Thereafter, 'Tow aft' or'Tow forward' as the case might be were favoured evolutions in the lal')'. E.L. Merrett, a civilian sailing in the Repulse, recorded his impression as Hood prepared to take his ship under tow in the Mediterranean in June 1937: The incident of the day has been the taking in tow of the Repulse by the Hood. A complicated, delicate and supremely '" 111"1, 911711, pp. 69-iO. James, The Sky \\'as Always Blue, pp. 171-2.
;1
Left: The funnels belch smoke
Above: The Hood's 3.7in
during a full-power trial in the late
steam picket boats rests on its crutches in the foreground while
howitzer being manhandled up a hill by a naval landing party at Loch Eriboll. Sutherland in June 1934. Reputedly a veteran of the Boer War, a sad fate awaited it over a Norwegian cliff in 1940.
the after starboard 5.5in director
HMS Hood A»oc~flon/WilllfCoIf«t1Ofl
1930.. The safety valves on the sides of the funnels have just lifted with a roar. One of the ship's
tower can be seen on the right. HMS Hood ~tJOnlS.lltCoIl«tJOn
Routille, Work !llld Rest
impressive operation-the firing of a shell with line attached across the after portion of the Hood. In met, the shell landed in the middle of the ~Iarine Band which was standing by ready to play to the men who would have to haul in the ropes and cable. [... llt is not until one is told what the exercise is to be, understands the calculation in time and distances that have to be made, that one can fully appreciate the enormous responsibility of dealing with the great masses." This subject was another on which Cdr O'Conor had very definite ideas: It is generally agreed that an 'ocean' tow, which includes towing disabled ships out of action, as when ll/dolllirnb/e brought Liol/ home from the Dogger Bank, should and would be made with a single tow-line. 'Tow Forward' in the Service is frequently complicated as a drill, by adherence to the idea that it is desirable to provide, and to use simultaneously, two sets of hawsers, presumably with the intention of occupying all hands. There is as little room for two ets of hawsers on the average forecastle as there is for two projectiles in one gun" Another favoured exercise recreated that nightmare scenario for any capital ship at anchor: a night attack by destroyers or motor torpedo boats. In such instances the Hood relied for her defence chiefly on the eight (later six) searchlights controlled from the Tight defence station aft. Rear-Admiral Arnold-Forster: As darkness sets in every searchlight is kept manned. An
97
extra dynamo is warmed up below and kept jogging round, a leading stoker standing by to open up its steam valve instantly. A sharp look-out is kept from bridge and control po it ions for dim outlines of attacking destroyers. Flaming funnels may give them away, or the smell of burning oil fuel if they attack from up wind. Should the destroyers coming down from ahead succeed in locating the ship, her one object is to beat them off before they get close enough to make good shots with their torpedoes. Directly they are sighted, the captain from the bridge orders 'Switch on searchlights!' One of the foremost lights picks up the foam of a destroyer's bow wave, which always shows up first. The trainer keeps hold of that destroyer
Godfrey. -"ami Memoirs. IV, pp. 51-2. -j RBS. p. 112. Despite Q'Conor's comments it is clear that Indomitable towed Lion with two hawsers. one of which broke -l
repeated I}'. Below: Hood preparing to take Repulse in tow in the Mediterranean in 1937. One of Repulse's hawsers lies ready on her forecastle. HM$ Hood AnOCI.tlonlHiggmson ColI«tion
Bottom: Hood oiling the destroyer
Escapade off Spain in 1937. HMS
Hood Awx,..rlOnlHtggmMJn CoflKtlOtl
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
98
.• Arnold·Fohter, The \\'a)'s olthe 'avy. pp. 16i-8. ~, Le Bailly. The Mtw Around the
Engine, p. 23. A single searchlight produced 25,000 cJndlepower of illumination. -, Arnold-Forster. The Ways o/the Navy. p. 161. " Ibid.• p. 49.
wilh his beam as she draws rapidly aft through his appointed arc of training. He makes sure the next light has picked her up, then flicks his beam forward again to search for another bow wave. ntil one of the beam settles on him, the ship's searchlights actually help the destroyer captain to make his attack. Then the effect of the steady glaring eye of the searchlight becomes dazzling and confusing, and makes it extremely difficult for those in the destroyer to judge the distance and course of the ship and to get off a good shot with their torpedoes." eedless to say, these exercises were not without danger. Louis Le Bailly recalls the effect of a quarter of a million candlepower oflight directed onto his picket boat off the panish coast in January 1933: ... With the whole fleet anchored in Vigo Bay, there was a night attack exercise by the fleet picket boats simulating motor torpedo boats. My picket boat led a feint attack and was soon spotted and held by a dozen searchlights as the real attack came in successfully from the other side. The result was an appalling attack of'searchlight eye' which sent me into the sickbay."
Getting in the port paravane
using one of the collapsible derricks in the spring of 1933. The trolley on which it will be trundled back to its housing abaft the forward breakwater can be seen lying near the
derrick. Authon CoI/«t1Ofl
ext came paravane drill. The paravane was a torpedo-shaped minesweeping device which was streamed at the end of a lengthy cable attached to the stem of the ship. The expectation was that a mine, having fouled the cable, would be drawn onto a serrated cutter fitted to the head of the paravane where its moorings would be promptly evered. Once surfaced the mine could be dealt with by small-arms fire or otherwise detonated. Effective as they were, the real challenge of using paravanes lay in getting them in and out of the water, an evolution that required the Boatswain and his men to set up derricks on either side of'B' turret. Rear-Admiral Arnold-Forster explains the trials of dealing with these 'uncouth monsters', which in Hood were stowed on the screens abaft the conning tower or in lockers behind the forward breakwater:
\ hen the signal 'Out paravanes' is made, there is a rush to the forecastle to prepare all the gear, and a pair of paravanes is lugged along on trollie and triced up on small davits on either side ready for dropping. When dropped into the water, they quickly disappear beneath the surface and sidle off well away from the ship. Sometimes a paravane, not approving the way it is dropped, or feeling its inside to be slightly out of adjustment, instead of diving away, turns sprawling on its back and comes flopping along the surface. It then has to be recovered and hoisted in again. Or when being got in, it may take it into its head to dive under the ship's bottom and refuse to come out when the ship is stopped for it. However, when their tricks become known paravanes give little trouble.'· Cruising off Spain during the Civil War Capl. Pridham always took the precaution of streaming paravanes as his ship approached any harbour suspected of having been mined by either of the warring parties. But in wartime the Hood routinely ran paravanes for an entire patrol, recovering them only on entering harbour. In such drills and exercises resided much of the spirit of the interwar I avy. Beleaguered by treaty restrictions, government parsimony and loss of prestige, the avy remained firm in the conviction that success in battle depended above all on seamanship, brawn, stamina and resource; on speed of action and obedience to orders; on efficiency honed through endless repetition and healthy competition. There can be little doubt that this ethos served the Royal Nav)' well during the Second World War, but it al 0 en hrined a reticence towards technical advance and a rigid adherence to received doctrine and practice which was to cost her dear in ships and men once that conflict started.
........l1li.-.
Eventually the need to refuel or refit would bring the Hood back to port. Well-known and well-charted though the approaches to a harbour might be, the order was always passed for a leadsman to take his place in one of the 'chains' of the ship, the small overhanging platforms which in Hood were fitted on the forecastle abreast the conning tower. Rear-Admiral Arnold-Forster lovingly describes this timeless facet of the seaman's art just as it was beginning to pa s into history: Heaving the lead is an art that can only be acquired by practice. The leadsman plant his feet firmly on his grating, leans his body well out against a stout canvas apron that is secured to the stanchions, lowers the 14 lb. lead till it hangs about twelve feet below his hand, and starts swinging it to and fro. A few strong swings bring it to the horizontal, then by a sharp jerk and good timing he takes it right round over his head, once-twice-let go! The lead shoots like a rocket into the water far ahead, whizzing the line out with it. Hand over hand the leadsman quickly hauls in the slack so as to get the line 'up and down' as the ship passes over the spot, and he judges the depth of water in fathoms by the marks on the line. [... ] On getting a good cast the leadsman calls out in a sing-song voice, loud enough to reach the bridge, 'By the ma-a-ark-five!' 'D-e-e-ep,-six!' and so on."
ROlltine, \Vork mzd Rest
99
Meanwhile, bugles were summoning the off-duty watch to fall in by divisions for entering harbour while the band of the Royal Marines struck up Rule BrizallI/in on the quarterdeck. But this was not spectacle enough for dr O'Conor: A great ship should pass on her way, in and out of harbour, with a certain pomp and splendour and with a flourish of trumpets. For this purpose, a row of a dozen buglers against the skyline on the turrets at each end of the ship, eamen on 'B' Turret and Royal Marines on 'X' Turret, electrically controlled as one unit, and each group with their bugle major, calls the very decided attention of other ship and onlookers." And, indeed, the Hood never failed to impress. Here i Tim Foster's memory of her gliding into the Grand Harbour at Malta in September 1937: We were till securing when the Admiral Commanding Battle Cruiser Squadron's flag and the Hood's spotting top arose above the silhouette of Fort Ricasoli. She seemed to be moving at great speed as she passed along the mole. From Repulse's decks and with the recent experience of doing the same manoeuvre ourselves, we could enjoy and appreciate Hood' movements. She is a lovely ship and looked magnificent as she slowed, came to rest, slewed and came astern, heeling as she moved in a swirl of white and
Above: Heaving the lead from the starboard chains, c.1927. The canvas apron keeps the leadsman's legs from gening wet. One of the tapes indicating
the depth of the water in fathoms can be seen just beneath his hand.
green w3ter. 19
The ability to bring a great ship safely into harbour was an infallible test of seamanship. Between the wars no captain handled his ship with more panache and dexterity than Francis Pridham did the Hood during her Mediterranean interlude between 1936 and 1938. Service 'up the Straits' contained two notorious challenges for those who aspired to mastery in ship handling: coming alongside at Gibraltar and mooring at Malta, in each ca e without the assistance of tugs. Each presented its own special challenges. At Gibraltar the ship's passage to her moorings was complicated by the powerful wind and currents entering the harbour from the Straits, which tended to push her off course at the very moment when lack of peed on the propellers made accurate steering impossible. At Malta, meanwhile, the confines of the Grand Harbour required boldnes and judgement against a very low factor of safety. Moreover, an entry was performed under the eyes of the entire port and often in a silence and stillness that permitted onlookers to hear every order passed to the forecastle. One and a half miles from the harbour the Hood would reduce speed from 12 or 13 Imots to 6." At a distance of 700 yards from the breakwater the order was passed to stop engines, the ship gliding in on her own momentum while the Engineering Department tood by to give Pridham 50,000 horsepower on the propellers once he started manoeuvring her. The Hood's berth was in Bighi Bay just inside the harbour entrance and the following description by Pridham give some idea of the consummate feat of seamanship required to place her 860 feet there: On arrival on the Station our entry into Malta's Grand Harbour gave me an opportunity to depart from common practice, which was to carry the ship straight up her berth
HAAS Hood ~fJOnIR.,noIdCoI/«tIon
and then swing her 'Bows out'. The Hood was the largest ship ever to have entered that harbour. After experimenting with a scale model of the hip on the largescale chart of the Grand Harbour, I decided that the safest and quickest way was to stop and swing the ship when just inside the breakwaters and then make a bold 'Sternboard' to our berth in Bighi Bay, where the ship was to secure to a large mooring buoy at each end. I then cleared the fairway quickly and so allowed other ships to enter without delay. I... J As time passed and I got more experience, and with the help of noting certain landmarks which came into 'transit' thus giving me accurate positions on the chart, and an idea of her speed through the water, I became expert in this manoeuvre and got much pleasure when I succeeded in cutting off a few seconds from former times taken to be fully secured ..." Readers might forgive Pridham his conceit for it was in this very anchorage that Admiral Fisher had in 190 I ordered Sir Charles Beresford to 'proceed to sea and come in again in a seamanlike manner' after his ship had botched a imilar manoeuvre, the beginning of a savage feud in the lavy." That aid, the vivid terms in which Pridham characterised the handling qualities of his ship would hardly find favour today: Like many good-looking ladies she is inclined to be wilful, and likes surprising you. Watch her always and very closely. If the moment she gets up to mischief you give her a good hard thump with the engines and helm she will immediately behave like a perfect lady-like her sex in
Above left: Lord Kelvin's Sounding Machine, which began to replace the leadsman in the
chains before the First World War. This is one of the later motor·driven variants. of which the Hood carried one on each
side of the flag deck. It offered a continuous measurement of depth by paying out or heaving in a sinker attached to a wire slung from the end of a wooden spar projecting from the side of
the ship. HMS Hood Anoel.tlOl'llWilln CoIlfftlOlt
-. RBS, p. 118. ... Godfrey. rami Memoirs. IV. p. 142.
Pridham. Notes 0" Handling tire Hood, p.4. .1 (d., Memoirs. II, pp. 155-6. 10
tl
The incident is related in Chatfield. The Navy and Defence. pp.41-2.
Top: The Hood entering Malta in
the autumn of 1937. The offduty watch is formed up by divisions on the quarterdeck and forecastle. 8ibliof~k
fUr Z.irgftClllcllr•. Sturtgan
Above: Capt. Pridham brings Hood into the Grand Harbour at Malta without tugs. The paravanes have been recovered abreast '8' turret and the cable party is fallen in ready to moor the ,hip c.1937-8. HMS Hood Anoc,atloniHigginson CoIlKttOn
'J Pridham, Notes on HandJitlg the Hood,p.12. ~
Arnold·Forster, The \\'lJ)'s of the
'nV)', pp. 78-80
human form, she responds to a heavy hand when she knows she has deserved it!" Then came the complicated task of securing to the mooring buoy. Admiral Arnold-Forster describes the procedure in words which capture the minutiae of life and work afloat in the Royal avy, the passage of a few minutes, the tradition of centuries: As the big ship passes in through the narrow entrance between the forts at good speed, one of her cutters is manned at the davits, and with her midshipman and a crew of fourteen men, and the blacksmith with his bag of tools, is lowered near the water. The officer of the forecastle and the boatswain give orders and preparations are made for securing to the buoy. One of her huge cables is unshackled from its anchor, and its end hangs idly down from the hawsepipe. The end of the 'picking up wire; with its spring hook like the snap at the end of a watch chain, is led from the forecastle and placed in the half lowered boat, ready to
slip over the ring of the buoy. This wire is to hold on to the buoy whilst the blacksmith shackles on the cable. The ship's engines are stopped, but she still has plenty of steerage way. When nearing the buoy the boat is slipped from the falls, drops into the water with a crash, and is whisked ahead by a vigorous rush of men on the forecastle, who haul on a boatrope leading through a block in the eyes of the ship to the stem of the boat. A few strokes of the oars should bring the boat to the buoy, [... 1 the two bowmen ... jump on it with the picking up wire, nap it onto the ring, and the other end is carefully hove in by the capstan. The ship should then be secure enough for the blacksmith to get on with his part of the job; and he gets on the buoy with his tool bag. The end link of the ponderous cable has to be coaxed and sniggled into exact position near the ring of the buoy, then a heavy teel pin has to be inserted into tight-fining holes in the bow-shaped shackle. To do this whilst standing on a slippery twirling buoy without dropping pin or shackle overboard is by no means easy. Small lines manned on the forecastle are passed down to the blacksmith to take the weight for him, and the boatswain on the rail watches his struggles anxiously, and gives him advice. Once the pin is entered a few blows with the maul drive it home, a small steel locking pin is driven in, and in turn secured by hammering a pellet of soft lead into its undercut hole ... and nobody but the blacksmith with his special tools can get it out again. The officer of the forecastle at once sings out, 'Shackled on, sir!' to the captain of the bridge. The officer of the watch telephones down to the engine-room, 'Finished with the engines.' At the same moment, the two lower booms that boats make fast to swing out together, the main derrick is topped to hoist out the steam boat, small boats are lowered from their davit and accommodation ladders dropped. The forecastle-men haul the blacksmith up in a bowline."'
Routine, Work (lnd Rest
With this the evolution of bringing the greatest warship in the world into the Grand Harbour wa over. Years later Louis Le Bailly's reminiscence summarises the impact this spectacle made on all who witnessed it: One of the great sights of the pre-war era in Malta wa surely that of Captain A.F. Pridham bringing H.M .. Hood through the break'water, turning her on her axis (twentyfour boilers-full revs ahead starboard, full revs a tern port) and securing her to her buoys fore and aft in (I seem to recall) fifteen minutes flat.·; For Pridham, meanwhile, the highest praise lay in the approbation of Vice-Admiral Andrew Cunningham, a renowned ship handler and the sternest of ta kmasters. I 0 wonder his midshipmen all got firsts in Seamanship in their Sub-
101
place, this promptly disappearing with a mighty splash. Out clattered the cable in clouds of rust and dirt until, at the First Lieutenant's signal, a petty officer started to check its progre s at the brake of the cableholder. If the evolution had a perilous moment then thi was it. Loui Le Bailly, then a cadet, recalls a close shave at Spithead in November 1932: At the end of the autumn cruise when Hood dropped anchor at Spithead with the wind and tide astern the cable holder brake failed to operate effectively. The huge cable could run out and part. The first lieutenant (a gunnery officer) used all his magnificent vocal power to clear the lX'le. Then we retreated to the eyes of the ship where, he comfortingly told me, we should probably be safe. Fortunately the cable holder brake began to hold with less than half a cable of chain left in the locker'>
Lieutenants' exams. 86
Ofcourse, even in Pridham's hands the occasional mishap was to be expected. At best this might mean a gangway smashed or a few stanchions carried away. But in a ship the size of the Hood the penalty of equipment failure, misfortune or mi judgement could be very heavy. Len Williams recalls the accident while coming alongside at Gibraltar on 14 October 1936 which claimed the lives of 00 D.O. Smith and Corporal W.j. Hayward, R.M.: As we were warping our stern into the jelly by means of a wire around the after capstan, a sudden gust of wind caught the stern and tautened the wire, which became jammed on the capstan. The wire started to 'sing' and everybody jumped clear as the wire hawser snapped like a piece of thread, but one unfortunate seaman did not move fast enough, and the wire whipped back viciously and amputated both of his legs. He died the same day in hospital. One always had to be careful when using wires in conjunction with moving the ship. You had to be ready to immediately ease the wire when the strain became too great.·'
Just as frequently the Hood would moor not in a harbour but in open water. Though less fraught than securing to a harbour buoy or coming alongside a jetty, the evolution of dropping anchor was not without its trials and dangers, particularly when performed with other ships in company." The ship's anchors, cables, ropes and hawsers were the special responsibility of the Boatswain, and no evolution te ted hi skill and preparedness more. On either side of the Hood's forecastle lay the two Wasteney-Smith bower anchors, each weighing over ten tons, upon which she relied for mo t of her anchoring and mooring. ntil it was removed in 1940 a sheet anchor of similar bulk was carried through a third hawsepipe on the starboard side for use in emergencies. In a large anchorage or roadstead the Hood might come to with just a single bower anchor, an arrangement which allowed the ship to pivot freely on wind, tide and current. In more confined waters, however, it was necessary to drop both bowers and shackle them together by means of a mooring swivel in order to inhibit the ship's movement. Each anchor was connected to over 3,000 feet of studded cable constructed from links of steel nearly three and a half inches in diameter. These cables, stored in lockers beneath the forecastle, were relea ed by the blacksmith administering a blow to the slip holding the anchor in
Assuming the brake held, the second anchor was released and the procedure repeated until the requisite number of shackles of cable had paid out. The next task was to equalise the length of the two cables, accomplished by working the capstans until both were taut. ow the cable party came into its own, completing the evolution with the delicate and heavy task of attaching the mooring swivel to the cables. With this the ship could be con idered moored. And with this, too, the men had made harbour, with all that that implied. In peacetime the sounding of Evening Quarters at 16.00 heralded the end of the working day for most of the crew and, for a proportion of them, an evening's run ashore with perhaps night leave until morning. By 16.45 the 'Iibertymen' had changed into their o. 1 suit with gold badges and 'tiddley' accoutrements and were fallen in for inspection on deck. A reading of the pertinent sections of the King's Regulations and libertymen in tropical rig crowd into the Hood's 45-foot motor launch for a run ashore in the late 1930.. HMS Hood ~tionlSl;fCoJl«t1Oll
n Correspondence in Naval Review, 64 (1976), p. 85.
"IWM/SA, ~Iid. John Robert Lang (1936-<.1937), no. t2503, reel l. 11 Williams, Gone A Lolfg jOllme)', p. 117. For the aftermath of this incident. s« ch. 7, p. 175. .. Arnold·Forster, TIle Ways of tile Navy, pp. 89-94 .. le Bailly, TIle Marl Around tile E"g;ne, p. 23. The gunnery officer in question was probably Lt-Cdr Eric Longley-Cook.
TI,e BnttLecruiser HMS HOOD
102
.. RBS, p.6. Williams, Gone A Long /ournq. p.123. 91 Le Bailly, Tlte Man Around rhe E"gine, p. 46. tJ William, Gont A Long Journey. pp. 122-3. "'(\\'r1.I, 90/3811, vol.lII,Anecdole 3,p.6. "IWM/ A, no. 1195 J, reel 4. ~Iidshipman {I 935), '" H~IS Hood Association archives. r Carew, Tlte Lower Deck, p. 144. 91
Admiralty In tructions and they were boarding the ship's boats or drifter for shore. It was said that 'England's best ambassador' was 'a British Blue-jacket walking ashore in a foreign port' and this was certainly borne out during the great crui es of the 1920s when 'jack's' behaviour was invariably found to be exemplary.'" But it was often a different story in home ports or at Gibraltar and Malta. Particularly Malta; AB Len Williams: Malta provided some pretty hilarious nights which will long live in my memory and, no doubt, in the memories of hundreds of thousands of sailors the world over. We owe a lot to the patience and kindness of'joe', the average Maltese lodging house and bar keeper, who on numerou occasions would help the worse-for-wear malloes to bed." For the officers a typical run ashore might consist of a blowout at the Rock Hotel at Gibraltar or an evening in the Union Club in Valletta. Louis Le Bailly: Usually the senior engineer, Lancelot Fogg-Elliot, too busy on board to be anything but a bachelor, would dine with us weekly at Valletta's Union Club. This had a men-only entrance, but through a peep-hole one could jealously watch the poodle-fakers as they disported themselves with their damsels in the presence of some rather forbidding mothers. From frustrated voyeurism it was but a step to the long bar and a gimlet (still the in-drink) and so to the magnificent room, where the knights of Malta had once dined, and an excellent but economic meal."' Though officers occasionally partook, the Hood' ratings were often in search of more prurient entertainment. Len Williams:
One of the Hood's steam picket boats at Navarin, Greece in July
1938. HMS Hood AsJocytlOl'VSour.r Collection
In our runs a hore, Doug and I alway included a vi it to the 'Forty Three' club in Floriana. We usually started here before proceeding along the Strada Reale to the Gut. This club wa run by a man of about 40, known to all the fleet a 'Charlie'. He was a female impersonator, who, when dressed up resembled Mae West and took that famous lady off to a T. [ ... 1Sometimes we would take a bus or taxi over to
Sliema and visit one or two of the bars. These were inainly patronised by the destroyer men, since Sliema Creek was the destroyer anchorage. One bar in particular, the 'Empire', staged a female boxing conte t as their cabaret how, and we sailors would be treated to an orgy of boxing contests. The contenders, dressed in one-piece swim suits, wore a coloured sash across their chests indicating a 'Miss England' or a 'Miss Austria', or some other nationality. Although to watch two buxom wenches knocking each other about seemed prell)' revolting to us, most of us cheered them on as we sipped our iced beer, but the atmosphere was so clouded with tobacco smoke that it was sometimes difficult to see the contenders at all!" As in British society generally, attitudes towards sex in the Royal avy were, for officers at least, a curious mixture of awareness and denial. To this outlook the lower deck often lent its tacit support. Capt. George Blundell, then a midshipman, recalls the efforts of his We tcountry coxswain, PO A.W. jeffrey, to preserve his moral integrity during the Hood's second Scandinavian cruise in the summer of 1923: On another occasion I was driving my picket boat along what was then called 'Christiania Fjord' [now Oslofjorden J in Norway. On one side of our route was a ladies' bathing pool. It was summer and all the ladies were bathing in the nude. Each time we passed, my dear jeff directed my attention to some feature on the opposite side of the fjord. Obviously he considered it improper for his young officer to gaze on a naked female form.'" In its own way, PO jeffrey's discomfiture reflects that of the Admiralty itself which failed to include sex education in the curriculum of its officer cadets and midshipmen. A few might be taken aside for a fatherly chat by an officer or chaplain, but as Rear-Admiral Edmund Poland recalled, 'a majority of young midshipmen had their fir t exual experience in a brothel'." And not just their first. Paymaster Cdr Keith Evans has this reminiscence of a bordello in Malta in 1938: Strada Stretta commonly known as The Gut'. Wrexford's 'Aunty' a bit of a hag I think from orthern England. Bella and Te sa mal' have been Maltese but I think more oriental, comfortable numbers. As Gunroom officers, most of us aged 18 or 19 (not quite under age), I think our leave expired at 19.00 (later on occasions), so we had to make way for our 'elders' from the Wardroom and Warrant Officers' Mess." As a result, incidence of venereal disease-or 'Wardroom lumbago' as it was euphemistically known on the lower deck-was a concealed but not unknown reality among the officer corps. At least one of the Hood's officer 'caught a dose' during the 1936-9 commission. Confined to his cabin, he was dispatched home at the earliest opportunity. Attitudes were rather less inhibited on the lower deck where VD remained common despite the fact that improved hygiene and education reduced incidence by more than half between 1912 and 1932.'; Common enough, indeed, for Chief Ordnance Artificer 'Brigham' Young to give OA Bert Pitman a word to the wise on his first visit to Gibraltar in the summer of 1940:
ROlltine, Work and Rest
When we went to our first foreign port, Gibraltar, he sent for myself and another ),oungster and he said 'I want )'OU two to go over the border to La Linea tonight and I want )'OU to go to a brothel, one that also has a bar. ow go into that brothel, pick the girl )'ou'd most like to go to bed with, but don't. et )'ourself a drink, in fad, have several drinks and just sit and watch her.' Well, I picked on a beautiful-looking girl, but having seen her go up and down the stair with a couple of matloes I lost any desire to get off with her." But the temptation was always there. \ alking along 'The Gut', the red-light district of Malta, sailors were wont to have their black 'silk' scarves torn off b)' girls eager to entice them into a brothel. Even a stroll though the Alameda Gardens at Gibraltar might lead to an unexpected liaison with a lad}' 'hawking her pearl>" in the bushes. Equall)', there was great pres ure from old-timers for young sailors to prove their manhood through sexual initiation in a brothel. In the handbook for naval chaplains he published in 1944, the Rev. Harold Beardmore, Hood's chaplain from 1939-41, dilated on the situation his readers might encounter: One finds a number of men who are not hardened to loose living. ometimes the lapse took place after a party where the man had too much to drink, and his resistance to strong temptation was weakened awhile: frequently one comes across a comparative boy who has it pressed upon him by ome old-timer that he could never call himself a sailor until he had been with a woman. Thus it was in the form of an adventure that he went wrong, probably with some girl who, for want of a better term, might be called an 'amateur: and who in the eyes of the }'oung man was probabl)' safe as far as disease was concerned. The important thing is to get hold of the patient before the hardened sinner endeavours to comfort him by sa)'ing, 'That's all right, mate; we all get our unluc\.:y run; no need to take it to heart.' This is firstcia propaganda on the part of the devil." And so yarns were pun of the bLLxom harlots of Trinidad and t Lucia, of the 'White House on the Hill' at Arosa with its long queues of white-uniformed sailors, of the Oriental beauties of Singapore and Honolulu and of course the varied delights of outhsea and nion Street in Plymouth. But occasionall)' an encounter with a prostitute in foreign climes might end badly. In September 1937 an official visit to Yugoslavia to celebrate the birthday of King Peter afforded the Hood's crew a week in the port of plit and its hinterland. A first run ashore found the Coombs twins and their pals in one of the harbourside cafes: It was all very pleasant. We sat there sipping and trying to get used to their local wine or whatever it was and being served by two young and good-looking, clean and smart girls. The next thing, one of our party was seen slipping through the small door following one of the girls. The remainder could only guess what was happening but were alarmed when, a bit later, some Police and Gardia of some kind bur t in the little door and could be heard torming up the tairs. Wondering what to do, we could only go outside and wait for developments and soon, after a lot of houting and commotion, the Police bundled the girl
103
downstairs, knocking hell out of her just as the window went up and the fourth member of the chums came to the window, looked out and dropped his shoes out before starting to climb down a drainpipe that came down near the window. 1... 1 Quite a few people were pas ing and all the rest of the lads could do was to pick his shoe up for him and help him back across the lane into the cafe ... He told us he had just finished 'emptying his kitbag' when the commotion on the stairs had tarted and had ju t got out of bed to put his trousers on when the door burst open. This gang entered and grabbed the girl and started shouting at her and giving her a good hiding. He was petrified and when they had gone looked for the best way out which was the window ... After he had recovered [we] decided that the best thing was to get the hell out of it. .. 100
98'WM/SA, no. 22147, reel 3. .. Beardmore. The \\'tHers of U"cerraim)'. p. 66. . 91/7/1, p. 71. Ibid., p. 51.
100 1\\'~1. 101
Evidently, the pair had fallen foul of King Peter's draconian laws against prostitution. Return to home port invariably brought pleasures of a different ilk, perhaps a reunion with wife and family or, in the case of the Coombs twins, a visit from their girlfriends after an lengthy train journey from Sheffield. It was Navy Week 1936 and, amidst a carnival atmosphere, the Hood lay awash with visitors in dry dock at Portsmouth. For Fred and Frank there were certain naval traditions to be lived up to if possible: After... a good look round the ship, both above and below decks, except for not daring to offer to show the girls the Golden Rivet, which was reputed to be riveted into every R.N. ship, normally in some secluded part, well out of the wa)' of prying eye, we [spent the evening] passing the time away and smooching on Southsea Common and promenade, which was later to be converted into a vast, gras -covered bed. The popular tune at the time was 'Chapel in the Moonlight', but Southsea became renowned for the number of girls' knees, bent not in prayer but only earning their railway fare, and the words 'Bobbing Arseholes in the Moonlight'.lo,
Some o'f 'England's best
ambassadors' sampling local beverages at a bar in Corfu, July
As in every other sphere, the onset of war brought with it a
1938. HMS Hood Auoci.rlOfllSourN Cof/Ktlon
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
104
quickening of amorous life. While the Hood was refilling at Portsmouth in the last summer of peace, Jim Taylor and his companions on the Boys' Messdeck were given strict instructions to avoid the cafe at o. 12 Great Southsea Street, the petty officers' brothel. '.2 Condoms were issued free and in quantity but 'Rose ollage', the ship's VD ward with the legend 'Only those who have been purified can be pure' posted on its door, continued to have its patients, despite the red-ink entry on a man's medical history and damage to his prospects that followed'·' In the quarterly report he submilled on the medical condition of the ship in April 1940, Surgeon-Cdr K.A. lngleby-Mackenzie, the Squadron Medical Officer, listed four ca es of gonorrhoea and one of syphilis, though two of the former were to the same man'·' Though diagnosed and discharged to hospital, the syphilitic not untypically denied all exposure to infection, whereas the others admitted contracting theirs during the ship's brief stays at Greenock. In his report for the next quarter, which the Hood spent largely at Plymouth and Liverpool, Ingleby-Mackenzie recorded nine fresh cases of gonorrhoea and the installation, complete with framed instructions, of an ablution cabinet in the urinals near the port battery in which the men could discretely take prophylactic measures after an encounter ashore.'·s Still, this shows a decided improvement on 1932, when the ship recorded a total of 75 cases of VD, many contracted during a spring cruise in the Caribbean'" 1 eedless to say, such liaisons occasionally brought consequence other than disease. With due allowance for post-war embroidering, the following aside by OD Jon Pertwee is worth citing:
Cim'ersation between the author and Jim Ta)'lo, (1939-40) in Portsmouth,6 February 2003. '" IIVM, 91/7/1, p. 62. ,.. PRO, ADM 101/565,Medical Officers' Journal, 1 Januarr-31 March 1940, \'01. 28, ships H-I, ff. 37,-43,. '" PRO, ADM 101/565, Medical Officers' Journal, I April-3D June 1940, \'01. 28, ships H-I, ff. 43v-44r & 40v. ,.. PRO, ADM 101/536, Medical Officers' Journal, 1932. 107 Pertwee. Moon Boots and Dinner Suits, p. 154.I.T.A.L.Y. stands for " trust and love rout and IOl
H.C.L.L.A. .D. 'Hope OUT lo\'e lives and never dies: Other IIoms
de plume were'~lontagu \\'haler' (an allusion to the rig of one of
the avy's boats) and 'A. Vent: Lt Horace Davi~ R.M. was losl on 24 ~ta)' 1941. .ot Ibid .. p. IS5. '''IIV~I, 91/7/1, p. 69. 110 Cited in Coles & Briggs. Flagship Hood, pp. 12J--.l.
Lieutenant Davies also had the well nigh impossible task of running to earth those lusty lads who had given I/OI/IS de plul/le and aliases to various female conquests in port. Among the favourite names to be assumed was Able Seaman Derek Topping. When the arm of a derrick or crane is about to reach the perpendicular, the operator would shout 'Derrick Topping' meaning the crane arm had almost reached its limil. This pseudonym was frequently given after a night of love and passion, to minimise chances of identification should the sound of tiny mistakes be heard pattering up the companionway. Another much-used name was Able Seaman B. ~. Lever. The initials B.M. standing for breech mechanism, and lever referring to the lever on a gun that opens and closes the breech. So pathetic letters of remarkable similarity would arrive with envelopes marked S. WAL.K. (sealed with a loving kiss), possibly reading: Dear Derek, You said you was going to rite but you never. I am now three months gone. I am disparate has I am beginning to show-wot are you going to do about it? Rite soon. I.T.A.L.Y. Dori . P.S. H.O.L.L.A. .D. The e impassioned pleas were posted on the ship's notice board and brought forth little response other than cruel laughter. Derek Topping and Basil M. Lever should've felt very ashamed of themselve .,.,
The remainder, with wives or partners a world away and perhap little inclination for adventure, had to find contentment in the privacy of their cabin, hammock or caboose and await a reunion all the sweeter for the length of its parting. Of course, there were activities ashore beyond mixing with the opposite sex. Proverbiall)', there was unrestrained consumption of'the Demon Drink', however much the avy might try to discourage it. Jon Pertwee has this wartime reminiscence: When at anchor in Scapa Flow, off duty liberty men used to go ashore to taste the pleasures of Lyness night-life. This, for the majority of the men, meant going to one of the enormous AAFI canteens and, armed with Naval issue coupons, imbibing their allotted two or three pints of beer. Clever barterers, however, always managed to coUect a pocket full of additional coupons, which allowed them the long-looked-for opportunity of going on a monumental 'piss-up'. After several such outings I sold my beer coupons and opted for other joys of the flesh. ,.. Getting them back on board was no mean feat. The Coombs twins had the misfortune of crewing one of the boats sent to bring the men off after a night's carousing on the Cote d'Azur in May 1938: A lot, as drunk as newts, were stood on the wooden jetty with their girlfriends and others and would not climb aboard us. We struggled to carry some of them aboard the launch, only to see some of them crawl on their hands and knees to the other end and out again so eventually we went back to the ship with whoever would stay and went back with six big marines to get the others aboard. It went on a long time and it ended up with the cells on the ship that full of drunks that they had to release the more sober to find room for the more drunk.'" One of the drunks was toker Harry Holderness: No one was interested in returning until a stoker petty officer, who had drunk his fill, said he was going aboardand soon we were all following him. When the boats arrived at the Hood, which was three miles out, the officers were furious because the ship had not sailed. Most of us were singing and waving long French loaves. Commander Orr- Ewing called for us to be quiet and ordered the coxswains to take the boats round the ship until we were silent. But that set us singing 'Side, Side, Jolly Ship's Side'. Once round, however, we all quietened and filed aboard. The stoker petty officer, who had drunk too much, got a recommend for getting us all aboard"· No wonder the task of returning a boatload of drunken sailors was among the sternest tests a midshipman could face in his time aboard. There were severe punishments for the drunk and di orderly, but with the outbreak of war came recognition of the importance of allowing the crew to let off steam and thus a more tolerant attitude towards inebriated libertymen. AB Len Williams remembers the Hood at Greenock in early 1940: There was a considerable difference in height between
Routine, Work alld Rest
high and low tide in the Clyde area, and when the lads began to come back from leave, some of them the worse for wear and singing their heads off, it proved quite an evolution to get them safely down the steep ladders and into the boat. Captain Glennie, being a wise gentleman, and knowing the ways of sailors, had told the ship's company that he did not mind how his lads got back on board, provided that they DID get back. 'I do not wish to go to sea in an emergency with any of my crew missing' he warned us. Consequently, many and varied were the condition the sailors were in when we finally got them on board. On one occasion we lowered a steel provisioning net into the liberty boat, and loading the helpless ones carefully into it, hoisted them inboard with the main derrick. However, I cannot remember us ever letting the skipper down. We always sailed with a full crew.'" Apparently there was no more cherished desire among certain matelots than to fetch up with a wealthy widow ashore, and in this endeavour not a few went adrift on foreign service. During the 1936-9 commission none pursued this goal more ardently than 'Tiny' Fowler, one of the ship's divers. Here is Fred Coombs' version of events. The date seems to be january 1938 and the place Marseilles: One of the best yarns was started on that visit when Tiny Fowler, our huge ... diver went adrift. Whether or when he had met his friends before could only be guessed at, but he clearly knew where to meet them because he went ashore the first night at anchor and that was the last we saw of him 'til just before we sailed, when a smart, medium-sized motor yacht came alongside. They must have known what they were doing as they came to our forward gangway... where a glamorous grandma came on the bottom platform with Tiny Fowler to do a bit of snogging before the Regulating Crushers came running down to Tiny to run him back up into custody.'"
105
otherwi e committed to another eight or ten years in the 'Andrew' was well worth the remote possibility of recapture, and by the time the Special ervice Squadron sailed for Hawaii six months into the cruise 151 had deserted from her seven ship, all but ten in Australia.'" eedless to say, the Navy lived and worked to a harsh code of discipline, one that came down heavily on those who infringed it. Mindful of Invergordon, Capt. Rory O'Conor made no bones about the constitutional framework under which every man served: ... Those in authority can afford to act calmly, seeing that they are backed by the authority of the whole Service and the aval Discipline Act, with the Lord Spiritual and Temporal and all the Commons in support.'" The point was not lost on the majority of men. As CPO Harry Cutler put it, 'We knew what to expect. Those who got into trouble were those who kicked over the traces and refused to submit to discipline.'''' The structure of this discipline mirrored the organisation of the ship herself. LS (later Cdr) joe Rockey of Plymouth: The routines were quite strict and well laid down and if you did not carry them out you expected to be penalised, and if you disobeyed of course it meant that you were passed further along the chain of command, dependent on the error you'd made or what offence you'd committed.'" Enforcement of the King's Regulations and Admiralty Instructions by which the Navy was governed was entrusted to the Master-at-Arms and the ship's three regulating petty officers or 'crushers'. The Master-at-Arms, or 'jaunty' as he was known, was a man to respect. An experienced petty officer selected for toughness and intelligence, the lower deck held few secrets from him. As the senior Chief Petty Officer in the ship he wa the only rating afforded a private cabin and thus the privilege of sleeping in a bunk. His inAuence on the lower deck was enormous:
Three months later at Golfe-juan Fowler was at it again: Lofty Fowler was not allowed ashore this time but had worked them a Aanker by hiding in the forepeak of the picket boat that had been used by the officers to go ashore. He went by nipping out when the officers had gone and before the crew could stop him was off. The crew swore blind that they did not know that he was aboard but that was the last we saw of Tiny 'til the day we sailed. 1 1 The next day when we went in to fetch the few stragglers... one of our first customers was Tiny Fowler, drunk too, but with what looked like a dowager duchess on one arm, a bunch of Aowers and a basket full of eggs, some of which had got broken and were running down his trousers, on the other. If his lady friend had intended the eggs to restore his vitality she was unlud,y as Tiny returned peacefully. '" Fowler had ample time to savour the memory in the army detention quarters at Corradino, Malta. Then there was desertion. At no time in the Hood's career did more men desert than during the World Cruise of 1923-4. Evidently, the chance of a life in the sun for a man who was
The Master-at-Arms in a ship is a man whose co-operation and friendship one should cultivate. He is as a rule most helpful when he sees you are all out to encourage him in keeping the ship free from such things as leave-breaking, theft and immorality. A good Master-at-Arms can probably do more than any other member of the lower deck towards making a ship's company happy and contented.'" But if the Master-at-Arms chose to wield his considerable power with a heavy hand then life for many on the lower deck could be made intolerable, as indeed it would be for any ul1\vise enough to 'get athwart his hawse'. Occasionally the need for men to be detailed for disagreeable duty required the crushers to trawl the lower deck for volunteers and for such occasions it behoved one to be on the right side of the jaunty and his men. But their main duty was in keeping discipline and enforcing observance of naval and shipboard regulations both ashore and aAoat. This meant patrolling the messdecks for illicit drinking or proscribed games like Crown and Anchor, or against the bullying, violence and intimidation that occasionally reared its head. It might also mean landing with a shore patrol to moni-
III
'''illiams. Gone A Lotlg }oumey. p.
140. IIlIWM, 91/7/1. p. 63. I I ) Ibid.. p. 69. 114
O'Connor, The Empire Cruise, p. 228.
m II'
RBS, p. 84. Conversation with the author in
Devonport, 23 ~1ay 2003. IWM/SA, no. 12422, reel I. III Beardmore, Tile \Vaters of 111
Uncerta;tlty. pp. 53-4.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
106
tor the behaviour of libertymen and counting them back on their return to the ship. In his capacity as head of the ship's police, the Master-at-Arms was always in attendance at Commander's defaulters. the miscreants and their crimes enumerated in a large book carried under his arm. During the regime of Cdr Rory O'Conor (I 933-6), Commander's defaulters took place at 08.20 each morning save Sunday. It was a duty to which he gave the utmost importance: The Commander needs to be in a consistently judicial frame of mind for his magisterial duties ... Appearances are often misleading. and when they are unfavourable to the accused one may be misled into an injustice. Remember the old Chinese proverb: 'A man may be a teetotaller, but if his nose is red. no one will believe it:'" Some 3,000 defaulters having passed through his hands during the 1933-6 commission, O'Conor was able to offer reader his accumulated wisdom on the dispensing of justice: The majority of small offences are committed by thoughtlessness or mischance and not by intention. and after one solemn warning most men are careful not to reappear as defaulters. [... J In dealing with defaulters a Commander comes face to face with an endless variety of motives and mischances which bring men to his table. cap in hand. It is a central truth of human nature that men's faults are the corollary of their virtues, and that without our faults we hould be different men for good, as well as for ill. Justice is most just when tempered with mercy. ". \Vhere punishment was concerned, the following measures were recommended for leave-breakers: First offence: econd offence: Third offence:
If reasonable explanation-Caution If no reasonable explanation-Scale Scale Captain's Report'"
cale' here meant stoppage of leave, though stoppage of pay was an additional consequence of going adrift. Other infractions would receive one of the many punishments in the naval inventory, from 10. 16, an hour's extra work, to No. lOa, two hours' rifle and bayonet drill after tea. Of cour e, if one had an identical twin aboard it was possible to mitigate the worst effects of a punishment through artful substitution. Two sailors in this ambiguous situation were Fred and Frank Coombs, boy seamen with a knack for getting into trouble:
'" RBS. pp. i9 & 80. ". Ibid.. pp. i9 & 83. m Ibid., p. 80. '" IW~t. 91/i11. pp. 48-9. HMS 5, Vince", was the boys'
training establishment at
Gosport. '" RBS. p. 19t. m See ~orthcott. HMS Hood, p. 59, and Roberts, The BaNlecruise, Hood. pp. 18-19 fortables of the ship's complement of boats_
We had become well accustomed to doing plenty of jankers, but Gib added a further dimension as in the Med awnings were generally left rigged, which gave us the advantage of not being seen by the higher decks or the bridge. We soon came up with the idea of sharing the punishment by changing places at some place in our hourlong trot around 'A' and 'B' turrets. From our time at t Villcelll we had always hared our loads in punishment by taking turns to do the mustering and the evening drill. The fact that we now had two huge turrets to screen Iu I from the Instructor and four convenient hatches leading to a
lower deck to choose from made things much easier for us. No matter at which point our keeper stood to keep an eye on us, there was always one hatch not in his vision where we could change over. .. The other boys under punishment, who we had thought might object to our swapping over, made no secret of the fact that they were as keen as us to see our tormentors taken out for a trot. Though a lot were aware when one of us was on punishment and poor old [PO) John Bunney tried to catch us at it by nearly doing as much running as us ... we were never caught doing our vanishing act as one ran up lonto I the upper deck and one went down to the 10wer. .. 1ll In the event of a serious or repeated misdemeanour the offender would be sent before the captain for jurisdiction under the aval Discipline Act. Captain's defaulters usually took place around 11.00, the Master-at-Arms once again in attendance. The captain was the only officer aboard who could punish a man by warranl, that is either by confining him to the ship's cells for a maximum of fourteen days or by stripping him of his rate, his good conduct badges or his Good Conduct Medal if he had more than fifteen years' service. In the case of boys or midshipmen this extended to authorising a caning, administered by the Master-at-Arms to the former and the Sub-Lieutenant of the Gunroom to the latter. Officers were tried by court martial, a tribunal composed of their fellow officers acting under naval law but over who e judgements the Admiralty reserved plenary power. Really serious cases, men whose crimes fell beyond the punitive jurisdiction of the captain, were discharged to the detention quarters ashore for periods up to 90 days. Others, like Hood's mutineers in 1931, would find themselves ejected from the avy'Service No Longer Required' or subject to criminal prosecution.
·......11>..Eventuall)', after two or three year, the day came for the Hood to sail for home and payoff so that another crew might recommission her. It was a solemn moment. With the off-duty watch mustered by divisions on deck, the band of the Royal Marines truck up Rollillg Home and an enormous paying-off pendant unfurled from the main topgallant as she got under way, a bunch of golden bladders secured to the fly to prevent it trailing in the water. The length of the pendant traditionally reflected the duration of the commission or the number of men embarked. The same procedure, to Rille Britallllia, was followed on entering harbour, crowds lining the shore while families waited on the jetty to be reunited after months, sometimes years, of separation. Within hours the ship had paid off, many of her people scattered to the four winds never to meet again.
Boats, Floats and Drifters 'There is no truer saying than the old one that "A SHIP IS KNOWN BY HER BOATS)~'I2J The manning, sailing and maintenance of a capital ship's boat represents a world unto itself, rich in lore and tradition. The Hood's flotilla, constantly changing as a result of damage, exchange and the introduction of new types, usually numbered sixteen or eighteen vessels from 16-foot skiffs to the SO-foot steam pinnaces.''' These fall into three distinct categories: sailing boats, steam boats and the motor boats which by the I930s were on the verge of mak-
Routine, Work and Rest
ing the first two extinct. The largest of the sailing boats were the 42-footlaunches, of which Hood always carried at least one. However, much the most important were the 27-foot whalers, 32-foot cutters and 30-foot gigs, the first two clinker-built and the la t of carvel construction. These were standard equipment in the Navy, their provenance denoted b)' brass badges with the device of each ship affixed to their bows; those belonging to Aagship mo til' bore a representation of the admiral's Aag. For most of her career the Hood carried between eight and ten sailing boats and in them she competed in the pulling regattas each summer. Gigs were stowed on the boat deck but the two whalers and two of the four cutters shipped until 1940 were kept on davits for u e as eaboats, two on each side. The launching of the ship's eaboat, essential for emergencies, was one of the evolutions which punctuated the naval day. Capt. Pridham's account of the lacklustre drill he found on assuming command in February 1936 gives an idea of the procedure: On reaching open water, as first priority I exercised the seaboats (the lifeboats). A life-saving 'evolution' I had been brought up to regard as requiring absolute efficiency and utmost speed. I was shocked to see evidence of ignorance of the elementary details of lowering and hoisting boats at sea. The Commander expected me to stop the ship's way before he gave the order to 'slip'. I had never dreamt of uch slovenliness. Hooking on and hoisting were equally lacking in any vestige of smart work. The little tricks of manipulating the boat's falls and lifelines when hooking on, which I had learned as a midshipman, were apparently unknown to my Commander or to the boats' crews. The boats were hoisted lazily at a slow walk. On eeing this I made my disapproval known to all hands by ordering the Commander to lower the boats again and have them hoisted at the run. It was a risk, but it worked. '" However, the workhorses of the Hood's Aotilla were the two 50-foot steam pinnaces or picket boat and the 45-foot barge provided for the use of the admiral and his staff. Completely decked in and capable of making II knots in calm water, on these magnificent vessels fell mo t of the ship's daily errands. Payma ter Lt-Cdr E.C. Talbot-Booth R.N.R.:
107
and had a boat hook to en ure that this was done. I was, however, not entirely free in the use of the boat hook as there was a series of defined movements to adhere to. 121 On the e steam boats a generation of sailors and midshipmen would lavish their care and attention both aboard and aAoat. Boy Fred Coomb : One of the rewards ... was to be ... given the jobs as 1st and 2nd Picket Boat' crews a Fender Boys. We took a great deal of pride in polishing the black, highly polished boat's side with wax polish when lifted inboard. That black boat's side and the near white wooden decks were our respon ibility and we spent hours of diligently applied hard work in polishing the ... side when possible and daily scrubbing of the decks to near white with a piece of shark's skin, sand and salt water that the sun could bleach and show the regular black pitched joints up to perfection'" The gleaming brass funnel of Hood's 1st Picket Boat had come from the battlecruiser Lion in 1922 and on it Mid. Le Bailly and his companions devoted not only their time and energy but also the remains of their daily pay in Brasso. The crew beautified the
Left: 'Away seaboat!' One of the Hood's 32-foot cutters being lowered fully manned from its
Every day each ship of any size appoints a D.S.B. (Duty Steam Boat) which is responsible for performing most of the ordinary routine in harbour, such as fetching off postmen in the morning, running officer ashore, probably towing some heavily laden boats with liberty men going ashore in the evening and a thousand and one odd jobs. he lies at the bottom of the rope ladder attached to the boom projecting from the side of the ship until such time as she is called to the gangway to undertake some duty.'"
davits in the late 1930.. The fall at the bow is about to be cast off and the men on the starboard side are just getting their oars ready. The device on the bows denotes the boat as belonging to a vice-admiral's flagship. HMS Hood AssociiJtionlMiJJOn ColI«tion
Left: One of the Hood's cutters at sea, in this case for the melancholy task of recovering
the body of a pilot officer killed in a crash off 5t Catherine's Point, Isle of Wight on 5 March
Boy Jim Taylor was Bow Boy in Rear-Admiral William Whitworth's barge in the spring of 1940:
The Admiral's Barge was a splendid craft having a crew of about six or seven: a Coxswain, a hief Petty Officer, a Petty Officer, a Stoker and Boy on Bowand tern. As Bow Boy I had to ensure that the boat came alongside smoothly
1935. HMS Hood Auoc;'tlonlWiliis Coll«t.ion
III 116
Pridham. Memoirs, II, p, 147, Talbot-Boolh, All tile World's Fighting Fleers, 3rd ron. pp. t27-8.
HMS Hood Association archi\'es. "'IW~t, 91/7/1, pp. 53-4. ll~
..
~-------------------------------------------- ~ The BattJecruiser HMS HOOD
108
One of the steam picket boats secured to the boom in a heavy
swell. The midshipman in command holds the jacob's ladder for one of his men. The coxswain is at the wheel in a
sou·wester. The boom was planed flat on top to allow the men to run along it. Crewmen usually boarded by sliding down the 'lizard' ropes. one of which can be seen on the right. The brass funnel tops for the Hood's steam boats came from the battlecruiser Lion. Note the boat
badge on the bow. HMS Hood AsJocutlOfllC~,1c CoIlKtlon
interior with tasselled curtains and cushion covers of duck and blue jean while those kiLled in the art of fancy ropework produced turk's heads for the boat hooks and elaborate fenders for the sides. The result was a vision of gleaming paint, scrubbed wood and polished brass, the pride and joy of the two crews responsible for her. However, in Cdr Rory O'Conor's view, boat crews had not only to act the part, they had to look it also: A clean boat is sometimes spoilt by men of indifferent appearance. Picked men, both as workers and on account of good physique, are the men to represent the ship in her boats.'" And so O'Conor always selected bronzed matelots of formidable aspect to crew his boats. But the ultimate touch was a distinctive outfit and very occasionaLly an admiral or captain was wealthy enough to dress his boat's crew in speciaLly-tailored uniforms. If the avy gave great importance to the appearance of its boats then it also prided itself on their handling and operation, entrusting each to a midshipman under the fatherly eye of a coxswain. The responsibility gave him not only his first taste of command afloat but also his first prolonged contact with the men at close quarters. As O'Conor put it, The finest training as a seaman and for command that he can possibly have is in a boat if he is given complete charge. Should the boat have two crew, there should be a midshipman for each, working only with his own crew, and hoisted in and out with them in the boat. I... ] The Midshipman of a boat must share aLI the vicissitudes of wind and weather with his crew, and it is not right for him to accept an invitation to go below in another ship while his boat lies off, with the crew exposed to the elements.'" The boats' crews therefore enjoyed a spirit of teamwork and endeavour exceLled by no other section of the ship' company. Mid. George Blundell was in command of the Hood's 1st Picket Boat during the World Cruise of 1923-4:
,,, RBS, p. 131. uo Ibid.. p. 2i. III
'Wr-.l, 90/38/1. \'01. III, Anecdote 3. pp. 1-2.
m Ibid.
Both Hood's picket boats were oil-fired 50 footers. Each had a double crew of one midshipman, one Petty Officer oxswain, two Able Seamen Bowmen, one Able Seaman
Sternsheetsman, one Stoker Petty Officer for the engine room, and one Stoker for the boiler room. At the time one did not give it a thought, but, looking back, their competence-and loyalty-were incredible. Not once during the whole of my time did my boat run out of fuel, fail to have steam immediately after being hoisted out, fail to carry out the whole trip ordered on leaving the boom, or not be manned peedily by the proper crew. On the World Cruise, when in harbour, the two picket boats ran almost continuously the whole day, the early boat mooring up at midnight and the late boat at 2 a.m. or later. [... ] How marveLlously aLI the crew backed one up: they provided aLI the thrill of a close-knit, trusting team. When one heard the pipe 'Away First Picket Boat' it wa a point of honour to try to man the boat before one's crew. I used to hare up from the gunroom, race along the shelter deck, charge along the lower boom, and dive head first down the lizard. Once I lost my dirk doing that! On the World Crui e picket boat midshipmen always wore their dirks whether in monkey jackets or bum freezers, and, at least in Hood, manned and left their boats at the boom, never at the gangway.'" From an engineering standpoint the operation of the picket boat was like a miniature version of the ship itself. Blundell: The engine was a twin cylinder compound reciprocator complete with condenser, air pump, circulating pump and lubricating pump. The boilers were of the smaLl-tube 'Yarrow' type, fed by feed and fuel pumps. Forced draught could be applied by closing the boiler room hatch and running the fan. Communication between the Stoker P.O. and the Stoker was usually done by hitting the bulkhead with a ring spanner! The large propeller was right handed, and because stern power was equal to ahead power, stopping power was enormous, so that when going astern on coming alongside the stern could 'kick' quite viciously to port. A good stoker petty officer, head sticking out of the engine room hatch, one hand on the throttle valve and the other on the rever ing link, was a great help in going alongside and in stopping in the right place! [... 1The midshipman controlled the engines by means of a pull-up handle which rang a gong in the engine room: one gong for stop, two for ahead, three for astern, and four for ease up or slow.'" Whereas the smaller boat could be hoisted in and out by the 40-foot derricks and the seaboats brought up to their davits by their falls, the barge and pinnaces, each of which weighed sixteen tons, required the services of the main derrick. RearAdmiral Arnold-Forster describes the procedure: Silently the great steel derrick is topped up and swung out over the ship's side, the ponderous hook of its lower purchase block swaying in the air as the ship gently rolls and pitches. By mean of boat ropes the picket boat, with fenders out, is slowly hauled alongside; in their plunging boat the crew, who have been preparing their stiff wire three-legged slings, lift up shoulder high the heavy ring joining the legs, and watch for a chance of slipping it over the hook of the derrick purchase. Though the motion of the ship at anchor is only slight, the 16-ton steamboat, if
109
Routine, Work and Rest
allowed to start swinging like a huge pendulum, would do untold damage. So before the men come up out of their boat, stout 'rolling tackles' for steadying her are passed down for them to hook on. As the boat's crew swarms up the ship's side, boat ropes, derrick guys, and rolling tackles are hauled taught. All eyes are then turned towards the derrick officer who, in oilskin and sou'wester, and holding up a pair of hand flags, is silhouetted in the glare of a light high up on the after bridge. He is watching the boat rising and falling in the sea. just before she sinks into a trough he signals 'Up purchase, full speed!' then-as the slings tauten-'Up topping lift!' The powerful electric boat-hoist motors hum round; everyone holds his breath. If well done, there is a hefty jar as the weight comes on. If not-a terrible jerk that shakes the mast, makes the whole ship quiver, and brings a tremendous strain on all the gear. As the long, dripping boat comes up out of the water, more steadying tackles are hooked on to her. A slight mistake now may stave in her planking. Firmly held, she is swung in by the derrick guys, and carefully lowered over the boat deck, where her crew and a few shipwrights wait to receive her. The warrant shipwright jumps about in the glare of the light, making frantic signals with his hand for plumbing the boat exactly over her gaping steel crutches. Pushed about and coaxed by many hands, she settles down in her close-fitting bed with a creak. The derrick head is quickly lowered and secured, and ropes coiled down. 133 The recognised expertise of the Royal avy in seamanship owed much to the emphasis it placed on boat handling in the training of its officers. Lt-Cdr joseph H. Wellings, official observer of the U.S. Navy, discovered as much while staying in the ship during the winter of 1940-1: My visit with the midshipmen developed into a sentimental journey in small boat sailing (my favorite hobby and sport). I listened to their small boat sailing expert describe the various types of sailboats and sailing races. I was certain after watching their young commissioned officers and midshipmen sail boats, that as a group they were much better small boat sailors than our younger commissioned officers and midshipmen.'" However, accidents were not uncommon. George Blundell: One of my early picket boat memories lies in taking some officers from the Hood, alongside the detached mole at Gib., to land at Flag Staff Steps. The more junior officers, including the snotties' nurse, were sitting on the gratings on the casing, whilst the engineer, paymaster and surgeon commanders were in the stern sheets. I misjudged the alongside badly and ran the bow firmly on the submerged bottom stone platform of the steps. Being the senior officers in the boat, the three commanders, looking somewhat shaken, made to land over the bow. In ringing tones I sang out' obody is to leave the boat'. I then ordered my passengers, including the three commanders, to stand on the stern sheet gratings. As the officers of commanders' rank appeared somewhat hesitant at carrying out my order to stand on the stern, perhaps I was
over-peremptory with them. However, the stern went down and the bow rose up and the crew were able to right the boat's precarious attitude. Much relieved, I sang out 'Carryon ashore'. I can see the faces of my three commanders now: the engineer looked very angry, the paymaster nonplussed, but the P.M.O. (Dudding) was beaming. In due course I was reported for insolence, my leave was stopped and I received a dozen from the sub. 135 Nor were they the preserve of midshipmen. Louis Le Bailly recall an incident at Malta on the morning Vice-Admiral Andrew Cunningham hoisted his flag in Hood, 15 july 1937: With everybody's nerves as taut as bowstrings, it was not long before the beautiful steam barge was called away to take Cunningham to pay his respects to the Commanderin-Chief, Admiral Sir Dudley Pound. What possessed the admiral's coxswain, a rather grand chief petty officer who conversed normally only with the admiral's staff, I shall never know but just as he was about to leave the starboard quarterboom he saw the admiral descending to the quarterdeck. Quickly he rang down for Full Ahead and, turning hard-a-starboard in full view of the quarterdeck elite, placed the barge fair and square in the path of a picket boat. The barge was stove in just for'd of her boiler room and it at first seemed both boats might sink. It took 80 men on four guy ropes to work the Hood's main derrick and never before had they been assembled with such speed. The admiral, by now also steaming slightly, was dispatched in the captain's small motor boat to keep his appointment with the commander-in-chief. '36
'Hood was always a wet ship.'
Sub-l! (E) louis le Bailly and gunroom companions in the process of winning a bet against the wardroom that they could not sail a cutter from Tangier to Gibraltar between dawn and sunset one day in the autumn of
1938. Vic~Admi,./
Sir L.ouis L~ e.iIIy
Like much else in the Navy, the business of boat handling was distinguished by an elaborate etiquette, centuries in the making. Rear-Admiral Arnold-Forster provides a flavour of it: ... Every boat approaching an anchored warship after dark is challenged by the hail 'Boat ahoy!' sung out sharply from the bridge forward or from the quarter deck aft ... It is the coxswain's business to answer the hail instantly. The correct answer depends on who is in the boat. If officers of lieutenant's rank and above are in the boat the answer is 'Aye, aye!'; for anyone below that rank 'No, no!' If the captain of the ship is in the boat, the reply given is the ship's name; for an admiral the answer is 'Flag!' A boat not coming alongside simply answers 'Passing!' [... ] Besides these old sea hails, the recognised salutes given by boats have been handed down by generations of seamen---except those for steam and motor boats, which are naturally more modern. The larger pulling boats-----
UJ
Arnold-Forster,
The \\'a)'s of the
,val?" pp. 108-9.
NWC, Wellings, Remi,,;scePlces, pp.79-80. m IWM, 90/38/1, vol. III. Anecdote
1J-l
3. pp. 2-3. The officers were Engineer Cdr Frank R. Goodwin,
Paymaster Cdr Edgar B. Swan and Surgeon Cdr John S. Dudding. 116 Le Bailly. The Mall Arollnd the Engine, pp. 40-1.
The Battlecrlliser HMS HOOD
110
stops or eases her engines and the bow wave gradually disappears-not very impressive but all she can do. m A Arnold-Forster evidently realised, the death knell of many of Ihese traditions was sounded-quite literally-by the arrival of the motor boat with its internal combustion engine during the First World War. The Hood's original outfit consisted of a 35-foot fast motor boat capable of 18 knots along with a 42-foot launch which included an auxiliary motor good for 7 knots. A second 35-footer was added in time for the World Cruise in 1923 but these two gave endless trouble on the voyage, to the great embarrassment of Temp. Lt Albert Robinson R. .V.R., the Thornycroft salesman who joined Hood to promote his company's wares. Lt (El Geoffrey Wells had the misfortune to be charged with their maintenance. His diary for Tuesday 15 January 1924 rather summarises his lot: Motorboats would not behave as motorboats should; in fact they behaved as motorboats do. Trouble with a big T. 138 Nor, it seems, had things changed much by 1937. After an absence of four years Sub-Lt (El Louis Le Bailly rejoined the Hood at the Coronation Review at Spithead that year: 1was sad to find that the magnificent steam barge 1had known as a midshipman was soon to be replaced by a three-engined speedboat designed by Vospers. The story was that the soon-to-be Vice Admiral Sir Geoffrey Blake had insisted that after the review the new barge should take him to the royal yacht to receive his accolade. This left no time for Peter du Cane, once a [lieutenant- ]commander (El, now a famous boatbuilder and director ofVospers, to carry out trials. From the boat deck [ watched the new barge come alongside and heard the awful mechanical crunch when the coxswain went astern. With two engines only now serviceable the odds favoured the admiral getting to the royal yacht on time but alas it was not to be. The coxswain, anxious to show off the boat's speed, opened up both throttles to the maximum whereupon the engines died. Happily for the admiral, if not for Vospers, a yellow speed boat belonging to a rival firm spotted the disaster and delivered him to the royal yacht with only minutes to spare. Poor Peter du Cane and his splendid firm were damned forever in the admiral's eyes but the beautiful old steam barge returned to the ship!'''
U7 Arnold.Forster, Tile lVa)'sojrhe Navy, pp. 98-9. 1)1 Extracts from Diary of World Cruise, 1923-4, p. 22. 1J9 Le Bailly, Tire Alatl Around tlte
Eagiae, pp. 39--40. 140
Writing in RBS, p. 120.
Ibid., pp. 120-1. Vice-Admiral ir Louis Le Bailly in NamJ Review, 90 (2002) p.IS7. 10 H.M. . Hood: Notes for Visitors (c.1925), p. 2. '~RBS, pp. 173 & 204. 10 lago, Letters (loch Ewe. 23 October 1939). 141
141
Mechanical unreliability staved off the inevitable during the inter-war years and the spectacle of motor boats having to be towed in by a steam picket boat was no doubt a source of gratification to officers of the old school. However, reliability and performance had in fact greatly improved by the 1930s and with it the inherent advantages of the motor boat became apparent, principally in reduced weight and manning and increa ed speed and flexibility. Writing in 1937, Peter du ane summarises some of the advantages of Hood's complement of five motor boats: These modern boats ride over the waves when they are fully planing, as opposed to their predecessors' ploughing through the seas, and their seaworthiness and general riding comfort
have to be experienced to be believed, even under the worst possible conditions of sea, and in the smallest type of planing boat. [... ] The hoisting weight of the modern 45-foot highspeed picket boat [i.e. motor launch] is about one-third of the weight of the steam picket boat that it replaces ... and the main derrick, with its cumbersome and elaborate rigging and its heavy demand on man's time, can be dispensed with."· It took 80 men to hoist out a picket boat or barge and an hour or more for steam to be got up before the midshipman could take the big brass wheel. But though in many ways easier to operate than its steam predecessor, the motor boat left rather more to the delicacy of the coxswain than had earlier been the ca e:
[n the case of the modern high-speed boat, coxswain-control will nearly always be adopted. The coxswain stands or sits at the wheel in the ordinary way, but, instead of ringing gongs to the engine room or working an engine-room telegraph, he will move the reverse lever forwards or backwards as the case may be. The throttle, which controls the engine revolutions, will always be to his hand, but in manceuvring, the throttle should, as far as possible, be set to predetermined low revolutions of the engine, and left there except in case of emergency. The necessary operations to control the boat will then be confined simply to the use of a steering wheel and reverse lever, which would present no more difficulty than would be the case if there were a wheel and engine-room telegraph. [... ] [n getting under way, it is essential to use the throttle gently in accelerating. The engines in these fast boats are of relatively high power, and damage can be done by rough use of the throttle. This precaution should also apply to throttling down the engines as well as to opening out. It is a bad practice, and almost equally damaging to an engine, to throttle down very rapidly, though this is not often realised. All movements of the throttle should be smooth and ympathetic to the engines ... '" The last steam boat was not removed until the refit of spring 1941 but they had had one last laugh at the expense of their motorised counterparts. The ditching of the petrol tanks under air attack on 26 September 1939 meant that they alone of Hood's boat flotilla were of any use when the ship made Scapa Flow the following day'" Her final complement included six sailing boats of the old avy and eight motorised types of the new. In two world wars the Royal avy lost 21 battleships and battlecruisers and in no more than ne or two cases was it possible to effect anything approaching an orderly evacuation in boats. During the 1920s the Hood's boats were calculated as being able to accommodate 759 of her peacetime complement of over 1,100 men. '" The rest would have to make do with carley floats and lifebuoys of which there were eight and eleven respectively by 1936.'" The carley float was a canvas-covered cork ring fitted with life-lines round the edge and a wooden platform in the centre to support its occupants. [n October 1939 Sub-Lt John [ago R.N.V.R. informed his family that [ find myself in charge of a carley float with six ratings; [ shall expect to be piped aboard! A float is better than a boat because it can be launched by hand without a winch and will float-a boat probably won't!'"
III
Routine, Work and Rest
lago would be proved right though he could not avail himself of his carley on the morning of 24 May 1941. In the event, it was only thanks to the three-foot square biscuit floats with which she had been amply provided during her final refit that the Hood's survivors were able to endure until the moment of rescue. Though far too large to be shipped, the final unit in the Hood's flotilla was her drifter, a vessel of around 200 tons, 90 feet or so in length and with a speed of about eight knots. During the Great War hundreds of trawlers and drifters from the fishing fleet had been requisitioned along with their civilian crews for patrol and minesweeping duty in support of the avy. Most resumed their peacetime service after the Armistice but a number were retained by the Admiralty for use as tenders for capital ships, cruiser squadrons and destroyer flotillas in home waters. The aim was to reduce the burden on ships' boats by passing on to the drifter the tasks of keeping a major unit supplied and her men ferried to and from their ship. During the t920s Hood was served by the Halo which in 1920 accompanied her mi tress to Scandinavia and back. On emerging from her 1929-31 refit she was allotted the Horizoll, to which Mid. Louis Le Bailly was assigned in the summer of 1933: Coal-fired, her boilers served steam reciprocating engines driving a single large propeller. [... 1 A couple of hundred libertymen, several tons of potatoes or cabbages, firebricks, drums of lubricating oil, everything large in numbers or dirty came our way. But there was (to me) a very grand bridge, all of eight by six feet, the wheelhouse directly below, and a crew of 12. The wardroom, constructed in the fish hold, could conveniently accommodate four for meals and three for sleep: one body on each bench beside the table and a third on it. The ship's company lived in even greater discomfort. [... ] Stormy nights in the Firth of Forth, Cromarty or Scapa, with gusting winds and sometimes a strong tide, called for judgement and sea sense with little margin for error. Many were the trials and tribulations of the coxswain and engine room crew as a 17-year-old learned the tricks. Happily summer nights were short in the north and drifters, like warships, were strongly built. Somehow we survived."· Inside the fishhold the Horizon could accommodate up to 350 libertymen in fair weather by day; by night in foul weather her capacity was limited to 206.'" However, when sent on ahead of the Hood her complement was limited to twelve, all of them entitled to 'hard lying' money as compensation for their discomfort. Louis Le Bailly recalls a trip at sea: Either as a mark of favour or because I looked as though I needed fresh air, I learned I was to sail that evening for Portsmouth as Horizon's navigator and one of the two watchkeepers under a young lieutenant, a trip of challenge. Although we midshipmen had run Horizoll in harbour neither of us had watchkeeping certificates and had never kept watch alone in open waters. There was more to it than that. In theory Horizo/" carried enough coal for the voyage but some years before a similar fleet drifter, the Bille Sky, on precisely the same trip had been lost with all hands in circumstances never explained. For this reason we were instructed to close certain shore wireless stations
down the east coast and report our position by morse radio. We reached Portsmouth with, literally, only a few shovelfuls of coal left in our bunkers. l48 The Horizon seems to have passed to the battleship Royal Oak on Hood's departure for the Mediterranean in 1936, though another was assigned to her on the outbreak of war. Both were to be orphaned before the last shot had been fired.
Torpedoes and Torpedomen The Hood's torpedo armament has been the subject of controversy since the time of her design and con truction. ". The final design legend of August 1917 stipulated a total of ten torpedo tubes, two submerged forward of 'N turret and eight on the upper deck amidships. While not satisfactory, the placing of tubes above the main belt was forced on the designers by the shortage of space in a hull fi.I1ed with machinery and ordnance. In September 1918 the Director of Naval Construction, Sir Eustace Tennyson d'Eyncourt, expressed concern that a detonation of these was liable to break the ship's back given their position over the main strength girders running the length of the vessel. However, the view of the avy was that tactical considerations made torpedoes indispensable and orders were passed for the Hood to be completed to the approved design while the arrangements for her sisters were placed under review. ISO There the matter rested until July 1919 when the continuing demand for horizontal protection which characterises lhe genesis of HMS Hood prompted the removal not only of four of the upper-deck tubes but also the armoured box protecting the remaining two pairs of torpedoes. The understanding was that these would be retained for experimental purposes only and could under no circumstances be considered war fittings. In the event, this stipulation was ignored and the Hood was to serve out her time with four torpedo tubes on the upper deck. The originalS-inch protection was however restored during the 1929-31 refit. The submerged tubes were removed together with the after torpedo control tower at Malta in November and December 1937. The torpedo owed its inception to the ingenuity of a Capt. Luppis of the Austro-Hungarian Navy and to the technical expertise of Robert Whitehead, the English manager of an engineering firm in Fiume. Whitehead produced his first prototype in 1866 but it was not until the early years of the twentieth century that a truly effective weapon appeared. The key development was the production of an enhanced system of propulsion in the form of the Hardcastle heater in 1908-9. By heating the compressed air used to power the torpedo engine the Hardcastle device doubled its speed and range to 30 knots and 6,000 yards. To this innovation was added the angled gyroscope in 1910 which permitted ti,e torpedo to assume a course different from that on which it was launched, thus greatly enhancing the flexibility of the entire system. The Hood fired 21-inch Mk IV and Mk fV' torpedoes measuring nearly 22 feet in length and weighing a ton and a half. Though superseded by the Mk IX' in the 1930s, the Mk IV remained a highly sophisticated weapon containing over 6,000 parts. It was powered by a radial engine driven by super-heated steam produced by the passage of pressurised water through a combustion chamber. Kept at a constant depth by a hydrostatic valve and on a steady course by gyroscopic rudder control, the Mk IV was capable of carrying 515 pounds of TI T to ranges of5,OOO yards at 40 knots or 13,500 yards at 25 knots.'SI
1"6
Le Bailly, The MatI Around the Engine, p. 25.
'4' RBS, p.
192.
Le Bailly, The Man Around the Engine, p. 27. ...9 orthcon, HMS Hood, pp. to--l3. 150 See NM~'I, HMS Hood, ship's cover, 11.
1018
The BattLecruiser HMS HOOD
112
easy recovery and then the warhead itself with its pistol, primer and detonator to explode the charge against the hull of the enemy. In wartime the sinking valve in the buoyancy chamber of the torpedo was set to activate at the end of its run to prevent it falling into the wrong hands. But al £2,000 apiece the Mk IV was among the most expensive projectiles in the lavy and losing one in peacetime could be the cause of a Board of Enquiry.u' Even when located on the surface issuing its white plume of smoke a torpedo might yet give its recovery party a few surprises. Rear-Admiral Arnold-Forster: A torpedo out for trouble will sometimes play tricks with the picking-up boat's crew. It stops and comes gently to the surface near the target looking mild as milk, and allows them to put securing lines on its nose and tail; then, whilst they are further attending its wants, it rushes off at full speed like a harpooned whale, towing the boat with it and threatening to swamp it. Near the end of its run a sportive torpedo sometimes has a way of trying to put the wind up amongst the boat's crew by wallowing and snorting like a porpoise. '54 The forward tube of the starboard Torpedo adjusting space on the upper deck in July 1932. The reload is suspended above the tube, its warhead projecting into the armoured box. To the left another torpedo has been dismantled for servicing, the body on the right and the tail on the left. Wright & Logan
Roberts, The Bartlecrll;ser Hood, pp.17-18. m Ihid.• p. 18. 15} At 1940 prices; the cost in 1924 was £1,200. 1,5.1 Arnold·Forster, Tilt' \\'aysofthe Navy, pp. 132-3. 15' Jurens. 'The Loss of H.M.S. Hood', p. 152. '50 PRO, ADM 116/435 I, p. 368. 15\
'" Ibid., p. 383. ISll Brown. Nelson to Vanguard. pp.
162-3. 159 Eric Grove, 'Hood's Achilles' Heel?' in NamI History. 7 (1993), Summer, pp. 43-6. 160 Williams, CO'le A Long lOllrtley. p.116.
The tubes were loaded and traversed by hydraulic power, a torpedo kept permanently in each tube with a reload slung on rails directly above it. There were two Torpedo magazines, both just forward of';>': turret shell room in the hold and with a joint capacity of 32 warheads. Directly above them were the submerged tubes set ell echeloll on the platform deck. The principal working space was the Torpedo body room on the main deck which was served by a pair of elongated lifts descending to the Submerged torpedo room two decks below. Embarkation of torpedo bodies and warheads was performed through a hatch on the forecastle by the forward breakwater, the hardware being lowered through the upper deck and down to the working space below. Supplying the submerged tubes was therefore a straightforward matter but torpedoes for the above-water tubes had evidently to be trundled along the upper deck and assembled ill situ. How were the torpedoes aimed and fired?'" The process was considerably easier than for guns since no elevation data was required. Target bearing and deflection data was provided by a total of eight torpedo deflection sights mounted on the fore bridge, in the conning tower and in the after torpedo control tower on the boat deck. Range was calculated on three 15foot range finders, one atop the after control tower (removed in 1937) and two abreast the Midships searchlight platform between the funnels (both removed in 1940; 12-foot 5.5in rangefinders on the signal platform used thereafter). Until 1929 the resulting information was fed into the Torpedo transmitting room on the lower deck abaft 'B' turret. Here a Dreyer Table generated a setting for the torpedo gyroscopes; after 1931 this calculation was performed in the Torpedo control position on the bridge. Once set, an electric circuit was closed and the 'tinfish' fired remotely from the Torpedo control tower or the after control tower. Whereas submerged torpedoes were discharged with compressed air, the upper-deck ones were launched by a cordite charge. As the torpedo left the tube a lever controlling its supply of compressed air was tripped, the paraffin feeding the heater ignited, the oil jet triggered and the engine started with a whirl of counter-rotating propellers. Torpedoes were provided with two detachable heads, first a practice one containing teak ballast and a calcium flare for
But for the two Boards of Enquiry investigating the loss of the Hood in 1941 hertorpedoes represented a far more sinister danger to the crew. Both were concerned to explore the possibility that a detonation of the upper-deck torpedoes had caused or contributed to the loss of the ship. '55 Witnesses to the disaster and those who had recently served in her were asked whether the armoured mantlets covering the torpedo tubes were likely to have been open or closed as she went into battle. Captain William Davis, Executive Officer until September 1940, confirmed that they would have been shut. I" An explosives expert, Capt. John Carslake, indicated that it would require not a near miss but a shell actually detonating on the warhead to cause the explosion of a torpedo. I" Although members of the Royal Corps of Naval Constructors dissented from its findings, the second board concluded like the first that there was little evidence of a torpedo detonation and attributed the loss of the ship to a magazine explosion. Among the dissenters was a member of the second board, D.E.]. Offord, head of the Director of Naval Construction's damage ection through the 1930s, and the DNC himself, Sir Stanley Goodall. lss Though the theory of a torpedo detonation still has its adherents, subsequent analysis has tended to endorse the judgements of the two boards. '59 The hundred men who formed the Hood's Torpedo Division were as close-knit a group as any in the ship. In the mid-1930s the 'tin fish men' produced a stylised version of the ship's badge which replaced the anchor with a torpedo. Len Williams was one of their number between 1936 and 1941:
Hood's torpedo division were a happy-go-lucky lot; we were about 90 to 100 strong and by age and service were the oldest division in the ship. Over 50% of us were threebadge men, which meant that they had at least 13 years service to their credit. At this period, most torpedo men were fairly senior men due to the great competition to get into the branch to begin with.
I'"
However, the Torpedo Division's duties extended well beyond tinfish and the hale oil used to lubricate them. Until 1929 the Torpedo Branch was also responsible for the distribution of all
Routine, Work and Rest
113
Left: A Mk IV torpedo leaves one of the port upper-deck tubes on
electrical power on board. This, so said the ship's guide book, included 200 miles of electrical cable and 3,874 light fittings. The increasing sophistication of electrical systems of course warranted the formation of a separate branch but this had been strangled al birth by an Admiralty convinced that technical specialisation was a threat to the fighting spirit of the Navy. In lieu of this the Admiralty decided in 1929 to transfer all high-power distribution-that relating to propulsion, damage control and habitability-to the Engineer Branch while leaving the Torpedo Branch in charge of low-power electrical supply-gun firing, fire-control, emergency, searchlight and telephone circuits'61 The /-load's electricity was generated by eight 200kW dynamos which supplied current at 220 volts DC into a common ring main controlled from the main switchboard on the lower deck beneath 'B' turret. Low-power supply, which depended on numerous motor generators, was controlled from a second switchboard nearby. The outbreak of war for the first lime brought a universitytrained electrical engineer to the /-load in the shape of Sub-Lt (later Electrical Lt) John lago R.N.Y.R. Within two weeks of his arrivallago had had a new system of emergency lighting for the ship approved by Capt. Glennie.'·' Among those charged with its maintenance was LS Len Williams: I had recently been promoted to Leading Seaman and was put in charge of all the electrical emergency circuits, which included [automatic electric ballen jlanterns, temporary circuits, sick bay operating lamps etc. I had an assistant, and it was a full-time job for we had some seven hundred of these auto lanterns alone to check over and maintain. They had to be kept charged up and periodically tested to see that the relays did not stick. In view of what happened later it was heartbreaking to know that no opportunity was given to the ship's company to make use of these safety arrangements when trouble did come.
I.'
Modifications were still being made in the spring of 1941: During the refit I thoroughly overhauled our emergency electrical system, and with the aid of some old motor-car headlamps was able to produce some fairly efficient emergency operating lamps for our action medicalleams.'64 Nor did the Torpedomen's responsibilities end there. Along wilh the Engineering Department, the Torpedo Division was entrusted with the ship's ventilation which supplied or extracted air from her internal spaces along miles of trunking. The fans for the living and working spaces were powered by electric motors working on the ship's low-power supply. In order to avoid piercing the armoured bulkheads each major section of the ship was served by fans and motors on a unit system. These it was Len Williams' job to inspect: I changed my job onboard from Torpedo maintenance to ventilating fan maintenance which was a watchkeeping job, necessitating a visit to every running fan in the ship during one's period of duty. These large fan motors provided the forced ventilation between decks, some being supply fans and others exhaust. It was essential that the lubrication and the electrics of each fan be checked during each watch. As there were hundreds of these fans of all shapes and sizes,
the detonation of a cordite charge. Crewmen watch beside
Port NO.6 S.Sin gun; late 1930s. HMS Hood AwxiarionfPercival Col/ecrion
Below: Still issuing smoke, a practice torpedo is hoisted aboard after being recovered by one of the ship's whalers in the late 1930s. The trolley that will return it to the Torpedo body room can be seen in the upper
part of the photo. HMS Hood AssrxiationlMawn Collection
and in various awkward positions, it took one the whole of one's four-hour watch to get around them all.'·s Although the /-load's ventilation system was a considerable advance on earlier designs it was found to be inadequate in e>..t remes of heat and failed to prevent the incidence of tuberculosis aboard. Moreover, in relying on natural supplies of air drawn in through ventilation fittings out on deck it made flooding unavoidable in heavy seas, especially on the messdecks forward. At the best of times the crew lived in an environment of'canned air' with foul smells periodically wafted through the lrunking. As Surgeon-Cdr K.A. Ingleby-Mackenzie related in April 1940, not even the Sick Bay was spared: The atmosphere in the Sick Bay has at times become very heavy at sea: and this has been cleared by turning on an internal circulation of air in the forward end of the ship, though as the heads are involved in this circulation, the air ventilated is not always of as salubrious an aroma as one would wish. Accordingly another method has now been adopted for the Sick Bay, namely the exhausting of air from the Sick Bay by a special fan placed near the main door down into the CO, room: and this has had a decidedly beneficial effect: and has been regularly used of late. 166 Unfortunate as it was, this along with the constant whirring of the fans was part of the reality of life afloat, the backdrop against which all served and from which no one was spared.
Roberls, The Battlecrfl;ser Hood. p.14. lltl fago. Letters (at sea, 9 October 1939). 16} Williams, GOlle A LOllg jOllmey, p.142. 1601 Ibid., p. 151. '" Ibid.. pp. 121-2. 161
1M>
PRO,AD~1101/565, ~Iedical
Officers' Journal, 1 Januar)'-31 March 1940, vol. 28, ships H-I, f. 37r.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
114
5 Life Aboard On what wings dare he aspire? What the hand dare seize the fire?
NE OF THE DISTINCTIVE FEATURES of life and war at sea is that a ship, however large or small she may be, is at once the home, work and weapon of all who sail in her. More than that, she is their only succour and defence against the remorseless power of wind and water which is the common enemy of all seafarers. For this reason, as for the large number of those embarked in her, the life and functioning of a warship has more of the quality of a community than perhaps any other military unit. Whereas a soldier may expect to serve out his time in the same regiment, it is the fate of a ship's company to be scattered by recommissioning or war after no more than a few years. But no matter how short her lease there is always time enough for her distinctive personality to impress itself for good or ill on all her people, and for these in their turn to leave their mark as indeltbly on her. In thi way the cycle is renewed in the experience of other crews and men until either the violence of the enemy or the breaker's torch fulfils her destiny. Welded in discipline, tradition and war, and yet capable of annihilation in a matter of seconds, it is the transient yet lasting quality of naval life afloat that affords it much of its fascination: short in time yet rich in memory. This is true of no ship more than it is of HMS Hood.
O
•. . . . . .11 ••• For Cadet Le Bailly, joining his first ship in 1932, his arrival aboard was a solemn and exhilarating moment. Thus it was that Dick Litchfield, I and two others foregathered at the Keppel's Head, Portsmouth, one evening in early August 1932. From our modest attic bedrooms we could see the quarterdeck of the great ship which was to be our home. Next morning, clad in our number one uniforms, we duly repaired on board. [... J From the moment we reported to the officer of the watch, the whole rhythm of life was a boy's dream come true. They were all there, as Taffrail and Bartimeus had told us they would be: Guns and Torps, the Springer and the Pilot, the Schoolie and the Chief and the Senior, the Chippie, the Bo'sun, the PMO and of course our lord and master the Sub.'
Le Bailly, Tile Mall Arollnd rite Engine, p. 20. 'Taffrail' and 'Bartimeus' were the pseudonyms of two naval writers of stature, Captain Taprell Darling and Pay Captain Sir Lewis Ritchie. 1 Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, p. 132. 'IWM, 91/7/1, p. 38. ~ The detail in this section owes much to Mr George Donnelly (Stoker, 1936-8),10 whom I express my gratitude. I
Some, indeed, could say no more of the Hood than that her beauty was echoed in the friendly atmosphere they encountered aboard her, unusually so for a ship of her size. The Rev. Edgar Rea, joining as the ship's chaplain in September 1936, was relieved to discover several familiar faces from earlier commissions, while Paymaster Cadet Keith Evans found himself playing deck hockey within half an hour of stepping aboard. However, for most their arrival was more modest, though no less impressive for that. Hammock and kit-bag over his shoulder and ditty box in his hand, a rating would traipse up a gangway amidships to be received without fuss or cere-
mony into his new home. Ted Briggs: Then we were marched up the long gangway to be swallowed by this whirring monster. Everything seemed twice as big as normal. The mess decks were colossal; a series of scrubbed wooden mess-tables reached out at me like massive conjuror's fingers; mess-kids gleamed in innitation of sterling silver; even the overhead hammock bars glinted, while the faint whiff of fuel oil and the constant humming of the air vent engulfed me. This sense of space and clean-cut lines did not diminish in the boys' mess deck, where we were deposited to make ourselves at home.' How different had been the reaction of Boy Fred Coombs, reaching the same messdeck four years earlier. For him and those, including his twin brother Frank, who accompanied him, the reality of life afloat evidently came as a dreadful shock: On joining the Hood in Portsmouth Dockyard on 31 March 1935, struggling up the long steep gangway with, first, our bags and, after scathing remarks about our slackness, a run back down to fetch our hammocks, we felt like flies on top of a dung heap. After a guided wander down steel ladders, on identical-looking corridors, through huge steel doors, we ended up somewhere in the bowels of what seemed like an inhuman, airless and windowless white-painted mass of long passageways and boxes, in what was, in reality, a barracks. We felt more like the maggots underneath the dung than the flies on top. [... ] After being led through some deserted messdecks and enclosed compartments, we found all our bags and hammocks heaped at the bottom of a steel ladder after being thrown, a deck at a time, through three decks to the lower level, which led to our mess deck. That rough handling of our hammocks was to be the first indication that life was rough at sea and on ships.' The seamen's messdecks in which Briggs and Coombs were to make their home for the next few years differed little from those in other capital ships of the Royal Navy. Ranged on the upper and lower decks were fifteen enclosed messes for senior ratings and eleven open ones known as 'broadside messes' for the bulk of the ship's company-over 1,100 men in peacetime.' [n a typical open mess, such as that of the Torpedomen and the Quarterdeckmen on the port side of the upper deck amidships, accommodation was provided for about 200 men in a space up to 70 feet long and 30 across. The main feature of each was a row of long wooden tables lying athwart the ship and supported either on folding legs or else suspended from the deckhead by means of a series of highly-polished steel bars. On either side wooden forms provided seating for up to 20
I
Life Aboard
115
Above: The Torpedomen's mess looking aft and inboard in the early 19305. The messdeck has been scrubbed, polished and tidied for morning Divisions; note the shoes under the table. The tables are suspended from hooks and the deckhead is covered in ventilation trunking and bars for slinging hammocks. To the left is a range of highly polished kit lockers. Just left of centre in the background is a ventilation fan while a second range of lockers to the right forms a partition between this mess and that of the Quarterdeckmen beyond. 5ellicks
men per table. Each of these tables constituted a 'mess' in its own right and it was here that a man ate his meals, read his mail, played games and spent much of his life cheek by jowl with his comrades. Every mess had its number, even to port and odd to starboard, the numeration beginning forward and proceeding down from the upper to the main deck. The atmosphere of a large messdeck is nowhere better described than in the following passage by Lt-Cdr W.B. Harvey, who began his career as a sailor: At one end of the table a game of solo, euchre, brag or any other of the innumerable card games was in progress, usually with slightly resented 'advisors' hovering in the background; Spoff Hammond who ran the 'goffer' shop would be mixing a concoction in a bucket to sell as lemonade; 'Brigham' Young would be writing to one of his many girls, sorting out their photos in his ditty box; 'Nobby' Hall, prospective Med Fleet light heavyweight champion, doing his shadow boxing; cooks of the mess peeling spuds and over all a buzz of conversation, jokes, taunts and cat calls making a noisy, happy background, repeated in all si>.."teen broadside messes.' For Divisions each morning the white linoleum cloth that covered the tables was rolled back to reveal the scrubbed deal wood beneath and the mess cutlery artistically arranged on top. At the gangway end the 'Cooks of the Mess' polished and stacked the assortment of 'fannies' with which each was equipped with military precision. Fred Coombs: At the other end of the table was another highly polished tin box holding some tea and sugar in separate compartments, which we were advised was to make tea in a large, odd-shaped tall teapot with removable tea strainer, with a small lid, the only recognisable thing being the pout to pour from. Teatly arrayed in front of the box, with the teapot on top, was a mess kettle and lid alongside a round, wire-handled, flat-bottomed can and lid, all highly polished, which, with a large soup ladle, were to be our mess utensils. Underneath the table was a highly
polished and clean bucket, even though it was to hold any leavings such as the tea leaves from the teapot.' Along its length a series of shallow racks fitted to the underside of each table provided space for shoes and so forth while no doubt adding to the general sense of cramped discomfort. The opposite end of the table was usually hinged to the ship's side, along which ran stowage for dilly boxes, boots and other items. Just above the table was a lamp-traditionally oil-burning but in Hood always electric-together with the mess number neatly done in black paint, and a small notice board containing special orders and the duty roster for cooks of the mess. Higher still was additional stowage for ditty boxes and the rack for 'mess traps' (assorted utensils) that completed the culinary outfit of each mess. Fred Coombs:
Above: The same Torpedomen's mess looking forward and outboard in July 1932; the angle of view is in pre<:isely the opposite direction to the previous photo. Note the numbers of each mess painted along the ship's side and the ditty boxes stowed beneath
them. Above are the racks for
'mess traps'. Mess utensils have been uniformly laid out and the bread barge and assorted fannies gleam at the end of each table. A
range of kit lockers is visible on the forward bulkhead. Ventilation trunking is attached to the
longitudinal girders above. Nearly 100 men inhabited this space. Wright & Log.m
On the ship's side was fixed a wire-framed mess cupboard with separate and safe stowage for the standard crockery and cutlery, and underneath a highly polished box lid which fronted the bread barge-bread bin to us noviceswho, from custom, were looking for something to eat and finding that, as on all Boys' mess decks, there was never any leftovers! Along the internal bulkheads were ranges of gleaming steel lockers for the rest of the men's equipment. Against the deckhead a confusion of kinked hammock bars, beams, cabling, ventilation trunks and fittings for hammock stowage completed the austere panorama. Amidst all this the Coombs twins and their companions sat disconsolately waiting for something to happen. However, help in the shape offood and messmates was at hand: Having had a taste of finding our mess deck after stowing our hammocks, we all decided to stay put in our messes until Cooks to the Galley was piped about 4 o'clock, when two duck-suited youngsters came rushing into each mess, one to put a handful of tea into the pot, the other to show us how to roll the usual white lino table cloth on the table, scatter a few knives before dashing off to join the queue at
S
Cited in Wells. The Ro)'al Navy, p. 139. The messdeck described is in the battleship Marlborough in the
early t920,. 6'WM, 91/7/1, pp. 38-9. The'naTbonomed can' was properl)' known as a fanny, the 'bucket' as a messkid. , Ibid., p. 38.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
116
the Servery and be handed a numbered tray containing just the correct number of rations required in the mess. [... ] Of food there was no sign until the duty messmen came running down the steel ladders, their backs to the rung, an impossible method of descending without a lot of practice, but the only way to carry our food down to our mess, some three ladders down, using the back of our ankles pressed against the preceding ladder rung to balance ourselves and with our heels pressed firmly on the next rung down. It was the only way to carry a dish that at some time would have to contain liquids such as gravy. After a bit of practice we were soon to run down ladders in this way, a much quicker method when we couldn't use our hands to balance and the only way when we had to carry a dish without spilling its contents' A drink of tea and a slice or two of bread and things looked much rosier: After tea, which was more often bread and jam, we sat around sipping our strong, sweet tea and talking to our new messmates, who were waiting their turn to go on leave, and found new advisors, already veterans of six months' service on the Hood, coming from our home town and taking us under their wings' Even for those not subject to the terrible hunger pangs of the Coombs twins, food was a significant and indeed contentious Seasonal fare for the lower deck on Christmas Day 1938, the ship lying at Malta. Daily menus were
We accepted it reluctantly. No longer could we collect mess savings at the end of the month as a result of economies we made in each mess by not catering for those on leave and ashore.'·
much less varied. The signatures are presumably those of the
owner's messmates. HMS Hood Asso
Q
H.M.S. "HOOD" CH,.ISTMAS 1838.
I
~
jI<
I'" t j~J~r
L • Ibid., p. 39. 'Ibid. 10
II
Cited in Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, p. 18. HMS Hood Association archives; c.I920-2.
"IW~IISA
no. 13581, reel 2. J.lIWM/SA no. 5818.
part of naval life. On commissioning the Hood became the first ship in the avy to adopt the dual systems of General Messing and Central Storekeeping. Traditionally, each mess had been given a monthly allowance of food which was drawn and prepared by two of its members, the 'Cooks of the Mess', who performed this task on a daily rota. Once prepared, their pies, joints and vegetables would be taken up to the galley to be baked in the ship's ovens until dinner or supper. This system, which was known as Canteen or Broadside Messing, had its supporters among those on the lower deck who favoured their own concoctions, but as ships' companies became larger the wastage and inefficiency implicit in requiring the 'cocoa bosuns' (galley staff) to cook as many dishes as there were messes began to call for change. The avy's answer was the General Messing system devised by Warrant Officer Alphonso Jago, after whom it was named 'Jago's' by the lower deck. Under this scheme the Paymaster and his victualling staff assumed responsibility for all lower-deck catering, undertaking to provide three meals a day to a pre-arranged weekly menu against the deduction of a daily allowance from the men's wages. This allowance amounted to Is. 1.2d. in 1937 rising to Is. 3.2d. in 1940. The introduction of General Messing placed a corresponding need for improved food-storage facilities aboard, which in Hood's case included large refrigerated meat and vegetable stores on the lower deck forward. In all some 320 tons of provisions could be laid in to keep the ship supplied for up to four months. This scheme, which saved the avy a lot of money, was for some time the source of much suspicion and resentment on the lower deck. Telegraphist S. Donovan:
"7
-
MENU. BREAKrrA5T.
'Rolls and 'Butter.
Pork Sausage. Egg and 'SacoD.
...
Marmalade.
Tea.
onetheless, others took quite the opposite view. Gunner 'Windy' Breeze, Royal Marine Artillery: The Hood was the first ship to start general messing. This was under a Paymaster Commander and instead of being in debt every month we soon had a huge surplus which was used to entertain the visitors to tea and cakes (rock cakes, stone hard)1' For a member of the Hood's first crew, AB Leo Brown of Newbury, the clincher was fried fish and chips from the galley range and 'tiddie oggies'-pasties-every Friday." Indeed, most came to appreciate not only the greater variety but also the improved quality of meals that had earlier been left to the questionable culinary talents of their messmates. Even so, for OD orman Wesbroom, aboard in 1931, 'general messing was never very popular'." Though preparation generally improved out of all recognition, the meals served remained much as they had always been. Breakfasts of bacon, tomatoes, tea, bread and butter, or issued in sandwich form after a rough night at sea. A roast or 'potmess' stew for dinner or supper with the eternal 'duff' steamed pudding for afters. But whatever the quality of the preparation, the journey from servery to mess still greatly imperilled the offerings of the hip's galley. For Fred Coombs tea was 'a
Life Aboard
quantity of bread, butter and perhaps jam which, if the ration carrier had remembered, would be on the plate and not in the bottom of what might be a greasy dish'... AB Bob Tilburn (1938-41) took a still more cynical view: Our food was very, very good, when it was in the fridge. But by the time the chefs had had a go at it, and it was on your plate, it wasn't too good." After the meal came the clean-up: All the time learning, we soon had to have the pots washed, the mes cleaned up, and perhaps the one who had the job of emptying the gash bucket over the ship's side down the steel gash chute (which prevented the hip's side becoming marked) would hear the familiar tinkle as an item of cutlery went down too, and often heard the remark 'Tinkle, tinkle little spoon, knife and fork will follow soon'. The oceans of the world must be marked by small items of Sheffield-made Royal Navy cutlery... " It was surely Hood's misfortune that, having been in the vanguard of General Messing, she did not survive long enough to avour the next development in naval culinary organisation, the cafeteria-style Centralised Messing introduced during the Second World War. At nightfall the men retrieved their hammocks from compartments or stowage nettings under the deckltead and slung them fore and aft over the mess tables to minimise the effect of the ship's motion on their slumber. Each 'mick' contained a mattress and a series of rope 'nettles' by which it was lashed to hooks fitted to the deck beams specially for this purpo e. Fully extended it measured all of eleven feet though requiring very litLle width. By moving a wooden 'spreader' bar along the nettles the hammock could be opened or closed as the user's need for privacy, warmth or comfort dictated. Fred Coombs explains the procedure: The long day finished with us slinging our hammocks for the first time for real, holding the nettles open at our head end by a short length of stick, unfolding our one heavy woollen blanket lengthways across our opened hammock before swinging our bodies in with the help of the conveniently placed hammock bar of the next leeping billet. Landing feet first on our blanket and lowering our shoulders and blanket beneath us, it was easy to draw each side up in its turn and wrap ourselves in. A comfortable bed when you got used to it and if we had made our boots and clothing into a comfortable pillow, held in place by the head nettles. Though the curvature of the spine suits the sag of a hammock, supported only at either end, sleeping on our backs was not natural though we soon got used to it .. ." leep when it came was at best fitful that first night: The steady subdued roar of machinery that came down those fan trunkings above our heads might have helped us to sleep but the lights ... were not dimmed till after 'Lights Out' at 10. Fitful sleep came to most after a lot of new and odd movements as we wriggled about and tried to, at the
117
same time, keep our blankets wrapped around us ... our hands between bent knees and not protecting our privates as now seemed necessary. Our long troubled night, broken by odd bumps underneath as passers-by headed our perhaps too-low-slung hammock as they went about their duty... was ended at what seemed an early hour b)' the switching on of all the lights and the raucous shouting of the ill-tempered ... Pett)' Officer who was on duty." The order to 'Lash up and stow' hammocks ma)' have been received with chagrin by some, but for others on the Coombs' messdeck it was a case of the early bird catching the worm: The time being 5.30 am gave us little time to lash up and stow our hammocks, get dressed and find our mess for a promi ed cup of ship's ky [cocoal and biscuits, only to find that the established messmates had turned out early to draw the rations before lashing their hammocks up and disposing of the rations in comfort. We were only caught the once as, like all things learnt the hard way, only fools get caught twice." However, for many there was every reason to remain ensconced for as long as possible. During his tenure Cdr Rory O'Conor took steps to enforce the standing order requiring every hammock in the ship to be lashed up and stowed away by 06.45 each morning: It is bad enough for a man to have to turn out and scrub the decks at six o'clock in the morning, but it is till worse if when he comes down to breakfast he finds someone from Guard and Steerage just getting out of a hammock slung over the mess table, and getting mixed up with his breakfast. It is unpleasant and causes unpleasantness.'· O'Conor's remarks touch on the central issue of messdeck life, the question of maintaining respect and comradeliness between men in an environment that was not only fraught and overcrowded but also devoid of privacy. Beyond the confines of his hammock or caboose, the only shred of privacy left to a man in a world subject both to official inspection and the intimate scrutiny of his messmates was his ditty box. Traditionally a hinged white-wood container sixteen inches long, nine wide and ten deep, the ditty box contained photos, letters, writing instruments, mementoes and trinkets to remind its owner of home, 'party' (sweetheart) or famil)'. Secured with a lock and identified with a brass plaque, Stoker George Donnelly (1936-8) kept a hairbrush and comb, two boot brushes and a housewife for minor sewing jobs in his." From the 1940s it was replaced by a small briefcase twelve inches long and ten wide with a spring lock and handle. Apart &om this each man had a locker in which he kept his various uniforms and equipment, his tin cap box and kit-bag, the packing of which was an art unto itself. Under such conditions there were inevitably moments when one had had enough of one's messmates, when exhaustion, discomfort and &ustration would fray nerves or tempers to breaking point. The view of 00 Jon Pertwee, a 'Hostilities Only' rating in 1940-1, is typical of the more sophisticated men that war brought into the avy:
"tWM, 9t/7II, p. 39. 15 Arthur (ed), The Navy: 1939 to the Presem Day, p. 90. "tWM, 9t/7II, p.40. "tbid., pp. 40-t. " tbid.,p.41. "Ibid. "RBS, p. 64. II E-mail to the author, 14 ovember 2002.
118
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
tl
Pertwee, Moo" Boots and Ditmer
l}
Suits, pp. 154-5. Ibid., p. 154. CPO Pope was lost in
U
the Hood in Ma)' 1941. HM Hood Association archives.
u Wincotl, lm'ergordotl Mutineer,
pp.34-5. ~ Arthur
Time spent with my mates on the mess-deck was fine, but in small doses only; for any long period, the noise and the subject matter of general conversation was one of boring and monotonous repetition, 'parties', poking and booze, booze, poking and 'parties'."
(ed), TilE' Nav)': 193910 the
Present Da)'. p. 89.
For a bored and seasick actor like Pertwee the antidote wa to be found among friends elsewhere in the ship, in this case CPO Geoff Pope of the Supply Branch: 'Sit down,lad, and have a tot: said Geoff, and from that moment on we became the best of friend. When work was slack and the sea was flat, 1would call in for a grog and a chat, but if it was rough, Geoff let me crawl in under his desk with my jam tin, and seemed quite impervious to my noisy discomfiture."
The ship's company of HMS Hood photographed on the forecastle at Topsail Bay, Newfoundland on c.14 September 1924 at the end
of the World Cruise. Vice-Admiral Sir Frederick Field seated in the centre with Capt. John 1m Thurn to his right. Joey the wallaby in the front row. HMS Hood Amxj.rIOfllR~idCoIlrction
However, for regulars recruited before the war it was the norm to socialise only with those in the same mess or duty area. Stoker Dick Turner (1936-9): Being such a large ship it was impossible to mix socially with many of the crew so you tended to find yourself with a small group of close friends."
This homeliness no doubt owed something to the prolonged separation from family that was the lot of all sailors. Len Wincott: To me it was obvious that I had joined a band of men who were in the first place sober, sentimental home-lovers, whose frequent absence from their closest bred in them a firmer tie with their home than many people who come home from work every day care to show." But for many intelligent men there wa something enervating about life at sea. AB Bob Tilburn had recourse to astrophy ics: 1always thought it was tremendous, the sea, but mentally,life at sea was numbing. 1started reading navigation handbooks and 1got some books about the stars. 1would write down how far a star was away, multiplying the speed of light by so many million miles. Just to keep the mind going'· However, for long-service regulars as much as erstwhile civilians it was the camaraderie and friendship that men remembered from their service. AB Len Williams of Portsmouth, a torpedoman aboard between 1936-41, puts it eloquently: Living as we did, cheek by jowl, in close contact with each
Life Aboard
other, often led to strong friendships. The sort of relation hips not found among t men in civilian life, where friends meet only occasionally, and where lives are lived in separate houses. Here we lived together as a giant family. We knew each other's failings and weaknesses, and liked each other in spite of them. We slept in close proximity, in swaying hammocks. We even bathed together in the communal bathrooms. In fact we lived candidly with one another, accepting the rough with the smooth. This sharing and living together, forged a comradeship which one can never find in civilian life." Occasionally one suspects that there was more to some relationships than mere amity. In the Mediterranean between 1937-8 Len Williams enjoyed the unforgettable companionship of a rating his memoir refer to only as Doug: About this time I became on friendly terms with Doug, who was a wireless operator. The Sparks' mess was on the same messdeck as ours, and sometimes we would take a walk on deck together. Whether there was something about me which invited confidence I do not know, but Doug used to pour out all his troubles in my ear, and gradually we got on shore-going terms.
119
He was more like Snowy than Harry had been, preferring the bright lights and cabarets to the quiet places. It was like old times again. We went wimming together at weekends, followed by an evening down the 'Gut'. In Doug's company I began to enjoy life again. On nights we were not ashore, Doug and I Jept on the upper deck under the huge forecastle awning. We both had camp beds and we would lie and watch the signal lamp, high up on the mast of the Castille Signal Station, flashing its messages to the fleet lying in the Grand Harbour. It was the limit of our vision before the awning blotted out the stars. It was pleasant lying there, listening to the bells of the horse-drawn carozzins or gharries, as we usually called them, and watching the lights of the waterfront bars and cafes ashore and the bobbing lights of the dghaisas going about their business. We would talk until the lights ashore began to go out one by one, and soon we ourselves would grow tired and fall asleep. Doug and J had a couple of pleasant months together, going ashore and enjoying ourselves before the Spring Cruise began, although for Hood this turned out to be another period of Spanish Patrol duty.
21
Williams, Gone A Long joumey. p. 141.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
120
"Ibid., pp. 121, 123 & 124-5. ~ Vice·Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly, 'Rum, Bum & the Lash: Some
Thoughts on the Problems of Homosexuality in the Ro)'al Navy' in }ourtlal of the Royal United Sen'ices Jrrst;tute. 141. no. I (February 1996), pp. 54-8. "Wells, Til< Ro)'al Navy, p. 138. )1 Pertwee, Moon Boots and Ditmer S"its, p. 147. n Humphries (ed), The Call oflile II
Sea, p. 93. Le Baill)'. 'Rum. Bum & the Lash', pp.55-6.
"IWM, 91/7/1, p. 41. " Ibid., pp. 38 & 57.
Shortly before we sailed, Doug was drafted to the destroyer leader Hardy, and I saw very little of him afterwards. I missed him of course, but thereafter, when going ashore, I usually picked a casual friend to go with. It wa not quite the same, since Doug and 1 had been together a year and we each knew the others' likes and dislikes, and we always got on so well together, but navy life is like this; friends come and go, and one has to make the best of it. 28 Despite the predominantly heterosexual and indeed homophobic sexuality that characterised the lower deck, homosexuality retained its place in naval life afloat." In 1929 a confidential fleet order expre ed dismay at the number of 'unnatural offences' being reported in the Navy.J(1 The Admiralty's emphasis on the steadying influence of the older man in curbing this phenomenon perhaps reveals its ignorance on the subject since it was the 'Sea Daddy' himself who was as inclined as any to seek sexual favour of hi younger hipmates. Joining Hood in ovember 1940, OD Jon Pertwee was befriended by a threestripe able seaman of the peacetime Navy: He wa a real mother to me, and a I was reliably informed by my hammock lasher, would've been a lot more, if I'd given him half a chance. There was nothing really homosexual about him, said my informant. It was just that when at ea, having a young 'oppo' to 'care for' was an old Navy tradition. It was further said that the expression 'chuff (carryings-on) for duff' (pudding) was not without a certain element of truth. Perhaps food was the only article of barter left to those young men unluck), enough not to have a tot to bargain with, but to me bartering with pudding seemed a bit beyond the pale."
Role·reversal and role· playing. Stokers dressed up as women and in uniforms borrowed from their officers. The occasion is no more than a S.O.D.S. opera in the late 1930s but no one can deny
the tensions of class and sexuality which, in varying degrees, characterised life afloat. HMS
Hood ~t~it CoIl«tlOll
Pertwee is not perhaps the most reliable of commentators but there is anecdotal evidence for arrangements of this sort in the Hood and elsewhere. Equally, in this as in so many other areas the war served to erode existing sexual barriers. Terri Gardner, called up in 1940 and trained as a avy cook, was discharged for suspected homosexuality after service in a corvette:
One was young, and sex is very much a thing in your life when you're in your twenties-you're out to get every bit and have as much fun as you possibly can. The married man away from home and in the avy a far as I could see, was the worst sort of man-he would go out of his way for a bit of nonsense. The difficulties were finding somewhere to be intimate." The psychology of homosexuality lies well beyond the scope of these pages but there can be no doubt that, a hore as afloat, homosexual activity was by no means the preserve of homosexual men per se. It was occasionally partaken of by frustrated heterosexuals in the confines of shipboard life, men for whom a secluded caboose or a night a hore when the ship entered harbour offered temptations impossible to resist. Until the mid-1930s the Tavy'S stoker complement was composed largely of men in their twenties, many of them miners from the north of England. However, at this moment a change of recruiting policy for the first time brought numbers of teenage stokers into the Engineering Departments of HM ships, a development neither they nor the avy were prepared to cope with. Vice-Admiral ir Louis Le Bailly, Lieutenant (E) and a divisional officer in the 1936--9 commission, recalls the upset caused by their arrival in the Hood: The advent of young tokers onto the stokers' messdecks posed problems. Many were under 18, yet there were no separate bathrooms and being young and some, good looking and attractive, were fair game for homosexually inclined older men. So steps were taken to billet them into separate Messes and to integrate them in 'Dog-Watch' schooling with the Boys. Further, in some cases the Boys' Divi ional officers agreed to permit them to take part in subsidised and supervised 'runs' ashore, sightseeing and picnics. On the whole the writer's view is that the measures taken for both seamen and stokers certainly diminished and possibly abolished 'romance' and rape. But in a big ship with innumerable corners and 'cabooses' and fan flats, concealment was not difficult." Although Boy Fred Coombs (1935-8) evidently subscribed to the homophobic tendency shared by most of the lower deck, his concern to protect his genitals during his first night aboard was not perhaps as absurd as it seems on a prima facie reading of his memoirs." The issue of homosexuality was clearly a pertinent one in the Hood during the mid-1930s, Coombs and his pals on the Boys' messdeck spending much of their time ridiculing their petty officer instructor and his 'bum boy' and speculating on whether their divisional officer was himself 'a bit of a puffter [sic]'." As a product of the Royal Naval College at Dartmouth, a community based on the English public school model, it would hardly have been surprising had the officer in que tion indeed been 'a bit of a poofter'. Le Bailly, a cadet at Dartmouth between 1929 and 1932, has these comments on the College between the wars: .. . aval Term officers [were I forbidden to have wives within 30 miles and many of the old masters [were I delightfully 'bent' bachelors. There was ... segregation by age-group of
Life Aboard
l2l
'Terms' except perhaps in the mid-Thirties under the influence of two over-enthusiastic Cadet Captains, when the consequent 'romances' reached almost scandal proportions. Some of the elderly Masters hastily married their Housekeepers. The policy, if there was one, seems to have been 'Cadets must get it out of their systems: 36 Sometimes, however, it was asking too much of an officer to 'get it out of his system'. At about 11.30 on the morning of 29 June 1939 as the Hood lay at Portsmouth a boy seaman reported an indecent advance by the newly-joined First Lieutenant. At noon the executive officer, Cdr William Davis, received a message in the wardroom anteroom to the effect that the Master-at-Arms needed to see him urgently. By 12.30 the First Lieutenant was under arrest in his cabin with a Marine sentry outside and it was here, before two bells of the afternoon watch had struck, that he blew his brains out with his own shotgun. Though dark rumours persisted into 1941," the evidence was quickly disposed of in one of the ship's incinerators, the matter declared a tragic accident and the deceased accorded a fullnavaJ funeral. So ended a brilliant career. He lies in the cemetery of R.N. Hospital Haslar, a victim no doubt of weakness and incontinence but more certainly so of the honour code and repressed sexuality of his age. Great as the impact of homosexual incidents were, it would be a mistake to regard them as anything other than occasional frissons in the life of the ship, though no doubt much went undetected. The following comment by a member of the Hood's last peacetime commission puts it all in perspective: ... The Old Man and 'Winger' (the younger person) was a general reference to a friend without any sexual connotation, someone perhaps only a year or so younger and usually being a run-ashore chum. My own particular friend was a Chief Ordnance Artificer. .. while I was a junior Telegraphist. I don't know his age but he was older than me, we had much in common, principally because we both came from the Isle of Wight and many hours were spent talking and walking the forecastle as well as runs ashore. This caused some ribald comments, but like most of them they were not meant seriously. I flatter myself that I was a reasonably good looking Boy Telegraphist, but during my two years plus aboard Hood I never encountered any homosexual approach, nor was I aware of any elsewhere. Perhaps I was naNe?
......111.-Though truly negative accounts of life aboard are rare, their scarcity should not blind us to the disagreeable realities that occasionally asserted themselves. Every so often a breakdown in relations or other circumstances would require an individual to be transferred away from his mess. O'Conor: Care is needed to ensure that a man's part of the ship and his mess are never changed unless it is absolutely necessary, or for some good reason it is to his advantage. Quarrelling and mutual antipathies sometimes make a change desirable, and cases occur when a fresh start in a new environment and with different associates will turn a youngster from wrong ways."
Equally, the anguish when a thief was found to be at work in the midst of a community that laid such reliance on trust is to be imagined. The incidence of petty theft on the messdecks is a difficult and disturbing problem. It is difficult because a thief is seldom caught red-handed, and it is disturbing because it engenders an unhappy atmosphere of suspicion among messmates. Unless he is a kleptomaniac, the man who steals from a shipmate must be the meanest of mortals. Experience shows that he is also, usually, most cunning, and, regrettably, he is seldom laid by the heels." The moral integrity of the lower deck improved markedly after 1900, but with the Second World War came many dubious characters or 'skates' into the Navy. As 00 B.A. Carlisle (1940-1) discovered to his cost, theft was rife on the messdecks of most big ships: Conditions below deck were by modern standards primitive and to wash one had to leave one's clothes outside the washroom and go in and sponge down. I foolishly left my belt, which held my worldly wealth of £7 (representing 70 days' pay), and when [ came out the money had gone. I reported the loss to the Master-at-Arms who was sympathetic but naturally said there was no remedy."" O'Conor, however, wouldn't have had any sympathy: If ever there was a case of Prevention being better than Cure, it is so with theft. Men are very careless with their money, and they leave it about in a way which must often sorely tempt the light-fingered. Money in a belt hung from the end of a hammock while the owner sleeps, or money placed in an unlocked ditty box, are quite frequently reported among the losses. A solemn warning is needed to all hands, prominently displayed on the Commander's Notice Boards, and repeated whenever necessary, that there is no safe place for money except(I) On a man's person. (2) Deposited with the Paymaster. Those who disregard this warning and suffer loss have only themselves to blame, and it is up to them to catch the thief." Small wonder 00 Bill Hawkins (1940-1) always took care to bring his clothing with him into his hammock when he turned in for a kip." For such moments-and there were many-when only complete solitude would do, the caboose, or cabouche as it was sometimes called, came into its own. Jon Pertwee: The most heartfelt want of any sailor at sea was privacy and a man would go to any lengths to find it. Behind a cupboard, on top of a cupboard, or in a cupboard, he would layout his hammock mattress and make himself a little home-from-home. I was luckier than most on three counts. First, I wa in charge of a rope-locker on deck. This was about seven foot long, four feet high and with the
J6
Le Bailly, 'Rum, Bum & the Lash',
pp.54-5. Jenson, Till Hats, Oilskins 6Seaboots, p. 91. " RBS, p. 65. " Ibid., p. 85. ., SWWEC, 200\11376, B.A. Carlisle, H
p.6. .. RBS, p. 85. U HMS Hood Association archives.
122
U
Pertwee. Moon Boots and Dinner Suits, p. 150.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
ropes coiled and piled up at one end, left ufficient room for my mattress, ditty box and 'thing '. With a pusser's torch suspended from the deckhead I spent many a happy hour reading, writing letters and generally revelling in the privacy this minuscule iron cell afforded me. With the locker catches down, I was unassailable. Photos of my dear one were stuck on the bulkhead allowing me to dream undisturbed of peace and tender loving arms enfolding me. These 'cabouches', as such havens were traditionally known, were quite accepted by the Officers and Petty Officers and could be occupied during daylight hours without fear or hindrance, although two men in a 'cabouche' with the door closed and locked off, wa likely to be frowned upon. You wouldn't believe how many of my mates were able to get themselves into that ridiculously
confined space for a smoke and a 'crack' (chat)" A caboose between decks lent itself to even greater improvement and redecoration, many going to the lengths of painting and filting their retreat with a permanent light, pictures, some sticks of furniture and even a bed. Taking one's night' rest in a cabouche was discouraged and some were locked against buggery, but officers frequently turned a blind eye. To deprive a man of those hours of privacy and solitude that, in war particularly, might occasionally mean the difference between survival and insanity in the cockpit of messdeck life, was not a step to be taken lightly. The open messes were presided over by the 'Leading Hand of the Mess', a leading seaman or 'killick' who was but one promotion away from sharing the enclosed messes of the petty
THE ROYAL MARINES
At the time of her loss the Hood's Royal Marine detachment consisted offour officers, 158 men and one Bandboy. Despite numbering not less than 10 per cent of her crew the Marines have rarely been given the attention merited by their impact on shipboard life, a reflection no doubt of the traditional antagonisms with seamen which are touched on elsewhere.... These few remarks cannot hope to make good that deficiency but they may at least provide an impression of the range of activities performed by the Royal Marines afloat. The bulk of the detachment occupied a large mess known as the Marine Barracks on the upper deck amidships. Their officers-usually a major, a captain and two Iieutenants--messed in the wardroom and slept in cabins aft. The detachment seems to have been composed of two or, later, three squads of 36 men each, drafted from Plymouth in the 19205 and Portsmouth from 1931 onward . To them were added a dozen or so noncommissioned officers led by a colour sergeant and the seventeen musicians of the ship's Royal Marine Band. The principal task of the detachment in this as in other ships was the manning of'X' turret, which required the services of about 65 men under a Captain R.M. The Marines were also responsible for part of the ship's secondary armament, being assigned Starboard No.2, 4, 5 and 6 5.5in guns during the 1933-6 commission. Led by a Bandmaster, the musicians served in the Transmitting Station for the main armament, a mark of the confidence reposed in them. In 1903 the Royal Marine bandsmen were established as the main purveyors of music in the Navy, replacing the somewhat mixed talents of the seaman bands which had preceded them. The Navy therefore came to enjoy a high standard of musicianship not only in the daily rituals of shipboard life but in every sphere from Beating the Retreat ashore to jazz numbers on the quarterdeck. The 'Royals' also
Left: Band practice in the port battery, (.1935. The Royal Marine Band played a wide variety of music. from ceremonial marches to jazz and chamber music. The hatch behind the
Bandmaster leads down to the Quarterdeckmen's mess on the upper deck. Beyond it is the head of the
dredger hoist for Port NO.5 5.5in gun. HMS Hood AmJd.riolllW1lfis CoIl«tion
Below: The Hoods Marine detachment formed up in tropical rig with their ceremonial white helmets during the traverse of the Panama Canal, 24 July
1924. Behind them is the Night defence control station and to their
right Port 4in Mk V High·Angle gun. Nested boats in the background. u.s. N• .,., Histonal C.,-,t." Washington
acted as sentries, officers' servants and wardroom attendants, while performing the same tasks and evolutions as seamen with the exception of boat work. In line with their role as 'sea soldiers: the detachment also trained for operations ashore with frequent landing parties and route marches. Finally, the Marines performed the task of ship's butchers while being entrusted with her mail and printing services. The standards for recruitment into the Corps were high and many were turned away at the barrack gate who later found no difficulty entering the army. Together with a great fighting tradition, this gave the Marines an air of superiority and the conviction with respect to
seamen that 'Anything you can do I can do better: The traditional rejoinder was 'Tell it to the Marines', an allusion to the supposed ignorance of the 'leathernecks' of the ways of the avy. However, by the early twentieth century it was plain that the Marines were an elite corps with a major contribution to make in both war and peace. In the Hood it was the Marine 'Guard and Band' which gave lustre to every occasion and the detachment which led many of her teams to victory, including three Rodman Cups between 1926 and 1928. However, many in the Corps felt a growing frustration during the inter-war period at the continued tendency among naval officers to regard them as little more than a pool of labour for menial and sentry duty and con equently seagoing service was never particularly popular among the rank and file. During the Second World War Marines served afloat as they had always done but the formation of Commando battalions in 1943 pointed the way ahead. For Hood's detachment, however,lost to a man on 24 May 1941, thi was a future they would never see. .. See (h. 6. p. 158.
123
Life Aboard
officers. There was a clear hierarchy on each messdeck, the Leading Hand being followed in seniority by those ratings whose three Good Conduct badges signified at least thirteen years' service in the avy. It was the endurance, skill and mordant humour of the long-service rating that shaped a messdeck's character in peace and stiffened its inmates to the trials that beset them in war. However tendentious hi other views, when the Invergordon mutineer LS Len Wincott described his companions of the inter-war Navy as the 'finest body of men in the world' he meant it." Responsibility for individual messes was also given to leading seamen, after whom time served on the deck was the determining factor where it came to allocation of lockers or a decent berth to sling one's hammock. Rank also exempted leading hands from the duties of food and mail collection and of course the daily mess cleaning, during which the tables were hoisted to the deckhead and the forms cleared away so that the corticene flooring could be crubbed and every surface buffed to a gleaming finish. Each mess would then be reassembled and its utensils and equipment laid out in the prescribed manner. Despite a near-obsessive concern for cleanliness, conditions aboard often militated against hygiene. Though a considerable improvement on older capital ships and fitted with amenities unknown in smaller vessels, Hood's lower-deck bathrooms still left a lot to be desired. Ted Briggs: The drains and scuppers could seldom cope with the ablutions and laundering of scores of naked matelots, and the result was a constant flood of four inches of murk" water on the floor. Hence the old expression: 'For you I swim the stokers' bathroom in full flood backwards.''' Ejectors were fitted to drain the bathrooms but a shortage of pressure prevented them being left permanently open. In addition, a chronic shortage of boiler feed water required most wash places to be closed for several hours each day-longer in wartime-while the ship was at sea. As ratings were not allowed on the messdecks in their grimy working rig this often made for severe overcrowding when large parties of men came off watch. The men performed their ablutions in a galvanised tub 30 inches wide and 10 deep which they filled from large taps set into the tiled bulkheads. In heavy seas, the flood of water sloshing from side to side might well send a tub, matelot and all, sliding right across the bathroom to the consternation of its occupant. Meanwhile, the absence of designated laundry rooms obliged men either to bring their washing into the tubs with them or else do their scrubbing in the basins found there, so adding to the mess and congestion. In war particularly, many found themselves with neither the time nor the inclination to undress at sea, leaving the overdue task of changing and 'dhobeying' their clothes to the return to harbour. When not done at the wash place basins, dhobeying was often performed in a bucket of water from the galley with a bar of 'pusser's hard', the waists on the main deck amidships being a favourite spot. Scrubbed clothing would then be deposited at the drying room or, in the case of stokers, taken below for the heat of the boiler rooms to deal with over the course of the next watch. 'Pusser's hard' was a form of currency by which the avy maintained the cleanliness and tidiness of the messdecks. Telegraphist Dick Jackman (1937-9) explains:
If detergent existed in those days it certainly never reached
Hood, and all non-personal washing was done with large bars of yellow soap about 2.5 x 2.5 x 6 inches which could be purchased from the ship's stores. If one left belongings lying around they were picked up and put in the 'Seran Bag', and in order to retrieve them one was fined a portion of a bar of oap, size depending on the amount left lying around. This requisitioned soap was then used to keep the ship and mess clean." Although regarded as a most comfortable vessel on completion, the issue of habitability became more pertinent as time passed. Certainly, the Hood's amenities and general standard of comfort seemed less remarkable towards the end of her career than they had at the start. As Mid. H.G. Knowles reported during a brief stay in June 1939, Exploring the Hood, full of noise, pipes, and dockyard maties, amazed me that such a contrast and change could have occurred since I went over her at Malta. There she had been my ideal in polish and efficiency. Now I began to realize how small and airless are the messdecks: indeed there is hardly a single scuttle below decks" By the late 1930s heating of the messdecks had become impossible because the tubing leaked so badly that the evaporators could not supply both it and the ship's boilers with the water necessary. The absence of scuttles and poor air circulation meant that light and smell deteriorated markedly the further one penetrated into the ship. The Hood had never been well ventilated but the tendency to dampness of a vessel whose messdecks were frequently awash was increasingly blamed for the high incidence of tuberculosis aboard. The ship's dentist, Surgeon Lt (D) W.J. Wolton, has left the following record of conditions aboard in 1936: Air conditioning was very poor. There were several deaths from tuberculosis. At Gibraltar a rating sat up in his hammock, coughed up a lot of blood and was dead in a few minutes,49 The matter was first brought to the attention of the Admiralty after an able seaman and a midshipman had been invalided off the ship with TB in 1932. 50 These concerns were brushed aside by the Admiralty which noted that £5,000 had been spent on habitability during the 1929-31 refit and that incidence of the di ease in the Hood compared favourably with the rest of the Fleet and the civilian population. However, by the late 1930s the Hood had earnt an unenviable reputation as 'the TB ship' and the Admiralty could no longer ignore a disease that, in the Navy at large, had twice the mortality rate of civilians and was as prevalent as it had been 30 years earlier." Cases of men with chest problems were reported weekly in the Mediterranean during 1936-8 and a regime of exercises on deck instituted." Appropriately enough, Vice-Admiral Andrew Cunningham had been chairing a committee looking into problems of ventilation and habitability afloat at the time of his sudden appointment to the Hood in June 1937." Equally, in a society that wa so fa tidious about cleanliness it comes as a surprise to read Capt. Francis Pridham's com-
Wincon. ltlvergordotl Mlltifleer, p. 147. 46 Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, p.
4S
135.
E.mail to the author, 4 January 2004. "IWM, 921411, 9 June 1939. 49 Cited in Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, p. 93; see also p. 72. 30 NMM, HMS Hood, ship's cover, III, no. 20. 51 Carew, Tire Lower Deck, p. 144. 52 IWM/SA, AB Percy Thomas Price. no. 20817, reel I, and LS Joseph 41
Frederick Rockey, no. 12422, reel I. 53
Cunningham, A Sailor's Odyssey, p.180.
The Battlecrlliser HMS HOOD
124
~ 55
Pridham, Memoirs. II, p. 146. nu~ CllolIg1l, April 1936. pp. 11-13.
"Warden. '~temories of the Battle Cruiser H.~1.S ... Hood ..•. p. 84. r HM Hood Association, Newssheet no. 2. 19i5.
Lc Baill}'. Tlu' .\/an ArOlwd tile Engine, p. 23.
ments regarding the grime and filth he discovered aboard on assuming command in February 1936. 'She was: he wrote, 'the dirtiest ship I had ever seen.'''' Whereas the carrier Glorious acquired a huge colony of rats that succumbed only with the loss of the ship, the Hood's frequent sojourns in tropical climes made her a particular haven for cockroaches. At Gibraltar in April 1936 Tire Cl,ougl" the ship's magazine, proposed a 'Cockroach Week' of planned extermination." But it was a losing battle, and when the Hood returned to capa Flow freshly tocked from her Mediterranean interlude in August 1940, the gunroom adopted a different approach. Mid. Ross Warden R.N.Y.R. remembers: One member of the gunroom hit on a novel ideaCockroach Races! We had a small colony and there seemed to be no reason why they should live a life of ease. The green felt covering for the gunroom table made an excellent paddock; chalk lines were drawn, the contestants were kept in matchboxes; and some others even went to the extreme limits of giving their prodigies special diets. Bets (small) were laid and at the shout 'They're off]' nothing would happen. The next step was a lit match applied to the rear extremity which was conducive to forward motion. 56
The Hood's 63 petty officers gathered on the forecastle in the late 19305. Most are in the rig derived from the officers' uniform but others prefer the square rig of the sailor. Medals usually indicate at least fifteen
years' service in the Navy and, in one or two cases, service in the Great War. Many, however, are not yet in their second period of service. Mrs TMIm. Mill.,
But while cockroaches never quite assumed the status of mascots, they had the virtue of not discriminating as to rank and came to be regarded as part of the ship's character. Decade later an anonymous boy seaman of 1933 was to answer the question 'What do you remember most about HMS Hood?' with 'The cockroaches which outnumbered us 100 to one'." In shipboard life the Royal avy rewarded rank and promotion by conferring two of its most signal privileges, additional space and enhanced privacy from subordinates. So it was with the enclosed messes of the chief and petty officers, which might consist of no more than a curtained-off partition on a larger messdeck or an entirely separate compartment with easy chairs at one end and an adjoining pantry. Whatever their structural arrangements, each me s enjoyed the en'ices of at least two 'messmen' who performed the same duties as the 'cooks of the mess' on the open decks. The messman was often a junior rating of the branch to which the me s
belonged, his labour entitling him not only to a monthly stipend from the mess fund but al 0 a number of privileges which made it a much sought-after po it ion. The food served to petty officers was supposedly the same as that consumed by the rest of the lower deck, but of course in practice this wa some way from being the case. Petty officers slung their hammocks with the re t, but there were compensations, not least the privilege of taking their rum issue neat, and consequently of being able to store it illicitly for future consumption. Then there were the warrant officers, the dozen or so men-true masters of their craft-who, more than any other, ran the ship, from whom neither she nor her men held an)' secrets. In recognition of their status, warrant officers were granted a private mess, galley and stewards to attend them a well as shared cabins on the main deck aft complete with bunks, though doubtless many had cause to regret this when it came on to blow and the motion of the ship threatened to deposit them on deck. The position of the warrant officer, half way between the lower deck and the wardroom officers, no doubt made for a demanding position requiring great tact and professional skill, but in them and their kind lay the backbone of the Hood's company. Vice-Admiral Le Bailly: For a few chief petty officers there was the big jump to the warrant officers' mess. Here were the barons, men of vast experience who knew all there was to know about sailors, who lived a very private life off duty in a mess into which few wardroom officers penetrated. Infinitely kind to midshipmen, but set in their ways, they were rightly regarded with awe by junior lieutenant .56 On their shoulders the wartime transformation of the av)' was borne. In quiet expertise and steadying courage they were the finest it had to offer. No overview of the Hood's complement would be complete without mention of the boy seamen of whom around 80 were embarked. The majority reached the ship in drafts of up to 20 or 30 from the boy 'training establishments, from Impregnable at Devonport until 1929, and thereafter mainly from Ganges at Shotley or 51 Vincent at Gosport, with a few from Caledonia at Oban between 1937-9. Rated Boy 1st CIa s, they constituted the Bo)'s' Division aboard and lived in a segregated mess on the main deck forward under the authority of four Petty Officer instructors. Among those responsible for their welfare were the so-called 'Sea Daddies', those Leading Seamen selected to initiate the boys in the minutiae of shipboard life. Along with the rest of the crew,the boys worked 'watch and watch', usually four hours on and eight off, but though life was generally much easier than in the training establishments they were often assigned the most menial and arduou duties. Morning routine was particularly unpleasant. Boy Jim Taylor, who served his apprenticeship aboard in 1939-40, remembers: A big difference in the daily routine was that every morning first thing-before 7 am-we boys had to scrub the decks. The ship's company in charge had seaboot but we boys were barefooted. A ho epipe was basically thrown over the side of the ship and seawater pumped over the decks until it was nearly ankle deep. The water was dark and very cold, and as it washed into the cupper got colder
125
Life Aboard
MEDICAL AND DENTAL
On completion in 1920 the Hood was provided with medical facilities the equal of wellsupplied hospital ashore. The large Sick Bay on the upper deck forward contained twelve cots which could be unclipped to swing freely if weather conditions required it." Leading off it was an examining room, a fully-equipped operating theatre and an isolation ward used either for subordinate officers or converted into 'Rose Cottage' for the treatment of venereal disease after a run ashore. Senior officers were usually cared for in their own cabins. There was also an X-ray and a dispensary along with a range of lavatory and bathing facilities. The Hood's medical staff consisted of a surgeon commander (invariably the Squadron Medical Officer) and a surgeon lieutenant, both university-trained. A second surgeon lieutenant, Christopher Dent R. .Y.R., was carried in wartime. They were assisted by half a dozen Sick Berth Attendants under a Chief Petty Officer, most of whom lived in an enclosed me s adjoining the Sick Bay. Sterilisation was performed in the Disinfector house on the boat deck abaft the after funnel. There were, in addition, two Medical Distributing Stations on the lower deck between each pair of turrets. Other than venereal disease and tuberculosis, the incidence of which are discussed elsewhere, serious illness was relatively uncommon in the Hood and significant outbreaks were few and far between thanks to improved hygiene and preventive care.'" In January and February 1926 an epidemic of measles resulted in the ship being placed under a seventeen-day quarantine off Gibraltar, but the next major incidence of disease seems not to have come until June 1940 when a consignment of bad meat gave much of the crew food poisoning at the Gladstone Dock in Liverpool. The outbreak was doubly inconvenient since the afflicted had to use lavatories ashore due to the main heads being closed while the ship was in dry dock. Accidents, however, were frequent and of these the Hood's Sick Bay saw plenty in its time. Among the worst was that suffered by LS Fred Hard to hi arm in 'B' turret in 1937, the limb saved first by the administration of a new drug, Prontosil, and then by his being rushed to Bighi Hospital in Malta on Capt. Pridham's orders when his condition worsened.o, Hard was able to reach the Sick Bay on foot but for those too injured to do so there was the Neil Robertson Hammock Stretcher, a neolithic masterpiece of straps and bamboo. But most injuries were of a much less serious nature. In October 1940 Sub-Ll John lago (1939-41) slipped and fell on a soapy deck, breaking his ankle. Treatment and care were
Left: The Sick Bay with its
twelve cots in July 1932. The open doors give onto the Surgeon's examining room
on the left and the Operating theatre on the
right. SCuttles provide natural light and, in favourable conditions, ventilation. Wnghr&L~n
Below: A sick or injured man is lowered into one of the
ship's motor boats for transfer to a hospital ashore
in the late 1930.. The fender boys keep the boat from bumping the ship's side. HMS Hood A1soc~tJOnIHi99;mon CoIl«tlOfl
everything he could wish for: ... 1am sitting in front of a radiator waiting for my plaster to dry. I am 10 have a walking iron, made by the ship's blacksmith, fitted tomorrow then I shall be completely mobile. In the Officers' Sick Bay, I am at the moment being looked after by Sick Berth Attendants who are really male nurses. The urgeon Commander is looking after the ankle, ably assisted by two Surgeon Lieutenants, so there is no shortage of medical attention. All my meals are brought to me, 1have a large armchair and an electric fire, and so it is all very comfortable. 62 Generally, however, the Hood's medical staff were not over-taxed. lago: I was prevailed upon by our own medical staff (who have nothing better to do) to be vaccinated and inoculated against tetanus. The latter is supposed to last a lifetime but was only discovered a few years ago, so how they know this is a mystery. 0 side effects and it gave the Surgeon Lieutenant something to do! I have to have a further tetanus one in a week's time then that's the lot 6 ' The same could not perhaps be said of the ship's dental officer. 0 one who has seen photos of smiling matelots could have very much doubt that the dentition of His Britannic Majesty's Navy left omething to be desired. It fell to'Toothie', usually in the shape of a Surgeon Lieulenant (D), to repair or cauterise the neglect of years. The Hood's dental surgery was on the boat deck beneath the bridge tructure and like the ick Bay it was equipped with every innovation. Among those whose cavities Surgeon Lieutenant Bill Wolton filled in 1936-8 was Admiral
Cunningham himself, who wore a well-concealed denture and had no more patience with dentists than with other 'quacks'. However, not all were so inclined and among the effects left by Cdr Wolton on his death in ovember 2002 was a casting of a gun tompion made and painted for him by a grateful patient. NMM, HM Hood, ship's cover, II, no. 150. Surgeon Commander Louis E. DartneH to Admiralty, HMS Hood, undated but early 1921. .. See, respecti"eJy, ch. 4, p. 104 and ch. 5, p. 123. 61 HMS Hood Association archives, biography of Lt-Cdr Fred Hard by Gary Andrews; Stt also ch. 2, p. 53. 6! lago, Letters (Scapa Flow, 23 October 1940). Surgeon Cdr K.A.I. Mackenzie, Surgeon Lt James Fielding and Surgeon Lt Christopher Dent, R. .V.R. The last two were lost with the ship in May 1941. 6J Ibid. (Greenock, 2 February 1940). More inoculations were given on the Hood's departure for the Mediterranean in June. 59
126
.. HMS Hood Association Archi\" "IWM 91/7/1. ppA 1-2. .. RBS. pA7.
The Battlecrlliser HMS HOOD
still. Eventually one was left on a damp deck that was colder than you could imagine. If your toes were knocked, as they frequently were, they were too cold to bleed. This deck washing was probably my pet hate in the Navy." However, there were easier tasks, including those of officer's messenger, of lashing or unlashing hammocks, cleaning the ship's boats or even membership of a crew. Budding specialists like Ted Briggs kept watch on the flag deck with a dozen other Boy Signalmen. Apart from their shipboard chores of cleaning and polishing, boys had to submit to two hours' instruction in the schoolroom flat on the main deck aft together with an hour's homework each day. Smoking and shore leave were greatly restricted, as was pay which in 1939 amounted to 8s. 9d. per week for a Boy 1st Class. Of this the boys received a weekly allowance of just 1s. 6d., the balance being paid in a lump sum (without intere t) on promotion to ordinary seamen at the age of eighteen. Discipline remained harsh, with caning by warrant for the most serious offences and the 'stonnicky', a length of knotted rope, wielded by petty officer instructors 10 encourage the laggardly.
.......>
The last class of boy seamen trained at HMS St Vincent, Gosport before the outbreak of
war seen under gunnery instruction in the summer of 1939. Several, including Jim
Hawkins and Sammy Milburn (second from right) found their way to the Hood; Milburn was lost with the ship. W:H. 1.
~wt.IfIS
If the moment of his arrival aboard might well provide a boy seaman with his first inkling of the rigours that awaited him in his chosen profession, a few days would quite likely add a taste of its frequent drudgery and occasional injustice. On his second morning aboard Fred Coombs and his companions were subjected to the same ordeal as that described above by Boy Jim Taylor. Maybe the weather was worse and his subsequent experiences more bitter, but there can be no denying the disgust and disillusion in Coombs' account: The next day we mustered at 6, still trying to crunch with our teeth the hard ship's biscuit before someone robbed us of it. On mustering with the rest of the upper-deck part of the ship's company, we were all reported to the Duty Officer who gave the usual order to scrub decks. The only difference that morning was that, in the unusually cold weather for
Portsmouth, when the sea water was pumped and hosed on the decks the water froze and turned to icy slush as it ran on deck and over the side. As normal in the R.t ., the last order was always obeyed and, as normal, the lower end in the pecking order, tho e with no boots and socks, Itook] off boots and ocks, rolled our trousers up and, on the orders of the leading seaman in charge of our small section, were told to grab a long-handled heavy scrubber and 'scrub aft'. Of those who did not own or have ... a pair of eaboots, mo t seem to have vanished or faded away as soon as the icy slush was seen and felt on bare feet to set us all hopping and heading for a still dry part of the deck. The Duty Officer, who was no doubt till wearing hi uniform jacket and trousers over his pyjamas and heavy woollen scarf, was sat in his nice warm cabin, sipping nice warm tea as we waited for his nice hot bath to be run for him, was wondering why different leading hands and petty officers kept running to his door to tell him that it was freezing up there. Don't know how long it took him to get back on deck but do know that, when he did, all he could find was his senior ratings and those wearing seaboots still washing the decks but, instead of scrubbing them, trying to broom the slush over the side before it froze solid. Can well imagine what the ship's commanding officer said to his juniors when he saw the dirty slush frozen to his fre h1y-painted lovely ship's side, but by that time he had it all to himself and his senior ratings as we were all below in the muggy warmth getting thawed out and into heavier underwear before breakfast.6 ' Whatever the reality, there is no doubt where Cdr O'Conor stood on the matter of allous or negligent leadership: It has been said that the traditional practice of the Commander turning out with the hands in the early morning, to start them off with the order to scrub and wash the upper deck, is old-fashioned and illogical, and more than once the purpose which he serves by so doing has been called in question. 1... 1Traditional practices are seldom easy to defend on any but sentimental grounds, but it is believed that, in this case, there are definite and solid reasons for the Commander being there when the hands turn-to first thing. He stands in a special and unique position in regard to his hand, and in hi mind's eye there should always be a continuous and up-to-date picture of their work and of the routine. If he is not up at the start of the day, he will never have the same grasp as the Commander who makes it his duty to be there. And if he is not there at the beginning, how is he to appreciate the conditions for scrubbing decks on cold, dark and wet morning or in rough weather?"
For the Coombs twins, however, poor leadership was as nothing to the demoralising effect of petty discipline: The first time that we were both rattled for a very minor offence was by a young midshipman, of about our own age but educated. We found out why these snotty-nosed youngsters were called snotties and began to realize why all those who hoped for 1promotion I, whether officer or man, were fighting each other to bring their names to the attention of our seniors. Such as us, with no ambition and
Life Aboard
very little interest, were thought to be good food to feed on. Even the maggots would have had better ta te but it suited them and that was all that mattered. We went to build the mound of their ambitions·' The opinions of Fred Coombs are unusual in their vehemence, particularly in the Hood which is remembered as a happy ship throughout most of the 1930s. But they encapsulate much of the resentment and frustration that at one time or another burned in the heart of all ratings who went down to the sea in ships in the inter-war period. To be sure, the Coomb twins were, on their own admission, hardly whiter than white; in fact, they were notorious for always being in trouble. But their sentiments, expressed in vivid sailor's language, would have been shared by many in their more desperate moments. A Coombs recalled, It was explained to us by the odd older members of the crew-a lot of whom were survivors of the wartime fleets, now drastically reduced-[thattheyl only put up with the poor conditions and pay to avoid the mass unemployment that awaited them if they did not achieve Pension Age." Where officers and morale were concerned the view of Telegraphist Dick Jackman (I937-9) was perhaps more typical of the younger rating: I cannot comment on life in the wardroom, except that it was of a very high standard and very much resented by the lower deck for whom very little wa done to make life enjoyable. Petty restrictions such as making the wearing of uniform compulsory at all times, ashore and afloat, with the exception of banyan parties when sports wear was worn, could have been relaxed. One needed to be a contortionist to get out of, and back into a sailor's uniform ..... Cdr O'Conor, that most reform-minded of officers, gauged the issue of morale in rather simpler terms. Seen from the oppo ite end of the spectrum, the whole problem boiled down to nagging by officers and superiors: The tendency to nag arises from human fretfulness, and there is nothing to urpass it for making an intelligent man feel insubordinate. Injustice is far easier to put up with than any form of bully-ragging. The Commander has to make it clear early in the commission to all those set in authority under him that, no matter what is done or left undone, he will not have tllings aggravated by nagging. I... llf a man is sulking, the chances are that someone has been nagging him'· Equally, it was as well for someone in authority to avoid any ort of confrontation with the men. The Rev. Harold Beardmore, chaplain aboard between 1939-41: When visiting the messdecks see that you don't get involved in an argument: (a) when a rating takes an opportunity of getting at you or your job, or (b) when he gets 'hot under the collar' about some social or service matter. It is best to send for the man at some convenient time, and discuss the
127
malter thoroughly over a cigarette in your cabin. One finds that when the man is by himself he is much more reasonable than when surrounded by his messmates, before whom he may like to pose as a bit of a sea-lawyer" Coombs, for his part, eventually reached the conclusion that 'the uneducated, too-thick-to-think lower end were not at a disadvantage by being uneducated if they made up their deficiency by using their common sense'." Time would amply vindicate this view. As he lived to discover, the coming war altered the sailor's lot beyond all recognition. Though Coombs and his companions could not know it, they and their ship were living in the twilight years of the old Navy. ""'here opinions on the men were expressed at all these were usually full of respect, affection and admiration. That of ViceAdmiral Le Bailly is typical:
'-I\\'~t, 91/7/1, p. 42. "Ibid. et E.mail to the author. 8 January 200·1. .. RB ,p. 84. •• Beardmore, n,e Waters of Uncertain'}'. p. 54. -, IW~t, 91/7/1, p. 45. .) Le Bailly, n,e .\Iml Around the Engine, p. 22.10 1932 a cadet's pay was 3/6<1. and that of a midshipman 5 shillings per diem, which compared favourably with that received by Boys, ODs, ABs and Stokers 2nd Class and. in the case of midshipmen, Stokers 1st Class. See ch. 5, p. 140.
Above all we learned about sailors: from our hammock boys, who lashed up or unlashed our hammocks each morning and evening, the only people on board younger and financially poorer than we were (despite the small subvention we gave them); from our boats' crews, from the lordly chief and petty officers, from the cooper, still plying his trade, from that now unhappily extinct dinosaur, the Royal Marine gunner and from his fellow warrant officer; from them all more than any formal lecture or book could teach us." Even so, such views were often underpinned by a strong measure of suspicion. In the handbook for naval chaplains he dedicated to the Hood's company in 1944, the Rev. Beardmore warned his readers again t the age-old subterfuges of which sailors were capable. I once had to 'vet' the ca e of a certain rating who requested to change from C. of E. to Methodist. As the Methodist Church Party had to walk two miles to their church, and the walk included a steep hill, my suspicions were aroused. After a chat in my cabin, I realised that thi
Sub-It (E) louis le Bailly and a party of stoke" landed for field training at 5t Andrew's Barracks. Malta (.1937. Stoker George Donnelly on the right. The years after Invergordon saw greatly improved relations between officers and the lower deck. Vicr-Adm;r.' Sir Louis h lWilly
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
128
rating had a particular longing to quench his thirst on a Sunday morning about 10.00 when the sun was really hot. In the walk to church the party had to pass the Recreation Room where good beer was obtainable. The trick was to get in the last section of fours, and as they passed this welcome spot, just slip out and slip back again by mingling with the congregation outside the church laler when Ihe party fell in to return to the ship. The captain smiled when this was explained to him, and the request was not granted. We should be men without guile, but see that you are not 'sold a pup' by the old-timer who may think that because you are new to the en'ice he may be able to 'work a swindle' as the saying is on the lower deck." There is, of course, more than a hint of condescension in Beardmore's comment that 'They think these things out very carefully'. This attitude did not pass unnoticed. Len Wincott, Invergordon mutineer and Hood veteran of 1926: If a sailor tried to explain the cause of a minor misdemeanour, the officer's foregone conclusion was always that the man was lying. Equally, it was accepted without evidence or question thaI the men were dull-witted." Yet, as Wincott continued, It is greatly to the credit of the officer corp of the R thaI a considerable number of them discarded this attitude, developing instead an approach based on a simple, humane principle: firm but polite. This attitude owed much to the enhanced concern for the plight of their men thaI Ihe Invergordon Mutiny brought to the upper echelons of the avy. Even so, 1938 still found Capt. Francis Pridham having to exhort his officers to Learn all you can about how your men live in their ship. Details of the serving of his food, where he writes his letters, the true extent of the facilities (or lack of them) for washing, shaving, keeping his kit tidy etc. Study life on the Mess Deck. Discover their recreations!" And above all, Keep in mind Ihe very narrow financial margin within which many men and their families have to live." Concerned interest there may have been, but there were still ratings, 20-year veterans of the avy, for whom cynicism was the ultimate lesson of their experience. Fred oombs:
-~
Beardmore. The \\nUN of
Ur,certaitlt),. p. 59. . ~, Wincon.lm·ergordorl .\Iulill£('r,
p.70. ~.
Pridham, NOles for Sewl)' Jomed Officers (January 1938), p. 4. " Ibid., p. 5. IWM, 91/7/1, p. 42. ~ Pridham. Ltclures otJ Mut;"y, Part I: Prt\·tmiorl. p. 8. "IWM, 91/7/1, pp. 49-50.
Of the others, survivors of the previous generation, most were lough old nuts with nothing to lose, their Good ConduCl badges having gone with the wind many a time, and toughened up by periods of detention. [Together, this] made for a tough old navy thaI required tight controL" eedless to say, most officers were under no illusion as to the type of man they were dealing with here. Capt. Pridham made no bones about it:
There are of course various kinds of'black heep: The chap who is 'grey black' through his own foolishness, gets drunk on shore and makes himself a noisy nuisance, is no great anxiety. The really 'black' ones, the Bolshies, the coarse, the lecherous and the surly gaol bird are the dangerous ones. I have no compunClion in saying Ihat the risk we run in carrying this type justifies us hounding him down, and out, when we find him out. The avy is not a reformatory." But there were other considerations. For most officers, ironhard di cipline served not only to restrain the unruliness and aggression that made the British sailor the formidable man he was, but also to harden him against the day when the sea or the enemy might mete out more than irksome labour or petty di cipline. Fred Coombs admilled as much in recounting the following incident on the Detached Mole al Gibraltar in the autumn of 1935: Though not very pleasant places to hang around, the toilets ashore were much sought after by some as a place to skive or perhaps read the newspaper, which at busy times in the mornings meanl that queues were formed at some of the blocks. orne anxious person, crossing his legs and stamping his feet, had the idea and was given the opportunity to crumple a sheet of newspaper up, wait for the flush to run, light the paper and drop it on the outflow. The resulting yell a posteriors were singed soon meant that at the first yell everybody stood up and walChed for the party piece to float past before sitting down again. This harmle s form of amusement wenl on for weeks, perhaps months, and caused many a laugh. But there is always someone to go too far, as happened when someone used petrol to catch the lot and not the firsl 10 shout. Letting the petrol be poured slowly till it had reached the other end, he threw in his match, resulting in a huge flash which engulfed the culprit as he was the only one singed round the face and head, all others being scorched at the other end. We heard the thudding explosion from aboard and saw a line of matelols laggering to the ick Bay in various form of undress, mostly walking like cowboys, 10 have their scorch marks soothed. It was to be the last time that amusement was to be found in that form, though some wit sealed it off by putting on the notice board a notice that a delicate sen meal would be served that evening in the Sick Bay, the menu being Roast Bea t heek, Grilled Swinging Steak and Curried Dusters. The culprit was found 10 be a stoker in the motor boat where the petrol had come fTOm. It was a foolhardy trick, but if the avy wanted crews with plenty of fire in their bellies who played hard, backing their King's Regulations and Admiralty Instructions by rigid discipline, Ihey had 10 expecl small explosions as devilment fired up.'" The challenge of harnessing this energy as war beckoned wa Capt. Pridham' special concern in 1938: [The] endeavour to bring out the fighting qualities of our men should be our constant consideralion. As their leaders it is our business to inspire enthu iasm and confidence. A 'clean shoot' should be regarded as a step lowards emptying the shell bays into the guts of the enemy. It is no
Life Aboard
129
easy mailer to bring into proper significance in peace time the importance of our fitness for fighting---{)ur sole purpose and great responsibility. Yet few of us remember it as such for long at a time. We are inclined to forget that even in these highly mechanised days superiority in battle is far more a malter of fighting qualities in ourselves and our men than of calibre of guns and thicknes of armour."
......~>--
To the majority of men, the Hood's officers seemed, in Ted Briggs' words, to be 'like God Almighty'." AB Bob Tilburn describes the altitude of most: In those days you were not necessarily frightened of those officers, you were in awe of them. Because they were so far above you, not only in the mental scale but in the social scale as well. It was still very feudaL" Typically, Fred Coombs took a rather more jaundiced view, though it was one shared by many: The way of the R.N. [wasl that when we went to sea on exercises we, the lower end, were too thick to understand why we did what, for [which reason wei were never informed. Steaming round the ocean was for the officers' benefit; if we were involved, the only information was that which we read on the notice board and not why [... 1 There was still a lot at the top end who still thought that education and breeding were the be-all and end-all of Sen~ce life." Despite Coombs' remarks, considerable effort were made after Invergordon to keep crewmen informed of the ship's movements and the diplomatic context of her activities. William James, who flew his flag in Hood between 1932-4, was surely the first admiral to clear lower deck to explain forthcoming exercises to the men. ' In the 'Notes for ewly Joined Officers' he prepared during his tenure, Capt. Francis Pridham (1936--8) made it quite plain where the advantage of doing so lay: It is not difficult to give your men some idea of the duty the ship is being employed upon. The purpose of the exercises about to be carried out, why the ship is about to visit Arzeu or Barcelona, why the paravanes are being got out early in the morning watch, etc. etc. The more you can interest the Ship's Company in what is going on the better. Moreover, you will thereby shon-circuitthe disgruntled man who spreads the yarn that they are being bully-ragged and driven unnecessarily."
But though the Invergordon Mutiny ushered in a significant change in officer attitudes, there can be no doubt that arrogance and thoughtlessness lay at the root of much di gruntlement and disaffection on the lower deck. O'Conor tacitly admitted as much: All men, young and old, are sensitive and it does not do to speak roughly, or someone will be burning with indignation from a neglect of courtesy, of which you may remain profoundly unconscious. 7
In most instances the men could draw on a subtle and evolved language to express their disgust or disappointment at those given command over them. A tone of voice, a nuance of body language, a show of reticence, all spoke volumes to those on the receiving end. There were moments, however, when extreme aggravation called for more direct means of communication. Shoddy or listless work, mass leave-breaking and desultory performances in fleet sporting events were a sure sign of poor morale and failing leadership. The tenure of RearAdmiral ir Walter Cowan and Captain Geoffrey Mackworth in 1921-3 rivals the Invergordon Mutiny as the most unhappy period in the Hood's long career. Both fell victim to pranks by their subordinates." One fine day somebody pushed Bill the ship's goat mascot through the skylight of Cowan's sleeping cabin and into his bed. On another occasion Mackworth, who was fond of asking for working parties of six Marines, received a box of toy soldiers in the mail along with an impudent note which resulted in the entire detachment being subjected to a handwriting test. Neither culprit wa ever discovered. But there were gentler ways of letting off steam. The pukka accent in which much of the wardroom spoke was the subject of ridicule on the lower deck and many was the officer who acquired a nickname. Len Wincolt: The nicknames that men give to their officers are more informative than many people think. If an officer is given a number of nicknames, and more and more are conjured up, it is a sure sign that he is far from popular. If on the other hand he gets one which sticks to him, one can be certain that he is respected'· Equally, the officer whose men called him a 'gent' was being paid their very highest compliment. But most were glad to keep their distance and generally had as little contact with officers as possible. The following remark made ell paSSattf by CPO Bill Lowe discloses the prevailing approach: ... However, there wasn't a lot of game played in those days, except by the officers who used to play quite a bit, but we never used to worry about them."
A party of Hood's officers landed for field training at St Andrew's Barracks, Malta c. 1937. The major hurdle in officer promotion was that from lieutenant-commander to commander; fewer than half made the cut in peacetime. Front row: Sub-Lt (E) L.E.S.H. Le Bailly. unknown commissioned warrant
officer, It-Cdr C.H. Hutchinson, Lt-Cdr M.E. Wevell. Lt J.F.A. Ashcroft, Sub-Lt l.S.L. Crabb. Rear row: Mid. D.eS. Currey, Mid. eM. Bent, Mid. T.S. Sampson, Paymaster Sub-Lt A.B. Webb, Mid. G.H.G. Crane, Mid. B.e Longbottom, Mid. H.W. Wilkinson. V/CP--Admir.1 SIr louIS L. ~ilfy
Pridhanl, Notes for Newly Joined Officers, p. 6. .2 Taverner, Hood's Legacy, p. 73. U Arthur (ed), TI,e Navy: 1939 to tile Presetlt Day, p. 89. .. IWM, 911711, p. 45. IJ Vice-Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly, letter to the author, 22 February II
2003.
.. Op. cit., p. 5. " RBS, p. 84. .. HMS Hood Association archin's; Gunner "Vindy' Breeze, R.M.A. M \Vincott,lm'ergordotl Mutineer, p. 136. .. Arthur (ed), The Navy: 1939 to the
Present Da)'. p. 86.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
130
,. I\VM, 90/38/1, \'01. III, Anecdote
3. p. 6. The coxswain in question was PO A. IV. Jeffrey (sic).
.1 Vice.Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly. letter to the author. 24 December 2002. Le Bailly, The Man Around tile Engine, p. 37. .. Ibid., pp. 37-8. 'J
Members of the gunroom sharing a joke on the quarterdeck with Commissioned Boatswain J.McK. Kirkcaldy
D.S.M., c. 1932-3. Most recalled their time in the gunroom as one of learning. laughter and
friendship. Paymaster Mid. J. Charles (lost in the Barham, 2S November 1941),
Cadet L.E.S.H. Le Bailly, Kirkcaldy, Cadet G.W. Vavasour, Mid. G.R.A.
Don VIC~Adm".1SIr LouIS
l. ".IIfy
owhere is this attitude more exquisitely captured than in the following exchange between Mid. George Blundell, then in command of the /-load's first picket boat, and his Westcountry coxswain. The year is 1924. I have often reflected on what a lot the petty officers tactfully taught me on how to behave. One day we landed a number of officers just after lunch: the ship's company was still at work. On return I asked the coxswain (Jeffreys was his name; he was a darling man) 'What do the men think of the officers going ashore in working hours?' Jeff looked at me with that 'three badge'twinkle in his eye. 'Lor' bless you, ir,' he replied, 'We likes to see them out of the way.' I have never forgotten that wise remark.°' The /-load's wardroom numbered around 45 officers out of a peacetime complement of about 1,150 men. As was the case throughout the Navy, the ship's officers were divided into two branches, Executive and ivilian. The distinction is important because it was not until after the Second World War that officers of the so-called Civilian Branch could aspire to their own seagoing commands. Among the Executive Branch were the specialists in Gunnery, Torpedoes, avigation and Signals together with the 'salthorse' officers who were content to make their careers without specialised training in any discipline. This branch was, of necessity, completed by the Captain and his principal executive officer, the Commander. Officers of the Civilian Branch wore the same uniform as their executive colleagues, though their particular specialisations were distinguished by coloured cloth between the gold stripes on their cuffs. In the case of Engineer officers this was purple. Paymaster wore white, In tructors blue, hipwrights and Constructors silver-grey, Surgeons red and Dentists orange. Unusually for a capital ship, the /-load's officer complement was
remembered as a friendly and homogenou body throughout much of her career, 'probably as happy as a big hip could ever be'." However, this cannot disguise the tensions and snobbery that occasionally surfaced in the wardroom, particularly between executive officers and the Engineer Branch which was stripped of its executive status by the Admiralty in 1925. Executive officers derided engineers as 'plumbers', 'dustmen' and 'dirty fingernail types', to which the latter responded with 'dabtoes', 'crab wallahs' and 'fish heads'. In 1937 Sub-Lt (E) Louis Le Bailly, fresh from the RO)'lI1 Taval Engineering College at Keyham, found himself greeted on the quarterdeck by Cdr David Orr-Ewing, a gunnery specialist, with the words 'Are you another of these pacifist subs from Keyham?'.93 The notion that the technical disciplines were at odds with the spirit of a fighting service and their practicants ill-suited to seagoing command remained deeply ingrained. Evidently, there were many in the Tavy who had as yet failed to grasp the technological realities that the coming war would so ruthlessly assert on it. The gunroom to which, as a sub-lieutenant, a chastened Le Bailly repaired on arrival was the domain of the midshipmen, the Royal Navy's officer in waiting. Until 1932 it was part of his training as an officer that every cadet emerging from the Royal aval College at Dartmouth should serve up to two years aboard a capital ship, and the /-load's gunroom complement was never less than 25. Thereafter cadets spent a year in the training cruiser Frobisher before being promoted midshipmen and let loose on the fleet, a development which caused the /-load's gunroom complement to drop to around fifteen with a turnover of half a dozen or so every four months. The gunroom was a large and austere compartment on the port side of the upper deck served by an adjoining pantry. Sub-Lt Le Bailly, returning after a four-year absence, was relieved to find things much as they had been during his earlier occupation: With some trepidation I entered the gunroom door at the armchair end reserved for sub-lieutenants. The brass stove, which I had assiduou Iy polished, was till there and to my delight I was welcomed by a near-contemporary as the coruler of his little kingdom. I soon discovered that the gunroom was still a place where laughter mostly prevailed and the food as bad as ever with the same grinning, but now even more pear-shaped, messman peering through the serving hatch; where the same tin lockers in which I had kept my journal and sight book were still used by the midshipmen; where the only daylight came from the skylight. The same leather-coated cushions on the benches at the ship's side were even more worn as were the two leather armchairs of which I could now claim one. 94 The gunroom was mostly taken up by a large polished mahogany table at which the 'young gentlemen', suitably attired, were waited on at dinner by a pair of mess tewards. During the I930s at least, catering for the Hood's gunroom was, by choice, left in the hands of a civilian messman. Louis Le Bailly: Dinner, as with our other meals, was dispensed by the same wily Maltese messman and his acolytes who took a shilling a day from our pay. Our wine bill was limited to 10 hillings a month as cadets and 15 hillings as midshipmen. On this we could treat ourselves to a sherry,
Life Aboard
a glass of beer on guest nights and an occasional glass of 1arsala when we returned, cold and shivering, with our boat cloaks and uniforms wet through from a rough boat trip. Spirits, had we been allowed them, were almost unknown to u and few could afford or wished to smoke. o' Though the bullying made notorious by the novels of Frederick Marryat and Charles Morgan was largely a thing of the past, the gunroom remained a spirited community which, like its public-school equivalents, deferred to authority yet frequently took pleasure in the misery of its inmates. Equally, it was often a forcing ground for lifelong friendships between officers. Ragging, especially on gala nights, was a popular and often violent diversion to which senior officers traditionally turned a blind eye, though in 1938 the gunroom created something of a stir by including inflated condoms among its Christmas decorations." Rear-Admiral Peter La iece (1940) recalls some capers off Scotland early in the war: It was a high spirited gunroom and one evening we went ashore to Helensburgh, on the northern side of the Clyde, to ee a film; on leaving the cinema we 'borrowed' a framed picture of the film star Loretta Young; this was borne back on board, signed by all concerned, and hung in the gunroom as a trophy. Later on it was captured by a raiding gunroom from another ship; in due course it was recaptured. It was then replaced by a Barber's Pole also acquired from Helensburgh. Suffice to say the Barber's Pole went from ship to ship until after the end of the war when I rediscovered it. [ ... J 1stilJ have the picture of Loretta Young... 97 The prevailing atmosphere i captured by Paymaster Lt-Cdr E.G. Talbot-Booth, R. .R.: Although discipline is probably stricter than in any other force in the world, there are times when the bounds are loosed to an extent which cannot be understood by foreigners. There are occasions when the junior members of the Ward-room Mess will make a swoop or raid on the Gun-room, or midshipman's mess and a tremendous scrap will ensue. The compliment may be returned and a fierce combat ensue on the floor of the senior mess to the detriment of boiled shirts and winged collars. Five minutes later perhaps the junior midshipman is knocking at your cabin door his hand raised to the salute while he gravely informs you that your boat is alongside. o, The Sub-Lieutenant of the Gunroom could be delegated the authority to administer up to a dozen cuts with a cane or dirk scabbard for minor offences, though this form of punishment was forbidden by O'Conor during his tenure as ommander in 1933-6. As he later wrote, 'The old argument, that a Snottie preferred half a dozen to having his leave stopped, is disposed of when it is realised that neither treatment is suitable for an officer'." O'Conor also stamped out both early-morning gym and the degrading rites of'creeping for Je us' and 'fork in the beam', the gunroom punishments that sub-lieutenants had inflicted on their juniors since the days of the sailing navy.'DO The time was ripe for change:
131
Punishments that are suitable for schoolboys are not suitable for adolescents of the age of 18 to 21 whom it is intended to regard as officers. We must have it one way or the other. Either treat them as schoolboys-messengers, truants-or else make up our minds that they are officers and that we are going to treat them a sUCh. 'OI With O'Conor the midshipman of the Royal avy finally came of age. In most cases life as a midshipman afloat gave an officer his only taste of sleep in a hammock. With no designated sleeping compartment, midshipmen usually slung their hammocks in one of the flats on the main deck aft, sub-lieutenants enjoying the comparative luxury of a shared cabin. The large white chests with which generations of midshipmen had gone to sea were stowed in the chest flat on the port side of the main deck aft. earby was the Subordinate officers' dressing place and an adjoining bathroom, the former fitted with stowage for clothing and equipment and the latter with a steam main that provided just enough hot water for the sub-lieutenants' baths and no more; their juniors maintained the acquaintance with coldwater bathing struck up at Dartmouth. Touring the ship in January 1926 the journalist George Aston, who had first gone to sea before the Great War, was mightily impressed at the improved conditions for midshipmen since his day: In my time he had only a chest (for which he paid) to wash in and to keep all his clothes in. Then he was given a 'bathroom', so called, with flat tin baths. Still only the chest flat to dress in. Now he has a chest, provided by the Government, a chest of drawers and part of another one, a bathroom as on hore, with hot and cold water, and a dressing place with lots of room to keep his gear-in Hood long lines of hooks and spreaders for coats etc. etc. owadays he has his sextant supplied, instead of paying for il. 102 On the basis of a fortnight spent aboard while the ship was refitting at Portsmouth in June 1939, Mid. H.G. Knowles would certainly not have agreed. The gun-room's only ventilation is a solitary skylight, while the chest flat and sleeping flat lack even that. The chest flat, recently a thieves' paradise, has always to be kept locked, while nine of us try to keep our clothes in our trunks, no chests having been supplied, most of the hanging room already taken up by the coats of other midshipmen in a space far too small, where everything disappears unaccountably amongst a maze of trunks and boxes. 'OJ
to
Ibid., p. 23.
HMS Hood Association archives. Paymaster Cadet Keith Evans. "La ieee. Not a Nifle to Five Job. p. 29. 96
Austere as it was, life as a mid hipman in Hood was taken with stoicism and humour, a common sentiment of difficulties shared and challenges surmounted in the formative phase of one's creer. Louis Le Bailly: 1 and my group (1932) lived quite happily in the Flat around the X turret barbette as there was no room in the chest flat. Much clothing was common and one of my messmates had a large stamp made which inscribed his handkerchiefs with 'Stolen From .. .'l"
.. Talbot-Booth. All the 1V0rld', Fighting Fleets, 3rd edn, p. 223.
"RB ,p.2S. 100 IWM/SA. Rear-Admiral Edmund Poland. no. 11951, reel 4. RBS. p. 28. ,,, KCL, LHCMA, Aston tltO, pp. 52-3. 10) IWM. 92/4/1. 9 June 1939. lIN Vice-Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly. 101
leiter to the author, 22 February
2003.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
132
Moran, TIle Anatomy of Colmlge, pp.92-3. ,.. RBS. p. 27. 101 Warden, '~Iemories of the Battle Cruiser H.~t.S. "Hood": p. 84. ''"tWM. 90/38/1. vol.lII,Anecdote 3. p.4. 109 IWM/SA no. 11951, reelS. lloRB ,p.27. III IWM.92/4/1. III jenson, Tin Hats, Oilskins 6S
Above all there was pride. Lord Moran captured it perfectly in
The Allatomy of COl/rage: That a boy has set his heart on this tough service goes for something. He has initiative; he is a cut above the ordinary. Long before the Hitler Youth was thought of. the Navy caught him young and soaked him in the pride and joy of a great tradition.'·' The midshipmen's education, welfare and leave arrangements were entrusted to a lieutenant-commander known colloquially as 'Snotties' urse·. The incumbent ,va often a sympathetic figure who had assumed this duty by choice. but, as O'Conor lamented, his brother officers tended to regard midshipmen either as messengers or, in the worst cases. 'a schoolboys and their natural prey'.'" Ross Warden, who served aboard as a midshipman R. .V.R. in 1940-1. puts it in perspective:
The cabin of Sub·lieutenant John lago R.N.V.R. on the main deck near 'X' turret. These cabins were designed for two officers and had no scuttles. It is Christmas 1940 and a number of
cards are arranged on the table. Above it are scraper board drawings from his girlfriend Aline. To the right is a mirror stand and towel rail with stowage for cap and shoes above. lago was an electrical engineer and wired a sophisticated lighting system for
his cabin. Mf'f 8ft Kfmd'lIngron
The rank of midshipman is very precarious and one learns to treat certain ranks with suspicion, especially that of Lieutenant-Commander. Commanders and above (the majority) seem to mellow with seniority: it may be the start of a second childhood, but when they hand out justice you can almost sense them tnlllking: 'Well. 1was once a midshipman myself.' By and large we were exceptionally fortunate with our LieutenantCommanders: there was just one nake in the woodpile, who apparently enjoyed making our lives miserable.'·' Warden and his companions were able to take their revenge on Lt-Cdr Snake with a packet of Ex-Lax on the Hood's return from the Mediterranean in August 1940. but such schadellfrel/de was not always possible. More often than not the snotty, or 'wart' as he was often known, had to accept his lot with only the lower deck to console him. Looking back on the early 1920s. Capt. George Blundell recalled how 'ships' companies of those days seemed nearly always kind and sympathetic to the "middies". Perhaps they saw in them a kindred "depressed class..·.'..
They did to a degree, and often went to great lengths to cover up for young officers in trouble. though not always for the reasons Blundell thought. All the same. as Rear-Admiral Edmund Poland recalled of his three-man motor-boat crew in 1935, 'they owned me, wouldn't let anybody be beastly to me"" While it was never entirely reciprocated. the lasting respect engendered for ratings by those who were later to command them remained one of the greatest strengths of the Royall avy. As future officer, mid hipmen were assigned important duties afloat, chief of which was that of Midshipman of the Watch. As deputy to the Officer of the Watch he was expected to assume control of the ship's routine, discharging his duties on the quarterdeck in harbour and from the bridge at sea. This involved taking sun and star sights and assisting him in keeping the deck log as well as running errands of one sort or another. The most coveted respon ibility, however. was command of one of the ship's boats. a skill upon which the avy placed the greatest emphasis. The business of boat handling not only gave a midshipman a feel for command and seamanship but allowed him to make his mistakes in a relatively controlled environment; as O'Conor put it. 'a picket boat smashed may one day mean a battleship saved'."· Most mornings began with physical training followed by morse, flag-hoisting or semaphore exercises before breakfast, after which he might be told off for duties by his divisional officer. But mercifully a midshipman's life was not always so demanding. Often as not it provided an essential primer in the minutiae and routine of naval life. Here is Mid. Knowles' journal entry for Saturday 16 June t939 as the ship lay at Portsmouth: Substituting duty mid hipman for Hill who has gone home on weekend leave. I turned out early to run and heat the bath-room water, and call the remainder of the midshipmen at 06.30. A new et of hammock-boys having arrived. after 1 had finished the first half of relieve-decks I made out labels for our hammocks so that we should in future sleep in the same one every night. The forenoon I spent titivating my journal, going ashore to play tennis at the nited Service' Club after lunch. A two-hour dogwatch passed uneventfully'" Beyond his ordinary duties, a midshipman's week was filled with classes and study for the Sub-Lieutenants' exam. In the Midshipmen's Study on the main deck right aft and in turrets, engine spaces and elsewhere around the ship, an Instructor officer and a range of warrant and petty officers gave theoretical and practical classes in gunnery. torpedoes. wireless. navigation and engineering. The Sub-Lieutenants' exam consisted of a number of written papers. exercises and evaluations culminating in 'the Board'. a viva voce grilling on seamanship by a panel of senior officers. The concluding part of a midshipman's qualification rested in his journal, which he was required to keep daily and illustrate with maps, pictures and technical drawings of naval interest. Infinite care and attention was lavished on these, which remain a valuable source of information on the daily life of the ship. For Latham Jenson of Calgary who joined Hood as a midshipman R.C.N. in December 1940. his journal was nothing less than a hobby. '" During the SubLieutenants' exam held aboard in April 1941 it got the only perfect score in the Home Fleet and Jenson went on to become a
133
Life Abonrd
distinguished illustrator after a career in the Royal Canadian avy. The completion of the four-day exam was greeted with jubilation by the successful candidates. Ted Briggs, then a Boy ignalman, recalls the celebrations of Jenson's group, the very la t to achieve promotion from the Hood: I remember this particular session because after it was over there wa a riotous party in the midshipmen's gunroom, of which the ship' company got to hear. After the gin, beer and 'el torpedo' and 'depth charge' cocktails had flowed, bottle began to fly-and trousers, too. One lieutenant was cut by a piece of shattered glass, before all the popular officers were debagged by the 'mids'J" For a time boys and midshipmen might share duties and instruction, but on promotion the enormous social gap asserted itself and their ways parted forever. As on the lower deck, an officer's status was denoted by his accommodation, which ranged from a shared cabin on the main deck aft to the palatial apartments for the admiral and captain described elsewhere. Officers' cabins had always been a case of'multum in parvo'-much in little-but, as on the messdecks, the first impression seems to have been of airy spaciousness in comparison with other ships. A typical cabin, fifteen feet long, ten wide and twelve high, was entered through a door fitted with louvre windows which slid behind a rifle rack facing the lobby. Lit by a scuttle and a lamp at the deckhead, its furniture consisted of a bunk bed set on a unit of drawers laid fore and aft along the ship's side, an upright wardrobe for uniforms, further drawer, a foot locker for shoes, and a desk and chair. A pair of shelves, a mirror and a small stand attached to the painted bulkheads completed the fittings. The only semblance of permanent decoration lay in the two laths of teak that ran along each bulkhead and to which pictures could be secured with screws. Because the officers' cabins aft were prone to flooding, the corticene flooring was rarely mitigated by any carpeting while a set of rails on each bunk bore witness to the occasional need to wedge oneself into bed in heavy weather. Even so, efforts were made to beautify the surroundings with chintz curtains and lampshades and the usual selection of family or risque pictures as the taste and attachments of the incumbent dictated. In larger cabins the decor extended to framed pictures, ornaments and perhap a hip model under glass for the mantelpiece. Sub-Lt John lago, who joined the ship from civilian life in September 1939, brought his skills as an electrical engineer to bear in the decoration of his cabin: I've had the same cabin all the time. It looked very bare to begin with but now I have improved it. I have made the spare bunk into a sort of sideboard and have framed and put up pictures, mainly from magazines. This evening I have been fixing up a system of indirect lighting, which is very fine. All lights are concealed and shine up on to the deck head and I have a bed light and a dressing table light. It all looks very pleasing and I am thinking of having some yellow or red bulbs in a few of the holders. Altogether there are 12 small bulbs now. Also there is a special having light, which comes on with my razor!'" After lights out lago no doubt drifted off to sleep to the same
chorus that had lulled generations of officers at sea: On one's first night in a warship there are many strange sounds to wonder at, for in addition to the customary creakings and groanings of an ordinary ship, the rifles in their racks add their clatter to the din of the steering gear; a battleship wallows with a long slow roll and the rhythmic rattle of the small arms which accompanies each change becomes a pleasing tattoo which lulls one to sleep}"
Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, p.195. ll~ lago, Letters ( apa Flow, 27 August 1940). IIJ Talbot· Booth. A.1l 'lie \\'orld's Fighting Fleets, 3rd eeln, p. 190. 116 Wellings, 0" His Majesty's Sen'ice, p. 82. IIJ
What distinguished the Royall avy from many of its foreign counterpart was the degree of personal service an officer could expect on board. All from the rank of lieutenant onwards were assigned a Marine servant to rouse him in the morning, fill his tub in the officers' bathroom, see to his clothing and laundry and keep the cabin and its contents clean and tidy. The same service was expected with rather less justification during wartime. On 6 July 1940, three days after the attack on Oran, one officer felt moved to issue the following complaint in a letter home: Have been having a bit of domestic trouble! My new man is always too busy to clean shoes, or to make my bed before teatime-I may change him for one of my torpedo men. The Marine in question presumably had his hands full as the Hood beat back to Gibraltar after covering the coup de grace on the battlecruiser DUllkerque at Mers-el-Kebir. Despite the many black and Filipino stewards engaged by his own navy, this state of affairs appears to have come as something of an eye-opener to Lt-Cdr Joseph H. Wellings U.S. '.:
The officer's wardroom looking forward and to starboard in the
1920<. On the mahogany tables
My servant calls me at 08.00, brushes m), clothes, shines my shoes and lays out the rest of my clothes. Right this moment my bed is turned down, pajamas laid out evenly, slippers under the bed. I take my bath before dinner in order not to go out afterwards and possibly catch cold(yes, the tub is drawn-or rather the water is drawn and just at the correct temperature).I"
are some of the trophies won by and presented to the ship throughout her career and travels. A pair of skylights. low· slung lamps and naked bulbs illuminate an unexpectedly austere space. On the far side. under portraits of King George V and Queen Mary, are two serving hatches from the wardroom
pantry. ~I/ICkJ
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
134
1I7
This section owes much to the
memories of Vice· Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly. III lago. Letters (Loch Ewe. 3 October 1939). II. WeLiings, 0" His Majesry's Service, p. 81. lZO lago, Leiters (Greenock, 22 December 1939). Gieves was the
principal N3\'}' tailor. III IWlI.I/SA. Rear-Admiral Edmund III
Poland, no. 1195 J. red 5. O'Connor, The Empire Cruise~
p.81. '" Lt (E) Geoffrey Wells, Diary of World Cruise. p. 4.
Personal attention of thi sort more than made up for the comparatively primitive washing facilities aboard. All cabins were fitted with hot and cold running water but the wash basins drained into copper receptacles which had to be emptied by hand. In the largest cabins and compartments the ultimate touch before they were replaced with electric stoves was a coal fire kept regularly stoked by a Marine servant. If the Hood was remembered as a comfortable ship it was to the senior officers' quarters that she owed this reputation. The heart of the officers'world was the large suite on the forecastle deck amidships known as the wardroom. First came the anteroom,lit by a large sk'Ylight on the boat deck and furnished with a pair of leather-upholstered settees and a club fender round the stove. Here, under a large bookcase holding the wardroom library, officers gathered for drinks before lunch and dinner. A doorway, later converted to an arched opening guarded by a curtain, led into the wardroom proper, a lofty space lit by further skylights and a row of scuttles overlooking the port battery. The wardroom was dominated by the four large mahogany tables at which the officers ate their meals waited on by Royal Marine attendants. Unlike froll Dtlke, Lolldoll and Sheffield, the Hood had never been presented with a great silver service, but in cabinets about the room, on its walls and tables were the mementoes and trophies of her voyages across the world: the silver-mounted elephant's tusk given at Freetown in December 1923 and the trophy heads of lion, tiger, bison and moose presented thereafter along with countless cups, salvers and centrepieces in silver and gold. All were landed in August 1939 to be destroyed in the Portsmouth Blitz. A third settee filled one corner while a kneehole desk opposite allowed officers to compose letters on the ship's crested tationery. The furnishings of what was by earlier standards a somewhat austere space were completed with a piano-much used on guest nights-a pair of stoves under mirrored mantelpieces, sundry cupboards and a large buffet from which attendants served food passed through a hatch in the wardroom pantry. As in the other officers' messes, wardroom catering lay at the discretion of its members.'l7 Throughout much of her career the Hood's wardroom appears to have left the matter in the hands of a messman who provided three meals a day plus tea against a monthly deduction from officers' pay. Generous as it was, no opportunity wa lost for adding to wardroom fare. On Sunday 18 May 1941 a last fishing trip on the shores ofScapa Flow brought Lt-Cdr Roger Batley a 2-lb. sea trout and the wardroom a catch of 50 fresh lobsters which he relieved from an old fisherman for two shillings apiece. Breakfast was served between 07.30 and 09.00,lunch between midday and 13.00, tea at 15.30 and finally a formal dinner at 20.00 sharp. At sea, and especially in wartime, a more relaxed routine prevailed, with meals being largely on a self-service basis. The food prepared in the wardroom galley was expected to be of an extremely high standard and even in wartime was the equivalent of a fine restaurant. Indeed, Sub-Lt John lago R.N.Y.R. is unlikely to have been the first wartime officer to question whether such lavishness was appropriate in view of the dearth on the Home Front: I don't think it would hurt us to have a great deal less, especially in view of shortages elsewhere. Breakfast: Porridge or cereal followed by grilled herrings or some other fish. ext course, eggs and bacon, then toast and marmalade or
honey to finish. We have a three- or four-course lunch, small tea (just tea and cakes) then we round off the day with a four-course dinner at sea and six courses in harbour."' Even Lt-Cdr Wellings of the U.S. avy, a service known for its generous fare, was taken aback at the range of foods on offer, though he was perhaps not the first American to be stunned at the sight of a monumental English breakfast: The food is much better than at the main office. Grapefruit every morning so far, cereal or rolled oats, ham or bacon and eggs, toast, marmalade or butter (or both) and coffee. How is that for a breakfast? I have given up afternoon tea as I don't want to gain on this job which is much easier than my last one.'" For his part, John lago found his expanding waistline a matter of some embarrassment while his relatives in suburban London subsisted on wartime rations: Have gained I st. 4 Ibs. since joining the Navy, which explains why my reefer jacket would not meet and has had to go back to Gieves for adjustment!l2· However, wardroom catering was not without its mishaps. Some consternation was caused in 1935 when it was discovered that PO Cook Sultana, a Maltese, had been using his armpit to shape the beef rissoles that were a wardroom favourite. 12I In the 1920s at least, the atmosphere in the wardroom, particularly where meals were concerned, had something of the character of an English country house or a gentleman's club ashore, with all their quirks and mannerisms. Sailing in Hood during the world cruise of 1923-4, the writer V.c. Scott O'Connor noted 'a little fad in the avy... that no one is very fit to talk to at breakfast',though Aston and later Wellings found their messmates cheerful enough. III The fact that O'Connor was on record as saying that all naval officers were 'born idiots' cannot have endeared him to the wardroom. 12J It was suppo edly taboo to discuss women, religion and politics, though the drift to war presumably meant that at least one of these topics was frequently broached. Clinking glasses was regarded as a portent of death, the threat usually warded offby fining the culprit a bottle of port. It was common for officers to carry an engraved napkin ring from wardroom to wardroom, the names of their ships being added to it with each passing commission. Drinks were served before and during lunch and dinner in harbour, but the restrictions on alcohol at sea were strictly adhered to. There was no ban on drinking at sea, and indeed nonwatchkeepers were entitled to three tots of alcohol a day, but it was 'not done' for any watchkeeper to partake. It was a different matter in harbour, but even there consumption was regulated with monthly'wine bill' allowances of 10 shillings for cadets, 15 for midshipmen and £5 for officers, each drink being entered in the wardroom wine book and subject to regular scrutiny by the captain. Even at official parties the amount drunk was recorded and tabulated against the 'monthly mess hare'. As the admiral and the captain usually dined alone there was no special seating at table except for the Mess President and Vice-President who held office for a week at a time. Officers dressed for dinner, which con isted of mess jackets,
Life Aboard
winged collars and bow ties in peacetime but no more than reefers in war, though a stiff collar would be added in harbour. Officers of the Royal Marines wore the tight breeches that were traditional in the Corps, some like Lt A.H.R. Buckley of the 1923-6 commission exercising their right to don the blue mess dress of the defunct Royal Marine Artillery. Grace would be said if the chaplain were present, all standing until the Mess President had taken his seat. Then course after course would be served by a phalanx of attendants in white mess tunics, twice weekly to the accompaniment of a Royal Marine orchestra in the anteroom. As Wellings, unaccustomed to this luxury, put it, 'music at dinner does aid one's digestion', though his contentment no doubt owed something to the alcohol which was never served in his own navy.'" In keeping with the tradition of the Royal Navy, the Sovereign was toasted while officers remained seated, followed by a toast to the relevant potentate if foreign guests were aboard. So it was that the Hood's wardroom found itself drinking the health of Chancellor Hitler when officers of the Delltschland came aboard at Gibraltar in June 1937. At Scapa three years later it was the turn of the President of the United States to have his health drunk, Lt-Cdr Wellings observing protocol with a toast to King George VI. Little has survived to record the mood of the Hood's wardrooms in either peace or war, though one thing was quite clear: it didn't do to be a teetotaller in such society. The following advice given by the Rev. Beardmore to aspiring naval chaplains speaks volumes. A teetotaller certainly starts scratch in any mess, and finds life rather difficult, especially on a foreign station, where there is a lot of entertaining to be done, and where each officer has to do his bit. I think the average Naval officer considers a padre to be a good messmate if he has learnt how to drink sensibly; they look upon him as a normal person, and looking back, I can remember getting inside the shell of many a 'reserved' or difficult messmate over a glass of wine, and making a valuable contact. 125 As in the gunroom, there were times when alcohol and high spirits turned the normally august surroundings of the wardroom into something of a melee, particularly Thursday evenings in harbour-Guest Night. Beardmore, who had no doubt sat through all too many during his two years as the Hood's chaplain, felt moved to issue this warning: The Chaplain who thinks it is a popular thing to be broadminded, and accepts everything that is said and done in a Wardroom Mess, doesn't really command respect. Officers expect the Chaplain to be different from them, and if at rather a late party he joins in, or condones, the more vulgar songs that are sung from time to time, he lets the side down in their eyes, to say the least of it."6 Officers who stayed up drinking were often only a step away from out-and-out rowdyism. In what was perhaps the last letter he ever wrote, the ship's First Lieutenant, Lt-Cdr John Machin, confessed with ill-concealed pride that he had cracked a rib during a recent guest-night caper. 127 But there were times when matters got really out of hand. One night off the Yugoslav port of Split in September 1937 Lt Gresham
135
Grenfell, creeping on all fours under the wardroom tables, stalked the row of trophy heads on the forward bulkhead with a loaded shotgun. Selecting the moose as his target, he calmly emptied both barrels into it, blasting off an antler to the consternation of those present. ' " Unfortunately, some of his shot passed through a scuttle and lodged in the hammock of a sailor sleeping in the passage outside. The antler was glued back on and the sailor fobbed off with beer, but, as Fred Coombs said, 'if the avy wanted crews with plenty of fire in their bellies who played hard ... they had to expect small explosions as devilment fired Up'l,. Evidently, this was as true of the Hood's officers as it was of her men. The Hood was the finest ship in the avy and it can come as no surprise that her wardroom should have included several whose accomplishments past, present and future place them among the elite of a great service. To describe the wardroom of 1936-9, the Hood's last peacetime commission, is therefore to give a flavour not only of its character over the previous 20 years but of the calibre of men who made up the officer corps of the British Navy."o The Executive Officer for most of the commission was Cdr David Orr-Ewing, later captain of the fast minelayer Abdiel when she was mined and sunk at Brindisi in September 1943, and eventually Commander-in-Chief Home Fleet after the war. Among his many accomplishments was the ability to drink beer standing on his head. '31 Lt-Cdrs H.A.L. Marsham and CH. Hutchinson had distinguished careers in the Submarine Service during the coming war, the former as CO. of HMS/M Rover and the latter in command of HMS/M Trtlallt. Hutchinson ended the war as Chief of Staff to Admiral Sir Bernard Rawlings in the British Pacific Fleet and became captain of the Royal Naval College at Dartmouth. Lt Roger Hill, who hated big-ship life, went on to win a D.S.O. assisting the crippled tanker Ohio into Malta while in command of the destroyer escort Ledbllry in August 1942. His Hood messmates, however, would remember him chiefly for his devastatingly beautiful Swedish wife and her equally entrancing friends. Among the Engineer Branch were Cdr (E) Peter Berthon, already Dean of the Royal Naval Engineering College at Keyham and the moving spirit behind the foundation of its great successor at Manadon. His future son-in-law,
Another view of the wardroom, this time looking aft in July 1932; the angle of view is in the opposite direction to the previous photograph. The doorway on the right leads to the anteroom. Note the pictures screwed into laths of teak running along each bulkhead. To the left is a coal or oil fire. The chairs are standard Navy wardroom issue. Wright & logan
ll~
Wellings, Otl His Majesty's Service, p. 81. m Beardmore, The Waters of Uticertai"ty.pp.I6-17.
Ibid., p. 16. Geary, H.M.S. Hood, p. 38. Letter dated 16 May 1941. 128 Rea, A Curate's Egg. pp. 142-3, corrected by Vice-Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly, letter to the author, 13 November 2002. "'IWM, 9t/7It, p. 50. \)0 These details owe much to the memories of Vice-Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly. IJI IWM/SA. Mid. John R. Lang, no. 12503, reel 1. 1M
m
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
136
Lt (E) Louis Le Bailly, survived the sinking of the cruiser aiad off idi Barrani in March 1942 and went on to become naval attache in Washington D.C. and finally, as Vice-Admiral, Director General of Intelligence. A distinguished tarine officer was Lt 'Black jack' Macafee who, as Provost Marshal in Alexandria during the war, closed all the principal male brothels and managed with a single Marine company to maintain order when troops of the Australian 9th Division arrived on leave from the desert. Then there were the characters. Cdr ( ) D.H.S. Craven, a keen jockey who managed to persuade the wardroom to buy a horse at Malta in 1938, a decision it would regret once it became obvious the animal would never win a race. In one of the most extraordinary capers to take place between the wars, Lt Guy Hor ey, then based at RAF Gosport, had in june 1936 managed to crash his Blackburn Baffin onto the bows of the liner Normandie.'" Horsey was reprimanded and dismissed the FAA after the French Line sent the Admiralty an enormous claim for compensation. A few months later he joined the Hood along with another high-spirited lieutenant, Gresham Grenfell. His wardroom antics apart, Grenfell was probably the finest Divisional Officer of the 1930s. At a time when young stokers were joining the Hood as never before, Grenfell, then Boys' Divisional Officer, made a lasting impact on morale by encouraging comradeship between boy seamen and their peers in the Engineering Department. The following memoir of a boys' party ashore in 1938 is a mark of the man: As an illustration of how much he was respected and even loved I recall going ashore with him and a mass of boys including their football team in Marseilles. The French team never turned up. So Grenfell doled out francs to each boy and told them they were to catch the 18.00 boat back to the ship. With Marseilles the hotbed of brothels and other exciting pursuits I doubted if even one boy would show up. They ALL did even if one or two were a bit tipsy. '"
It was, thought the Rev. Beardmore, a truly exceptional officer who could get on in the Navy as a teetotaller and a non-smoker. One such was onstructor Cdr W.j.A. Davies, capped 22 times for England in rugby and remembered as one of the greatest half-backs in the history of the game. Davies' international career was interrupted by service in Iron Duke during the First World War but he went on to lead England to two famous Grand Slams in 1921 and 1923. The steadying innuence of a distinguished paternal figure of Davies' stature was a priceless asset in the young and boisterous wardrooms of the inter-war years. A messmate, the Rev. Edgar Rea, was to remember him thus:
1)2
Rea, A Curare's Egg, p. 141, corrected by Sturti"ant & Cronin, Fleet Air Arm Aircraft, Units and Ship' 192010 1939, p. 141.
IJj
Vice-Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly. letter to the author, 13 lQ\'ember
2002.
Curate's Egg, p. RBS. p. 149.
I~ Rea,A
m
144.
Although old enough to be father to many of us, he was humble, approachable and quite unaffected by the great name he had made. Even the most junior officers were permitted to tease him and no one enjoyed it more than Davies. The number of parties and receptions which he attended during his great rugger days must have been legion and yet I think I am right in saying that he remained throughout, both a teetotaller and a nonsmoker. Unlike so many people on social occasions, he never looked uncomfortable without a glas in his hand.
He could it or tand in any circle, he alone without a drink, and join in the conversation and laughter without appearing ill at ease. In every respect he was a fine example to the young, with whom he was so very much at home.'" The gunroom of the time also contained a number who would distinguish themselves in later years, including Mid. D.C. 'Bull' Wells, eventually Vice-Admiral Commanding, Royal Australian j avy. But if the Hood's wardroom was one of accompli hment it would prove al 0 to be one of sacrifice, and there were many, destined no doubt for high rank, who were not to survive the Second World War. Lt-Cdr (later Cdr) E.O. nwin, Squadron WIT officer fir t on Cunningham's and then Layton's staff, suffered a harrowing death in the Atlantic after the light cruiser DIlIledin fell victim to U-J24 in November 1941. Lt-Cdr (E) Lancelot Fogg-Elliot, then a commander, perished together with his entire engineering staff when the cruiser Galatea was torpedoed and sunk by U-557 off Alexandria in December 1941. Mid. O.S.Y. Waterlow, a holder of the D.S.C., was listed a missing, presumed killed after the submarine Talisman failed to return from a patrol off Italy in September 1942. Of the five Australian midshipmen shipped in 1938 only one survived the 1940s. Two of them, T.E. Davis and I.T.R. Treloar, were serving in the cruiser HMAS Syduey when she was lost with all hands following a punishing engagement with the German raider Kormoran off Australia in ovember 1941. Another, Mid. B.M. McFarlane, perished when the midget submarine X22 collided with HMs/M Syrtis in the Pentland Firth in February 1944. A fourth, K.A. Seddon R.A.N.R., died in the destroyer HMAS estor in january 1947. For the Hood's officer complement as for the ship herself, the price of admiralty was to be exacted in full. aturaUy, the Hood's wardroom was not without its share of timeservers, failures and non-entities, those who, in O'Conor words, lacked 'the spark of leadership, ... the ability to organise, and the will to carry things through'.''' or could its society very well be described as a 'band ofbrothers~ The 'community of sentiment' preached b)' Admiral Lord Fisher prior to the First World War would not be realised until the avy finally embraced the technological realities of its calling in the 1950s. But, as on the lower deck, the Hood's wardroom was imbued with a certain spirit which her officers would carry with them in the trials to come--of pride, confidence and satisfaction in hard-earned victory; above all, of what it meant to love one's ship.
......11I>-For a community like the Hood, organised entertainment served not only to relieve the drudgery and routine of life at sea but also to provide an outlet for the talents of those who perhaps yearned for a different career than that which fate had allotted them. Its other virtue lay in the opportunity it afforded men to vent the frustrations that attended a sailor's life while at the same time strengthening the communal bonds that made a ship's company what it was. For all its greatness, the Navy of Hood's peacetime career wa fraught with tension, bitterness and insecurity. In war her men had to come to terms with fear, depression and uncertainty. Under these circumstances it was only natural that interested officers and men did all they could to foster the camaraderie and unity of purpose which was reckoned to be the essence of a successful ship. For others, mean-
Life Aboard
while, their interest rested purely in the diversion and escapism represented by it, the fleeting opportunity to express themelves unhindered by the call of work and discipline. As in almost every aspect of her life, many of the Hood's shipboard celebrations and entertainments were rooted in naval tradition. On Christmas morning, with an evergreen garland secured to the masthead, the Captain visited each mess to greet his men and acknowledge the efforts they had made to embellish their space with seasonal decorations. On New Year's Eve there was the ceremonial ringing of the ship's bell followed by toasts and dancing in the wardroom, the admiral, captain, wardroom, gunroom and warrant officers all in attendance. Then there was the elaborate 'Crossing the Line' ceremony described elsewhere, together with the legion customs and traditions that punctuated the commission of every ship in the a"Y. An affable admiral might set the tone by putting on an entertainment of his own, though these were invariably officeronly affairs. One such was given by Rear-Admiral Sir William james in his quarters at Gibraltar in February 1933: My cabins were lit with dim red lamps, there were musicians in native dress tapping drums and blowing into reed instruments, there were some fine-looking Arabs with cutlasses at the doorways and for refre hments there were boar sandwiches and other African tit-bits. The officers of the Hood, who filled the native roles, were always ready to enter into the spirit of this kind of entertainment.'J6 But the most pungent and momentous entertainment was that provided by the hip's Own Dramatic Society in it .0.0.. operas. For an evening or more a mixed cast of officers and men had something approaching carte blmtche to comment on the life and personnel of the ship and the triumphs, mishaps and adventures of her commission. Rigged on the quarterdeck, a variety programme of off-colour songs, sketches and performances inter persed with acts of genuine talent were held together by the Bandmaster and his musicians. The earliest group for which details survive is 'The Frolics' which performed throughout 1921. At Gibraltar in February 1934 the ship put on a'musical fantasy' entitled Pirates which included the wives of two officers among the cast. The entertainment, which was reviewed in London by The Tatler, made a wry comment on the incident at Cromarty the previous October when a harmless drill devised by Rear-Admiral james using matelots in pirate garb resulted in banner headlines of unrest and violence in the Hood. '" But earlier, as the ship steamed away from lnvergordon on 17 September 1931, a S.O.D.S. opera had provided the first step in the long road to recovery from a real mutiny. The crew produced several musical ensembles including a male voice choir, a seamen's dance band-the 'Bandits Dance Orchestra' of the mid-1930s-and most notably the' Hood's Harmony Boys', a 3D-strong accordion and mouth organ band formed in 1937 which continues to evoke fond memories among its surviving players and aficionados. The Harmony Boys were unique in drawing their original complement from the ship's stokers under the direction of Chief Stoker Cathmoir. Thanks to fund from the Canteen Committee, they were kitted out in plendid cream silk outfits adorned with green piping-the ship's colours. The value of a successful group like the Harmony Boys lay in its ability to enhance the reputation of the
137
ship both a hore and throughout the fleet. Stoker Ken Clark, a member between 1938-40, recalls a night in Malta: When we were in port we would often find a bar and put on some entertainment for the sailor and locals alike. I remember one occasion in particular when we were in Malta. We played through one or two numbers then one of the locals said 'I have a complaint about the band'. 'Oh, dear', we thought. But fortunately the chap only wanted to complain that we had been providing the entertainment but had not been supplied with drinks by the bar manager. We had some great times in the harmonica band and I often wondered how they were getting on after I left the ship.'J8 The Harmony Boys were good enough to broadcast a live performance on Maltese radio in 1938 and continued to thrive into the war years under new leadership, though their practising, usually done in the Schoolroom or the Reading Room, was by then restricted to time in harbour. Other shipboard associations were dedicated to mutual assistance and improvement. During the 1933-6 commission a Mutual Aid Society was established aboard which maintained a membership of over 800 men.'" Against a monthly deduction of a shilling from hi pay a member was guaranteed a grant of up to £5 for travelling expenses incurred while on compassionate leave, £5 should he be invalided out of the ervice and £10 to his nominee in the event of his death. When the ship paid off in june 1936 more than 80 per cent of the money subscribed was returned to the members. As Cdr O'Conor, a keen sportsman, noted, not only were men able to receive compensation in the event of some personal calamity, but the Ship's Fund upon which they traditionally relied could devote a greater part of its resources to recreational and sporting activities. In the early days the Hood presumably hosted a chapter of the Royal aval Temperance Society (Templar ) but if so there are few memories of it. The one fraternal organisation for which details are available is the Royal Antediluvian Order of Buffaloes, which had a lodge aboard until 1931."0 In October of that year allegations that the lodge in the battleship Valiam had been used as cover for illegal gathering before the
James, The Sk)' Was A/ways Blue, p.168. '" Ibid., pp. 172-4, and Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, pp. 78-9. u, Ht\IS Hood Association archh"es. .,. RB ,pp. ISH. 140 Carew, Tlrl? Lower Deck, pp. 166 & I."
2So-I.
The HOOd's Harmony Boys seen on the boat deck beside Port No.
2 5.5in gun, (.1938. The two officers are Lt-Cdr (E) Lancelot fogg-Elliot (lost in the Galatea,
15 December 1941) and tt (E)
louis le Bailly. Between them is the leading light of the Harmony Boys, Chief Stoker Cathmoir. They often played in other ships and were known for a particularly fine rendition of
Hearts of Oak. HMS
Hood A.noc,.tIOnIS.tlt CoI/«tJOll
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
138
le Bailly. The Mati Arolmd the Engine, p. 23. Ie Cunningham, A Sailor's Odyssey. pp. 184 & 189--90. I·a) Le Baill)'. The Man Around ti,e Engine. pp. 46-7. .•• Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, p.93. '" I\\IM/SA, no. 22147, reel 4. 1"6 Tire ChougJr, April 1936, p. 27. 14\
A relaxing afternoon on the forecastle off Palma in 1938. Note the hawser reel and ventilation trunking against 'B' turret and the large mushroom vents on the right. A paravane
has been stowed on the starboard forward screen. HMS Hood A5Joc.~tionlC~,kCoIlKtIOfI
Invergordon Mutiny resulted in the Admiralty withdrawing the Order's right to meet on board HM ship. The allegations were never proved and no evidence was presented against the Hood's lodge but the die was cast and little was heard of her Buffaloes thereafter. The Hood no doubt also played ho t to branches of the large number of lower-deck societies that followed the rise of naval trade unionism prior to the Great War, but, again, these are poorly documented. Only the Engine Room Artificers' Society is known to have been repre ented aboard in the late 1930s though its activities had clearly been in abeyance for some time. In line with the I avy's idea of suitable activities for its men, a majority of off-duty recreations were sporting in nature. At sea and weather permitting, deck hockey on the quarterdeck after tea was a perennial favourite for officers, 'an exhausting and often bloody game with a rope grommet puck, bent walking sticks and no rules'.'" Officers also indulged in the traditional pursuits of hunting, shooting and fishing, for which the Hood's frequent stays in Scottish waters provided ample opportunity. Rear-Admiral James participated in a boar shoot not far from Algiers in February 1933 and officers rode to hounds with the Calpe Hunt in Spain when the ship docked at Gibraltar each winter, but the weekly shooting parties that were a distinctive feature of life in the Mediterranean Fleet were only rarely savoured by the Hood. Vice-Admiral Andrew Cunningham, then in command of the Battle Cruiser Squadron, was able to indulge his passion for trout fishing in the hills above Split and, with less success, in Corsica when the Hood called there in 1937 and 1938.'" Polo and squash at the Mar a Club in Malta and tennis with officers of the French avy were prominent in the Mediterranean between 1936 and 1939. For the keen cyclist there was the Wheeler's Club while the ummer and autumn cruises to Scotland offered plenty of golf on the seaside links, the Hood's players being divided by handicap into two leagues. Swimming and sunbathing were among the main attractions of the Mediterranean for both officers and men, including the novel recreation of water ski-
'II"' I •
----
ing behind the Hood's 3D-foot motor boat for the former. Louis Le Bailly, then a Sub-Lieutenant, describes a typical Sunday ashore at Malta in 1937 or '38: unday divisions and church were obligatory but, unles there was a sailors' picnic, the bachelor's routine was invariable: change into old clothes, pack bathing gear and take a dghaisa to the Sliema Club ... There on Monkey Island we could laze, sustained by cheap gin, a blistering curry, followed by blessed sleep on the warm rocks, a bathe and lustful discussions on the poodle-fakers and their companions' physical attributes 30 yards across the channel of water. Then iced almond cake for tea and a slow dghaisa back to the wardroom cinema.'" At Gibraltar the nearby beach at Rosia Bay was traditionally reserved for officers and nurses of the garrison, but the six months Hood spent alongside between the autumn of 1935 and the summer of J 936 demanded special arrangements for the men. The ever-resourceful O'Conor responded by turning the catamarans between ship and mole into a lido complete with coconut matting and lounge chairs.'" Swimming races and rowing were encouraged. Fishing was allowed off the decks after tea was piped or on make-and-mend afternoons, but at no time was it permitted out of scuttles and ports. At Scapa Flow in 1940-1 OA Bert Pitman pent many an off-duty hour fishing for mackerel over the ship's side, often having to share his catch with marauding 'shitehawks', the epithet sailors gave to seagulls in the firm conviction that they were the spirits of thieving dockyard maties.'<5 'ever a ship to pass up the chance of a contest, one evening towards the end of March 1936 over 60 of the Hood's men took part in an angling competition on the Detached Mole at Gibraltar.'" ot much was caught but Ginger, one of the ship's cats, had a field day with the bait. O'Conor's other innovation was in converting the South Mole coalshed into a cinema, stage and boxing ring with shovels, ho es and whitewa h. The first shipboard cinematograph was
Life Aboard
139
Marines playa game of 'uckers in
installed in the banlecruiser Queen Mary before the Great War, but in promoting cinema as a suitable diversion both ashore and afloat O'Conor anticipated the work of the aval Film Service, then still in its infancy. Films were an expensive commodity but by sharing them with other ships and charging an admission of 2d. per man and 1d. per boy the burden on the Ship's Fund was significantly lessened.'" By 1938 movies were being shown on two or three evenings a week between decks or in the Starboard Battery. There were also screening in the wardroom to which the gunroom officers were always invited. The introduction of regular film screenings presumably had an adverse impact on the popularity of traditional offwatch recreations but these continued to be enjoyed by the men. Darts and 'uckers-a type of ludo-were played on me sdeck and in recreation spaces, a were bridge, whist, cribbage and mahjong, but all forms of gambling for money stakes were prohibited, including betting and bookmaking. Naturally, this did not stop proscribed games such as brag and Crown and Anchor being played, and many was the man who lost his pay for a few hours' illicit entertainment. For others there was much amusement to be had in setting up a 'solo school' for ha'penny or 'tickler' (cigarette) stakes. Bridge, whist and, in wartime, poker for money stakes, were played in the wardroom and billiards was a favourite after-dinner activity for officers in the 1920s. Dancing seems to have diminished in popularity after the First World War, but music grew in importance and many played instruments either privately or in one of the ship's ensembles. Sub-Lt John lago relates the following in a letter home in December 1939: I have played a good deal of bridge when off watch and my piccolo has come in to favour again which I play in my cabin. Pillinger has moved out and a chap with an accordion has arrived in his place. I think worse noises come out of our cabin than out of any other in the ship!''' During the 1930s broadcast music and radio programmes became a significant part of shipboard life thanks to a number of technical innovations, including the in tallation of a broadcasting system ('the tannoy') in about 1935 and acquisition of a radiogram and gramophones. Once again, O'Conor was in the vanguard of these reforms: Broadcast programmes, backed up by gramophone records, playa big part in life on board ship. Men are keenly interested in the affairs of the day, and crucial pronouncements by statesmen unfailingly attract attentive crowds to the loud-speakers. The time of pipe-down has frequently 10 be deferred in response to a request to keep the wireless going, and the cause is as likely to be an important speech from London or Geneva as a 'big fight'. 149 However, as the Rev. Beardmore relates, no doubt from bitter experience, widespread interest and the sailor's natural curiosity meant that such novelties had to be carefully guarded: You will find that there are a large number of ratings in the e days who appreciate other music than 'swing' and 'jazz' and welcome a concert of really first-class music. Try to obtain a radiogram for the use of the hip' company
the starboard battery. c. 1935. The pile of 5.Sin cordite cartridge
cases behind indicates that the gun may shortly be in action. HMS Hood Auoc.;'flOfllWillit CoIl«tlOll
and have it fixed in some convenient place where you can use it for concerts. ee that it is always kept locked until required for a concert, otherwise its life will be short, ruined by the rating with an inquiring mind, who has 'never really understood how one of these 'ere things works.' The answer is, it works no more. ISO Handicraft competition in leather, usually under the chaplain's auspices, were another popular diversion on the lower deck, as was tapestry among the older men. Although it was already a dying art in the avy, fancy ropework continued to be formed in the fo'c'sle messdecks and in private cabooses on the boat deck. Wherever long-service able seamen had responsibility for a part of the ship no opportunity was missed to enliven it with superb workmanship. Heads of gangways, man ropes and hammock lashings all received the fruits of their labour, but the finest work was reserved for the ship's boats. Tiller handle, boat hooks and other accoutrements were lovingly embellished with turk's heads and elaborate coach whipping and fenders laboriously crafted out of 50 yards of hemp rope. For a few shillings an officer could have his telescope ornamented with intricale rope grommets. Trades, or 'firms' as they were known, represented an important source of income for many ratings, particularly in the depressed 1930s. Clo ely regulated by the Navy, only a limited number of men were permitted to do business aboard in each of the recognised trades. By the late 1930s the Hood's allowance was for six tailors, nine cobblers or'snob ',six barbers and a pair of photographers. '" Prices were controlled, with boot repairs running from 7d. for a simple rubber fitting to 4s. 6d. for a
147
141
RBS. p. 151. lago, Letters (at sea, 7 December
1939). Temp. Lt (E) E.IV. Pillinger (1939-<.1940). 14' RB . p. 152. uo Beardmore, The Waters of UtlcertailllJl, p. 43. '" RBS. pp. 218-19.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
140
tell him that. It didn't come to either of us having to leave but the takings were a lot higher from then on although I never really trusted him again afterwards.
A space rarely photographed: the Barber's shop on the upper deck where Stoker Bill Stone plied his trade between 1921 and
1925; seen here in 1940 or 1941. HMS Hood Association"an Warts
complete sewn heel and sole job. Haircuts were 4d. for officers and men but free for boys at certain hours. Lots were drawn among the six barbers embarked in 1937 for the privilege of plying their trade in the ship's barber shop for six-month spells. Stoker Bill Stone (1921-5) was one of the lucky ones: The 'Barbers' Shop' in Hood was on the port side of the upper deck-one deck down. I remember that it certainly was a lovely room with a 6-foot wide mirror, water geyser and all the equipment that a budding barber needed. The other thing that struck me about the room was that it was a rather odd shape. This was due to the fact that one of the walls was curved. The wall was formed by the massive vertical steel cylinder or 'barbette' which ran down through the ship and on top of which sat 'B' turret.'" At 4d. per cut it was possible for a man to double his naval
income by devoting the better part of his spare time to his second career, though, as Stone discovered, this was only feasible if the integrity of one's colleague could be counted on:
HivlS Hood Association archi,'es. Western Evenillg Herald (Plymouth),60clober 1979. '" RBS, p. 223. 152 15}
Unfortunately, a while later I found out that the Marine Bandsman with whom I shared the shop was 'playing dirty' with me. We each charged 4d for a cut and the money was supposed to go into a kitty to be shared out at the end of the week. Being the new boy I had accepted this arrangement in good faith. However, I started to think that my share seemed low for the number of cuts that I was doing and eventually realised what was happening. The Bandsman was often being given a sixpence by his customers which he would put in his top pocket. He would then give them the 2d change out of the shared kitty which I was filling with my own takjngs! This meant, of course, that of the 4d that I put in only 2d remained there for the payout at the end of the week. When that arrived and the money was halved between us I was ending up with only a penny a cut! One night when he went out I took the opportunity to confirm my suspicions and found several sixpence pieces in his top pocket. ""hen he came back I confronted him and said that one or other of us had to go. I didn't tell him that I had found the evidence in his top pocket-his conscience would
Tailoring was another important trade, much patronised by the men for natty shore-going uniforms. 'Jewing firms' as they were known might consist of three men, one with the machine, another making buttonholes and a third sewing them on. In 1937 a sailor's No. I suit cost J 5s. 6d. if the tailor supplied the material and 7 shillings if it was provided by his client. During the world cruise of 1923-4 AB William Collier made over 300 uniforms at 7 shillings a time, a significant income for the period.''' Indeed, after the pay cuts of J931 a married man might well rely on the extra income to keep his family above the bread line, and competition for the few official berths was fierce. For others there were a few shillings to be made taking in laundry, lashing hammocks or setting themselves up as 'tickler' firms rolling cigarettes out of duty-free tobacco. There were other avenues as well. Skilled men could bolster their income in the ship's workshops by turning out 'rabbits', items for personal use made from Navy materials in avy time. Then there were those who earnt a lucrative but highly iHegal income lending money 10 their shipmates at rates of 25 shillings to the pound or higher. Evidently, though the avy might regulate the transaction of business aboard there were no end of ways by which men could make a little on the side. On joining the ship around 1930 a boy seaman-rated Boy Ist Class-would receive a weekly pay of just 8s. 9d., rising to 14 shillings on being rated Ordinary Seaman by the age of eighteen. Promotion to Able Seaman at nineteen brought 21 shillings a week, with an additional 3d. per day for each of the three Good Conduct badges he could be awarded after three, eight and then thirteen years of service. Leading Seamen earned 30s. 4d. a week. Qualifying for a specialist rate earned up to 3d. a day with a further 3d. for those who abstained from taking up their grog ration-a pertinent comment on the Navy's priorities before the Second World War. In view of the arduous nature of their work Stokers 2nd Class got 17 shillings per week, advancing to 25 shiHings once they were rated 1st Class. Petty Officers, meanwhile, received 42 shillings a week and Chief Petty Officers the princely sum of 52s. 6d. To the e figures marriage and child allowances were added for men aged 25 and older. In HMS Hood the men were paid every other Friday.''' In good weather Pay Tables were set up in the port and starboard lobbies off the quarterdeck, the men filing past in Ship's Book number order to receive their pay. Once at the Pay Table a writer called out names from a ledger and the amount each was due, the men holding out their caps to receive the contents of an envelope tipped onto it by the Paymaster. While many were, in O'Conor's words, happy to toddle complacently towards their pension, for others their time aboard represented another rung on the ladder of promotion and advancement. For a Boy Seaman the passage of a year or two would finally bring him 'man's rating' and promotion to Ordinary Seaman, with a marked improvement in status and conditions. Fred Coombs: Come the 31st March 1937 we were rated up to Ordinary Seaman, a milestone for us as it meant that we at last got away from the hated Boys' Division, were left more to our
Life Aboard
141
own devices and learnt that if we mucked in and pulled our weight, everyone did the same which made life much easier. .. We never looked back, feeling better for just being treated as equals if still junior'" Apart from the ordinary drill and instruction which formed the basis of their training, those eager for promotion were required to pend the mid-week make-and-mend afternoon attending the requisite classes. As O'Conor put it, 'when a man is under training for higher rating, he is working for his own advantage a well as that of the Service, and he should therefore make some contribution from his own time to the week's work'.'56 Through the autumn of 1940 LS Len Williams devoted much of his spare time to preparing for the Petty Officers' examination: During our brief spells in Scapa I managed to take the Petty Officers' examination, which involved power-boat handling, boat sailing and numerous other practical and theoretical seamanship subjects. I had to read and send a message in Morse code, using a flashing lamp ... After a bit of swotting in my spare time, I succeeded in passing the complete examination, and my name was forwarded to the Depot and placed on the Roster for advancement when my turn came along. 15' Though the early commissions saw relatively little change where the composition of the Hood's crew was concerned, by the early 1930s the breakdown in the Home Fleet's drafting organisation resulted in a vastly increased turnover of personnel. The ship's company that set out on the Empire Cruise in 1923 was formed of the cream of the Atlantic Fleet and, desertions apart, remained substantially intact for the next three years. A decade later the numbers of men crossing her decks made the Hood feel more like a training establishment, with all the disruption to her life and efficiency that that implied. Over a nine-month period in 1934 almost a third of the crew were drafted away for one reason or another. 158 CPO Bill Lowe, a veteran of 1930-3, describes the atmosphere:
have been left unmoved by the experience, particularly those whose service took them across the rubicon of war. For Lt Louis Le Bailly, completing his second commission aboard in ovember 1939, the time had come to move on, though not without a measure of nostalgia for all that had past: Although both wardroom and gunroom contained many delightful people with whom I had become fast friends, I wa conscious that I had been in Hood overlong, too apt now to look back to earlier and easier days. I spent some of my remaining hours touring the ship. It was a sad if, in the chief stokers', artificers' and chief petty officers' messes, a singularly alcoholic parting which the wardroom completed: I was thankful for the taxi that bore me to orth Road Station'" PO Len Williams, drafted in February 1941 after five years aboard, also found himself torn between memory and anticipation: I received the draft witll mixed feelings. Due to my long service in Hood I had grown attached to her. We had travelled many thousands of miles and had visited many distant places together; besides which I liked my shipmates, most of whom, like myself, had served a very long time in the ship. On the other hand I wanted, eventually, to qualify as a Torpedo Gunner's 1ate and Instructor and to do this I must first of all clear the hurdle of the Leading Torpedoman's Course, which was the next step.'" But when the moment of departure came there was no doubt where his feelings lay: An oasis of peace amidst the clamour of the ship: the chapel c.1935. leonardo's The Last Supper hangs above the altar in token of the communion services frequently held there. The chapel was on the main deck right aft and one of the ship's frames can be seen on the left. HMS
Hood ~r,onIWillrs
Co/l«TlOn
We hardly knew anybody other than who was in our own department. I would see fresh faces every day and I wouldn't know them. Every time we went abroad and went into harbour there was about fifty of us go ashore to go back to England for courses and another fifty joinedthat's how it was all the time.'" Although matters stabilised during the mid-1930s, by the end of the decade the situation had reverted to its earlier state and the 1936-9 commission reportedly experienced a turnover of at least 80 per cent.'''' As war beckoned and reconstruction depleted the operational strength of the battlefleet, the expansion of the avy transformed the Hood into the role of training ship which she retained to the end.
.......iII>_ _ To be drafted from the Hood meant being severed from a unique community, one that could never be recreated except in the mind's eye. For many, of course, the news must have come as a blessed relief but for others it was undoubtedly a source of great adness. Whatever their emotions, very few can
m IWM. 911i/l. p.60. RBS. p. 55.
1S6
m Williams, Gone A Long fOllmey. pp.149-50. lSI Glo\"er, 'Manning and Training the Allied Navies', p. 211. Arthur (ed). The Navy: 1939 to the Present Day, p. 86. 160 Rea,A Curate's Egg, p. 154. This figure has not been verified. .11. Le Bailly, The Mati A.routld the Engitle, p. 55. IU Williams, Gone A Lotlg fOLlmey, p.151.
I"
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
142
As our train passed over the Forth Bridge, we looked across to the dockyard and saw the 'Old Lady' lying alongside the basin wall. I would not be honest if I did not admit that I was very close to tears as we watched her pass out of sight, as our train sped onwards towards Edinburgh. I had joined her a very humble eaman Torpedoman and had left a Petty Officer. lowed Hood a lot and I was grateful.
or could there be much ambivalence in the memory. The sentiment of toker Jim Haskell, a veteran of 1934-8, echoes the enduring conviction of a generation of men who sailed in her: 'To me Hood was always my avy, the finest ship I ever served in'.163
'''';'11>... The Chaplain and his Parish
Cited in Taverner. Hood's Legacy, pp. 138-9. 1M The Rev. Gordon Taylor, The Sea Chaplains: A History of the Chaplains of the Royal Navy (Oxford: Oxford Illustrated Press, 1978). '" See ch. 6. p. 156. 166 M I, Hl\IS Hood, ship's em'cr, 11. no. Il(b). Carey was chaplain of the \\~rspjte. 16~ Le Baill)', Tile Man Around the £"gine, p. 35. ." Beardmore. The Warers of U'lcerta;1Ity. p. 24. 169 Cited in Bennett, Cowan's War, p.54. I'" Beardmore. The Warers of Ur,cerrainr)', p. I·t, 16.1
Chaplains had gone to sea with the Royal avy since the Middle Ages but it was not until 1913 that the first chapel was in tailed in a British warship.'" The ship was the battlecruiser Qlleell Mary and its installation was owed to Capt. W.R. Hall and Cdr William James whose innovations are discussed elsewhere. l • s Divine service continued to be held out on deck or in one of the messdecks in bad weather but the chapel now offered a place not only for Holy ommunion and other services but also for those seeking a moment's respite from the crowded life of a man o'war. The appearance of chapels afloat therefore answered a long-standing need and they were soon being fitted throughout the Grand Fleet. Among the papers relating to the Hood at Greenwich is a letter written by the Rev. Walter Carey to the Admiralty requesting that all future capital ships be so provided. I" His prayers were to be answered in the shape of HMS Hood, the first vessel to include a chapel in her original design. The Hood's chapel, dedicated to St 1 icholas and Our Lady, was a well-lit space below the quarterdeck on the quieter starboard side of the ship. The altar was placed against the aft bulkhead and backed by a series of brocade hangings on rails. The decor changed as time passed but by the early 1930s a reproduction of The Last Slipper by Leonardo hung over the altar with other religious pictures ranged opposite the scuttles. The accoutrements were such as one might find in any English church ashore: oaken furnishings and about 40 whitewood chair together with a complete set of vestments in all the ecclesiastical colours. In some ships, notably Rodney and Nelsoll, enormous lengths were gone to panel the entire space and provide stainedglass covers for the scuttles. In Hood, however, joinery was limited to the Communion rail and some panelling in the Sanctuary, both of which were made in the ship's workshops. Also in the chapel was a memorial to all who had died while serving in her. The chapel was kept clean by a 'sweeper', one of whom, aD Ron Paterson (1933-6) eventually took holy orders. Presiding over the hip's spiritual wellbeing was the chaplain. Among the many remarkable people who served in the Royal avy in the first half of the twentieth century a special place is reserved for 'that notoriously eccentric and loveable crew of clerics, the naval chaplains'. ot the least extraordinary of these was the Rev. Harold Beardmore whose manual for aspiring chaplains, The \Vaters of Ullcerta;lJIy, drew heavilyon hi service in the Hood from 1939-41. The Chaplain Branch provided a padre for each ship of cruiser size or larger
I.'
as well as to destroyer, submarine and motor-boat flotillas, and to shore establishments around the world. avy chaplains messed in the wardroom and in Hood were accommodated on the upper deck amidships or, by the late 1930s, in the bridge tructure on the boat deck. The Chaplain's office or 'vicarage' lay on the upper deck abaft the conning tower, among the main living spaces in the ship. The chaplain's primary function was to lead the services which formed a statutory part of each day: prayers after Divisions at 09.05 every day except Sunday when Divine Service was held around 09.45 (later in wartime). In Hood the latter was celebrated either on the quarterdeck or, in foul weather, on one of the messdecks or in the recreation space beneath the bridge. After the removal of the last 5.5in guns in 1940 services were quite frequently held in the Starboard Battery. 'Church' on Sunday had to be rigged by the First Lieutenant with seating, usually deals on upturned buckets, and the Union Flag draped over the lectern. In the Hood a pair of gleaming wooden benches was brought from the Captain's lobby for the occasion along with a harmonium from its closet.ln 1939-41 Beardmore always set the stage by having recordings of church bells played over the ship's broadcasting system. The men, already gathered by divisions, now took their places; attendance at Church wa compulsory for all ranks and ratings not required for essential duties. When all was ready the First Lieutenant went aft and reported 'Hands ready for Church' to the Captain, just then completing his Sunday Rounds, the inspection of each department. The aptain then took his place in the congregation, the Church Pendant flying in place of the Ensign. On a signal from the Chaplain the bandmaster lifted his baton for the opening hymn. The service was performed in accordance with the Liturgy of the Church of England as contained in the 1662 Prayer Book. As Beardmore added, 'If this service is to be popular and achieve anything, it must be (I) cheerful, (2) dignified, and (3) short'. The result differed little from a service ashore except in its length; three popular hymns thundered out by the men, the les on read by the Captain and a ten-minute sermon with a story to teU. Most commanders were content to leave the liturgical details to the chaplain, but not Rear-Admiral Sir Walter Cowan who flew his flag in Hood from 1921-3. Here is part of his opening salvo to the Rev. Arthur Deane Gilbert on (1922-3):
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I hope you will not have the Litany in my flagship; but if you insist will you please omit the petition where we ask to be delivered from battle, murder and sudden death. Hang it! I've never been trained for anything else.
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Divine Service in Hood was often followed by Holy Communion in the chapel, the sacramental wine kept locked away in a drawer to avoid it quenching the raging thirst of a member of the ship's company. nlike his Army and RAF counterparts, avy chaplains wore no uniform other than the peaked cap of an officer. As Beardmore put it, 'The Padre is a man apart, in that he has no specific rank and is thus different from the other officers'.I7· Beyond his pastoral duties, the fundamental role of a chaplain was to act as a liaison between officers and ratings: You will soon realize that the happiness of the ship must
Life Aboard
begin in the Captain's cabin, and generate for'ard via the Wardroom, Warrant Officers', Chief and Petty Officers' Messes ... and a tactful Chaplain with a cheerful personality can help enormously to foster a spirit of sympathetic comradeship born of true leadership.l7I No one appreciated this role more than the Captain: Here again you will find one who is pleased to have you on board, for he is a man upon whose shoulders fall a tremendous responsibility, and his task is eased in many ways if he feels that in you he has a man in whom he can confide, and place the utmost trust and confidence. After many years of experience of human nature, he is the first to realize what an influence for good you can exert upon the officers and men it is his privilege to command.'" This, however, placed the chaplain in an extremely delicate position with respect to both parties. In describing his predicament the Rev. Beardmore reveals something of the mentality of the Royal Navy: They expect you to know what you believe and why you believe it. .. Both the aval officer and the rating have a very high regard for sincerity, but they despise hypocrisy, and just as they soon discover from your sermons whether you are a man who has something to say as against the man who must say something, so they soon weigh up your true motives and outlook on life. They do not really expect you to be the same as them. They like to see you wearing your clerical collar, and unless he is playing games, they are apt to be a little suspicious of the priest who continually goes to social functions disguised as a layman. r... J Do what you do by conviction and they will reverence your sincerity... 173 It was therefore incumbent on the chaplain to form a bond of trust with each section of the ship's company: Soon after you have joined the ship, make a point of calling on the Warrant Officers and meeting the President of the mess ... ; they are the men of long service and can be a great help to you and like to feel that they are part of your parish. Don't confine your visit to once a weekwhen you take the Church notices round; take them up in turn to the Wardroom in the dog watches, for a yarn and a drink, and they will soon appreciate your friendship. Visit the Gunroom fairly frequently so that you will keep in touch with the Sub-Lieutenants and Midshipmen; it is a good plan to ask each Midshipman in turn to supper on Sunday night-in this way you get to know them and do not feel that you are always accepting their hospitality without returning it. r... J If you show them that you are keen to help develop their character and powers of leadership as future Commanding Officers, you will find that they will 'open up' and probably come in for another talk later on. Every Chaplain has his own methods, which must depend of course upon his own personality. '" Equally, a chaplain had to be careful to divide his time in proportion to the composition of his flock:
143
Avoid anything which may label you 'an officers' parson'; more than one Chaplain has been thu labelled by the ship's company because he happens to be a keen bridge player, and gets caught up with a section of officers who play in the dog watches and after dinner. Those are the times when the Chaplain can wander round the messdecks, or organize some upper deck games or concerts for his parish. If they only see you at Morning Prayers, in the chapel, and on Sundays, then you are not doing your job. 17S By making contact in a quiet way each day, the men will gradually come to realize that (a) you like tlleir company, and (b) tllat you are tlleir friend. The latter must depend upon your own personality and the power to convince them that you never betray their confidence nor carry tales aft to the wardroom. A chaplain can easily be thought a spy, and therefore treated with reserve by the ship's company if the word is passed round that the Chaplain 'only comes for'ard to find out things' ... '76 On the other hand, it didn't do to dither on the messdecks: As you get to know your parish you'll find it easy to have a cup of tea in one of the messes at 'Stand Easy; but remember not to stay after the 'Carryon with your work' has been piped, otherwise you will be unpopular with the Chief Petty Officers, whose duty it is to see that the men leave the messdecks. I say this against myself, having been 'chased off' a messdeck for this reason. l77 Occasionally, however, the chaplain would learn of a grievance on the me sdecks: If you find during your visiting and your conversation with the ship's company that they are obviously unhappy about their leave ashore or the routine, have a private talk with the Commander; he will appreciate this, and knowing that you are trying to help him keep the men happy and contented, will look into the grievance and see how things can be adjusted. I " Another dimension of the chaplain's duties was welfare work in the event of personal difficulty with respect to family or finances: You will frequently have to assist men sort out some financial problem-in these days ratings marry young and often do not realize their liabilities until the first baby arrives, and the wife, who probably had a job previous to her confinement, can no longer assist the family income. Every Chaplain has his own views about lending money, but, in principle, I am certain one should never lend money to ratings. If we lend to one rating we should do it to similar 'hard cases' if one is to be consistent. One cannot do it officially, and if the ratings learn that you do lend money, you will be continually worried.'" Then there was bereavement, of which Beardmore sawall too much as the war and particularly the Blitz of Britain's cities unfolded in 1940-1:
171
Ibid., p. 18.
I12lbid.,p.14.
m Ibid., pp. I 1,12 & 24. ... Ibid., pp. 19-20. '" Ibid., pp. 18-19. 116 Ibid., p. 52. m Ibid. 1"lbid., pp. 54-5.
,,, Ibid., pp. 59-60.
144
The Batt/ecruiser HMS HOOD
The Admiralty inform the ship when the next-of-kin of a rating has died or been killed. It i worth while making an arrangement with the Captain that compassionate telegrams which are going to give the man a 'shock' should be handed to you. You can then send for the man concerned and break the news to him. The man will be grateful to you if you offer to assist him to word a leiter or telegram of condolence. If you have a chapel, suggest to him that you both go and pray for the person who has passed on, and for those who mourn, then leave him there in the only place in the ship where he can find peace... 180 aturally, such misfortune could occasionally have an adverse effect on a man's behaviour: The Commander will tell you that Able Seaman Bloggins, whose service record is good, has suddenly started breaking his leave, or getting drunk ashore, or committing disciplinary offences in the ship. Ask the Master-at-Arms to send the man to your cabin, sit him down, and have a friendly talk with him. It is possible that he will tell you what is the motive behind his strange behaviour. It may be some domestic trouble-his wife may have gone off with some other man, his house may have been bombed, and he's just fed up and 'going on the drink' to try and forget it. Ask the man if he would like you to tell the Captain what the trouble is. 1... 1 The Commander will tell you whether he has 'stood over' the case before dealing out punishment, or whether he has had to pass on the case to the Captain, for his jurisdiction. I' 1 However, as Admiral Sir William Davis recalled of his tenure as Commander of the Hood in 1939-40, the Captain's discipline was as nothing alongside a dressing-down by the Rev. Beardmore: A serious talk by the Chaplain was much more to be feared than literally hours of e":tra work! To this day I remember the occasion when I was seeing a real old-timer at the defaulters' table, for, I think, his usual offence of trying to give the Master-at-Arms a black eye on return from shore leave late at night. I said to the Master-at-Arms: 'Is this to be a Captain's Report or a talk by the Chaplain?' The accused burst out:' ot a talk again please, Sir, by the Chaplain. I will never get drunk again, but I shall never forget what he said to me last time'.I" 1110
Beardmore, The \Vaters of 60. Ibid., p. 55.
Uncerrai"r)~ p. 1'1
Cited in Taylor, The Sen ClIaplai/ls, p. 438. IS) Beardmore, The Warers of 18!
Uncertainty. pp. 41-2.
'" Ibid., pp. 42-3. 18$ Applegarth School archives, Beardmore to Miss Weighall, HMS Nelson, II July 1941. 186 Cited in Taylor, Tile Sea Chaplains, p. 438. 181 See Ch. 5, p. 129. "'twM, 91/711, pp.56-7. 189 lago. Letters (Scapa Flow, 17 November 1940). 190
Pert wee, Moon Boors and Dil/"er Suits, p.161.
But it was in battle that the chaplain really came into his own: The Chaplain's duty in action is to do what he can to strengthen the morale of his parishioners, especially those who have the unattractive jobs down below, jobs which demand that they have to wait until something happens, and when it does happen it is of course of an unpleasant nature, a bomb or a shell hitting the ship. These ratings form the damage control and repair parties. In times past it was possible to visit and talk to these men and make them realize how important they were, for one has to remember that the men who make up these parties are very often those who have not had the martial training of
a seaman, a stoker, or Royal Marine. They are for the most part inexperienced youngsters, stewards, cooks, N.A.A.F.1. Canteen Staff. The question is, therefore, frequently asked: 'Under such modern conditions which is the best place for the Chaplain?' To this question I would reply, that as soon as the Chaplain has gained experience of ships and men and really knows his parish, then one of the finest places for him in action is in some place on the bridge from which he can see everything and by means of a microphone broadcast to the ratings down below who have no idea what is happening. It is often difficult for the Captain to spare an experienced officer to play this part, while it is quite apparent that the person who does it must be some one in whom the officers and men will have confidence, and whose voice they will recognize. I" Beardmore seems first to have assumed the role of broadcaster at Mers-el-Kebir in July 1940, and on the morning of 24 May 1941 the measured delivery of his successor, the Rev. Patrick Stewart, was the last voice many of the Hood's men ever heard. However, during a lull in the action the chaplain's place was elsewhere: If there are casualties, they will be transferred to one of the Medical Distributing Stations during a lull in the action. You should arrange with the Medical Officers to inform you on the bridge when they think your presence necessary in either of the Medical Distributing Stations. They will know that you, as Chaplain of the ship, can be of the utmost assistance to them when things begin to happenoperations, etc. [... J You can, therefore, steady the uninjured who have never seen dead or dying men, and can also be of great help in inspiring a wounded man with confidence before an operation or surgical treatment. [... ]It is during such times as these that a Chaplain realizes the value of regular visits on the mess decks, and of taking every opportunity of keeping in touch with his parishioners and putting first things first. The Chaplain who has learnt to mix freely with both officers and men, sharing their everyday hazards, sunshine and squall, their laughter, their humour, and their domestic problems, is the man whose voice on the broadcaster they will be the first to welcome, and whose presence they will appreciate if they are in pain, or about to pass through the valley of the shadow of death. l84 Certainly, surviving memoirs of the Rev. Harold Beardmore, who died as Bishop of St Helena in 1968, leave little doubt as to his contribution to the Hood's morale before his departure to the Nelsoll in February 1941. Beardmore, who always took his bull terrier Bill to sea, could be relied on to raise spirits during the long night vigils, dispensing chocolate, chewing gum and an encouraging word to the watchkeepers. The many activities he organised on the messdecks from whist drives to 'Deep Sea Scouts' did much to keep the men's minds off the war. Nor did his work end with Hood's loss. After the sinking he was sent by the Admiralty to console next-of-kin in Portsmouth. l85 As Admiral Sir John de Robeck was once heard to say, 'Provided a ship has a good Commander and a good Chaplain you will never find anything much wrong with her'.I86
The Hood in Colour HE IMAGES ON THESE PAGES are stills from two colour films shot b)' the Hood's hief Engineer, Cdr (E) R.T. Grogan, who joined the ship on 5th Ma)' J 939 and peri hed with her two )'ears later. The footage, which was shot with a J 6mm cine-camera, dates from the summer of 1939 to the autumn of J 940 and reveals the ship from the lime of her full-power trials in June or Jul)' 1939, through the earl)' months of the war and finall), to the period following her 1editerranean interlude in the summer of J 940. The intended result, a film titled TIle IVllr frolll tile Hood with oundtrack, has )'et to come to light but the surviving footage provides a remarkable visual record of the ship as she entered the concluding phase in her life. Robert Terence Grogan was born in Kent in c.1901 and presumabl)' entered Dartmouth around the outbreak of the First World War. A brilliant engineer with a reputation for breakneck driving at Brooklands, Grogan was appointed to Hood having been Senior Engineer in the new crui er Sileffieid. But Grogan's main shipboard hobb), was film-making and sound recording. The latter not onl)' allowed him to record the King's radio broadcast while the rest of the wardroom slept off Christmas lunch in December 1940, but also to install a device beneath the log of the forward control platform to catch engine-room gossip
T
from Lt (E) Louis Le Baill)'.' The first showing of Grogan's uncut work appears to have been to a wardroom audience in OClober J 939. This material seems mainl)' to have been of the ship running full-power trial Ihat ummer (nos. 5-12) but no doubt included footage of the penrfisll episode the previous month (see p. J 90) when Grogan is recorded as having been on deck with his camera. The shots of the flag deck (no . 15-17) probabl)' also date from this period. Grogan was in action again in mid December when Hood escorted the first Canadian troop convo)' of the war into Greenock with Resoilltioll, ReplIlse and IVllrspite in compan)' (no. 2 J). The appearance of either Georges Leyglles or MOlltml1ll in one of the sequences suggests he was also filming during the patrol conducted with the French nav)' at the end of November. By early 1940 Grogan's work had been given sanction by the Admiralty and was being broadcast by British Gaumont News, though usually in black and white. Years later, Rear-Admiral Peter La Niece, a midshipman aboard in Ihe first months of J 940, recalled standing be ide Grogan as he shot some of the footage that has become the stock of countless war documentaries:
been issued with an official camera by the Admiralty. I was tanding right beside him when he took the very sequence which found its way into the archive and which still reappears time and again in documentaries on television; whenever I see thi clip of capital ships ploughing through heavy eas I am always reminded of these patrols' Grogan's camera appears again during the Hood's Mediterranean interlude, first at Gibraltar (no. 22) and then apparently during one of her sorties into the western basin. The last identifiable footage is of the ship at Rosyth in the autumn of J 940 (no. 23). Reports of further wardroom screenings in October J 940 indicate that Gr gan had shot footage of Hood and Ark ROylllunder Italian aerial bombardment in July or August but this ordeal is not among the frames captured here.' Perhaps in some forgotten loft or packing case lies a canister of film and its synchronized radiogram entitled Tile Wllr frolll tile Hood waiting to add a further dash of colour to her last )'ears. Let us hope so. I
The Engineer Commander was a movie camera buff and his reputation was such that he had
1 J
(ago. utters (Greenock, 25 December 1940), and Vjce-Admiral Sir Louis u Baill)'.letler to Ihe author. I Februar) 2()().1. La ~ie<:e, 'ot n Nine to Fi,y Job. p. 29. 13go. lLtters (Sc-.1pa Flo,,"'. 10 October & Il"o\'ember 1940).
1 Hood glides past the camera on her way out of Portsmouth to run trials off the Isle of Wight in the summer of 1939. Men are fallen in by divisions on the forecastle. boat de
II
2 The Hood's Marine detachment fallen in beside 'X' turret as the ship warps away from the jetty at Portsmouth in the summer of 1939. The band marches on the quarterdeck. Repulse lies astern.
3 An Admiralty tug helps the Hood out of Portsmouth in the summer of 1939. Starboard No.3 5.5in gun is visible on the right.
4 Hood seen from her port quarter in a still from the same sequence as the first image. The Marine detachment is still fallen in on the quarterdeck.
5 Hoods forecastle wreathed in spray as she reaches her best speed in the summer of 1939. This sequence was filmed from the starboard side of the Compass platform overlooking the 30ft rangefinder atop the main director. 6 The same view seen from the Admiral's bridge. The conning tower rises on the left while 'Squeak', the starboard O.S-inch machine-gun mounting, sits under a tarpaulin on the right. 7 & 8 The funnels seen from the port side of the Admiral's bridge during the Hoods full-power trial in June 1939. In the se
I~""---
20 The port side of the quarterde
m
23 Dawn at Rosyth in the autumn of 1940. The view is from the quarterdeck looking forward. Port and Starboard No.3 twin 4in mountings can be made out on either side of 'Y' turret. The Forth Bridge is in the background. 24 Sunset as the Atlantic breaks over Hood's decks during the winter of 1939-40.
\
HMS Hood, May 1941
: \
... \
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I
HMS Hood, May 1941
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Internal arrangements, HMS Hood, May 1941 The images on these pages provide internal views of the Hooc!s turbine and boiler spaces together with sections of '/J\ and '8' turrets which can be seen in greater detail on the following spread. Beneath the funnels are 'Y', 'X' and 'B' Boiler Rooms along with part of 'Ii: Boiler Room under the bridge structure. Above them are the uptakes carrying smoke and gas into the funnels,
and on the seaboard side the 19·inch pipes transferring steam to the engine spaces. The three engine rooms lie further aft, dominated in each case by the turbine sets driving the propeller shafts. The twO outer shafts were driven by a pair of turbines in the Forward Engine Room. the middle room containing the inner port unit and the after room the inner starboard. The shafting of the starboard outer propeller can be seen extending over 250 feet from the Forward Engine Room to the shaft bracket on the hull. The thrust block of this shaft lies abreast the bulkhead separating the forward from the middle engine rooms, with smaller Plummer blocks punctuating it further aft. These views also show key elements of the Hoods hull construction, including the double bottom, a bulge section abreast 'X' turret, the round-down of 2.inch plating visible over the engine rooms, one of the longitudinal strength girders seen over the boiler rooms, and finally the sealed crushing tubes filling the buoyancy space in the ship's bulges, shown here between 'Ii: Boiler Room and 'B' turret.
., .'.'
The 15-inch Mk II turret and its loading system
A cutaway of the hull abreast'A' and 'B' turrets. The view shows double bottom. the shell bins and shell rooms in the hold, and ttl
de
A cutaway of •A' turret showing shells
at various stages in the loading process, which could be carried out for each gun independently. At the base of the trunking a , S~in(h projectile sits on its bogie before being hoisted to the working chamber. The function of the working chamber was to transfer shells and cordite from the main cage to the gunloading cage and much machinery, piping and
plating has been stripped away to show the principal equipment for doing so. The slope· sided structure in the centre of the working chamber is the flash-tight box around the cordite waiting position. The pair of objects lying just before it are the presses for the two shell hoists serving each gun, while the mushroom-like device is the gearbox of the swashplate engine which trained the turret by the rack·and·pinion arrangement shown lower down. The black handwheel on the gunhouse floor controlled the training clutch immediately below. The turret traversed on the roller path seen above the elaborate ring bulkhead circling the inside of the barbette. Prominent in the working chamber are the emergency shell bins in the event of a breakdown in ammunition supply. Just inboard a further shell can be discerned on the waiting tray ready to be shunted into the gun-loading cage which. once lowered. rested in the box·like structure from which the guide rails emerge on the left. This illustration actually shows the gun-loading cage at the breech of the right-hand gun. The shell has been deposited onto the loading tray from where the rammer built into the flexible loading arm will thrust it Into the gun. The cordite will then roll out from the upper levels of the cage to be rammed in in its turn. The breech is then slammed shut and final preparations made to fire the gun. The control cabinet occupying the rear right·hand corner of the gunhouse has been cut away but the 30-foot rangefinder can be seen along with the ready·use bins and the crane apparatus for handling shells on the far side of the turret. life in the gunhouse was characterised by dim light. violent concussions of heavy machinery and the smell of oil and particularly cordite which entered the turret with each firing.
I turret and its loading system
A cutaway of the hull abreast 'A' and 'B' turrets. The view shows the box construction of the double bottom, the shell bins and shellrooms in the hold, and the magazines on the platform deck, the latter protected by a layer of 2·inch plate with a further three inches of armour on the main deck above. To the left is a section of the elaborate underwater protection scheme together with the belts of 12- and 7·inch armour and the round-down of 2-inch plating which constituted the Hood's main defence against shellfire. Dominating the image are the revolving structures of 'IX and 'B' turret, weighing approximately 890 tons each from the gunhouse to the base of the trunking in the hold. In each case a shell can be seen on its bogie on the lower platform, waiting to be clamped to the inside of the trunking for hoisting to the working chamber. Just below the working chambers the trunking has been cut away to show the cylinders of compressed air used to clear the guns after each firing. The structures projecting into the gun well are the lateral guides for the barrels and, forward of them, the cylinders by which each was elevated and depressed.
,hell, Jrocess, :tch gun
e on its ,e )1 the r shells and Ie gun'Y, piping and to show the
,. The ,Iopehe working 'ound the cordite eels lying just two shell hoists hroom·like device is ngine which trained , arrangement :mdwheel on the 'aining clutch raversed on the roller ing bulkhead circling inent in the working II bins in the event of a Iy. Just inboard a further liting tray ready to be Ige which, once lowered, rested in .h the guide rails emerge on the left. he gun·loading cage at the breech of IS been deposited onto the loading tray from ~ flexible loading arm will thrust it into the ut from the upper levels of the cage to be rammed in Jmmed shut and final preparations made to fire the 'ing the rear right-hand corner of the gunhouse has angefinder can be seen along with the ready-use bins ldling shells on the far side of the turret. life in the dim light. violent concussions of heavy machinery and cordrte which entered the turret with each firing.
Life Aboard
The boiler rooms and their operation Three views of 'Y' Boiler Room, looking in each case from the starboard to the port side of the ship. The first view shows the general arrangement of the space from the 50-called stoke hold on the lower platform deck. The six boilers faced each other in rows of three, each tended by a stoker under the control of a Chief Stoker and his PO Stoker assistant. The apparatus against the column in the centre of the picture is a bilge and fire pump in the event of flooding or a conflagration. The second view, taken from almost the same position, shows one of the boilers in greater detail. The eight rectangular structures in the lower and middle section contain the air boxes for draught and, in the centre, the oil sprayers which fed the brick-lined furnace burning inside. lying diagonally on each side are the boiler casings themselves with their mass of tubes. The furnace heated the water in
these tubes, converting it into steam which gathered in a drum seen at the top of the boiler behind the gantry. This level, known as the upper stokehold, was in the care of a leading Stoker water tender charged with monitoring the automatic feed water regulators of each row of boilers. The failure of these regulators required an immediate changeover to hand operation in order to prevent a major boiler explosion. The handwheels ranged at the end of rods on the left were for checking and regulating the feed water, while the lengthy one on the right operated the safety-valve easing gear, employed when there was a surfeit of steam in the boiler. The final view is taken from the level of the fan compartment, though much detail, including the fan flat itself, has been stripped away to provide this vista. Emerging from each boiler are the uptakes which vented smoke and gas into the after funnel. Running on either side are the boiler pipes supplying the steam mains leading to the turbines in the Forward Engine Room. The atmosphere of 'Y' Boiler Room with all six boilers lit must be imagined as one of oppressive heat against the shriek of sound and gale of wind produced by the high-pressure fans.
PETS AND MASCOTS
Sailors are traditionally fond of animals and virtually every ship had a pet as its mascot. Hood was, of course, no exception, and few ships can have had more than she during her long career. Her first mascot was Bill, the goat presented to the ship by Rear-Admiral Cowan (1921-3) and which on one occasion paid an unexpected visit to his sleeping cabin.'·7 Bill seems not to have outlasted Cowan's tenure but the World Cruise of 1923-4 was to turn the Hood into a veritable menagerie. At least one cobra appeared with its snakecharmer at Trincomalee but once Hood reached Australia animal started coming aboard to stay. There was Joey the wallaby at Fremantle, Thomas the kangaroo at Adelaide and a variety of other local fauna including a ring-tailed possum, a pair of cockatoos and numerous parrots. To these a kiwi-Miss Apteryx Australis-was added in ew Zealand, though no substitute was found for her insectivorous diet and she did not survive the voyage. A journey to Calgary yielded at least one beaver, and a marmoset and flying-squirrel had joined the throng by the time Hood reached Devonport in September 1924. Most were offloaded to wos but Joey remained until patience finally ran out in 1926, prompting Lady Hood to present the ship with Angus, a pedigree bulldog. A number of men kept their own pets aboard, mainly in the form of songbirds since larger animals required the permission of the Commander. In May 1936 a visit to the Canaries brought numerous birds onto the lower deck though, as Boy Fred
Mediterranean Fleet. n canaries urviving by th occasionally the sight c( sad-faced matelot whisF secluded corner of the l pleading 'Sing, you bast; canary which, more tha laying on its back with i we reached the colder n,
A cheery party on 'A' turret and the forward breakwater at SCapa Flow in the autumn of 1940. With them is Bill, the Rev. Harold Beardmore's bull terrier. Also there is
Fishcakes, held by the second man from the right. The forward UP launcher can be seen on 'B' turret.
Coombs explains, appearances were deceiving: ... With abject poverty everywhere even the boys could afford the nick-nacks and canarie in wicker cage though, as in Madeira, most of them turned out to be brownish mute canaries when the yellow powder came off. Soon after we came home again but this time only to be recommissioned and return as part of the
The first ship's mascot 0 have been Judy, the West I-' Rory O'Conor brought wil However, it was during thi Hood received two of her t Ginger, a large red macken cat, and Fi hcake ,a tuxed, an inseparable part of ship Hood's last three commissi no doubt suffered a severe of the Rev. Harold Beardm in June 1939. Though frier people, Bill had a violent SI to have done away with m, However, Bill nearly met h ship was being depermed ~ 1941, being unfortunate er on a length of electric cabl return what Jon Pertwee la severe whack in the winky' Beardmore in February 19 fate that apparently claime Fishcakes. R.l. P. Left: The Hood's
seen here with tI
the Rodman Cup after by the Chie
seems to have Ie· passed into dock Author's CoIl«tlOfl
Above: Joey the wallaby who joined in February 1924 and stayed until passing to a zoo in 1926. Remembered for his boxing and an insatiable appetite for tobacco.
Top centre: Ginger and an unidentified terrier on one of the pom-pom mountings, c.1935. Ginger was not to have his tail much longer; it had to be amputated after being
trapped by the lid of a wash-deck locker.
Mrs Margaret ~ry
HMS Hood ~tJOn
Right: 'Ever the best of friends.' Ginger and Fishcakes in the late
HMS Hood Assoc;'tKNllHl99lnson CoIl«tlOfl
Centre: Ginger in his salad days. c.1933.
19305. Sadly, the evidence is that they both perished with the ship.
Right: Fishcakes in the port battery, c.1935.
HMS Hood ~tJOnfMaSOtl CoIl«tlon
HMS Hood Assoc;'tlOfllWillis COIJ«t1Oll
Life Aboard
PETS A
145
0 MASCOTS
ailors are traditionally fond of animal and virtually every ship had a pet as its mascot. Hood was, of course, no exception, and few ships can have had more than she during her long career. Her first mascot was Bill, the goat presented to the ship by Rear-Admiral Cowan (1921-3) and which on one occasion paid an unexpected visit to his sleeping cabin. ,.7 Bill seems not to have outlasted Cowan's tenure but the World Cruise of 1923-4 was to turn the Hood into a veritable menagerie. At least one cobra appeared with its snakecharmer at Trincomalee but once Hood reached Australia animals started coming aboard to stay. There was Joey the wallaby at Fremantle, Thomas the kangaroo at Adelaide and a variety of other local fauna including a ring-tailed possum, a pair of cockatoos and numerous parrots. To these a kiwi-Miss Apteryx Australis-was added in New Zealand, though no substitute was found for her insectivorous diet and she did not urvive the voyage. A journey to algary yielded at lea t one beaver, and a marmoset and flying-squirrel had joined the throng by the time Hood reached Devonport in September 1924. Most were ofAoaded to zoos but Joey remained until patience finally ran out in 1926, prompting Lady Hood to present the ship with Angus, a pedigree bulldog. A number of men kept their own pets aboard, mainly in the form of songbirds since larger animals required the permission of the Commander. In May 1936 a visit to the Canaries brought numerous birds onto the lower deck though, as Boy Fred
Mediterranean Fleet. There was very few canaries surviving by then, though occasionally the ight could be seen of some sad-faced matelot whispering in some secluded corner of the upper deck and pleading 'Sing, you bastard, sing' to his mute canary which, more than likely, would be laying on its back with its legs in the air when we reached the colder northern climes. ISS
A cheery party on .A' turret and the forward breakwater at Scapa Flow in the autumn of 1940. With them is Bill, the Rev. Harold Beardmore's bull terrier. Also there is
Fishcakes. held by the second man from the right. The forward UP launcher can be seen on'S' turret.
oombs explains, appearances were deceiving: ... With abject poverty everywhere even the boys could afford the nick-nacks and canaries in wicker cages though, as in Madeira, most of them turned out to be brownish mute canaries when the yellow powder came off. Soon after we came home again but this time only to be recommissioned and return as part of the
The first ship's mascot of the 1930s seems to have been Judy, the West Highland terrier Cdr Rory O'Conor brought with him in 1933. However, it was during this commission that Hood received two of her best-loved pets, Ginger, a large red mackerel tabby and white cat, and Fishcakes, a tuxedo. This duo became an inseparable part of shipboard life during Hood's last three commissions, a status quo that no doubt suffered a severe upset with the arrival of the Rev. Harold Beardmore's bull terrier Bill in June 1939. Though friendly enough to people, Bill had a violent streak and wa known to have done away with more than one sheep.,s9 However, Bill nearly met his maker when the ship was being depermed at Rosyth in early 1941, being unfortunate enough to cock his leg on a length of electric cabling and receive in return what Jon Pertwee later described as 'a severe whack in the win"-'Y'.I90 Bill left with Beardmore in February 1941, being spared the fate that apparently claimed Ginger and Fishcakes. R.I.P. Left: The Hood's bulldog mascot Angus. seen here with the Silver Coquerelle and
the Rodman (up, c.1928. He was looked after by the Chief Boatswain's Mate and seems to have left the ship when she passed into dockyard hands in 1929. Authon CoII«tion
Above: Joey the wallaby who joined in February 1924 and stayed until passing to a zoo in 1926. Remembered for his boxing and an insatiable appetite for tobacco.
Top centre: Ginger and an unidentified terrier on one of the pom-pom mountings, c.193S. Ginger was not to have his tail much longer; it had to be amputated after being
trapped by the lid of a wash-deck locker. HoodAnocMtion
MfJ M.. '~'e! Berry
HMS
Right: 'Ever the best of friends: Ginger and Fishcakes in the late
HMS Hood AnotiItIOnlH/99If1KX1 Collection
19305. Sadly, the evidence is that they both perished with the ship.
Right: Fishcakes in the port battery, c.193S.
HMS Hood A.ssooI!IOnf~sonConeaion
HMS Hood AJJoc.. tlONWilln Collection
Centre: Ginger in his salad days, c.1933.
The BattLecruiser HMS HOOD
146
6 Disaster and Recovery, 1931-1936 And what shoulder and what art Could twist the sinews of thy heart? N THE SPRING OF 1931 the Hood finally emerged from her lengthy refit and resumed her exalted status as flagship of the Battle Cruiser Squadron, Atlantic Fleet. In May she completed to full complement and a month later sailed from Portsmouth for the usual summer spell at Portland. However, it was quite obvious that matters had changed greatly since she had paid off and passed into dockyard control at Portsmouth two years earlier. For one thing she was now a Pompey ship, having exchanged the outspoken Westcountrymen of her first four commissions with the more stolid crews of the Portsmouth Division. But above all, the world to which she returned seemed very much less stable than it had in the summer of 1929. In October of that year the Wall Street Crash precipitated an economic depression that by the autumn of 1931 had put over 2.5 million men out of work and brought the ational Government of Ramsay MacDonald to power in Britain. With the economy in crisis, on 31 June of that year the Committee on National Expenditure chaired by Sir George May recommended sweeping wage cuts for civil servants including the armed forces, declaring that' 0 officer or man serving His Majesty has any legal claim to a particular rate of pay'.' For those sailors who kept abreast of political events, who read The Fleet and participated in messdeck discussions about welfare, pay and representation, here was the first inkling of trouble ahead. Despite these developments, the first few months of the Hood's commission passed off uneventfully as the crew laboured to slough away the dirt and disorder of a prolonged period in dockyard hands. Sea trials off Portland were followed in July by a visit to Torbay where the flag of RearAdmiral Wilfred Tomkinson was hoisted for the first time. Though it had little bearing on subsequent events, his arrival on board was at best inauspicious. Vice-Admiral Eric LongleyCook, then the ship's First Lieutenant and Gunnery Officer, has left this account of Tomkinson's opening gambit:
I
Carew, The Lower Deck. pp. 154-5. HMS Hood Association archives, Address to the Association. 24 May 1980. in 1980 newsletter, p. 2. ACQ was the traditional pendant code for Admiral Commanding, Battle Cruiser Squadron. 'IWM/SA, no. 5807. .. Carew, The Lower Deck. pp. 128, 213. I
1
We sailed early one fine morning to take station astern of the Battle Cruiser Squadron. I was on the bridge and wondered what the Admiral's signal would be. 'Glad to see you back'? 'Welcome back to the BCS'? No. A flag signal 'Manoeuvre badly executed'; from tails up to tails nearly down. Next morning, Sunday 08.00 in Torbay, we hoisted the flag of ACQ. At 09.00 he arrived on board, walked round divisions, then 'clear lower deck, everyone aft'. From the after capstan the Admiral addressed us. Summarily he said 'I was the first Captain of this ship and until you reach something like the standard in which I left her, I shall not be satisfied'. Now, we had had worked very hard indeed to get her from dockyard condition to fleet condition, so tails went down even lower. So on we went, not entirely happy.'
The crew no doubt recognised this as a particularly gauche example of the ploy often resorted to to goad men into action, but Tomkinson remained highly unpopular in this his first and last seagoing command as an admiral. However, this state of affairs was greatly mitigated by Cdr C.R. McCrum, an exceptional executive officer and much admired by his men. Years later LS Sam Wheat recalled him thus: I'll always say we had the most excellent Commander you could ever have. He's the best admired Commander I've ever known or ever served with, and that was Cdr McCrum. And he was a diplomatic chap.' The months to come would require all of McCrum's powers of diplomacy. Meanwhile there was a lengthy refitting at Portsmouth during which Hood was once more the main attraction at avy Week. Summer leave was taken by watches. Morale was good and the atmosphere calm. It was against this backdrop that the Hood sailed from Portsmouth on 8 September to participate in the autumn gunnery cruise of the Atlantic Fleet off Scotland. Though few of her men suspected it, even as she headed north the seeds of disaster were in the wind. The mass disobedience that the Navy had been spared since 1797 was about to return. 'Mutiny' was at hand.
•.......lIb ... Though not known for dissidence, the Hood had had her share of lower-deck unrest during the militant years following the First World War. In March 1921 the ship fell under the thrall of Rear-Admiral Sir Walter Cowan and his Flag Captain, Geoffrey Mackworth. Cowan, an aggressive blood-and-guts officer of the old school, had already weathered three mutinies, one as captain of the pre-dreadnought Zealandia in 1914 and latterly as Senior aval Officer, Baltic, where in 1919 there were serious cases of insubordination aboard the gunboat Cicala and in his own flagship, the cruiser Delhi. The Delhi incident had been provoked largely by the tactlessness of her captain, Mackworth, who Cowan unwisely brought with him to the Hood. It was to prove an unfortunate pairing, exacerbated by events. Within a month of their arrival the Hood was at Rosyth where three battalions of sailors and Marines were landed to help maintain essential services during the rail, bus and coal strikes. With lower-deck unionism at its height it was not long before elements of the Hood's company began to express their solidarity with the strikers ashore. One day during Commander's Rounds the Executive Officer Richard Lane-Poole entered one of the seamen's messes to find it festooned with red bunting.' Service against the Bolsheviks in the Baltic had made Cowan particularly sensitive to the spread of Communist ideas in the Navy and he immediately ordered two able seamen to be court-martialled for mutinous practice. When they were acquitted for
Disaster and Recovery, 1931-1936
want of evidence an incensed Cowan responded by court-martialling Master-at-Arms William Batten for 'concealing a mutinous practice' and Stoker John Hall for inciting the same. The case against Batten was al 0 dismissed but Hall was sentenced to three years' hard labour. Meanwhile, Cowan was warning the Admiralty that discipline in the Battle Cruiser Squadron 'hangs by a very lender thread, chiefly by reason of the mass of mischievous and revolutionary literature, which floods the country'.' It seems that Cowan greatly exaggerated the significance of the incident, but nonetheless the rest of the commission was characterised by a remorseless emphasis on discipline and efficiency that made for an extremely unhappy ship. Matters were not helped by Mack"Worth's increasingly irrational outbursts and the demise of his relations with Cowan himself. Sporadic disturbances and pranks continued, culminating in the spring of 1923 in the refusal of the ship's company to enter the Combined Fleet Regatta, a traditional means of expressing resentment. As one officer recalled, even in I926-three years after the end of the commission-'the Cowan-Mackworth combination was still an evil legend in the Atlantic Fleet'· By contrast, the next major outbreak of industrial unrest, the General Strike of May 1926, apparently had little effect on the Hood, which was rushed to the Clyde and spent nearly two months lying quietly at Greenock. Among those drafted aboard while a majority of the crew were ashore guarding mines, dockyards, depots and factories was one AB Len Wincott. Wincott's memory of the episode is typical of his jaundiced style: Then a whole battalion of seamen from the depot were despatched on an aircraft carrier to the Clyde for the purpose of guarding 'important objectives'-that is, the mines and factories belonging to private individuals where the workers were on strike. We were dumped on the Hood which was anchored off C1ydebank and there for six weeks we stood guard over holy-stones and wash deck gear until again somebody remembered our existence and brought us back in comfortable railway carriages. It was at that time that reducing the sailor's 'over-generous pay' was
147
being considered-no doubt to make up for the vast cost of our useless round-trip to Scotland.'
, Ibid., p. 130. , Bennett. COlVan's \Var, p. 68. 7
Despite the fears of Cowan and a generation of senior figures in the Royal avy, it was not political ideology but the policy and attitudes of the Admiralty itself that constituted the chief source of discontent on the lower deck.' The Admiralty not only failed to recognise the extent to which the First World War had altered the British social order, it also took an inordinately long time to accept that the Navy was drawing into its ranks men with aspirations and a level of education unknown in the prewar fleets. Against the backdrop of social and political change at home and abroad these developments coincided with the growth of the lower-deck societies. In the years before the Great War the lower deck had for the first time found representation by means of a range of semi-unionised societies, most of which confined their membership to a branch or trade such as the Engine Room Artificers' Society.' During the war these societies together with The Fleet, the influential newspaper edited by Lionel Yexley, successfully lobbied for the improvement in lower-deck pay that culminated in the 1919 settlement which at last provided the British sailor with an adequate compensation for his services. Though it had yielded on this matter the Admiralty was concerned at the increasingly politicised nature of the societies' activities and in 1920 issued a fleet order which effectively destroyed their capacity for organised representation. Their function as a mouthpiece for lower-deck grievances and welfare issues was taken by a system of conferences set up under the auspices of the Admiralty, the first of which met in May 1922. Predictably enough, the conference system proved ineffectual in the role for which it had been established and by the late 1920s the lower deck was aware that its voice had been stifled. Already in 1925 economic considerations had obliged the Admiralty to introduce a lower pay scale for all new entrants to the Service, though assurances were given that the earlier rates would be honoured for all currently in receipt of them. The 1925 pay scales were to have serious consequences for the avy. The two-tier structure was not only resented by those who
"
''''incon, i"vergordoll Mutineer,
p. 38. The pay cuts had in fact been made in 1925. The aircraft carrier was probably HMS Furious. S Carew, Tile Lower Deck, ch. 6-8. 9 Ibid., passim.
A rather grubby Hood sails from Portsmouth in June 1931 after two years in dockyard hands. Rear·Admiral Tomkinson did not like what he saw when she reached Torbay in July. Note the new seaplane arrangements on the quarterdeck. U.s. Na",al Historical Center, washington
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
148
'Pay-out day' by Jack Kenle. The inroads made into lower-deck pay illustrated on a postcard sold in Hood at the time of Invergordon. Note the smugness with which the officers have
been portrayed. Mrs ~I.. SmIth
.• Pensions were to be reduced to the March 1930 Ic\'ds, a reduction
of 2'.,d. per day to 8d. II See Raskill, Naml Policy. II, pp. 9~.
Whether or not Tomkinson
saw this cipher before 13 September is a matter of some
debate; whate\'(~r the case, he gives no indication of having absorbed its contents before the arrival of
the Admiralty Fleet Order detailing the same on the 12th.
The Hood lies peacefully at Invergordon, probably in May 1932, just nine months after the Mutiny. Ro~1 N.~.' MIISNm.
Portsmouth
found themselves receiving less pay for equal work, but did nothing to alleviate the blockage in promotion caused by the mass of men who had achieved higher rating during the Great War. Under these circumstances the failure of the welfare conferences and the closing of official channels of representation hastened the decline of the lower-deck societies and drove men to a more radical expression of their grievances. When in September 1931 the Admiralty tamely acceded to a government proposal that the pay of the entire avy be reduced to the 1925 levels the stage was therefore set for the II1vergordon Mutiny.lO The circumstances under which the 1931 pay cuts were decided upon and the catalogue of error, oversight and incom-
petence that attended their promulgation to the Atlantic Fleet as it gathered in the Cromarty Firth lie beyond the scope of this volume. Suffice to say that confusion following the sudden hospitalisation of Admiral ir Michael Hodges (Commanderin-Chief, Atlantic Fleet) on Monday 7 September apparently prevented the ranking officer, Rear-Admiral Tomkinson in the Hood, from learning of the extent of the cuts until events were already well in train. An Admiralty cipher prepared for this purpose on 3 September (A,\I. 1738) Tomkinson either never saw or failed to take in." On Thursday 10 September, with the fleet still on exercises in the orth Sea, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Philip Snowden, delivered an emergency budget speech to Parliament in which the pruning of government expenditure was finally made public. Despite indications from the BBC later that day, it was not until the day's papers came aboard once the fleet had dr6pped anchor at Invergordon on Friday 11th that those on the 1919 scale-over 70 per cent of the avy-Iearnt that their basic pay was to be reduced by up to 25 per cent. But this was not all. ot only had the Admiralty betrayed its solemn guarantee of 1925, but in sanctioning the government package it had effectively permitted the cuts to be made in inverse relation to rank and seniority. Whereas the basic pay of many able seamen would be cut from four to three shillings a day (25 per cent), that of an admiral of the fleet suffered only by a matter of 17 per cent. Though the proportional cut was in fact rather lower when the allowances earnt by
Disaster and Recovery, 1931-1936
most were included, the inequitable division of the reductions, the manner in which they became known, the speed with which they were to be implemented and the likely impact on the men's families and prospects provided the basis for the lnvergordon Mutiny. The unfolding of the 'breeze' at Invergordon has been treated elsewhere and the account which foLlows wiLl confine itself largely to the Hood's involvement." Although the mutiny owed its impetus to a spontaneous reaction by the fleet at large, it is clear that the seat of the movement, insofar as there was one, lay in ships of the Devonport Division, notably the battleship Rodn")', the cruiser Norfolk and the minelayer Adventure, together with the battleship Valiant of Chatham. Feelings had been running high in Devonport since lanuary when bad leadership in the submarine depot ship Lucia resulted in 31 members of her crew barricading themselves below deck, an incident which led to four men being court-martiaLied and another ejected from the avy." But above aLl the mutiny owed its support to the 'staid hands', those leading seamen, able seamen, stokers and Marines on the 1919 pay scales who represented the group worst affected by the cuts. However, the practical difficulties of fomenting a mutiny in a dozen or more ships largely prevented the operation of any central organisation and the degree of participation of individual vessels rested mainly on the morale, convictions and mood of their crews as events unfolded. So it was with the Hood, in which the impending cuts were apparently discussed at several illegal meetings before the ship reached Invergordon on Friday I J September. With Admiral Tomkinson and his staff stiLl oblivious to the unrest on the messdecks, the Hood passed quietly into harbour routine, most of those off watch spending the afternoon of Saturday 12th at the Invergordon Highland Games where the ship's Marine band formed one of the attractions. That night,just as a bundle containing the sixteen-page Admiralty Fleet Order 2339/31 detailing the cuts reached the Hood, the naval canteen ashore was alive with men anxiously discussing the measures, details of which had been broadcast in the BBC's evening bulletin. At this meeting it was apparently agreed that a larger gathering should be held the foLlowing day and canvassing for action to be taken over the cuts proceeded both in and between ships thereafter. Early the foLlowing day came the first indication that trouble was in store. During Divine Service that Sunday morning the AFO was posted on the Hood's notice boards, so confirming the worst fears of the lower deck. Even before the Rev. Turner had issued his benediction, the congregation in the Starboard Battery could hear threatening voices being raised against the cuts: 'It's the lot! .... And they've bloody weLl had it!'" Shortly before midday Lt-Cdr Harry Pursey, one of the handful of officers to have won promotion from the lower deck and later a distinguished Labour MP, was approached by a trusted member of the lower deck. Shown a copy of one of the Sunday papers with banner heacllines of the cuts, he was told 'The lads won't stand for this'." Within a few minutes Pursey had passed the paper to Cdr McCrum, to whom he offered the foLlowing prescient warning: If these cuts are not reduced there will be trouble If there is trouble, it wiLl be on Tuesday-at eight o'clock Four capital ships due to sail.... It's tailor-made for the job.
149
The capital ships in question were Valiant, Nelsoll, Hood and Rodlley, due to sail on the morning of Tuesday 15th for gunnery exercises in the orth Sea. McCrum dismissed the suggestion, assuring Pursey that 'We shaLl be aLl right on this ship'.'· Events were to prove otherwise. Meanwhile, leaders were emerging from the 12,000 men gathered in the Cromarty Firth. Out of the blue fug that fiLled every flat, caboose and messdeck came the germ of plans that could only be implemented in concert with a significant part of the fleet. These meetings were largely the preserve of stokers and seamen of at least ix years' seniority yet below the rating of petty officer. 'Petty officers made themselves scarce, and the younger ratings were kept out of it, some accused of letting the others down by enlisting on lower pay.''' aD Roland Purvis of the battleship Malaya lost count of the number of times he was told 'Push off, sonny, this is nothing to do with you'." One of the leaders, AB Len Wincott of the Norfolk, had already taken advantage of the Catholic mass celebrated in the Malaya that Sunday morning to gauge opinion in the fleet and pass word of the canteen meeting that night. At midday Capt. 1.F.e. Patterson of the Hood received inteLligence of this gathering from his counterpart in the Warspite, though Tomkinson was apparently not informed and no pre-emptive action was taken. Quite the contrary, leave was given at 13.00 as usual and men began to pour ashore. Even in view of the footbaLl final being held that afternoon, the number of libertymen heading for lnvergordon was unprecedented. Although Patterson and McCrum found nothing untoward during a visit ashore, the men knew different and by late afternoon many were drifting away from the footbaLl pitches and into the large canteen overlooking the anchorage. The Hood's contingent, whose team had defeated Norfolk 2-0, no doubt had something to queLl their anger but it could only be a temporary paLliative. The men were angry at the cuts and at the breach of faith implied by them; angry above all that the government and the Admiralty thought them stupid enough to take it lying down. LS Sam Wheat:
Rear·Admiral Wilfred Tomkinson, whose career was broken by the Invergordon Mutiny.
Capt. Julian Patterson: powerless to influence events.
II
'The Invergordon Mutiny: For the
mutiny itself, see Edwards, The Mlltin)' at ltll'ergordotl, Owen, Mlltiny i" the Royal Navy (the
Austen Chamberlain [First Lord of the Admiraltyl was the bloke-they'd've crucified him if they could've bloody got him, believe you me. [... J Because he thought that none of the Navy had any inteLligence at aLl. [... 1To take a shilling a day from each one was, to put it mildly, bloody silly. [... ) I mean, they thought that the chaps were uninteLligent and this is really what caused it. I think they'd've got away with it if they'd said 'WeLl, we're going to reduce your pay by 5%' or whatever it is ... But to do that made them look like nincompoops, as though they didn't know anything at all." Besides, there was the very real issue of whether the men's families could subsist on the new rates. As one of the Hood's leaders put it in a letter to TlJe Daily Herald a few days later, We are fighting for our wives and children. The cuts cannot hit us on board ship. We have not to keep ourselves except in a few essentials, some clothing, soap, shoeblacking and so on. We have cut out the luxuries long ago. We cannot do it on less than 5s. a week. Our wives, after the rent is paid, have no more than a pound. How can they stand a cut of 7s. 6d.?'"
For the background see Carew, The Lower Deck, and especially id..
Staff history), Divine. Mllti,,), at Jtll'ergordotl, and Roskill, Naval Policy, II, pp. 89-133. Wincott, Itn'ergordOfI Muti"eer is a highly suspect account; see the critique of it by Cdr Harry Pursey in N~'IM, Elkins/II. The essential chronology is provided by Pursey, 'Invergordon: First Hand-Last Word?'. However, the only comprehensive coverage is Pursey's unfinished history of the mutiny, a draft of which survives in NMM, Pursey/14. For the Hood's involvement, see Ereira, Tile IIH'ergordo" Mutiny and Coles, 11l1'ergordotl Scapegoat, pp. 113-31. Carew, The Lower Deck, pp. 140-1. I~ Pursey, 'Invergordon: First Hand-Last \Vord?', p. 159. 's Ibid., p. 160. 16 MM, Pursey/11. ., Carew, The Lower Deck, p. 160. The 'lower pay' in question refers to the 1925 scales. 's Ibid., p. 249. .9 nVM/SA, LS Samuel George Wheat, no. 5807. 1O The Daily Herald, 17 September 1931, p. 2. U
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
150
II
Ereira, The itn'ergordon Mutiny. p. 60, and Coles & Briggs, Flagship
Hood,p.54.
" I\IIM/SA, no. 5807.
Cited in Ereira, The Invergordon Mutiny, p. 65. 24 Pursey, 'Invergordon: First Hand-Last Word?: p. 160. " 'MM, E1kins/2, Report, p. 3. U
,. I':'
MM,
Pursey/15.
Cited in Ereira, The lmwgordon Mutiny. pp. SO-I.
What began as a sombre occasion gathered steam as the evening wore on and the depth of feeling began to make itself felt. Many, including LS Charles Spinks of the Hood, clambered onto tables to deliver speeches and opinions that often owed more to alcohol than common sense. But among them was Wincoll, a born orator, who, taking up a theme already mooted, urged the men to remain in their ships and implement a campaign of passive resistance when the order came to put to sea. His words had an electrifying effect on the crowd, now over 600 strong. One who heard them was Rear-Admiral E.A. Astley-Ru hton, commanding the 2nd Cruiser Squadron, who found himself outside the canteen as Wincott was in full flow. Astley-Rushton immediately informed the shore patrol, manned that night by men of the Warspite, which promptly called for reinforcements from the Hood. By the time these appeared an increasingly rowdy gathering had dispersed and the men were heading back to their ships, many singing The Frothblower's Anthem-'The more we are together the merrier we will be.. .'-though some in the Hood's drifter felt the need to shout 'We're not yellowbellies!' to taunts from others." As they did so the Nelson, Hodges' flagship, finally steamed into Invergordon carrying the Admiralty cipher warning of the cuts that had supposedly been in Tomkinson's hands a week earlier, along with AL. cwo 8284/31 of 10 September, a letter to all flag and commanding officers justifying the measures. Astley-Rushton came aboard Hood to discuss the events ashore with Tomkinson, but these were dismissed as being of no consequence and the Admiralty was ignalled to this effect the following morning. Despite the taunts, the Hood's libertymen returned to a ship in which, as LS Sam Wheat put it, the overwhelming sentiment wa ' 0, we ain't 'avin' this'.Zl onetheless, the men settled down for the night and the ship's routine began normally the following morning though Cdr McCrum, sensing the volatile atmosphere, limited work to 'a little General Drill' which was performed in a somewhat perfunctory manner. 2J Shortly after 10.00 Tomkinson signalled his captains ordering them to explain the contents of AL. cwo 8284/31 to the men. He was no doubt astonished to learn that it had been received in only five of the twelve ships in harbour, and it is no surprise that subsequent efforts to interpret the cuts tended to poison the atmosphere still further. 0 it wa in the Hood, where the mood of the men was being stoked by copies of the Daily Worker which had come aboard that morning. The order to clear lower deck was passed at 11.45, but according to Pursey Capt. Patterson's recommendation that the men bring hardship cases to the attention of their divisional officers was greeted with angry calls of 'We're all hardship cases!'" His suggestion that they refrain from illegal action and channel their grievances through him can't have cut much ice either. However, daily routine continued and shore leave was granted at 16.30, this despite every indication in the Hood and elsewhere that a further meeting was planned for the canteen that evening. Among the many hundreds going ashore that Monday evening was Lt Robert Elkins, in command of the Valiant's shore patrol and charged with arresting anyone suspected of subversive activity. As on the previous night, at least 600 men gathered in the canteen to hear speeches and settle on the action to be taken. The speeches were mostly of an inflammatory nature and it was while AB 'Ginger' Bond of the Rodney was delivering one of these that Elkins reached the canteen at
18.15. Gaining entry, he met a hostile reception, being struck by a beer glass and eventually bundled out into the cold, the doors locked behind him. However, he succeeded in being readmitted to the meeting, which broke up to reassemble on a nearby recreation ground. Having called for the Hood's reinforcing patrol Elkins followed the crowd to a spot where men were speaking from the roof of a wooden hut. Among them was a Marine, apparently from the Hood, whose medals denoted him a a veteran of the Great War: He talked a good deal about pay and War Service, and again demanded 'What are we going to do about it?' This time the crowd called out 'Pack up!', and he said 'Tonight or tomorrow?' There was a good deal of laughing and someone said 'After breakfast-when we've had it!'" At 19.30 the meeting adjourned back to the canteen, though many took the opportunity to get off to their ships. By this time the Hood's patrol had made its appearance under Lt-Cdr L.G.E. Robinson who marched into the canteen with the intention of closing it for the night. Robinson got up on the bar but was hard put to it to make himself heard over the noise: For some minutes I was shouted down, but the majority of the men were shouting 'Give him a fair hearing'-'Let's hear what he's got to say', and eventually I had silence. I told the men they were going the wrong way about things and would only bring discredit on themselves and the avy. That they should bring up any complaints in the Service manner and that I would permit of no more speeches." Robinson's speech impressed Wincott and ended the meeting but it swayed only a minority, who were violently overborne by the rest. As the men headed for the jetty to return to their ships they did so in the certain knowledge that an irrevocable decision had been taken: the Atlantic Fleet would not be sailing on the morrow. Down on the jetty the libertymen embarked for their ships in what Tomkinson later described as 'a very disorderly manner'. Shouts of'Don't forget-six o'clock tomorrow' were drifting across the anchorage as searchlights began to play over the pier. Those in the Hood's drifter, the Horizon, were belting out stanzas of The Red Flag, a court-martial offence. The din interrupted a dinner party being given by Tomkinson for the fleet commanders, the Officer of the Watch, Lt ).S. Gabbett, ordering the Horizon to layoff until the men were silent. However, the singing was a clear indication to the Hood's lower deck that something had been settled ashore. By the time Elkins got away from the pier to report to Tomkinson at around 21.00 a crowd of over 100 cheering men had gathered in the eyes of the ship where a rating was inciting them to refuse work in the morning. Boy Harold Prestage R. .V.R. recorded the scene: A stoker spoke, very emotional about keeping wife and two kids on three shillings a day. He said he owed ten pounds, how was he to pay? Several others spoke. They say we on the Hood are blacklegs and cowards, our people did not seem to support the crowd on hore much. At last after much haggling they decide to down tools at eight o'clock tomorrow morning."
Disaster and Recovery, 1931-1936
Once again, the lack of enthusiasm for action noted among the Hood's contingent ashore is significant in the light of subsequent events. Certainl}', as a newly commissioned ship with a high level of morale her men were unlikely to hare the militant tendency which characterised Valiallt and Rodlley. Whatever the case, her officers were under no illusion as to the gravity of the situation. Gabbett greeted Elkin on the quarterdeck with the information that there had been trouble aboard. 28 On his way to the wardroom he met Lt-Cdr Longley-Cook who invited him to dinner aboard the following week 'if there were still a avy'. Already at least one messdeck had sent a representative to its divisional officer." Not the least informed was Tomkinson who, as Elkins put it, gave the impression of knowing 'a good deal about it already', though clearly did not think it 'so bad as it sounded'. With this view a majority of the senior commanders were in agreement. How wrong they were. McCrum had the forecastle cleared by the Master-at-Arms and one of the regulating petty officers, but a number of men were detailed by the ship's committee to spend the night on deck and send down a warning if any attempt were made to weigh anchor.'" The size and composition of this committee, how it came into being and the means by which it influenced events in the Hood and liaised with those in other ships remains shrouded in mystery. Indeed, virtually nothing of the internal structure and organisation of the Hood's mutiny has survived for posterity. either, at 70 years' remove, can the atmosphere prevailing on the Hood's decks and messes, in her
151
passageways and spaces public and private during those six fateful days be reconstructed in any but the vaguest terms. Both then and later the crew closed ranks to protect the identity of the 'spoke men' who organised the mutiny and those who succoured and lent it their support, often at the cost of their careers in the avy. But, for the committee as for the ship herself, the moment of truth was drawing near. That night, in an incident no doubt repeated countless times on the lower deck, R.A. Feltham was roused by a leading hand and told to lash up and stow in the morning but obey no orders thereafter." On Tuesday 15 eptember the crew duly turned to at 06.00 but all eyes were on Ifaliallt and Rodlley upon whose action the success or failure of the mutiny depended. Full muster in the Hood encouraged her officers to believe that their shjp would remain unaffected by what all now sensed was coming, but in this they were soon to be disabused. Making his way down to the boiler rooms, Stoker Walter Hargreaves found his progress barred by a big stoker who told him to 'get back' and left him in no doubt of the result if he didn't." When by 07.00 it was obvious that neither Valiallt nor Rodlley was being prepared for sea, the forecastles of the eight major vessels left in the anchorage began to fill with crowds of cheering men. Stoker Charles Wild shut down the hydraulic pumping engine on which he worked, downed tools and headed forward." At around 07.45 Cdr McCrum went forward, climbed onto one of the ship's capstans and implored the men gathered among the shackles to return to work. The request was politely declined A gathering on the Hood's forecastle during the Invergordon Mutiny, probably
Wednesday 16 September t931. lIIuw.t«J London ~
II
"
~!(M, EikinsJ2, Diary, p. 1. MM, Purseylt5. R.A. Feltham '0
Cdr Harry Pursey, Gosport. 22 October 1961. JO IWM/SA, SlOker 2nd Class Charles Edward Wild, no. 5835. ,. NMM, Pursey/IS. J\VMJSA. no. 5831. Stoker 2nd Class (1931). " IWM/SA, no. 5835. )1
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
152
and his place taken by a sailor intent on stopping the ship weighing anchor. Four decks below a party of men led by a chief stoker refused to allow the Engineer watch keeper to run the capstan engine." In the cable-locker Rat a similar effort to unshackle the bridle by the Torpedo Officer, Lt-Cdr j.F.\V. Mudford, provides a cameo of the quiet resistance encountered by officers of the Atlantic Fleet that morning: With pelty officers and a few available hands from the cable party I went on to the forecastle to unshackle the first bridle. 0 marines were present in the cable-locker Rat so that both the naval pipes and cable lockers had to be uncovered by my mall party. The demonstrators were standing over both bridles and the hawsepipe cover, which was still in place. I went amongst them to view the cables and was immediately hemmed about by the crowd who stood a yard or two away from me. One man shouted 'What's the use of trying to take the ship to sea like this?' I said 'What about it! If I give order to heave in, are you going to stop me?' They replied 'Yes, Sir, we shall have to'. I felt it would be unwise to use force without instructions to do so from higher authority, and the futility of giving a direct order to so large a number of men, when I knew I could not possibly enforce that order, was too obvious." Indeed, the strategy couldn't have been simpler. R.A. Feltham: It was made quite clear that we were to keep everything clean and ship-shape, and that the object was to keep the Fleet from going to sea until something was done about our pay."
" IWM/SA, Stoker ISl Class
Nicholas Smiles Carr (193
Report of Proceedings, p. 3. " IWM/SA, LS Samuel George Wheat, no. 5807. .. IWM/ A, no. 5807 & 5835.
Cited in Carew, 'The 'm'ergordon Mutiny: p. 182. " Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, p.62. 41
Wincott,lm'crgordon Mutineer, pp.121-2. " Ibid., p. 123. u I\V~I/SA. no. 580i. 4J
'Colours' was carried out with due ceremony on the quarterdeck at 08.00, but no sooner had they been hoisted than cheering erupted across the anchorage. Only 30 per cent of the Hood' crew fell in for work at 08.30 and the howl of deri ion directed at them from the Rodlley settled the matter. The Invergordon Mutiny had broken out. The sequence of events in the Hood over the hour or so that followed remains unclear. There are unsubstantiated reports that Lt-Cdr Pursel' volunteered to go forward and clear the forecastle with his revolver. J7 If true, the offer was wi ely declined by McCrum who had already informed Capt. Patterson that 'no good purpose was likely to be served by my also addressing them'." However, it does seem that a large meeting then took place in the fore topmen's mess on the upper deck amidships at which an unnamed AB made it perfectly clear to all and sundry that 'We're not going to let this bloody ship sail'.'" It was also made plain that this was not a mutiny but a strike, and that there was to be no violence. When it was over parties of men returned to the forecastle where a heavy wire hawse was rove through the cables and round the capstan to prevent the anchor being slipped.'· Shortly after 09.00 Tomkinson cancelled the planned exercise and informed the Admiralty of the situation. Much to the officers' surprise, once it became obvious to the crew that the Hood would not be putting to sea the ship slipped quietly back into harbour routine. ormal work and divisional drill continued against the background of poradic cheering between ships, not all of it cordial: it is quite obvious that the Hood's return to work provoked considerable resentment in
the Rodlley. onetheless, parties of men kept a permanent watch on the forecastle, from where any developments were communicated to the mes decks below. A AB Fred Copeman of the orfo/k later explained, the choice of the forecastle was an obvious one: If you're on the forecastle no one el e can get there. The hatches from the seamen's mess deck lead directly to the forecastle. If the marines are with you no one can do anything about it. Every ship did the same." But it wasn't all toil and angst. Many took the opportunity of 'having a good time' in the benign autumn weather. The ship's deck hockey tournament was advanced and rehearsals began for a concert party." On the Rodlle)' one of the messdeck pianos was hoisted onto a turret for a stoker to keep the men entertained with the latest music-hall hits. He was Rung out of the avy for his pains. Communication with neighbouring ships-Rodlley, Dorsetshire and Warspite in Hood's case-was carried out in the first instance by means of Rags and then by the use of caps, short-arm semaphore and aid is lights. Wireless was used briefly until cut off in mid-morning. Quite frequently the messages transmitted were no more than 'sticking out okay', for which regular crossing of forearms, lowering of the Union Flag at the jackstaff or hourly cheering ufficed. In this the mutineers made use of the subtle body language with which sailors always communicated. Len Wincott: ... If the crew of a passing motorboat from another striking ship showed crossed forearms, it conveyed to us that the men of that ship were still solid in their strike. This was not a planned signal. The crossed forearms were one of many unofficial signals that had entered avy life years and years before and actually meant 'Tie up' or 'Finish'. In our particular circumstances at Invergordon it was automatically adopted to mean something moreY The ship's boats were active throughout, used by both mutineers and officers, though manned by pelty officers in the laller case. Discipline in the Va/iam collapsed to such a degree that the Hood was obliged to provide a boat for the lise of her captain. Officers had difficulty communicating from ship to ship but Tomkinson was saved by the loyalty of the Hood's telegraphists thanks to whom he maintained steady contact with London. eedless to say, the officers of the Atlantic Fleet found themselves in an exceedingly difficult position. Not only had they received no more warning of the cuts than the men, but the erosion of discipline was profoundly di turbing for those accustomed to orders being obeyed without question. Many would have preferred Tomkinson to have taken a firmer line but others, perhaps for the first time in their careers, were completely at a loss as to what to do. The frustration that caused Lt-Cdr R.H.S. Rodger of the orfo/k to ask 'What do you want?' of Wincott and his companions therefore went hand in hand with a growing anger at the Admiralty that had landed them in this ghastly situation." As one of the Hood's lieutenant-commanders told LS Sam Wheat, 'This is the worst bastard thing the Admiralty has ever done to us'." It fell to Tomkinson to bring an initially belligerent Admiralty to a full
Disaster and Recovery, 1931-1936
realization of the issue facing the 1 avy. Orders were pas ed for the investigation of hardship cases to begin and at midday Tomkinson let it be known that he was sending the Chief of taff, Rear-Admiral Reginald Colvin. to London by air to confer with Their Lordships. These measures evidently had their desired effect and the atmosphere in the Hood eased as the men decided to await the response of the Admiralty. For many. indeed, it was their first opportunity to reflect on the day's events and the possible consequences. As Stoker Charles Wild put it. 'Everybody was really kind of stunned with what they were doing... I think everybody was apprehensive of what was going to happen·... That evening the ship's cinema was rigged and the men settled down for a ten e night. The first indication of a response came with the morning papers on Wednesday 16th. in which the Admiralty's optimistic characterisation of the mutiny as 'unrest among a proportion of the lower ratings' provoked considerable anger. During the 10.30 Stand Easy Lt-Cdr Pursey was again approached by a rating brandishing a newspaper: 'It's all up again. sir'. 'Why?', 'Admiralty statement "unrest".' ... 'What do they want us to do? Chuck the bloody guns overboard?' ., The news caught the Hood at a particularly delicate moment. ot for the first time the resumption of work after Stand Easy was received with some disgust in the nearby Rodlley. herself largely at a standstill. Opinions were hardened by the rumours circulating during 'Up Spirits' at 11.15 that the ship was to be interned at Scapa Flow or placed under clo e arre t at Portsmouth. For a few hours the Hood teetered on the brink of open mutiny and only resolute action by IcCrum prevented her joining the most militant ships in the fleet. Capt. Patterson: The normal work of the ship proceeded throughout the forenoon. though the atmosphere was somewhat strained. It unfortunately happened that the turn of the tide coincided with 'Stand Easy' in the forenoon, with the result that the two ship [Hood and Rodlley) were swung parallel with one another. A mutual demonstration of cheering between the men assembled on Rodlley's forecastle and the men who had gone forward for a smoke during 'Stand Easy' in Hood took place. The e men returned to their work after 'Stand Easy' but there is little doubt that some signals and signs were exchanged to the effect that Hood's ship's company were not supporting the cause with sufficient enthusiasm. During the dinner hour one or two leading seamen reported to the commander that the feeling on the mess decks was growing strongly in favour of stopping work, and that the life of those against it was being made difficult. It became evident from various sources that the men would probably not 'Turn To' after dinner, and just before the routine time for falling in the hands the Senior Engineer reported to the Commander that the stokers appeared to be not coming down below. In order to avoid an open demonstration. the hand were piped to 'Make and Mend Clothes'. This took them omewhat by surprise and resulted in their proceeding down below to sleep instead of cheering on the forecastle."
153
For the Hood at least this was the high point of the mutiny. However. there was not much longer to wait. Tomkinson had finally succeeded in bringing home to the Admiralty the dire con equence that might ensue from its refu al to make the necessary concession. At 15.10 the following signal was received from London: The Board of Admiralty is fully alive to the fact that amongst certain classes of ratings special hardship will result from the reduction of pay ordered by H.M. Government. It is therefore directed that ships of the Atlantic Fleet are to proceed to their home ports forthwith to enable personal investigation by C.-in-C.s and repre entatives of Admiralty with view to necessary alleviation being made. Any further refusals of individuals to carry out orders will be dealt with under the laval Discipline Act. Thi ignal i to be promulgated to the Fleet forthwith" Tomkinson allowed the gist of the signal to reach the men in the form of a 'buzz', the eternal currency of the lower deck. The news was received with relief by some but many regarded it with deep suspicion. The directive was interpreted. rightly. as an attempt to end the mutiny and winnow the ringleaders out from the rest. The signal immediately caused a rupture between those for whom a return to home ports meant another spell of leave and those. usually from Scotland and the orth of England. who tended to regard it as a potential trap. It was in this atmosphere that Capt. Patterson cleared lower deck at 16.45 and addressed the ship's company from 'A' turret while Tomkinson looked on from the bridge: ... 1informed the ship's company of the decision. At the same time I informed them that I could guarantee that any rumours as to this being a ruse to divide the Fleet were entirely unfounded and that any further refusal on their part would do still further harm to their cause. The information was received in silence. and the men then dispersed. so The speech was certainly not received in silence. In fact, it was punctuated by a stream of ribald comment from his audience: 'All me eye and Betty Martin' ... 'Scapa Flow' ... 'Spithead' ... 'We stay here .. .'." Worse. during his address Patterson made the mistake of mentioning that 'Of course. we haven't had the Royal Marines up here'. a comment that was taken as a veiled threat. For a crew suspicious that the ship might be boarded by Marines at Spithead it met with a predictable response: 'You get the bastards up here!', a reaction which, among other things, shows how difficult had been the position of the Hood's Marine detachment." As was no doubt the intention. the Admiralty signal provoked considerable debate in the fleet and prompted choruses of shouting and cheering across the anchorage. AB Alex Paterson, later a commander and one of the few willing to show his opposition to the mutiny. recalls the aftermath of the captain's speech in the Hood:
.. tWM/SA. no. 5835. 41 Purser. 'In\'ergordon: First Hand-Last \\'ord?', p. 162. ... PRO,AD~t 178/110, Patterson's Report of Proceedings. pp. 4-5. The suggestion that a 'Make and ~Iend Clothes' be piped was apparently made by Pursey himself; Purser. 'In\'ergordon: First Hand-Last \\'ord?', p. 163.
.., Reproduced in Di"ine,Mmi")'aI Itll'ergordon, p. 171.
Within five minutes a two-badge able seaman convinced nearly everyone the signal to sail was a trick to get the ships to sea and to separate them so they lost mutual support. which would lead to the arrest of the leaders. He claimed
,. PRO, ADM 178/110. Patlerson's Report of Proceedings. p. 5. 51 Purser, 'In\'ergordon: First Hand-Last Word?'. p. 163. " IW~IJSA, LS Samuel George Wheat. no. 580;.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
154
the cuts would be made and money never restored. He then called for a vote, with a show of hands. Those in favour of not putting to sea were overwhelming. Only four hands were raised in favour of weighing anchor." But debate continued and the concern of the crew eventually boiled down to whether the ship would indeed return to Portsmouth, and what their reputation would be if they allowed her to do so. On the other hand, no ship wished to face the wrath of the Admiralty alone at Invergordon. Lt-Cdr Pursey captures the dilemma of a majority of the crew: Master-at-Arms reported to Commander: 'Stoker X wishes to see you, sir,' Stoker: 'We've had a meeting on the fo'c'sle and we've decided: if other ships don't go ... we won't go. If other ships go ... we will go .... We won't stay here alone .... Can you please tell us whether the other ships will go?' Commander: 'Quite honestly ... 1don't know. When 1do 1 will let you know,''' The first sign that a decision had been reached came at 17.00 when the full engine-room watch turned to for lighting up the boilers. However, cheering and shouting continued from the forecastle where the cable party was prevented from doing its work. AB Paterson: As we came through the forward screen of the forecastle, we were greeted by loud cheers and laughter from what seemed to be most of the ship's company. Several sailors, who were sitting on the lashed cables, eyed us suspiciously. One glance by u was enough to decide that the anchor couldn't possibly be weighed without a full party. Ill-Cdr} Longley-Cook was politely informed they had no intention of moving without the use of force. Longley-Cook did not argue and withdrew to report to the captain." onethele ,by 20.00 the men were preparing for sea and the dire agreement made between Patterson and Capt. ).B. Watson of the elsoll that the cables be parted if necessary had never to be implemented." Parties of men began taking their stations, the bridle were un hackled and the hawse rove through the cables the previous morning was removed without difficulty. However, Tomkinson was by no means certain that the rest of his command would follow suit. Indeed, at 19.45 he signalled the Admiralty that'l am not sure that all ships will leave as ordered but some will go'. In the event, a change of orders allowing ships to proceed independently rather than by squadron extinguished the last embers of resistance. By 23.30 the fleet had cleared Invergordon.
........11I>-Cited in Coles & Briggs. Flagship Hood, p.65. }4 Purser, 'Invergordon: First S.I
Hand-last Word?', p. 163. " Cited in Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, p.66. 56 Ereira, The J,,,,ergordotl Mutiny. p. 137. and CoI~, Itlvergordotl Scapegoat, pp. 130-1. 57
Pursey, 'In\'ergordon: First
Hand-last Word?', p. 163. " See also Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, pp. io-l.
o sooner had the last ship passed through the Sutors guarding the entrance to the Cromarty Firth than the aftermath of the Invergordon Mutiny began. On the evening of Thursday 17th the Hood's officers were invited to a S.O.D.. opera performed by the ship's company which, as Pursey recalled, 'treated [the] whole affair as one big lark'." But no one could be under any illusion as to the challenges that lay ahead. That morning married men on the 1919 scales had made it plain that they did not wish their hardship statements to be taken by
divisional officers with no experience of family affairs. Cdr McCrum obliged with the unprecedented step of himself receiving their statements in his cabin. It was the start of a new era in officer-sailor relations. Shortly after 06.30 on aturday 19 eptember the Hood docked at Portsmouth. Leave wa given until Monday evening and the pubs of Pompey filled with blabbing sailors, Communist agitators and badly disguised secret-service agents. Hardship statements continued to be taken, but on 21 September the government announced that the pay cuts would be reduced to a maximum of 10 per cent. In the event an order passed on I October placed the entire avy on the 1919 rates less II per cent. The lower deck could savour a victory of sorts but for the government and the avy the damage was done. ews of the mutiny had been followed by a run on the pound and within days it wa announced that Britain had been forced off the Gold Standard. Meanwhile, the Admiralty began to set its house in order through a policy of punitive action and vigorous self-exculpation. On 6 October Admiral Sir John Kelly, a confidant of King George V and much respected on the lower deck, succeeded Hodges as Commander-in-Chief, Atlantic Fleet. It was a condition of Kelly's acceptance that he be allowed to make a clean sweep of the fleet and sweep he did. He was particularly adamant that the Invergordon ringleaders be rooted out and expelled from the avy. Despite the amnesty promised by Chamberlain to Parliament after the fleet had left Invergordon, 120 men were confined to barracks before it sailed north in early October, ten of them from the Hood. 0 sooner had the general election of 27 October returned MacDonald's ational Government than most of these were discharged, the first of nearly 400 undesirables to be ejected from the avy over the next few months" or were these the only casualties. Despite favourable remarks on his conduct, in its zeal to absolve itself of blame the Board of Admiralty began gradually to lay responsibility for the mutiny at Tomkinson's door. There is certainly much in the view that Tomkinson allowed matters to develop by not preventing the meetings being held ashore, but his treatment by the Admiralty represents the final chapter in one of the most discreditable episodes in its history. After a decent amount of time had been allowed to elapse, on 2 February 1932 the Admiralty issued two letters addressed to Tomkinson, the first promoting him vice-admiral and curtailing his tenure as squadron commander by eight months, and the second censuring him for his handling of the mutiny. Of this Tomkinson received his first inkling by means of a BBC broadcast picked up in the Hood's WIT office as she layoff Trinidad on 16 February. Tomkinson fought a bitter rearguard action but it was to no avail and his career in the avy was broken. It is a measure of how out of touch the Admiralty was that no official investigation of the causes of the Invergordon Mutiny was ever carried out, a decision which provoked much criticism in the avy. Months after the event senior officers were still unaware whether their conduct had met with the approval of the Admiralty or if they would eventually join the list of casualties. The gulf-like gap between the views of the Board on the one hand and those of the officers who lived through it on the other is nowhere better demonstrated than in the extracts which follow. First the Admiralty's view, promulgated to the Atlantic Fleet in October:
Disaster and Recovery, 1931-1936
The Board of Admiralty has given full consideration to the reports received on the serious refusal of duty which occurred in some of the principal hips of the Atlantic Fleet at Invergordon on the 15th-16th September last. otwithstanding the decision that, owing to the exceptional circumstances, no disciplinary action should be taken, this insubordinate behaviour was, in Their Lordships' opinion, inexcusable. Their Lordships note with great satisfaction that, in the whole of the rest of the avy, the ships' companies acted, at a very critical time, in accordance with the high tradition of the Service. They desire, however, to impress on all Officers and Men that this failure in discipline by a small part of the Fleet has done grave injury to the prestige of the whole avy and to the country. They look with confidence to every Officer and Man to do his utmost to restore the proud position the Royal avy has always had in the eyes of the world." Against this 'ineffable display of smugness' can be set Capt. Patterson's reasoned conclusions as to the cause of the mutiny, in which, like Tomkinson, his sympathy with the men is quite apparent: I am of the opinion that the primary cause of the intense outburst of feeling on the part of the lower ratings was the sudden shock they received in the announcement of the reductions without any previous preparation. The feeling of unjust treatment was sufficient to unite them and make them very easily influenced to take strong and concerted action on their own lines, rather than await more patiently the orthodox methods which they were convinced would not be effective in the short time available'o The gently chiding tone of Patterson's comments no doubt helped seal his fate as well, and he surrendered his command together with Tomkinson in August 1932. Within a few months, however, the Board that had presided over the Invergordon Mutiny was itself no more, and by year's end the Atlantic Fleet had become the Home Fleet. Historians will record that the 'quiet mutiny' was in fact less a mutiny than a strike, though it was one which after the frustrations of the Great War and the trials of the 1920s came close to destroying the Navy. Luckily, a new Board of Admiralty proved equal to the task of restoring its fortunes. For the Hood, too, a new regime awaited, one that, for a few fleeting years, brought her to the height of her glory. For the lower deck, meanwhile, the Invergordon Mutiny was looked back on as a rubicon in its relations with authority. As LS Sam Wheat put it, It did a bit of good. It did make them ee that you had
intelligent people in the Service, and that they were not going to be trampled on." How this realization affected the Hood is what concerns us next.
· .......t r--
155
The appointment of'Darby' Kelly brought a breath of fre hair to the Atlantic Fleet. 0 sooner had hi appointment taken effect than he was moving from ship to ship, addressing the men in their own pungent language, admitting past wrongs and attempting to instil confidence in the future. Anxious no doubt to lay a ghost, within a month of the mutiny Kelly had brought the fleet back to Invergordon for a week of intensive drill where earlier it had lain idle. Despite Kelly's report at the end of November that the fleet was at a high level of efficiency, morale remained low, particularly in the Hood which Tomkinson suggested should be recommissioned with a fresh crew. To have done so would have placed her in the same category as the Valiant and the Adventure, which were ignominiously paid off before the end of the year. The Admiralty refused and Christmas leave was taken early. In the ew Year Tomkinson led the Hood on a spring cruise to the Caribbean accompanied by Repulse, Norfolk, Dorsetsllire and Deilli. Under normal circumstances this might have acted as a huge fillip for morale but the cruise was overshadowed first by enormous seas between the Lizard and the Azores and finally by the news that both Tomkinson and Patterson had fallen victim to the attrition of senior officers that followed the mutiny. It is also clear that Tomkinson's personality made for an extremely unhappy wardroom, and by the time he hauled down his flag on IS August 1932 the Admiralty had reconsidered it earlier decision not to payoff the Hood. The arrival of Rear-Admiral William james that same day heralded a new era for the Hood, one which was to make a lasting impression on the avy as a whole. The collective sigh of relief is captured in a tanza by Paymaster Lt j.T. Shrirnpton, a member of Tomkinson's staff, penned two days before james' arrival: The summer days are on the wing, The bathers' cries are echoing, When news of a momentous thing Through the warm air goes humming; We hear the staff now softly sing, 'The King is dead-long live the King!' The new regime, the new regime, The new regime is coming.·' WiJJiam james was born into one of those upper-middle class families from which the avy has drawn much of its officer corp. His early years were blighted by the portrait of him as a child executed by his grandfather, the artist Sir john Millais, which, as the advertisement for Pear's soap, became one of the first icons of Briti h marketing. From this came an enduring nickname: 'Bubbles'. Despite this stigma, james entered the Navy where he was in the vanguard of officers who embraced the revolution in gunnery led by Admiral Sir Percy Scott at the turn of the twentieth century. He first came to prominence in 1909 as Gunnery Officer of the crui er alai, his crews smashing all records for speed and accuracy during the annual firing competitions of the Home Fleet. More even than his technical ability, james had the gift of drawing the best out of his men and when W.R. Hall, his last captain in the Natal, was appointed to the battlecruiser Queen Mary in 1913, james followed as executive officer." Between them, HaJJ and james refined the divisional system and devised a revolutionary watch routine destined to be adopted by all British capital ships on the out-
" Reproduced in Divine. Milt;"! at It1vergordon. pp. 208-9. .. PRO, ADM 178/110, Pan",on',
Report of Proceedings. p. 6; Tomkinson's conclusions in his Report of Proceeding', 22 September 1931, p. 13, are
remarkably similar. " IWM/SA, no. 5807. 62IShrimptonJ. Verses. p. 3. 6J James, The Sky h't1s Alulays Blue,
pp.77-ll2.
156
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
first time in my eighteen years al sea I was told what the peacetime job of the Royal avy was. To train for war in order to keep the peace. To 'show the flag'. In home waters to show the British public what they were paying for and abroad to be good ambassadors for Great Britain. From then on it was 'tails up'.·'
Vice-Admiral William James inspecting the port side of the boat deck abreast the forward funnel in 1933 or 1934. Inboard, covered in a grille, is one of the vents for 'A' and 'B' boiler rooms. Third from right is It-Cdr J.H. Ruck-Keene; fifth from right is Capt. F.T.B. Tower and next to him is Cdr Rory O'(onor. It was under James that the Hood began her lengthy recovery from the Invergordon Mutiny. HMS Hood AssociationlWillis Collection
break of the Great War. This implemented, they turned to conditions aboard, and it was in this ship that cinema, a chapel, bookstall and electric washing machines made their first appearance afloat in the Royal Navy. ext they saw to improved bathing facilities for stokers and allowed petty officers to rearrange their accommodation in line with their new standing in the Service. James left the Queerl Mary in January 1916, just months before she was destroyed at Jutland, but the ideas and procedures pioneered in her were enshrined in New Battleship Organisations, the influential manual on ship husbandry he completed early that same year. M The Hood therefore provided fertile ground for James' particular talents, and rarely can a ship have needed them more. As he later wrote, I never met a more unhappy party than when I relieved Tomkinson. He and his Flag Captain Patterson were at daggers drawn, and the Commander, McCrum, had lost all interest through being hunted by Tomkinson whose habit it was to find fault with everything.·s
M
65
Cdr W.M. James, New Battleship Organisations and Notes for Executive Officers (Portsmouth: Gieve's, 1916). CAe, ROSK, card index.
James. Tile Sky \Vas Always BIlle, p.163. "HMS Hood Association archives, Address to the Association, 24 May 1980. in 1980 newsletter, p. 2. .. Wincotl, Juvergorrlotl Mutineer, 66
p. 69
n.
James, Tile Sky \Vas Always Bille, p.179.
As so oflen , James broughl with him as Flag Captain a companion from earlier days, in this case Thomas Binney, his executive officer in the cruiser Hawkins. It was to prove an inspired choice. Judging that the Hood had 'a first-rate lot of officers and a fine ship's company', within weeks these two had persuaded the Admiralty to drop its decision to pay her off, judging this 'a confession that it was beyond the powers of naval officers to dispel the gloomy atmosphere and restore vitality and happiness'." But restore them they did. James' overture to the crew on his arrival set the tone for the rest of her peacetime career. Admiral Longley-Cook remembers the occasion: We sailed to Southend and again on a Sunday forenoon 'clear lower deck, everyone aft'. He addressed us. How differently! '1 am proud to have joined you' and for the
True to his word, James' tenure began with week-long visits to Sou thend and then Hartlepool, one of the towns worst affected by Ihe Depression. Children's parties were held aboard and entertainments arranged for the men ashore. At Hartlepool the ship played the town at water polo and hundreds of jobless miners were invited aboard to have tea with the men. As a display of the Admiralty's new sensitivity it could hardly have been bettered. Apart from eliciting some dreadful stanzas of poetry from James, the Hood's visit to Hartlepoollefl a lasting impact on one small boy who had to content himself with admiring her from afar: Ted Briggs. Thereafter the ship went from strength 10 slrength. Kelly's campaign to restore confidence and morale after Invergordon turned on a relentless programme of drill, exercises, training, discipline, housekeeping and sport, and James did not disappoint. Within the space of a year the Hood, showing unusual proficiency in gunnery, had demolished a battle practice target, won the fleet anti-aircraft gunnery competition and become 'Cock of the Fleet' at the Home Fleet Regatta in May 1933. In Oclober of that year a landing party near Invergordon was performed with such enthusiasm that James had to rebut claims, splashed in banner headlines around the world, that the Hood was in the grip of another mutiny. Apart from Ihe leadership provided by James and Binney, the recovery of the Hood's morale owes much to her executive officer, Cdr C.R. McCrum, to his right-hand man and Mate of the Upper Deck, the ex-lower deck Lt-Cdr Harry Pursey, to the First Lieutenant Lt-Cdr Eric Longley-Cook, and to Engineer Cdr A.K. Dibley. Among the Hood's officers were at least two more who had benefited from the Mate Scheme, Lt (E) Ernest Mill (later a rear-admiral) and Sub-Lt T.J.G. Marchant. Pursey seems to have had a share of unpopularity as 'the Commander's nark' but the fact that three of the ship's officers had begun their careers on the lower deck cannot have been lost on the crew and such evidence as survives suggests an unprecedented entel1te between officers and men in the months and years after Invergordon. There is evidence, too, that the broader outlook of the engineer officer began to make itself felt in relations with the lower deck; men who, in Len Wincott's words, were 'not dependent for prestige on any particular show of aloofness from the mob'." Like so much else in the locust years, the mechanics of this process now seems lost to posterity, but the accomplishment is real enough. Though largely overshadowed by the regime that followed it, there can be no doubl Ihat Ihe successes of the mid-1930s would not have been possible without the qualities of leadership shown after Invergordon. James did not strike his flag until the summer of 1934, but when he recalled his lenure as having been surrounded by 'officers and men who had responded eagerly to everything I had asked of them ... in an atmosphere of happiness and high endeavour', it was to the 1931-3 commission that he was referring above all.·9 Yet it was not all happiness. Morale had improved markedly but problems remained which lay at the heart of the crisis affecting the avy as a whole. The
Disaster and Recovery, 1931-1936
Invergordon Mutiny exposed many failings in naval organisation, but in shipboard life it did so in three areas above all: in the widespread disillusion over prospects and promotion; in the strained relations that existed between departments; and finally in the failure of the divisional ystem in which the Admiralty had reposed such confidence. The restoration of the Hood as the greatest ship in the lavy in the years to come cannot be understood without reference to these issues. Through the 1920s promotion to leading seaman and petty officer had been slowed by the great numbers of men who had achieved higher rating during the First World War. Although a man was entitled to take the examination for leading seaman at 21, it might be six or seven years before a vacancy allowed him to be rated accordingly. Wincott was a case in point, passing quickly for leading seaman but still an AB at the time of his discharge from the Navy several years later. This situation provoked considerable resentment on the lower deck, and it is no surprise that the Hood's petty officers and chief petty officer did their best to keep out of the way during the 'breeze' at Invergordon. Their unenviable position is captured in a paragraph of Tomkinson's official report: The attitude of the Petty Officers from the outset appears generally to have been a passive one. They carried on with their own work, but made little attempt to get the lower ratings to work, and on Wednesday 116 September) it was reported to me that some Petty Officers were showing signs of joining up with the disaffected men. This was to be expected as time went on, since their sympathy was with the men in their grievance, if not with their method of indicating it.'" Nonetheless, by the late 1930s many considered that the petty officer of the Royal avy was not the man he had been twenty years earlier. Francis Pridham, Captain of the Hood between 1936-8, puts it in perspective: One too often hears it said that our Petty Officers are a poor lot and are of a lower standard as such than they have been in past. I believe this is an exaggeration. It has never been within my experience to find a high proportion of Petty Officers individually competent to influence a ship's company. For this we have always been dependent on a few outstanding Petty Officers possessing high qualities of character and personality. These Petty Officers have not acquired these qualities through training; they are still to be found, and I believe always will be. It is unreasonable, however, to expect a high percentage." Do not expect too much of your Petty Officers. We cannot expect that their standard shall be a very level one; large numbers are being made and many are of very limited experience. Endeavour to avoid putting one in charge of a job without first discovering whether he knows how to set about it." Certainly, a petty officer's rating was not one to which as many men of real ability now aspired. Enormous damage was done by the mutiny itself, which disillusioned younger men as to the value of 3 naval career at the very moment when the older were
157
beginning to retire into civilian life." Some looked elsewhere, but the 'hungry '30s'left most with little alternative but to sign on for a second term of ervice. During the 1930s the Navy therefore found itself saddled with a rump of long-service ratings whose sole ambition was to reach Pen ion Age with the least possible sacrifice of energy. These men, the 'three-badge Barnacle Bills' of the battlefleets, not only resisted promotion but poured scorn on the ambitions of younger men, ridiculing the 'killick' anchor device which denoted a leading seaman's rating and undermining his authority on the messdecks. '0 wonder Capt. Rory O'Conor, late of the Hood, admitted of leading seamen in 1937 that many'cannot say boo to a goose'." But, as Capt. Pridham told his officers, even younger petty officers had difficulty keeping the older men in line: Keep your eye on the older Able Seamen. In these days the fact that an Able Seaman is wearing three badges, or ought to be, is in many cases proof of his unsuitability. Their influence with the younger men is considerable and frequently bad. [... 1 Bear in mind that the young Petty Officers and Leading Seamen have a difficult job. They find them elves in charge of men older than themselves (to whom the young seamen defer) and some of these will endeavour to trip them up. If you spot any sign of insolence or disobedience do not wait for the Petty Officer to complain or run him in." However, as Pridham recognised, resistance to promotion and the responsibilities that went with it ran deep on the lower deck. The system introduced by the avy to accelerate the promotion of suitable characters, the so-called 'Red-ink recommend', enjoyed only limited acceptance among the men: It is also our business to instruct and educate our men with a view to inducing ambition to better their position in the ervice, a distinct from their rates of pay. It is well known that few men on the Lower Deck regard special promotion with any enthusiasm. Trade Unionism and an innate fidelity to their own kind limit their aim to one of general security, i.e. equal opportunity to rise steadily on a pay scale. The principle underlying the 'Red recommend' is foreign to their upbringing and environment and is regarded with suspicion. The Service aspect does not enter their head. I... ] Few men volunteer readily to move outside the ordinary run." The result by the mid-1930s was that the Navy had in ufficient men of calibre for higher rating, a state of affairs that was not reversed until improved wages, expansion and the approach of war altered the views and prospects of the lower deck. Despite his plans, it was often Barnacle Bill's fate to see his term of service extended through the war years, though, as Wincott recalled, he and his like 'were to prove their worth a hundredfold at Dunkirk' and in a thousand battles aftern Nor did the tensions end there. Friction among seaman ratings over the issue of promotion was matched by that between the various departments into which the lower deck was divided: eamen, artisans and artificers, stokers and Marines. These not only served very different functions but inhabited separate messes and barely fraternised with one another. Ron Paterson,
'" PRO, ADM 178/110, Reporl of 71
Proceedings, p. 12. Pridham, 'lectures on Mutin)", Part I: 'Prevention', pp. 5-6.
n Pridham.· oles for Newly Joined Officer' (January 1938), p. 5. 7J Carew, The Lower Deck, pp. 176-7. "RBS. p. 107. ;'! Pridham, 'Notes', pp. 2 & 6. '. Ibid., p. 5. ~ Wincott, bn'ergordotl Mutineer, p.ln.
158
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
Cited in Rogers. 'H.M.S. Hood', p.40. "I\'I'M/SA, no. 749, p. 19. iI
0>
Boy Seaman and aD in Hood between 1933-6, describes the situation:
RBS,p. 64.
'1lBrowne),'A Low Tech
aval
Landing Party', p. 263.
Of course, you didn't meet anyone outside your own department, so the only time you'd meet the engineering lot and the Marines would be on shore, when there was a sports day." Divisions of this sort were of course in the nature of any large and sophisticated community, but they were greatly exacerbated by conditions in the avy as the 1920s wore on. The Artisan Branch, which comprised no more than 5 per cent of the crew, consisted of tradesmen-shipwrights, blacksmiths, joiners, painters and plumbers-recruited from civilian life to perform essential maintenance of the ship and her fittings. While a majority of the crew observed a four-hour watch system, artisans, who were designated as 'daymen', generally worked regular daytime hours and turned in at night like civilians. Equally, whereas the hands were roused at 05.30 to clean ship, artisans enjoyed what was known as 'Guard and Steerage', the right to stay in their hammocks until 06.00 or 06.30. This, together with their higher pay and petty officer's rank and uniform, was the cause of much resentment on the lower deck, to which their unfortunate official designation as 'Idlers' lent some credence. Plumber 4th Class Ernest Taylor, a veteran of c. J 926-8, recalls the atmosphere:
Fraternisation between seamen and Marines at Malta in the late
19305. Rare before the 19305 but an indication of the changing character and morale of the Navy as war approached. HMS Hood Association/Higginson Collection
The only compliment we used to get was that we were the idle rich ... and that summed us up in a way of speaking to the lower deck .... They didn't seem to appreciate the work we did, and of course the fact that we ... weren't raised from our hammocks until six or six-thirty... I think generally speaking-just generally speaking-the lower deck was a little bit jealous of that, that we had this extra hour, and of course we were, well, the nobodies if you like, except in the trousers."
Though subject to the same norms of service and advancement as artisans, the critical role performed by artificers in maintaining the ship's engineering, electrical and gunnery systems spared them the same degree of opprobrium. Even so, Cdr O'Conor did well to ensure that Every hammock in the ship should be lashed up and stowed by 06.45 on every morning of the commission, including Sunday and not excluding anyone ... 80 But such tensions were trivial compared to those which often prevailed between seamen and the Royal Marines. The ancestors of the Royal Marines had first gone to sea in the 1660s, but the role of the avy's sea soldiers and the discipline for which the Corps was known had maintained a clear distinction between them and their seaman shipmates. The 'leathernecks' as sailors called them were not only'sworn men' but preserved a martial bearing which was anathema to most seamen. While the Marine regarded his seaman counterpart with 'tolerance bordering on condescension' in military matters, the latter viewed him as generally somewhat lacking in imagination in everything else" Neither view had much to recommend it. The skill and calibre of the Marines was widely respected and the ship's band was one of the great assets of life afloat. But at Invergordon it was the sailor's traditional suspicion of the Marines as the officers' first line of defence against mutiny that had reared its ugly head. Though it flared briefly in the Hood this sentiment developed no further because cooler heads kept her Marine detachment in its barracks on the upper deck. By contrast, relations between stokers and Marines were generally good, even if the only point of agreement was a mutual dislike of seamen. The engineering revolution of the late nineteenth century brought large numbers of stokers into the Royal Navy, men whose arrival had a profound impact on the tenor of life afloat. If ailors deplored the stoker's lack of training in seamanship and pitied him his existence in the bowels of the ship, then the latter, who enjoyed better pay, considered theirs a less monotonous and regulated way of life. The differences did not end there. Whereas boy seamen joined the Navy at sixteen, the stoker was often recruited in his twenties from the industrial and mining centres of Britain and consequently po sessed a very different outlook and mentality. Indeed, with neither the attachment to naval tradition of the seaman nor his connection to the age-old forcing grounds of the Service, stokers added a breadth to the Navy which contributed greatly to its character if not its harmony. The discordance was perpetuated by the Admiralty which, in failing to acknowledge the critical role of naval engineering, failed also to provide stokers with the necessary formation to make good that potential. This state of affairs was but one aspect of the reluctance of the inter-war Navy to embrace the technical realities of its caJling, from which every branch suffered in one way or another. By no means, then, could it be said of the Hood that she was 'of one company'. In her, as elsewhere in the Navy, it required officers of the very highest calibre to bridge the gap between distinct worlds. That the opportunity and the men were found to do so before the onset of war is to the eternal credit of both. By the late 1920s the mechanisms reluctantly established by the avy to attend to lower-deck requests and grievances had
Disaster and Recovery, 1931-1936
quietly fallen into stagnation. With them went the lower-deck societies which, having been deprived of their capacity for representation in 1920, could offer little incentive for membership. The Admiralty, for its part, had begun to empha i e that the correct channel for welfare issues lay not in collective representation but in the relationship between an individual rating and his commanding officer: the divisional system. The divisional system of warship organisation was refined by Capt. Hall and Cdr James in the battlecruiser Queen Mary shortly before the Great War. This began by separating the crew into a dozen or more groups based on their trade and the part of the ship for which they were responsible. Each division was placed under a lieutenant or lieutenant-commander who was charged with its discipline, training, clothing and organisation. It was also the divisional officer's responsibility to familiarise himself with the personal circumstances of each man and provide him not only with coun el and assistance in domestic and service matters, but also with an avenue for voicing grievances if necessary. But it was in this, the most critical area of its organisation, that the divisional system had proved unequal to the demands placed on it in the years leading up to the Invergordon Mutiny. For one thing it was neither accessible nor equitable enough to function effectively. Any sailor wishing to speak to his officer was required to make out a written request and hand it to the divisional petty officer who would then submit it to the officer in question. The interview it elf might be witnessed by the divisional petty officer with perhaps even a 'crusher' in attendance. Moreover, the statutory punishments for those bringing charges or voicing complaints that were subsequently judged to be unfounded naturally dissuaded many from taking their problem to officers in the first place. Even if the complainant were vindicated, the liability of being a 'marked man' thereafter was often viewed as being too great to warrant the risk. When a man did approach his officer it was often to meet with a frosty reception. On the eve of the Invergordon Mutiny an attempt by a chief petty officer in the Hood to warn his divisional officer of the plans that were afoot received the order to 'Get below or you're in the Commander's report for prosecution in the morning'." either the modifications made to the King's Regulations and Admiralty Instructions in this respect in 1929 nor those added after Invergordon could dispel the overriding impression on the lower deck that ... you had nobody to represent you in the Navy in those days .... I don't think [the officersl would stand up for you, not the lower-deck man, not at that time." Evidently, the success or failure of the divisional system depended on the degree of interest shown by the officer concerned. To ome extent this interest depended on morale, and the morale of the officer corps of the Royal Navy had been destroyed by the Geddes Axe of 1921 which beached a third of its number. But where the Admiralty proved itself incapable of effedive leadership in this matter one officer set himself to influence his peers with a tested paradigm. That officer was Rory O'Conor. His paradigm was HMS Hood.
.....111>_Rory Chambers O'Conor was born into an Anglo-Irish family
159
in Buenos Aire in 1898.84 In 1911 he entered the Royal aval College at Osborne and spent much of the Great War in the gunroom of the pre-dreadnought Prince of Wales in which he saw action in the Dardanelles. A formidable sportsman, O'Conor represented the avy at rugby between 192Q-4,leading the nited Services team during the 192 1-2 season. His appointment to the Royal Yacht Victoria and Albert on being promoted lieutenant in 1919 was an early sign of favour but it was as a divisional officer in the battleship Barham between 1921-2 that he first came to prominence, Capt. Robin Dalglish noting his 'exceptionally good command of men'." Specialising in gunnery, he divided most of the next ten years between HMS Excellent, the gunnery school in Portsmouth Harbour, and various shore and seagoing appointments including the cruiser Emerald and the battleships Resolution and Royal Sovereign. Promoted commander in 1931, it was while he was on the staff of Excellent that 0' onor learnt of his selection as the Hood's executive officer, an appointment which took effect when she recommissioned at Portsmouth in August 1933. Despite being the subject of an ample biography the reasons for O'Conor's preferment at the age of only 34 remain unclear. His zeal and talent apart, the appointment seems to have owed much to Admiral Sir John Kelly, Commander-in-Chief, Home Fleet, under whom he had served in the Reso/utioll in the Mediterranean in 1924-5. Whatever the case, O'Conor was one of a generation of younger officers determined to take a hand in restoring the tarnished prestige of the avy; for whom the surest means to a happy and successful ship lay in a genuine interest in the welfare of her men; for whom the Royal avy was great enough to afford every man the chance of a fair hearing; for whom punishment existed chiefly to maintain discipline rather than to enforce compliance, and for whom the mere exercise of that discipline could never substitute for engaging the men as befitted their skills and responsibility. Above all, O'Conor and his like brought to their work both a heightened sensitivity to the plight of the ordinary sailor and an enhanced perception of his value as an individual. Among the first of this band wa Sir Atwell 'Lou' Lake, Bt., who as executive officer of the elson had been among the few to emerge with any credit from Invergordon. Although a more formal officer than O'Conor, it was Lake' force of character, love of ship and respect for his men that had made the difference in Nelson in September 1931. Another was C.R. McCrum who e tact and powers of leadership delivered into O'Conor's hands a vessel ripe for the changes he would bring to her life and organisation. Far more than her flag-showing, the Hood's reputation as the greatest ship in the Navy during the 1930s rests on the leading role she played in the introduction of a new dialogue between officers and men, to which first McCrum and then O'Conor made a vital contribution. The task of executive officer in a capital ship was among the most challenging the avy had to offer. Admiral Lord Chatfield, whose two-volume autobiography is one of the finest evocations of life in the Royal Navy ever written, provides the following descriptions of a commander's lot:
There is no greater test of character in the world than to be the executive officer of a big ship. Many shun the responsibility and seek a less exacting duty, such as the command of a small ship; but few captains can efficiently
"
MM, PurseJ'1J4, part 3 of book draft, p. 59.
IJ IW~V
A. Stoker 1st Class Nicholas miles Carr. no. 5809.
we Ta'"erner, A Torch Among Tapers (Bramber. '\T. Sussex.: Bernard Durnford, 2000). "Ibid., p. 10. ...
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
160
Chatfield, Tile Nail)' ami Defence, pp.Sl &77. 81 Cited in Tavcrner,A Torch Among Tapers. p. 223. .. RBS, p. 21. At;
.. Ibid., p. 10.
command a great ship's company unless they themselves have been through the mill, can realize the Commander's difficulties day by day and feel the pulse of his men. If the executive officer of a big ship ... wishes to succeed he must, as a first rule, know everything that goes on in the ship. He must be constantly visiting every part of it and be closely in touch with the ship's company's life and thought. He will thus understand his men, rectify just grievances in time and stop abuses before they can spread. His capacity will be accurately appraised by his officers and still more accurately by the ship's company, who will soon take his measure, and the evilly inclined soon know how far they can go in safety." Equally, the price of failure was very great. Remote as the captain often was from the men, the commander was unquestionably the key figure in the life of a major ship. On him depended the spirit with which his crew approached every endeavour. For him they might either do the least they could get away with or else slog their guts out. O'Conor's arrival in the Hood provided an early indication of how the orchestra of shipboard life was to be tuned for the rest of the commission. Louis Le Bailly, then a midshipman, remembers the occasion in August 1933: I suppose the greatest impact was when he tore up the voluminous Standing Orders and substituted his own 'Ten Commandments'. Their introduction to the new ship's company was dramatic. There was ... a magic lantern on the quarterdeck and the ten were put on one by one as he explained their relevance. Then almost from a puff of smoke,
CDR RORY O'CONOR'S 'TEN COMMANDMENTS', AUGUST
1933
Admiral Sir John Kelly, so beloved by the sailor, appeared from the after hatchway and gave a stirring address." Implicit in O'Conor's 'Ten Commandments' was the notion that every man who gave of his best could expect fairness, respect and consideration from his superiors; that there were rewards for hard work, and that no one could go very far wrong so long as he kept the interests of the ship at the forefront of his mind; that no ship could be regarded as successful if she were not happy, and that all had a share in this endeavour. Never before had such a contract been laid before the lower deck of the Royal Navy, nor was such a system ever sold to her officer corps in such persuasive terms. The assessment of the 1933--{) commission which follows is based not only on the memoirs of those who lived it, but on Rwming a Big Ship on 'Ten Commandments', the influential manual on ship organisation O'Conor published a year after leaving the Hood. The linchpin of the Hood's 'Ten Commandments' was O'Conor himself. What set him apart was his accessibility with respect to the entire crew, of which the outward sign was his celebrated open-door policy. In the course of the day's work innumerable people have business to do with the Commander of a big ship, and his ready accessibility is a matter of importance. Even with a properly decentralised organisation, it is inevitable that the Commander should be constantly sought after for consultation, advice, approval, permission, information, and a hundred and one other reasons. r... ] The Commander wants to feel free to wander about the ship at will, seeing the hands at work and getting to know them. But there is a time for everything, and there should be at least one hour, both in the forenoon and afternoon, when the whole ship knows that there is one place where he can almost certainly be found, and available."
SHIP'S STANDING ORDERS I The Service The Customs of the Service are to be observed at all times. 2 The Ship The Good Appearance of the Ship is the concern of everyone in Hood, and all share the responsibility for this. 3 The Individual Every man is constantly required to bring credit to the Ship by his individual bearing, dress and general conduct, on board and ashore. 4 Courtesy to Officers The courtesy of making a gangway, and standing to one side to attention when an officer passes, is to be shown by every man. If an Officer passing through men during stand-easy, meal hours, etc., carries his cap under his arm, it will indicate that no attention, other than clearing a gangway, is required. 5 Execution of Orders All orders, including those passed by Bugle and Pipe, are to be obeyed at the Run.
6 Punctual Attendance at Place of Duty Every man is personally responsible, on all occasions, for his own punctual attendance at his place of duty. 7 Permission to Leave Work A man is always to ask permission before leaving his work. S Reporting on Completion of Work Any man on finishing the work for which he has been told off, is to report to his immediate superior. Parties of men are to be fallen in and reported. 9 Card-playing and Gambling While card-playing is allowed at mess-tables and on the upper deck, any form of gambling is strictly prohibited. Gambling includes all games of chance played for money stakes. J0 Requests Any man wishing to see the Commander is to put in a request to his Officer of Division. In urgent cases his request is to pass through the Master-atArms and Officer of the Watch.
That place was his day cabin. Mindful of Invergordon, here O'Conor acted out the central tenet of his ethos: that it was an officer's duty to make himself a channel for the problems and grievances of those placed under hin,; that it was his responsibility to ensure that every man could turn to him for a fair hearing: In a great ship's company, there must inevitably arise every variety of problem for the individuals composing itproblems of life, love, leave, illness, death, and hardship of all kinds arising from work, pay, food, sleep, to mention only a few. No request must be ignored-all must be considered and given a sympathetic hearing, and the men encouraged to come forward." The other visible sign of this interest was the length to which O'Conor went to memorise the names of the Hood's 1,300 crewmen. Although he tacitly admitted being able to hold no more than 600 in his mind at one time, the general impression was and remains that he came to know the name of every man on board. Whatever the reality, the endeavour had a marked impact on the atmosphere aboard: Until you know a man's name he has no separate identity for you. Directly you know it, a bridge is slipped across the
Disaster alln Recovery, 1931-1936
gap and you very quickly begin to know a lot of other things too-so will he." An essential part of O'Conor's philosophy was what he called 'consideration for the men' on the part of their officers. This elCtended from reducing the amount of time libertymen had to waste waiting for boats and drifters to the introduction of a revised weekend routine which at last gave the crew the complete day of rest prescribed in the King's Regulations. He also saw to it that an off-duty watch was never roused elCcept in the event of an emergency. Many of these innovations were no more than the application of common sense to irksome naval tradition, of which his winter and foul-weather routines are typical elCamples: No good purpose is served by falling men in at 06.00 on a
161
wild and wet morning, and possibly also in the dark and cold, to scrub the decks, either at sea or in harbour. I... ]In the winter especially it becomes a farce--water is swilled over decks which are neither properly scrubbed nor properly dried ... , and the result is a muddy and sodden deck. [... 1 It is wiser to wait for daylight, when the elements are better faced by men who have already breakfasted"
The Forth Bridge seen from Hood's boat deck. Rosyth. 1934.
But when the men did turn out at the crack of dawn O'Conor was there among them. For him it was alCiomatic that the Commander's leadership was borne of elCample: He stands in a special and unique position in regard to his hands, and in his mind's eye there should always be a continuous and up-to-date picture of their work and of the routine. Ifhe is not up at the start of the day, he will never
.. Ibid., p. 87. .. Ibid., pp. S5--{;.
162
"Ibid., p. 47. ,) Ibid.. p. 9. .. Ibid., pp. 56-7. .. Ibid., pp. 157-8. .. Ibid., pp. H. yO Ibid., p. 9. .. Ibid., p. 6.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
have the same grasp as the Commander who makes it his duty to be there. And if he is not there at the beginning, how is he to appreciate the conditions for scrubbing decks on cold, dark and wet mornings or in rough weather? If on such occasions the Commander, in deciding to give a lie-in to the hands, is also giving one to himself, he is far less likely to overlook the occasions when such indulgence is justified and necessary, as it not infrequently is." O'Conor also took steps to miligate the constant disruption of work and leisure brought on by the need for men to stand aside and come to attention whenever an officer passed by. Henceforth, an officer carrying his cap needed no special attention otherthan being given room to pa s.lfthisapproach contributed to what he called 'the ideal state of every man knowing what is required of him' then it also had the effect of building a sense of community in the ship.OJ As he put it, If these rules are faithfully observed, a man has a chance to feel a sense of peace and security in his leisure time on board, and to think of his ship as his home ... rather than a place of duty only... , which is all for the good of those leading the abnormal and crowded life of a ship." That sense of community was assured once a man formed an attachment of pride for his ship. Indeed, a ship's community need not be confined to her crew:
Some of Hood's 'total family' dancing on the forecastle with their men, c.1935. Cdr O'Conor was the first officer to embrace
the wider community represented by the sailors' families and involve it in the life and morale of his ship. HMS Hood Auoc~rioNWjf/is CoIl«rion
There is no surer way to increase a man's pride in his ship than for those who are near and dear to him to feel proud of her too. It is impossible to show too much courtesy and consideration in welcoming friends and relations on board on every occasion when it is possible for them to be invited. [... J A strictly legal definition of the term 'Ship's Company' embraces every person borne on her books. But in practice, if it is possible by the warmth of the welcome they are given to make all families feel that they also belong, then the company of a big ship becomes multiplied from one thousand to several thousands. To have so great a
community bound together both by family affection and by pride of ship mu t influence her fortunes decisively." Evidence of O'Conor's interest in this wider community is provided in the census of the crew and their dependants which survives in his album of the commission (see Appendix III). It reveals, among other things, that the Hood's 'total family' of crewmen, wives and children numbered 2,562 souls. In his concern for such matters, in the role and impact of a warship in wider society and vice versa, Rory O'Conor was years ahead of his time. But pride was also bound up with the appearance of the ship and O'Conor laid a great, and indeed excessive, stress on smartne s, cleanliness and paintwork: It is sometimes lightly assumed that the ship's appearance is the concern only of a small hierarchy which includes the Commander, the hief Boatswain's Mate, the Captains of Ihe Tops and the Side, and perhaps a few others. 0 ship was ever kept clean except by the co-operation of all hands, and this needs hammering in, with emphasis on the ways in which every individual can help. [... J Everyone must be jealous of the ship's appearance and must make his contribution, and above all, he must avoid making unnecessary work for others who are striving to keep the ship as she should look." In this respect O'Conor was found to be the determined enemy not only of the man who skulked off leaving his companions to complete the most disagreeable chores but also of those who spoilt their hard work. First the skulker: All the world hates a skulker-it must hate him-why hould a man slide away and leave hi mates to finish off a job, perhaps an unpleasant one and in bad weather? The worst of skulking is that it can easily become infeetiousstop it at once. There is only one treatment for deliberate skulking, and that is' 14 days o. 11.'07 ext the despoiler: If a man is caught leaning on the paintwork, throwing fagends or any other rubbish on the deck, emptying slops out of a scuttle, leaning on the guardrails, or in fact doing anything that spoils the ship's appearance but, worse still, spoils some other man's good work, then put him as a sentry on the upper deck after hours, and leave him there until he catches someone else offending against the ship; that man then goes before the Officer of the Watch and takes over as a sentry.o, Visitors to the ship during avy Week in August 1935 were greeted on deck with placards like this: 'IT COSTS £135 TO PAINT THIS SHIP. VVE PAINT, YOU PAY. DON'T
POlL THE PAINTWDRK BY TOUCHING, LEANING, OR
STRIKING MATCHES ON IT.'
Another of O'Conor's pet peeves was the boathook, roughl)' wielded against the immaculate sides of his battlecruiser:
Disaster and Recovery, 1931-1936
v"hy should it be necessary for a boat leaving the gangway to give the nicely painted side a good push with her boathooks every time, and so damage the paintwork right alongside the front doorstep? [... J The order to the engines to go ahead is sufficient to warn the crew to let go fore and aft, and away she goes without of any of this 'Shove off forrard' business. Devastating work on the side is done by those who forget that when their boats are lying in a tideway they need steering all the time." Clearly, some of this could be taken a bit far in a vessel which in the course of ordinary events was likely to receive harsher treatment than that dealt her by a boathook or matelot's shoulder. Boys Fred and Frank Coombs, twin brothers from Sheffield, were among those who fell foul of O'Conor's regulations: The number of dos and don'ts on the Upper Deck such as leaning on the Guard Rails or being incorrectly dressed and lounging about seemed to make the Upper Deck a good place to keep clear of if we wanted to keep out of trouble. 'do But tiresome as his men found it, under O'Conor's stewardship the Hood brought to a pinnacle the art of ship adornment nurtured by the avy since the age of elson. There was, however, a penalty for this zeal for gleaming paint and that lay in the many tons of it which had to be scraped off her from 1936 onwards. Many of these measures and devices were not of themselves new. The entry punishment, for instance, had been employed by 'Lou' Lake in the elSOIl. But never had they been brought to bear on the management of a ship's company in such a concentrated and energetic manner. nderpinning O'Conor's tyle was his notably human and liberal approach to discipline. As in any ship, the barometer of the Hood's morale and discipline lay at the requestmen and defaulter's table, and above all the equanimity with which the Commander dealt with the cases that passed before him. First requestmen: Every request should be given careful consideration, and request men mu t feel assured of a sympathetic hearing. If a request has to be refused, the reason should be explained and the man given the option of coming up again if he wants to, or if necessary of seeing the Captain.'·' Then defaulters, of whom around 3,000 came cap in hand to O'Conor's table in the Commander's lobby over the course of the 1933-6 commission: The majority of small offences are committed by thoughtlessness or mischance and not by intention, and after one solemn warning most men are careful not to reappear as defaulters. [... 1 Long-drawn-out punishments are seldom necessary or desirable; the Commander should see all the more serious offenders again on the conclusion of their punishment, when he may be able to give them wise counsel and to urge them to go and sin no more. 102
163
for doing his best, and when he sins, of sinning in ignorance or from forgetfulness. Then, if he still fails, those in authority can afford to act calmly, seeing that they are backed by the authority of the whole Service and the aval Discipline Act, with the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and aJlthe Commons in support.'·' Against the yardstick of his 'Ten Commandments', O'Conor's style of discharging justice appears on the face of it to have yielded good results. Over the three years of his tenure transgressions against the Ship's Standing Orders apparently fell from a typical figure of 63 per week at the start of the commission to only seven later on.'''' As Admiral The Earl of Cork and Orrery later reported, despite the many and varied attractions ashore, only one man had gone adrift during the Hood's weeklong visit to Southend in May 1935, and he had been stuck in a traffic jam. But serious offences were also committed and to these O'Conor alludes only indirectly. The 1933-6 commission was plagued by the usual spates of petty theft while the months the Hood spent alongside at Gibraltar over the winter of 1935-6 evidently tested his authority to the limit. But by creating a regime in which it was easier to stay on the right side of the law O'Conor moulded a crew that, for a time at least, was more at peace with itself than it had been for many years. The effect of O'Conor's approach was not only improved morale and discipline but a far greater and wider degree of involvement in the life of the ship among both officers and men. This was reflected above all in the drive for sporting excellence which O'Conor pursued with unrelenting vigour, and for a few years the Hood dominated sporting competition in the Home Fleet. Her record in the fleet Pulling Regatta for the coveted Silver Coquerelle could not match the triumphs of the I920s when the Hood was Cock of the Fleet three years running between 1926-8, but the range of trophies won and competed for gives some idea of the enthusiasm O'Conor brought to the ship. Indeed, within fifteen months of recommissioning the ship had won virtually every trophy in the Home Fleet. The Hood recovered the Cock from e/soll in 1935, won the Arbuthnot Trophy for cross-country running between 1933-5 and the Palmer Trophy for bayonet fighting between 1934-6. These and many others O'Conor proudly displayed in his lobby on the forecastle deck. The embodiment of the Hood's competitive spirit was 'that fellow called George', a caricature in singlet and shorts bearing an oar or other sporting equipment as appropriate. The Chollgh, the ship's magazine, described him thus:
George is the spirit of the Hood. Everyone in the ship carries a little bit of him and therefore he is only able to go fl,lI steam ahead when all the Hoods are present in support. IOS Between 1933-6 'George' brought nearly a score of trophies to the Hood. But not everyone shared O'Conor's devotion for competitive sports. The Pulling Regatta required the active participation of a quarter of the ship's crew, including a good many reluctant volunteers. Two who, initially at least, had cause to regret the Commander's enthusiasm were the Coombs twins:
O'Conor's discipline, then, was one tempered by mercy: The dignity of a great Service like ours alone requires that every officer and man shall be given credit in the first place
... The ship's Commander, Rory O'Conor, was, like all who had ambitions for promotion, trying to make a name Iforl himself by howing that he ran an efficient warship. One
"Ibid., p. 97. '''IWM, 91/7/1, p. 40. 101 RBS. p. 79. '" Ibid.. pp. 79-80. IOl Ibid.. p. 84. '''Ibid., pp. 11-12. lOS TI,c ChOllgl., April 1936, p. 25.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
164
excellence, there were many material compensations for sailing under O'Conor. His innovations including the installation of a broadcasting system, introduction of regular film screenings and establishment of a subscription library and Mutual Aid Society are discussed elsewhere. lOS But it was by encouraging training and promotion that O'Conor made one of his most significant contributions. Specialisation was encouraged in all branches; men passed for Leading Seaman were given appropriate duties to help them develop the power of command; Stoker Jim Haskell, eager to transfer to the Submarine Service, was dissuaded until he had given it more thought and eventually dropped the idea after a sobering vi.sit to HMS/M Salllloll; thanks to O'Conor's initiative 00 Ron Paterson was able to enjoy the rare advantage of qualifying as a seaman gunner during his time aboard, a first step towards an officer's commission. Most of all did O'Conor encourage midshipmen, not only in preparing for their exams but in playing a significant role aboard as officers under training. O'Conor liked the man who 'went all out for his ship' and he found no more willing bodies than in the gun room:
I"
Once he realises that he will be treated with the full consideration due to his status as an officer, no one gives a readier response than a Midshipman, in keenness on his job and on his ship, both in her work and in her play.'l.
Another trophy: Cdr Rory O'Conor poses with the Silver Coquerelle and the crew of the
1st Signal and WfT Whaler after the victorious Regatta campaign
of 1935. HMS Hood~rion
way of doing it was to be 'Cock of the Fleet' in the Fleet Boat-Pulling Races to be held at Scapa Flow, which he intended to win. To help, as soon as we were clear of the land he had a mock-up of a boat's thwarts ibuilt]to hold two sat one behind the other. A heavy rope fastened to short lengths of oars ienabled] the two rowers to pull the rope i ... ]through two pulleys to a heavy weight and lift it from the deck protection mats. For some reason we went to look at this contraption and i ... ] ended up sat one either ide of the rope, our feet against a wooden stretcher, as in a boat, and lifting with others the heavy weights from the deck, up and down with steady pulls on the dummy oars. It was explained that it was all good exercise for leg, tummy, arm and back muscles but not that it made our skin, on toughened hands and on tender backsides, very sore as we found out after an hour or so when we were allowed to go for a bath and to wash the sweat away. Much to our dismay we found that, on looking at the mess notice board, we had volunteered for the Boys' Cutters crew and were to report for training each day at a set time in working hours, and for half an hour each evening for both boat pulling and physical training which were to be extended if they thought fit. That was when we found out what aching backs could feellike.'06
Ever the 'revolutionary constitutionalist', O'Conor gave his midshipmen an unprecedented role in the running of HMS Hood: A Midshipman is an officer, and he must be treated as such and given a task which he feels he can make his own, whether in charge of a boat or as Midshipman of the Watch, and only his Action Station must take precedence. i ... ] The Midshipmen are among the Commander's righthand men. They run the boats and they run his routine for him-it is only right that they should know what he wants and what is going on. If the Commander has a weekly meeting of the Midshipmen, it provides the opportunity to discuss all the week's happenings on the upper deck: in the boats, disciplinary matters, explaining where mistakes occurred and raising a host of miscellaneous points past, present and future, connected with them elves, the ship, the Fieet and the Service. i... 1Once the Snottie appreciates that the Commander wants and welcomes his suggestions for the improved running of the ship, and for the comfort of the men, he produces as good ideas as anyone l l l The gunroom of course loved him for it and O'Conor's commission album is full of photos and letters from midshipmen grateful for the unusually broad experience he had afforded them. The following passage from a letter by Mid. Peter Arbuthnot (1933-5?) says it all:
But O'Conor had no patience for whining: '" IWM, 911711, p. 43.
00' RBS, p. 141. '" See ch. 5, pp. 137, 139, 138-9, and ch. 2, pp. 36-7. 1M RBS. pp. 107-8. and Taverner, Hood', Legncy, pp. 138 & 94. 110 RBS. p. 27. III
Ibid., pp. 27 & 31.
Some people grumble about the Regatta; but it does no good to waste time grumbling; it is better to get down to it and go all out. If your luck is in, and even if you don't come out on top, but do well, you will hear no grumbling in your ship.I.' Despite his obsession with paintwork and zeal for sporting
As you know the Hood exceeded our wildest expectations. After serving for hort periods in other ships, I realized how unique was the spirit which prevailed throughout the commission. It was a seething spirit which on several unforgettable occasions bubbled to the surface. I remember so well the first occasion at Cromarty when the Captain spoke about the' lutiny' and we gave three cheers for him
Disaster and Recovery, 1931-1936
165
on the quarterdeck. Then again at our sporting triumph at Rosyth and the King's Cup matches. It continued for the whole two years of the commission in spite of several setbacks and I am sure it will prevail to the end." 2 However, this was one of several points on which O'Conor parted company with his officers. Like all innovators, O'Conor was the subject of jealousy and rumour, that he consulted his midshipman 'doggies' as to the popularity or otherwise of the wardroom officers and that his preference for the best-looking young sailors and snolties said something about his personal inclinations. Be that as it may, there can be little doubt that many of O'Conor's administrative measures came as a rude shock to those used to the traditional way of doing things. O'Conor favoured a highly centralised role for the Commander and his men that many would have preferred he did not have and which often undermined the divisional system that lay at heart of the ship's organisation. Successful as it was, the open-door policy allowed the men to bypass their divisional officers, a cause of some aggravation in the wardroom. The perks granted to sportsmen also raised eyebrows, and not just among the officers. Mid. Edmund Poland, selected to represent the Home Fleet in shooting, found himself excused many of his duties so that he could practise his questionable marksmanship at the Tipnor ranges. "' Meanwhile, the drafting of key players would be delayed for an important fixture. aturally, this began to have its effect on discipline as the commission wore on. The temptation to take advantage of the Commander's easygoing ways proved irresistible and it was rumoured that captains of sports teams could and did get away with murder at the defaulters' table.11< Warrant Shipwright .c. Hill, who joined the Hood at Gibraltar in February 1936, was amazed to find himself attending not to her fabric but to the construction of special bathing facilities for the men and the erection of a cinema, stage and boxing ring in a disused coalshed on the South Mole. But despite his efforts to keep the men amused it became increasingly clear that not all were disposed to submit to discipline. Boy Fred Coombs recalls some shenanigans in the renovated coalshed: The seating was a bit crude being rough wooden forms knocked together by our Shipwrights. The officers were accommodated at the front on padded and easy chairs brought from the Wardroom by the Duty Watch and returned after the show by men under punishment, though this arrangement was tightened up after a number of easy chairs were found floating in the harbour and even in the Med. [... ) It was then realised where the Wardroom chair were going. l15 Matters weren't helped by Capt. ET.B. Tower's notorious infidelity at the Rock Hotel during the many months the Hood was kept at Gibraltar owing to fuel shortages and the international situation over the winter of 1935-6. Even so, O'Conor appears to have forgotten the critical half of Admiral James' dictum on discipline, that it was an officer's duty 'to help in every way possible the loyal, hard-working men, and come down like a ton of bricks on the lazy and disloyal'. I 16 It is a sign of how far discipline had slipped that Tower's successor would find the ship both filthy and restive when he took over in February 1936.
Above: Renown left in Hood's wake shortly after colliding with
her off Spain, 23 January 1935. HMS Hood AssociarionlWiflis (alleerion
Left: Damage to the Hood's
quarterdeck after her collision with Renown. Cdr G'eonor soon had the mess tidied up but permanent repairs required a spell in dry dock. HMS Hood AnociationIWif/is Colle
·......11>_. Although the 1933-6 commission came to a climax with the Regatta victory and then the Jubilee Review in 1935, its final year was overshadowed by events of more lasting significance: the collision with the ReI/own in January 1935 and particularly the Abyssinian Crisis which came to a head that autumn. If the former broke the morale of the Battle Cruiser Squadron then the latter set the pattern for the rest of the Hood's peacetime career. The collision between the Hood and the Renollll/ on 23 January 1935 occurred following an inclination exercise carried out off the avy's winter anchorage at Arosa Bay in northwestern Spain. The circumstances which brought two of the Navy's greatest ships into collision in fine weather and broad daylight need only be summarised here from the considerable body of evidence and comment generated by it. l17 Essentially, the incident was caused by ill judgement on the part of Capt. H.R. Sawbridge of the Renown, inaction by Capt. Tower in the Hood as the ships closed, and above all by the ambiguity of Rear-Admiral Sidney Bailey's instructions as to the manner in which the pair would resume formation after the exercise. At 11.35 the signal for completion brought their 75,000 tons onto converging courses as planned. Sawbridge later maintained that he was expecting Hood to turn to port so that he could take station astern of her. For their pari, Bailey and Tower assumed
'" RNM, 1993/54. IWM/SA. no. 11951, reel 4. ll~ Vice-Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly,
IU
letter to the author, 13 ovembcr 2002. '" IWM, 91/711, p. 4B. 116 James. The Sky Was Always B/I/e, p.B!. '" PRO, ADM 156/107. See also Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, pp. 82-91, and Pridham, Memoirs, II, pp. 149-50. For the Renown's perspective, see Smith, Hit First, Hit Hard, pp. 59-64.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
166
that RelJOwl/ would simply manoeuvre herself into the flagship's wake, the Squadron then effecting the turn to port mentioned in the admiral's signal. But it was not to be, and by the time Sawbridge and Tower realised that neither was going to yield the opportunity for leisurely alterations of course had passed. Desperate efforts by both ships availed them not and by 12.20 it was obvious that Renown was going to strike Hood on the starboard side. ries began to go up in the Hood of 'Close all watertight doors' and 'All hands to clear starboard side'. Yeoman of Signals ed Johns recalls the scene: There was a jam on the boat-deck at the passageway by the funnels, caused by ratings who knew they shouldn't be there and the nosy few who wanted to see what was happening on the starboard side. The crowd cleared as soon as someone shouted 'Bugger off] The bloody Renown's coming inboard!"J8 Shortly after a sickening crash announced the arrival of Renown's bows on the Hood's quarterdeck. The fact that Tower had managed to swing his stem to starboard lessened the impact, but the Renown's bows scraped aft along the Hood's side and severely damaged her outer propeller.'19 There were no casualties in either ship, but men streamed up from the mes decks to contemplate the spectacle as Renowll extricated herself on engines thrown into emergency full speed astern. An examination of the Hood's quarterdeck showed an indentation about 18 inches deep at the point of collision, several yards of railing ripped away and a section of O'Conor's prized deck Hood docked at Portsmouth in February 1935 for repairs following her collision with the Renown. Her starboard outer propeller was severely damaged and distortion caused to plates and frames on the hull. The quarterdeck suffered an 18·inch indentation and repairs were needed for the inner propeller.
II' Cited in Coles & Briggs. Flagsllip 119
Hood,p.86. See orthcoll, HMS Hood. pp.
HO
4(}-1. I\VM/SA, no. 11951, reel 4.
III
Ibid.
planking reduced to matchwood. But that was all, and though a number of trakes and plates had to be replaced or repaired in dry dock along with the chipped propellers her structure emerged essentially intact. For her part, the Renowll suffered a holed stem which caused some flooding, a displaced ram bow and severe buckling and distortion to her plating. The two ships made their way independently to Gibraltar, the Hood arriving there on 25 January. By the time she did so O'Conor had covered the gash in her side with a strip of painted canvas and camouflaged the 10 t planking with a layer of yellow ochre, to the chagrin of waiting journalists.'''' His beautiful ship may have been damaged but the world at large was not to know the extent of it. Polite salutes were exchanged with Renown but nothing could disguise the ill-feeling that prevailed between the two crews. The ships had long enjo)'ed a fierce rivalry to which events were now to add a di agreeable dimension. Once running repairs had been effected the two returned to England where, following detailed stud)' of their reports, the Admiralty ordered Baile)', Tower and Sawbridge to be courtmartialJed. The proceedings were held with due ceremon), in the Great Cabin of elson's Victory in Portsmouth in the last da)'s of Februar)', 'an awe-inspiring spectacle' to which the midshipmen of both vessels were admitted.'" The closed sessions not onl)' revealed extensive collusion between Bailey and Tower on the one hand and Sawbridge and his officers on the other, but that Sawbridge had produced a spurious chart on which the movements of hi ship had been inaccurately plotted. By the time it was over Sawbridge had been found guilt)' and dismissed his ship while Bailey and Tower were acquitted. The verdicts
t ...
Disaster alld Recovery, 1931-1936
THE JUBILEE REVIEW,
167
1935 small ship contrived recently to be completely and most effectively flood-lit from her own resources. A big ship was able to achieve this partially. The existing masthead illuminating circuits for destroyers produce a crazy effect, reminiscent of the look of a country circus, and they conceal rather than reveal the ship they are designed to illuminate.'" Magnificent though O'Conor's lighting was, at least one of the Hood's resident bards couldn't help drawing some rather unmilitary comparisons: Modesty lacking, our size we proclaim, Mechanical monsters, the public remark, Lighting our chimneys to further our fame Quem Mary and Hood and Battersea Park. Should you see the Queel/ Mary with funnels ablaze Sail from a port with imperious hooting, As at her great smokestacks you wonderingly gaze just think of the Hood and the Gasworks at Tooting. But we noble warriors, our daytime we pass With polishing brightwork and fifteen-inch shooting; This puts us at once in a different class To the Normal/die, Rex and the Gasworks at Tooting. 125
Hood dressed overall at the Silver Jubilee Review, 16 July 1935. The ship is manned ready to salute the King as he passes in the royal yacht Victoria and Albert. O'Conor had seen to it that the bathroom ejectors spewing effluent from the ship's starboard side were shut off for the duration of the review.
In july 1935 the Silver jubilee of the 'Sailor King' George V occasioned the first major review of the fleet since 1914. On the 12th the Home and Mediterranean Fleets assembled at Spithead to be joined three days later by the Reserve Fleet, pecially commissioned for the occasion. By the time the Fleet had formed up into its nine columns more than 150 warships had gathered in addition to over 30 merchant and fishing vessels, present for the first time at the express invitation of the King and the Admiralty. In the centre lay the Hood, dressed from stem to stern with flags selected by the Chief Yeoman of Signals and triced up the masts at 08.00 on the great day, 16 july. At 11.00 the first of 500 officers' guests began to arrive on board to gape at the spectacle, not least of which was Hood herself, conjured by Cdr O'Conor into a vision of scrubbed wood, polished metal and gleaming paintwork. Three hours later the Royal Yacht Victoria mId Albert sailed from the South Railway jetty at Portsmouth for the King to receive the salute of the Fleet, a synchronised firing of21 guns by every capital ship and cruiser present. Once Victoria alld Alberl had secured ahead of the battleship Queen E1iznberh and the Board of Admiralty and Flag Officers had paid their compliments, the Royal Yacht began her stately progress through the lines. Each ship was manned, her crew drawn up along the railings to cheer lustily as the King passed. ext came an aerial salute from the Fleet Air Arm, with which the first part of the day's entertainment drew to a close and the protagonists retired to dinner. Later the spectacle resumed and of it Paymaster Lt-Cdr E.C. TalbotBooth has left this breathless account:
From 10 o'clock until midnight the whole fleet was illuminated and such a sight had never been witnessed before, not even in the days of the Crystal Palace fireworks. Ship after ship broke out into a glory of coloured lights and decorative schemes; there were Imperial Crowns, glittering in the true colours of the jewels and brilliants, there were representations of the crests of the ships, and, to crown all, sudden black-outs followed by thousands of rockets. m There was one final touch, recorded here by 00 Ron Paterson (1933-6): ... When we were already illuminated we were all given candles. At a signal, we had to light them and the effect, lasting for about ten minutes, was remarkable-an almost unending line of flickering lights along the guardrails, right along the ship.,n Typically, O'Conor went one better by floodlighting his ship, a subject upon which he held very strong views: 'Flood-lighting' is quickly supplanting 'outlining' for illumination of all kinds, but the Navy lags behind. Present-day illuminating circuits for ships are expensive and involve heavy labour in rigging and unrigging. In many ships outlining produces a caricature effect. With flood-lighting all of a ship's majesty and beauty can be revealed by light and shade effects, and the trouble involved in rigging is negligible. The cost is not great: one
At 11.59 the illuminations ended but the foUowing day there were fireworks of a different order as the Hood led ReI/OW", Va/iam and Barham in a concentration shoot off the Isle of Wight. The shoot against a battle practice target towed at 20 knots by the cruiser ClIrafoa was a success with six out of eight salvoes straddling over ranges of 13-13,500 yards. As the Victoria Q/ld A/bert led the battlefleet back to its anchorage the signal 'Splice the mainbrace' was hoisted, permitting every man who desired it to drink the King's health in an extra tot of rum that evening. For O'Conor it had been another gratifying episode. Not only had he attended the sumptuous dinner given at HMS Excel/erll for virtually every gunnery officer of note from jellicoe down, but he had managed to procure the return to Hood of his favourite 'team' of midshipmen from the cruiser Shropshire, anchored just a few cables away. It was one of the high points in the 1933-6 commission. 12• m Talbo'-Booth, All the World', Figllting Fleets, 3rd <do, p. 261. Cited in Taverner, Hood's Legacy, pp. 95-6.
IZJ
124 RBS. p. 134. ,n The Chough, April 1936, p. 17. 1%6 IWMlSA, no. 11951. red 4.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
168
Cited in Coles & Briggs. Flagship Hood. p. 89. ". ~IM. Chatfield/4/1-3. ff. 57r-60r, James to Chatfield, Churt, Surrey. undated hut 127
c. February 1936; fr.59\'-60r.
A visit from the exiled Emperor Haile Selassie of Abyssinia at
Gibraltar. 30 May 1936. The Hood had first played host to him and his entourage during his sad progress through Europe the previous autumn. Both visits aroused great sympathy and curiosity among the men. To the left of the Emperor is RearAdmiral Sidney Bailey; to the right is Capt. Francis Pridham. Behind them is the Emperors daughter, Princess Sehai. and,
presumably, Mrs Bailey. Hft/fS Hood AnocJ.rion!Crcm Coll«fK)(1
provoked much satisfaction in the Hood and corresponding disgust in the Rel/OIVII, but the issue was far from settled. Three weeks later Ihe Admiralty issued the following pronouncement: Their Lordships dissent from the finding of the courtmartial held for the trial of Rear-Admiral Bailey to the following ex1ent: 'Rear-Admiral Bailey adopted an unusual procedure in directing Hood and RellowlI 10 steer definite course to close. Since he had given that order, responsibility for the manoeuvre rested on him and it was incumbent on him at the proper moment to make a further signal to reform his squadron. His not doing so left in doubt his final intention. The signal for Hood and Rel/OIVII to form single line ahead was made too late. For these reasons Their Lordships are unable to absolve Rear-Admiral Bailey of all blame. Their Lordships agree in the findings of the courtmartial held for the trial of Captain Sawbridge but they have decided to reduce the entence to a severe reprimand. Captain Sawbridge will therefore resume command of ReIlOIVII. Their Lordships consider that Captain Tower should have taken avoiding action earlier and to that extent they are unable to acquit him of all blame.'" It was RellolVlI's turn to celebrate. There the matter might have ended but for the ill grace shown by Bailey toward the RellolvlI, an altitude that effectively destroyed the comradeship nurtured by James in the Baltle Cruiser Squadron after Invergordon. james, who went from the Hood to the Admiralty as Deputy Chief of aval Staff, wrote as much to Chatfield, the First Sea Lord:
I do feel Bailey failed from the outset to realize the importance of fostering, by every possible means, a 'squadron spirit'. He did not like Sawbridge [... J an unusual type, but a man who responded at once to any
lead. The collision accentuated this lack of good feeling between the ships and, as far as I know, no attempt has been made to improve matters. After Ihe courts-martial would have been just the moment for the Admiral to have gone on board RellolVll--{)r, beller still, after the Admirahy decision was received-and shown a big, generous spirit. If he had followed this up by a sustained effort to bring the officers and men of the two ships together, all would have been well. But bitterness over the collision ,vas allowed to exclude the e bigger and more generous thoughts.'" Bailey's reaction was echoed by O'Conor who took the collision as a personal affront and never boarded Rel/OIVII again. In no doubt as to where blame for the accident la)', O'Conor added a quotation from Disraeli to hi private album of the 1933-6 commission that says it all: The assaults of brutality you may combat, the cunning of duplicity you may contravene, the wiles of diplomacy you may defeat, but there is one force with which no human ingenuity can cope-the Unconscious Machinations of Stupidity. o wonder Rel101V1I was the only ship not to signal her congratulations to the Hood when she swept the board at the Home Fleet Regatta at Scapa two months later. Aside from these displays of petty jealousy, the collision provides evidence that the rigid command structure and imprecise signalling that had contributed to the German escapes at the Dogger Bank in 1915 and jutland the following year had yet to be banished from the Royal Nav),. By autumn a spell in dry dock at Portsmouth, the Regatta victory at Scapa and the jubilee Review had restored the Hood's fabric and fortunes, but the international situation for the first time brought the prospect of war onto her horizon. On 3 October 1935, after months of sabre-rattling, Italy invaded Abyssinia. Anticipating a pre-emptive strike on Malta, in August the Admiralty had taken the precaution of ordering the Mediterranean Fleet to Alexandria while elements of the Home Fleet, including Hood, were brought south to Gibraltar. The move incensed Mussolini who had massed troops in Libya and feared a blockade of Italian trade and supplies, especially oil, at either end of the Mediterranean. However, he need not have worried for neither Britain nor France had any intention of going to war over Abyssinia, to which the infamous HoareLaval Pact of December 1935 bore witness. For the Hood, which spent seven months at Gibraltar between September 1935 and june 1936, this translated into an agreeable though, for much of her crew, increasingly unsatisfactory period of enforced idleness. Things got off to a bad start when a disgruntled stoker, angry that the ship was being transferred from her home port, sabotaged one of the turbines with a number of razor blades. Then much of the crew was sickened by being fed a meal of corned beef which had been left out in the galley all night. Above all, it encompassed the departure of Capt. Tower and his replacement by Francis Pridham who e arrival in February 1936 brought a very different style of leadership to the Hood. Whereas Tower had been content to give O'Conor carte blal/clle to do more or less a he pleased, Pridham was a hands-on captain of the old school and one who immediately
Disaster and Recovery, 1931-1936
found much to criticise in the ship and her Commander's style. For one thing she was far below the required standard of cleanliness. As Pridham recalled, It took me some time before I could believe my eyes, [butl between decks she was the dirtiest ship I had ever seen. I could find no signs that good 'ship husbandry' was within the knowledge or competence of her officers. I... ) The messdecks were disgusting and swarming with cockroaches. These dirty pests are easily eradicated-if you know how; the ommander did not. One of my first orders to him wa that I expected to find the Mess Decks free from cockroaches in six weeks' time; and I told him how to set about it. It was SO!'29
The evidence is that the Hood was still infested months later, as he could hardly fail to be in the Mediterranean, but Pridham's criticisms of the layers of paint with which O'Conor had coated and recoated every surface proved rather more pertinent: It was by no means difficult to point out to the Commander that under all the paint he had plastered on the Quarterdeck were layers of dirt. I had one spot chipped down to bare metal and found a quarter of an inch of layers of paint and dirt on top of rust, indicating two departures from first principles: don't try to cover rust by painting over it, and don't paint over dirt. I"
There and then Pridham instituted a paint-removal drive that had not been completed by the time the ship was sunk five years later. To his credit, O'Conor noted the gist of Pridham's 'first principles' in Rl/nning a Big Ship, but by then the Hood was loaded down with all too many tons of his paintwork. or was this all. The ship was deficient in basic seamanship; the Hood's seaboat drill was 'lacking in any vestige of smart work' and her paravane drill equally laggardly. Pridham set to with a will: The sailors soon realized that the 'new Broom' on the Fore Bridge was no silent ornament and quickly adopted a new and enthusiastic demeanour to Seaboat Drill. In any case it presented an opportunity for competition between the two sides of the ship, just that incentive which can be SO valuable when working bodies of men. 131 And there was more. The traditional evolution of putting to sea without the assistance of tugs apparently left the Hood's officers nonplussed: Ever since that shocking collision between the Hood and the Renown ... the Hood had never been hanclled boldly, was everywhere given a wide berth, and was never moved in harbour without six or eight tugs being in anendance. I... J While talking to the Commander about going to sea next morning I told him, to his evident surprise, that I would not be using tugs, since in any case I hated having wire hawsers hanging over the propellers, so I would use a 'spring' to cant the ship's stern away from the wall. [... 1 I had to give him another lecture in seamanship and some firm orders. I had noticed that the First Lieutenant on the Fo'castle and his men had no idea of using a wire hawser and putting weight
169
onto it. They had seemed scared stiff and stood well clear as soon as any strain came on, instead of the First Lieutenant himself keeping a fOOL on it to feel the strain and to judge when it came near to breaking point, an age-old metllOd I had learned as a midshipman.'" Moreover, the Hood, thought Pridham, was a ship in which too great a reliance had been placed on machinery at the expense of traditional skills: I had first to kill the idea that one must use machinery whenever possible in place of man-power. It was my view that since the days of the passing of'Coaling Ship', it had been essential to find opportunities for exercising, physically, any Ship's Company; especially is this so in a ship with a very large Seamen complement like the Hood's. This should be backed up by introducing competition whenever possible.'" The shortcomings found by Pridham no doubt had something to do with the many months she had spent tied up at Gibraltar, but there was one respect in which the Hood could definitely be found wanting and that was war readiness-'our sole purpose and great responsibility'.IJ4 By early 1936 developments in Germany, the Japanese invasion of Manchuria and the Abyssinian Crisis had alerted the British political and military establishment to the likelihood of war on a global scale. As O'Conor's priorities indicate, this point had yet to impress itself on the Navy at large. William Harding, Warrant Engineer between 1936-7, recalls the situation: The Warrant Shipwright persuaded the Boatswain to convince the Commander to operate again the bower cable holder, which was not used because it spoilt the paintwork. It took two days and a fire around the spindle before the shipwrights freed it. The Torpedo Gunner was also given permission to work the above-water tubes. This entailed spoiling the side paintwork and it took almost a week to get the doors open.'" As Admiral Sir Roger Backhouse, Commander-in-Chief of the Home Fleet, put it in a letter to the First Sea Lord at the close of Capl. Tower's tenure, Of Hood, herself, I am not quite sure. She has done very well in ome respects, but not in all, and Tower's line in gunnery matters was always to make excuses.'" No wonder Backhouse dispatched Pridham to the Hood with the following brief: I want you to get the Hood out of cotton wool. Take your time, but as soon as you think you have got the feel of your ship, I want you to bring the Hood in here after dark and in foul weather. My ships will most certainly have to do such things in time of war. 1J7
Ilt
fighting effectiveness of his ship. Whatever his accomplishment in building a happy and successful community, O'Conor's neglect of the Hood's fundamental raison d'etre is
Memoirs, II, pp. 146 &
147. IJI
Ibid., p. 147. Ibid.
UJ
Ibid.• pp. 149. 150.
1)0
m Ibid., p. 148. IJ-l
It was the Commander's principal responsibility to ensure the
Pridham,
IJ)
Pridham. 'Notes: p. 6. Cited in Coles & Briggs. Flagship
Hood,p.96. .,. 'MM, Chalfield/4/1-3, If. SSr-56". HMS FalllknoT, at sea, 1 February 1936; f. 56v. W Pridham, Memoirs. II, p. 149.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
170
The hospital ship RFA Maine enters the harbour at Gibraltar in
a photo taken from the Hoods bridge. c. , 936. Hood spent an increasingly restive few months berthed here in the final year of the 1933-6 commission. HMS
Hood ~tIONH'99'mon
Col1«tlOl'l
the one signal failure of his tenure, though here Tower must evidently shoulder much of the blame. It is not difficult to detect the instinctive clash of personality between the humane and easygoing O'Conor and an impatient martinet like Pridham. The dissonance between them reflects many of the debates that had exercised the avy's officer corps since the end of the Great War. The relative merits of seamanship against technical specialisation, of brawn against machinery; the value of stern discipline against a more tolerant environment; of fitness for war against prowess in sport; ultimately the means by which the Navy's great tradition might be nurtured and perpetuated against the trials that beset it. Though Pridham admitted deliberately'stirring up my Commander and my Ship's ompany', there was no doubt where he stood on these issues, or on O'Conor himself for that matter: The Commander was a first-class showman ... He was one of the most upright men I have ever met, and a charming personality. [... 1 He had been promoted to Commander very young and before he could have had that experience which can only be gleaned in the lower ranks. He knew very little seamanship and nothing about ship husbandry. He was obsessed with the idea of spoiling his Ship's Company by saving them trouble (i.e. work) and he rarely awarded any punishment. In consequence many of the officers and petty officers were unhappy and felt frustrated in their endeavours to obtain cleanliness and order. The ship was inefficient in her main purpose.'38
U' Ibid.• p. 146.
I'" Pridham, 'Notes: p. 4. An edition of Pridham's memoirs and papers br this writer is forthcoming.
O'Conor's opinion of Pridham is not on record and his premature death deprived him of the luxury of leaving it for pos-
terity. Suffice to add that his commission album contains a single picture of Pridham along ide dozens of his predecessor, including one in bathing trunks. Despite their differences, Pridham and O'Conor had more in common than perhaps either imagined. Both had made their names after the Great War and had had every opportunity to observe the rapid evolution of the avy and its men at close quarters. Both, too, had lived through the Invergordon Mutiny, O'Conor at HMS Excel/elll and Pridham in the Admiralty itself. Following his appointment to the Hood Pridham produced a memorandum, his' otes for ewly Joined Officers', by which he expected the ship to be governed. It was never published, but many of his remarks are in the same vein as Rlllmillg a Big Ship: Your men must acquire through your manner with them the knowledge that you are available to them and that you expect them to approach you for your advice or help towards their welfare and contentment. Your endeavour should be to inspire in them a feeling of respect for you and confidence in your sympathetic interest and understanding of their problems, as well as your professional ability. This is the basis of discipline and leadership.'" However, he took a much firmer line on discipline as something to be earnt by example rather than conjured by favour. Leadership came from the top; the 'popularity Jack' soon lost the respect of the hard cases: Men quickly form a very shrewd opinion of your ability and your capacity for just dealing. On this assessment their readiness to foUow your lead and work with a will under
Disaster and Recovery, 1931-1936
you will mostly depend. I... J The amount of strength a body of men will exert is in proportion to the grip of the person in charge and his ability to hearten them. 1... 1 To obtain the essential grip of your men be on the lookout for opportunities to nip slackness in the bud-these will not be rare. Use your voice on these occasions, but don't scream or use much sarcasm. A short sharp hard word is by no means excluded, but it must be justly deserved. I··· J Once you have discovered a bad character you must lay for him (by watchfulness not by guile).'''' But both, though in rather different ways, laid great emphasis on the divisional system:
17l
Hood earned him wift recognition and on 30 June 1936 he became, at 37, the youngest captain on the avy List. Barely pausing for breath, he set about publishing the fruits of his experience in Hood for the wider consumption of the Navy. Equally characteristically, Admiral Backhouse sent O'Conor the following admonition when news of it reached his ears: I see you have written a book and (I suppose) invented a new routine! Do not, however, be too quick in your reforms, as, once introduced-good, bad, or indifferentthey may be very hard to change! '" But O'Conor pressed on undeterred and the result, RWlIlillg a 011 'Tell COllllllalldlllell/S', remains one of the most influential naval treatises of the first half of the twentieth century. Although the war would change O'Conor's avy for ever, the ethos enshrined in RlIIlIlillg a Big Ship, that every man was entitled to the understanding and consideration of his officers, was to have a lasting impact on shipboard relations in the avy. That said, RlIIlIlillg a Big Ship was not beyond reproach. Though written with great verve and skill, its scope was limited by a tendency to over-regulation and by being confined almost exclusively to the Executive Branch. either does it contain a single line on war efficiency, a point Admiral Lord Cork was evidently at pains to qualify in his foreword:
Big hip
If you are an officer of a Division encourage your men to come and ask you for your opinion about some facility or privilege, whether for an individual or for the benefit of a mess or section. [... J Learn their names. You must make a sustained effort in this direction. Know their pay, allowances and opportunities for advancement fully. Learn their circumstances, qualities and ambitions. Learn what your men are interested in and their topics of conversation and discussion. I... J Having come across some circumstance in a man's private affairs and perhaps obtained some advice and assisted him, do not let the matter drop and be forgotten. Subsequent enquiry as to how things are going on will sometimes bring to light that fact that a man is still in need of help, but is averse to making a fuss by coming to you a second time.'" And where consideration for the men was concerned there was nothing to choose between them: It is within the competence of any officer to show consideration to his men. Uncertainty as to whether they will be required during non-working hours, a sudden alteration or curtailment of a meal hour, should rarely if ever be necessary. 'Pass the word' as long beforehand as you can. 1... 1 Early information about long-leave dates, weekends landl movements of the ship may often enable a man to make private arrangement conveniently. The same remark applies to drafting: a sudden change to another ship may be extremely inconvenient, if not worse.'" For all the success of his regime, O'Conor ultimately chose to focus his energies and those of his crew on competition with other ships rather than the fighting efficiency which tradition and circumstance increasingly urged upon him. It was for this failing and all that it implied that Pridham never forgave him. The end of the commission must in these circumstances have come as something of a relief for O'Conor. There was, however, one final junketing to be celebrated, the I,OOOth day of the commission, which O'Conor laid on during a week of'holiday routine' at Las Palmas in May 1936. Partly in compensation for their having missed Christmas with their families, O'Conor granted the crew several days' leave by watches. In June the ship returned to Portsmouth where O'Conor saw her payoff with all the pomp and ceremony he could mu ter. The Hood's greatest commission was over. Despite his differences with Pridham, O'Conor's record in
The ship's company that can make a collective effort in one direction can usually make it in others. There are, of course, those who affect to sneer at such successes, saying that the Navy does not exist solely for boat-racing or other competitive drills and recreations. That may be partly true. But the avy does exist to make great collective efforts under the most difficult conditions. The ship whose officers and men, of all departments alike, are accustomed to go all out for the honour of their ship, is likely to last out just that fraction of a minute longer than an opponent, which in battle makes all the difference between victory and defeat. Those who 'pull harder than the rest' are likely to 'fight harder' also.'44 But O'Conor's contribution to the wartime avy lay in places other than shipboard honour. The legacy of RUIlllillg a Big Ship rests in the framework it provided for fostering an environment in which a young and diverse crew could withstand the immense strain ofwar. In this respect it proved of incalculable value for the avy, and many was the officer who kept a copy by him in the terrible years ahead. Pridham's' otes for ewly Joined Officers', by contrast, would enjoy only a limited circulation, but they made the deepest impact on those who read them. In the final analysis, the ability of men of O'Conor and Pridham's stature to give practical expression to their convictions is a measure of how far the avy had come since Invergordon. But for those who study HMS Hood, RWlIlillg a Big Ship is above all a memoir of the halcyon years of the greatest warship in the world. It is also, as one of O'Conor's reviewers put it, 'a monument to a very pleasing and capable personality', the more poignant for the cruel fate that awaited him.'" Rory O'Conor died following the loss of the cruiser Neptulle in a minefield off Tripoli in December 1941, a disaster which left just one survivor from her 767 men.
"·Ibid., pp. 1,6 & 2. HI
Ibid., p. 3.
Ibid., p. 4. '" RNM, 1993/54. Daled HMS Nelsofl, 22 December 1936.
Ie
1+4 10
RBS. X. 'Orion' in Portsmouth Evenillg News. 25 February 1937.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
172
7 War Clouds, 193 6 - 1939 And when thy heart began to beat, What dread hand and what dread feet?
1930S WORE ON the Royal Navy began to face the nightmare prospect of war on three fronts: with Italy and Germany in Europe, Africa and the Atlantic, and against japan in the Far East. Conscious of its weakness, particularly in cruisers and capital ships, the Admiralty was left with no option but to favour the same policy of appeasement and containment pursued by successive British governments over this period. As the ultimate symbol of British sea power it was natural that the Hood should feature prominently in this strategy, to which she gave the final years of her peacetime career. Capt. Francis Pridham, who commanded her between 1936-8:
A
I
Pridham. Memoirs. II, p. 167.
'IWM/SA, no. 12422, 'eel 2. J See Roskill, Naval Policy, II. pp.
372-82. and Cable, Tile Royal Navy alld rl.. Siege of8ilbilo, pp. 87-98. The Nationalist cruiser Almirante Cervera, challenged by Hood on the morning of 23 April 1937 in her attempt to bar the entry into Bilbao of a handful of British merchantmen. HMS Hood AssociItioniHlgglniOfl CoIl«t1Ofl
THE
During my two years in the Hood 'Up the Straits', as service in the Mediterranean used to be called, I was summoned by the Commander-in-Chief on three separate occasions to receive secret orders about an imminent move of my ship, for which I was to make only such preparations as would not attract attention, particularly of the Press. On the first occasion I was to be prepared to move at speed to the Far East via the Suez Canal. On the econd a few months later to the Far East via the Panama Canal. On the third to proceed to Scapa Flow to reinforce the Home Fleet, and I was to pas through the Straits of Gibraltar at night to avoid being sighted. It is true that whenever international relations became strained the question was asked 'Where is the Hood?') Hood's role as the sharp instrument of Britain's foreign policy if push came to shove was not lost on the lower deck, which christened her 'The Seven Bs': Britain's Biggest Bullshitting Bastard Built By Brown" Such is the stuff of legend. The Abyssinian Crisis of 1935-6 had already provided a first indication of the aggressive expansionism which came to characterise the Italian and German dictatorships. Having
renounced the military clause of the Treaty of Versailles, in March 1936 Hitler marched his troops into the demilitarised Rhineland. Four months later the start of the Spanish Civil War provided the backdrop against which the concerns and ambitions of every power in Europe would be played out in a terrible orgy of violence and destruction. The humanitarian effort performed by the Royal avy from july 1936 had required the transfer of a number of destroyers to French ports and the appointment of a Senior aval Officer orth Spain.' In September it also required red, white and blue stripes to be painted on Hood's 'B'turret to identify her participation in the Non-Intervention Patrol. However, the increasingly aggressive posture of General Franco toward merchantmen supplying Republican ports began to call for a more significant presence in the Bay of Biscay than that provided for by ships of the onIntervention Patrol. On 6 April 1937 the attempt by the armed trawler Galema and the 6in cruiser Almiran/e Cervera to deny ss TlJorpehall entry into Bilbao--foiled only by the intervention of three British destroyers-finally obliged the British government to take action in defence of its prestige and trading interests. The issue was a matter of some embarrassment in London where it was realised that despite Britain's stated policy of non-intervention much war materiel was reaching the Republican cause in ships flying the Red Ensign. However, the decision was made and on 10 April the Hood, flagship of Vice-Admiral Geoffrey Blake, was hurriedly dispatched from Gibraltar to the Bay of Biscay to lift the supposed blockade of Bilbao. ot for the first time the Hood's ymmetry was to stir the emotions of all who laid eyes on her and the Basque population turned out in droves to watch whenever she came inshore. Information provided by Cdr Harry Pursey (late of the Hood and by then active in journalism and politics) together with his own ob ervations convinced Blake that the Nationalist blockade was hardly worthy of the name. Blake therefore decided to test the Insurgents' resolve by sending a convoy of three merchant ships into Bilbao protected by the Hood and the destroyers Firedrake and Foriline. After dark on 22 April the steamers MacGregor, Hams/erley and Stallbrook slipped out of the French port of St-jean-de-Luz and made their way westwards towards Bilbao at a leisurely 6 knots. Blake's plan was for the merchantmen to fall in with his warships off Bilbao at dawn on the 23rd and then proceed into harbour. Predictably enough, these six were not the only vessels in sight as the mist cleared from the Biscayan coast that morning. There on patrol were the Galerna and the Cervera. For three hours efforts by the ationalists to thwart the entry of the steamers to Bilbao were frustrated by a measured application of power as half-understood signals flashed between the two sides. At one stage Galema fired a shot acros MacGregor's bows but the moment of truth was only reached once Cervera trained her guns on the merchantmen as they
173
War Clouds, 1936-1939
Hood in the Bay of Biscay in 1937. Not until the outbreak of war would she know such relentless service.
approached the harbour entrance. When Blake brought the Hood's full broadside to bear on the Cervera it was obvious to Capitan de avio Manuel Moreu that the game was up, though, as Pridham remarked later, 'we... did feel that we had been "a big bully"'.' However, the sight of the Cervera hauling away with her guns trained fore and aft came as something of a relief in 'B' turret where the fuse-setting key for the shells had been inadvertently dropped into one of the loading wells' Four days later the Hood glided effortlessly into Portsmouth to attend the Coronation Review of King George VI. By the time the Hood returned south Republican resistance was coming to an end in the Basque country and with it the need to protect British shipping on the Biscayan coast. However, the position in the Mediterranean remained precarious thanks to the increasingly active involvement of Mussolini on the Nationalist side. At sea this took the form of an offensive against vessels bringing war supplies to the Republic from Soviet ports in the Black Sea. Once again the Royal avy found itself reluctantly drawn into the conflict. Already on 13 May the destroyer HUrlter had 10 t eight men after striking a Nationalist mine off Almeria and on 3\ August the Havock narrowly escaped a torpedo from the Italian submarine 1ride, which escaped after a prolonged hunt with Asdic. june therefore found the Hood 'up the traits' where she was once more assigned to the Mediterranean Fleet while Blake was appointed Senior Officer, Western Basin. Sir Geoffrey Blake, however, wa not to enjoy his appointment long. On 20 june he was admitted to Bighi Hospital in Valletta after suffering an embolism during his accustomed early-morning pull in
a skiff. Five days later he was obliged to strike his flag, a circumstance which brought that most famous of admirals to the Hood: Andrew Cunningham. By turns combative and charming, 'ABC' as he was known in the avy was to become the greatest British fighting officer since elson. His arrival in Hood on the morning of \ 5 july, barely an hour after the liner bearing him from England had berthed in the Grand Harbour at Malta, is a mark of the man. Louis Le BaiHy recalls the scene: Early one morning Sir Geoffrey's flag lieutenant [james Munn] took the barge to meet Cunningham's liner and ascertain the time of his formal arrival on board his new flagship. For some reason I was on the quarterdeck about 08.20 when the barge rounded our stern and came alongside the starboard ladder, up which ran a somewhat rotund figure followed by a clearly hysterical flag lieutenant and a sailor laden with several suitcases. My comment to the officer of the watch, who was writing up the deck log in the lobby, 'that in my day as a seaman it was usual for the officer of the watch, at least, to meet an admiral' was treated as a poor joke. But when I suggested that the small man in mufti must surely be Admiral Cunningham, a scene ensued to which only H.M. Bateman could have done justice. The captain was in his bath, the commander breakfasting in the wardroom, the admiral's secretary in his bunk with his morning cup of tea, while the admiral, delighted at outwitting his flagship, was changing into uniform and admiring his magnificent quarters·
.. Pridham, Memoirs. II, p. 162. 'IW1.1, 9t/7It, p. 53.
• le Bailly, The Man Arolltul the Engi"e p. 40. H.M. Bateman W'3S a cartoonist.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
174
THE CORONATION REVIEW, 1937 Two years after the Fleet had gathered to celebrate the Silver jubilee of IGng George V it did so once more to mark the coronation of George Vl. In the intervening period the prospect of war, still remote in the summer of 1935, had become very much more real. japanese militarism, the Abyssinian Crisis, the resurgence of Germany and now the Spanish Civil War pointed to a dark future. Britain, meanwhile, had begun her belated rearmament, the first signs of which were the newly completed 6in cruisers Newcastle and Southampton. Unlike the jubilee gathering, the Coronation Review was attended by no less than eighteen foreign warships, including several whose names were to become famous in the years ahead. There was the Admiral Graf Spee, scuttled in the River Plate in 1939, and the japanese cruiser Ashigara, scourge of the Allied navies in the java Sea. Mo t poignant of all from Hood's perspective was the battlecruiser Dunkerque, destined for a tragic end under her guns at Mers-el-Kebir in 1940. But that belonged to the future. For now, after the disaster of the Abdication, there was a new king to celebrate and old friendships to rekinclle. Representing the United States was Admiral Hugh Rodman, commander of the 6th Battle Squadron of the Grand Fleet during the Great War, together with his old flagship, the uss New York. The review, which took place at Spithead on 20 May, followed the pattern of earlier years, the Royal Yacht Victoria and Albert sailing through the lines to the cheers of the Fleet. And like the jubilee Review, evening brought a great festival of light and sound. LS Len Williams (1936-41 l was among those entrusted with the Hood's illuminations:
Capt. Rory O'Conor, Hood's former Executive Officer and a vocal advocate of floodlighting in ships, no doubt looked on with some dismay. But the highlight from the Hood's point of view was the knighting of Vice-Admiral Blake in the Queen Elizabeth for distinguished service off Spain, though clearly it was an occa ion some found more enjoyable than others. ViceAdmiral Sir Louis Le Bailly was then a SubLieutenant (El:
During the Review, Hood, in common with the rest of the fleet, illuminated ship each night. As torpedomen, responsible for the
Before the royal yacht Victoria and Albert progressed round the fleet, cheered by each ship in turn, we donned our cocked hats,
Hood dressed overall at the Coronation Review of May
1937. This photo shows the alterations to the bridge structure carried out during
the refit at Portsmouth the previous year, including the removal of the Foremast searchlight platform and the installation of an Airdefence position over the compass platform. The light cruiser Curacoa lies off the starboard quarter; off the port quarter are Repulse, Glorious and Courageous. Not one would survive the
Second World War. HMS Hood ~tionIHiggimon Collection
electrical installation of the ship, this job was dropped into our lap. We outlined the silhouette of the ship with lamps, and a large Royal Cypher GVIR was constructed and suspended half way between the after funnel and the mainmast. We also created our Vice Admiral's flag in lights, and this was hoisted to the top of the mainmast. The whole effect was like something out of Fairyland. Hood cast her reflection on the water like jewels on rippled velvet. We also gave a searchlight, display in company with the whole fleet, and followed it up with a gigantic firework display'
frock coats, epaulettes, white gloves and swords and assembled on the lower signal bridge in strict Navy List order. This placed me at the end of the line of engineers, just ahead of the paymaster-commander. Both he and the commander (El, a few paces to my right, were finding their cocked hats tight. either's temper was improved during the long wait by the sound of popping corks as the admiral and his staff on the admiral's bridge above celebrated, with champagne, his new knighthood.' For the crew, meanwhile, it was a welcome opportunity to pend time with families they had not seen since October, nor in many cases were destined to see again before january 1939. The Coronation Review would also be memorable for the inebriated radio commentary of Lt-Cdr Tom Woodroffe, who on the night of the 20th informed BBC listeners that 'The Fleet's lit up! We're all lit up!' before the programme was taken off the air. The Coronation Review was the last great gathering of warships before the Second World War. By the time that conflict was over only 81 of the 145 British and empire vessels present that day were still afloat. The Hood in lights on the night of 20 May 1937. A big job for the Torpedomen entrusted with her lowpower electricity supply and installations. Vice-Admiral Sir
Geoffrey Blake's flag at the mainmast. HMS Hood AJSoc~rionlHiggimofl CoIl«tion
1
Williams, Gone A Long Journey, p. 121 .
• Le Bailly, TIle Mati Around the Engitle, p. 39. The Commander (E) was V.J.H.H. Sankey; the Paymaster Commander was C.K. Uord.
175
War Clouds, 1936-1939
As Pridham discovered during their first encounter, Cunningham liked nothing better than bearding his subordinates:
Among his first remarks to me was that he hated these great elephants of ships, which took so long to get moving. He then boasted to me that he had twenty-four years in destroyers, in which you did not have to wait minutes before the ship gathered way. He liked to feel himself moving at twenty knots a few seconds after giving the order Half peed Ahead. He claimed that ervice in destroyers was the only kind fit for a seaman!"
-L
I
Another victim of Cunningham's sharp tongue was the Rev. Edgar Rea, the ship's chaplain, who took some time to accustom himself to the admiral's manner: He had a devastating way of expressing both his opinions and his criticisms but he did not always expect people to shrivel up and become speechless under his verbal onslaught. He so dearly loved an argument that if one did not develop naturally in the course of a conversation he could be relied upon sooner or later to introduce some bone of contention. Although he frequently reminded me that his religion was hurch of Scotland-'the only true religion~ he would say-he always came to my Church Services. Judging by what happened afterwards, I was sometimes tempted to think that he only came for the sake of the argument which invariably followed. He sat direaly behind me and whenever his chair creaked during the sermon, a disturbing thought Aashed through my mind: 'This is it at last-he is getting up to contradict me'. Fortunately he never did though it often became clear afterwards that he had been itching to do so. Whenever he saw me after a Church Service. he almost always violently disagreed with me about something which I had said and he seemed to welcome my willingness to take up the chalienge. l • Cunningham was full of surprises. One day in May 1938 he returned to the ship minus his trousers after an incident while fishing in Corsica. But no admiral took a more uncompromising attitude to excellence and the Hood soon found herself under the sternest of taskmasters as he and Pridham chamfered her to a pitch of fighting efficiency. Fred Coombs: Lucky for us,' ullS' Cunningham, who had clawed his way through a life of destroyer commands to Aag rank, ... was beginning to make his presence felt and bring a bit of reality into our training. [... J The heads of Departments normally ensured picking favourable conditions for our practice hoots in order to show their efficiency. ot Cutts. If the weather was safe enough for the tug to tow the target it was good enough for US'I Coombs also recalls the grim satisfaction with which the lower deck watched their fire-breathing admiral set about the shortcomings of his officers: At a carefully chosen moment, he gave orders from his sea cabin for the Marine who always stood sentry on the Man Overboard Floats to release one and cause panic by shouting
'Man Overboard!'. By some crafty means [hel managed to have an inexperienced officer on his own, on the bridge perhaps, to test their reactions in an emergency. Many a suspect young officer carne a cropper by doing the wrong thing such as not swinging the stern away from whatever was overboard and in danger from our propellers. ... As seaboat's crew we got more than our fair share of the dangers of manning the life boat [... J so naturally were good at it but the Officer of the Watch was not and we had many sticky moments to face when we were either slipped too high or in the trough of the wave instead of the crest. Cutts soon sorted a few out who. through belonging to the right family, had wriggled their way to the top without experience. Even the higher ranking officers were not 'excused boots' ... 12
Hood alongside the South Mole at Gibraltar with the Japanese heavy cruiser Ashigara astern, June 1937. Ashigara was in European waters to attend the Coronation Review at Spithead. HMS Hood Assoc~tlonIH;gg'nson Collection
As Pridham ruefully put it, He was an extremely wise and very well educated little man, and though not always 'easy' in peace time I found that serving him as his Flag Captain was very pleasant and interesting. [... 1 With an occasional mild tussle we got on very well." At least one of these 'mild tussles' centred on the accident while berthing at Gibraltar in October 1936 when the parting of a hawser killed two members of the after capstan party and injured another." Pridham's refusal to use tugs no doubt had something to do with it, but a board of enquiry found a lieutenant-commander guilty of negligence. Months later, examination of the evidence led Cunningham to conclude that the fault in fact lay with those on the bridge and the verdict was overturned. Despite this, unningham, who prized seamanship above all else and had no opinion of gunnery officers or their trade. evidently made an exception with Pridham, of whom he tartly noted in his memoirs that 'specialisation in gunnery had not impaired hi ability in ship handling'.15 Although his abrasive style ofleadership ruffled many feathers, the legacy of Cunningham's sojourn in command of the Battle Cruiser Squadron rested in its transformation into a truly effective fighting force. As the Rev. Rea recalled, Cunningham seemed 'hardly ever to have a thought to which he did not
'Pridham. Memoirs, II, pp. 159-60. 10 Rea, A Curate's Egg, pp. 137-8.
" IWM, 911711, pp. 45 & 66. Syntax rearranged for clarity. " Ibid., p. 66. U
Pridham, Memoirs, II, p. 160.
Pack. CWUli"g',am lite eommat,der, p. 4; see also ch. 4. p. lOt. lS Cunningham, A Sailor's Odyssey, p.182.
14
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
176
.i Rea, A Curate's Egg, pp. 137-8. ., Cited in Pack. Clmtlingllam the
Commander, p. 71. "II"M, 911711, p. 66.
.9 ~
Pridham, Memoirs, II, pp. 167-8. Cunningham, A Sailor's Odyss£)'. p.186.
immediately give vigorous expression' and this impatience translated into those techniques of bold ship handling and firing at night and in all weathers that would be unleashed onto the Mediterranean theatre a few years later.'· As Lt-Cdr Dymock Watson, the Squadron Torpedo Officer, recalled, I particularly remember the exceptional way he handled the battlecruisers during neet exercises ... We were always in the right place at the right time and if only the Italian neet had come to sea we should have had another Trafalgar." However, this degree of efficiency came only after many months of arduous practice. Fred Coombs remembers the start of the campaign:
Below: Officers and men of the Yugoslav Army beside Starboard No.2 5.5in gun during the Hoods visit to Split in September
1937. The ladder on the left leads from the boat deck to the
flag deck, where the edge of one of the flag lockers can be seen. Behind the ladder is the head of the ammunition hoist serving the gun. The large tubular structure beneath the carley float is part
of the bridge tripod support; to the left of it is the entrance to the recreation space. HMS Hood A.s:sochttonlHigginiOn CoI1«rron
The first 5.5-inch shoot that we did, under roughish conditions with a half gale whipping the spray inboard, would have been postponed by the Gunnery Officer if he had had his way. The Marines, who manned the gun forward on the boat deck and were not protected by the casemate roof as were the others, found that the linoleumcovered deck round their gun was like a skating rink to their leather boots when wet. The loaders running around and clutching an [851-pound shell soon found it impossible to heave the shell into the breach and still maintain their feet. The loading drill from that one gun suffered and was soon halted-another lesson learned under Cutts. Some special shaped fibre mats and securing eyelets fa tened to the decks to hold them in position were later found by the sail maker hidden away in his store but nobody could remember them ever being used. They were easily rigged for every shoot from then on." However, the first night-firing exercise in battle conditions proved a sobering experience: The first occasion of carrying out a full-calibre night firing produced something of a surprise. The secondary armament of 5.5-inch gun was manned mo tly by young
Right: A cup of tea under 'Y' turret for refugees of the Spanish Civil War in the summer of 1938. Much of that year was taken up in humanitarian work of this sort. HMS Hood AllOCt.tlonJ~'(lvalColIKtlon
seamen, quite inexperienced, who on first being subjected to the blinding flash and blast of the turret guns, were so scared that a few ought shelter well in the rear of their guns, thus slowing down the rate of loading. The only way of dealing with this was for me first to speak some rough words to the assembled guns' crews. I told them that they were not fit for me to take into action against even an Eyetie ship! I then took the ship out the following night to do a repeat shoot. Of course, all went well then, but I had been shown the importance of frequent full-calibre firings." In all her career the Hood was probably never more battleworthy than in 1937-8 and though for various reasons this would not last much beyond unningham's tenure it could scarcely have come at a more opportune moment. In September 1937 the undeclared war against neutral merchantmen and warships by submarines and aircraft of the Italian Navy led to the convening by Britain and France of a conference in the Swiss town of yon. The conference was boycotted by the Germans and Italians, both of whom had withdrawn from the naval patrol of the international NonIntervention Committee in June after losing men to Republican air attacks off the Balearics. Undeterred, the British and French agreed not only to the introduction of declared routes for merchant shipping, but also that these should be patrolled by hips and aircraft with orders to meet force with force. These developments brought Cunningham and the Hood into the western basin of the Mediterranean where she was to serve two stints on patrol duty based mostly on Palma de Mallorca between October 1937 and February 1938. As he recorded in his memoirs, We made Palma our headquarters, with periodical visits to Valencia and Barcelona to visit the British consuls and the British minister, and to allay the fears of the latter. Almost every day we spent at Palma squadrons of S.79's roared overhead to bomb Valencia or Barcelona, though when we layoff these ports the bombers never came, so the inhabitants were glad of our arrival.'"
War Clouds, 1936-1939
At Caldetas north of Barcelona one of the ship's steam pinnaces would tow a culler loaded with provisions onto the sands where a group of supply ratings under the protection of a Marine landing party would see them onto trucks bound for the British Consulate." or did the boats return empty. A devalued peseta allowed Paymaster Lt A.R. Jackson to buy three fur coats for his wife while Cunningham di covered that half a crown would clear a flower stall on the Ramblas of much of its contents." The Nyon Patrol was not without incident. More than once the Hood was buzzed by the Regia Aeronautica, Cunningham ordering her guns to be manned and trained against the offending aircraft if they did not keep at the requisite altitude H In the event, the transfer of four Italian submarines to the Insurgent navy meant that the yon patrols enjoyed only partial succes and much of Cunningham's time was spent issuing futile protests to his ationalist counterpart at Palma. This while the Hood's Intelligence and wrr offices monitored signals between the armoured cruiser Quarto and Italian submarines in the Mediterranean. By the time the Hood returned for her third stint on I April after exercises and a month in dry dock at Malta, the steady advance of Nationalist arms northwards along the Valencian coast had made the evacuation of refugees and British nationals an urgent priority for the Royal avy. Large parties of civilians were embarked for Marseilles at Valencia and Barcelona and in all her career the Hood was never busier than in April and August 1938. On one of these trips the Hood, loaded with over 100 refugees from Barcelona, was called upon to rescue the crew of the ss Lake LugallO after she had been bombed in the Catalan port of Palam6s. These exertions called for the occasional rest-cure, the first of which was taken at Golfe-Juan on the Cote d'Azur at the end ofApril. The unique charms of the Riviera were not lost on the Hood's libertymen, many of whom were still carousing in bars and cafes on the morning of 2 May when their ship should have sailed. When Pridham finally did get them on board it was to sail to Corsica for a day of punitive drill while Cunningham and his staff went fishing in the mountains above St-Florent. But the Spanish patrol went on and it was therefore a cause of some relief to the Admiralty when the victory of one party promised an easing of the burden on its ships and men. In ovember 1938 the Republican defeat at the Battle of the Ebro made it quite certain which party that would be. Already in April 1938, a month after the German Anschluss with Austria, the British had signed their extraordinary rapprochement with Mussolini, the Anglo-Italian Agreement. As part of this tentative accord it was decided in London that a large squadron of Italian ships should be invited to Malta to renew the traditional friendship between the two navies. 0 quarterdeck in the avy lent itself better to such occasions than the Hood's and hers was among those selected to host the entertainments. This was accepted grudgingly by the wardroom and with decided ill grace by Cunningham: Most of us in the Mediterranean were sceptical about the results achieved by these same conversations. [... J As our merchant ships were being bombed almost daily by Italian bombers in and outside the Spanish ports it was not easy to work up cordiality. [... ) However, orders were orders, and the fleet set out to give the visitors a good time which,
177
in Latin countries, can be interpreted as one official entertainment after another without respite. Sir Dudley Pound, wishing to be particularly cordial, asked the Italian Commander-in-Chief to bring his wife and two daughters. We were to put up one of the two daughters, a tall order in a flat about the size of a large dog kennel." However, these complications were as nothing alongside those experienced on the Hood's quarterdeck on the eve of the Italian arrival. Louis Le Bailly: On the day before the arrival of the Italian Squadron Hood's Gunnery Officer had arranged that Y 15" turret, which had been under repair, should be trained under power from its foremost bearing to starboard to its foremost bearing to port. All went well until the pair of guns were pointing directly at the harbour entrance, through which the Italian ships would enter next morning. And at that point the turret well and truly jammed. Whilst this obviously hostile gesture was privately approved of by the admiral, it was felt that diplomatic niceties required the turret to be in its normal fore and aft position. Indeed, if it was not so trained, then it would remain impossible either for the main canvas awning or the ceremonial red and white awning to spread for the vast cocktail party to be given the following evening in honour of the Italians. Commander (El Berthon, as the ship's technical expert, though not himself responsible for the turret machinery, was called in to advise the poor Warrant Ordnance Officer who operated under the authority of the Gunnery Officer. After a detailed examination of the roller path, Berthon gave it as his view that the correct method of curing the situation would be to remove, individually, the grossly corroded rollers from the equally corroded roller path, clean off both and then replace the rollers. Such an operation would probably occupy at least a week. But of course hours were available. Thus the only remedy seemed to be the old naval one of'BF and BI' or Brute Force and Bloody Ignorance-although in this case the word 'ignorance' could be omitted. It was a remarkable feat. With the help of two hydraulic engines coupled to the hydraulic ring main, a block and tackle with luff upon luff led from the after capstan to the muzzle end of one 15" gun and a similar arrangement from the other muzzle, to the ship's tug-of-war team, the turret was finally brought to the fore and aft position. But the price was quite heavy. The after capstan was pulled out of line and the quarterdeck slightly buckled." After all this the entertainment passed off as well as could be expected. unningham:
" tWM/SA, AB Joseph Rockey, no. 12422, reel 2. U
I gave a large dinner-party for forty-five in the Hood preparatory to a dance in the Commander-in-Chiefs flagship, the Warspite. Decked out with palms, gladioli and carnations, the quarterdeck looked very fine, and the dinner was a great success. On the whole we liked Admiral Riccardi and the senior officers, who were most courteous and pleasant. The younger officers, however, were illmannered and boorish'·
HMS Hood Association archives. Cdr Keith Evans memoir,
193~9;
and Cunningham, A Sai/or's Od)'ssey, p. t89. lJ IWMlSA. no. 12422, reel 2. 14 Cunningham, A Sailor's Odyssey, p.19O. " CAC, LEBY 1/2, MS of Tile Mil" Around tlte Engine, ch. 12, pp. 2-3. The Gunnery Officer was It- dr J.D.Shaw·Hamihon. :'6 Cunningham. A Sailor's Odyssey. pp. 190-1.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
178
Williams, Gone A Long JOLlmey. p.126. 1I Rea, A Curate's Egg, p. 139. "Ibid., p. 140. 17
Despite the hostility between the two navies and a history of poor relations ashore, fears of unrest proved unfounded. AB Len Williams: However, sailors the world over have a knack of conveniently sweeping under the carpet any political rumpus, as having nothing to do with them; and so it was with us. There was time to worry when a war actually started! With their piano accordions and mandolins the Italians spent quite a few happy evenings in the bars of Malta. I know, for I was in their company with a lot more of our men, singing away with them, and we all thoroughly enjoyed ourselves. On this occasion Hitler and Mussolini were consigned to the dustbin! The visit was a huge success and in due course they left, leaving us with very pleasant memories, international situation or no international situation." For Cunningham the end of his time in the Hood was drawing near. In February he was appointed Deputy Chief of Naval Staff at the Admiralty and struck his flag on 22 August 1938. The news no doubt provoked a sigh of relief in the wardroom since no admiral drove his officers harder. The speech made by Lt James Munn, Cunningham's Flag Lieutenant, at the farewell dinner hosted by wardroom, provides a flavour of his leadership:
The battleship Conte di Cavour enters the Grand Harbour,
Valletta, at the head of a large Italian squadron in May 1938. They came as part of a shortlived entente between Britain
and Italy. To the left is the forecastle of Warspite, flagship of Admiral Sir Dudley Pound. HMS Hood Association/Higginson Cofl«tion
'Mr. President and gentlemen, you have no idea how lucky I feel to have survived the present regime (prolonged applause). You will understand what I mean by this statement when I tell you that in one of his ships the Admiral had no fewer than seventeen First Lieutenants.' Before the applause had died, the Admiral jumped to his feet and hanging his head as if thoroughly ashamed of himself sadly remarked: 'I'm afraid, gentlemen, it is quite true; and sat down again to even greater applause." The ship gave him a fine send offby sweeping the board at the Mediterranean Fleet sailing regatta at Navarin in July, though duties in the western basin kept her from reproducing the feat
for the Cock at Alexandria that autumn. But for Cunningham there would be one lasting memento of the Hood and that came in the form of his coxswain LS Percy Watts, who was to accompany him through all his subsequent battles, campaigns and appointments. The Hood's yon Patrol continued under Vice-Admiral Geoffrey Layton as the international situation spiralled gradually towards war. Though the damage was slight, the grounding of the ship while leaving Gibraltar on 20 September came at an awk-ward juncture. Already on the 12th Hitler had delivered a speech at Nuremberg attacking the stance of the Czech government over the Sudetenland, the German-speaking territory claimed by the Reich. This brought to a climax the increasingly fraught diplomacy that had engaged the chancelleries of Europe since February. Despite the craven policy of the Chamberlain and Daladier governments, there seemed every possibility that war might ensue if Czechoslovakia could not be persuaded to accede to her own dismemberment. On 28 September, at the very height of the crisis, the Royal Navy mobilised for war and the Hood slipped out of Gibraltar and into the Atlantic. The Rev. Edgar Rea describes the atmosphere aboard: When our men were feverishly fusing shells in preparation for battle, and things were at their critical worst, [Layton I handed me an unsealed envelope with the remark: 'You may find these useful one of these days'. Inside, I found the famous prayers composed respectively by Nelson and Drake before engaging the enemy. Soon afterwards, we started to raise steam. All leave was stopped and men already ashore were recalled by siren blasts. Towards evening we sailed and ordinary mortals like myself were left to guess both our destination and the nature of our mission. In view of all the circumstances most of us were convinced that a formal declaration of war was not far off." In fact, the Hood had sailed to meet the liner Aquitnnia, requisitioned as a troopship, and escort her through the Straits of Gibraltar against the possibility that the German pocket battleship Deutschland, then at Tangier, might attempt an interception on the high seas. In the event, the Munich Agreement by which Czechoslovakia was thrown to the wolves brought the Hood back to Gibraltar on 1 October where she was joined by the Deutschlmld herself the following day. This was by no means the first encounter between the Hood and warships of the Axis powers. Apart from the Coronation Review of 1937 and the Malta junketings already mentioned, the Spanish Civil War had frequently brought ships of the patrolling navies into the same harbour. In December 1936 she visited Tangier where were berthed the German cruisers Konigsberg and Niimberg and the torpedo boat I1tis along with the French destroyer Milan and two elderly units of the Italian navy, the armoured cruiser Quarto and the destroyer Aquila. Despite the differences between their governments, the Hood's men got on famously with their German counterparts, though on this occasion rather less well with those of the French and Italian navies. Boy Fred Coombs: The crew chose to chum up with the German pocket battleships when in Tangier, the Non-Intervention porr, where the Germans and the British had some battles royal
War Clouds, 1936-1939
with the French and Italian crew when in port together till it was decided that only one nationality would be allowed ashore at anyone time." AB Len Williams and his friends put this affinity down to the preference of British and German sailors for beer whereas the others favoured wine. Certainly, the beer, which was brewed aboard German ships and then consumed out of glass boot on the messdecks, accounted for part of the allraction, but for others it went deeper. AB Fred White (1937-8): We were all very fond of the Germans. [... J A very proud race, and they were clean, smart and a credit to their country." As AB Joseph Rockey put it, the Germans were 'very efficient, clean, smart, well drilled, well disciplined ... theirs was a harsh discipline, and we were disciplined ... ~J2 In any case, the political complexities of the situation were lost on much of the lower deck: 'Who was fighting who we had not much idea ... ~" Relations with the Italians, whom White considered 'slovenly', were to improve at Malta in April 1938, while those with the French remained somewhat distant: the matelots 'weren't bad ... but they weren't interested in us'." But it was a different matter with the Germans and the two navies were never closer than when the Delltschlfl/ld put in at Gibraltar after being bombed by Republican aircraft off Ibiza on 26 May 1937. The attack left 23 dead and over 75 wounded of whom eight would not survive. Many of the injured were hospitalised at Gibraltar where each man received a cap tally from the Hood and a total of £5 was voted the ship from canteen funds as a gesture ofsympathy; as Fred White recalled, 'That's how much we thought about them~ A German memoir of the visit survives from Matrose Hans Schmid, a young rating of the Del/tschland." The Delltschland had moored alongside the Hood, a complicated manoeuvre that the British observed with a professional eye. '0 sooner had she secured than Vice-Admiral Blake was received aboard by Kapitan zur See Paul Wennecker, apparently the first British Aag officer to set foot in a commissioned hip of the German avysince 1912.Aftera tour and refreshments of tea and cakes, Blake was paid the compliment of being rowed back to the Hood in a ten-oared cutter manned by German officers. The following day Wennecker received an invitation for the entire offduty watch of the Delitschiand to dine in the Hood. Matrose Schmid was among them: The ship's company was very excited by the prospect. [... J When the German seamen went aboard Hood they found her gaily dressed overall. Even the weather gods had joined in the spirit of this unifying festivity. A bright moonlit night and a silver panorama of stars glittering over Gibraltar made a perfect setting. The party in the 'model ship', as the British Admiralty rather conceitedly referred to her, surpassed all expectations. On the long wooden mess tables sat an array of sumptuous dishes which had been visually devoured by the German seamen long before they got a chance to tuck into them. But wine and beer were not served by the English messmen; instead one had to make do with exalted tap water from the springs of Gibraltar. Once the extravagant and princely meal was over the 'Sailors' took us on a journey through this monster of a battleship."
179
Despite the curse of Babel, the evening seems to have been a conspicuous success: After a 'digestive tour' around this outsized gargantuan of the seas, we assembled at the stern of the ship for a little conversation with our English hosts. Unfortunately, complete mutual understanding was only possible in the rarest of cases, as very few of the British understood German, and the Germans understood almost no English. However, using our hands and feet it was possible to convey all sorts of things in a comprehensible fashion. Both impres ed by what we had seen and by now rather tired, my shipmates and I took leave of the British battleship in the early hours in order to snatch a few hours sleep before the night was over." Though Schmid appears not to have noticed it, the absence of a full armoured deck in the Hood's design doubtless made an impression on more than one visitor that night, just as it did an officer of the Admiral GraJ Spee who came aboard at Tangier three months later." Much as the Hood's crew regarded her as 'good for anybody', and the Delltschland in particular, not even the bitterness over Germany's actions in Austria and the Sudeten land could dampen relations between the two ships when the laller edged into Gibraltar just two days after Munich on 2 October 1938. The Delltschland was there only to disinter and repatriate her dead from the previous year, but the opportunity was taken to renew acquaintances and drink more beer. The ships' football teams played each other and Capt. Harold Walker invited Wennecker to dinner in the Hood where they joined in watching the wardroom film. But circumstances prevented any lavish entertainment. Walker had lost an arm at Zeebrugge in 1918 but Rear-Admiral Layton, a submarine hero of the Great War, had spent the final months of that conAict as a prisoner of the Germans, whom he despised. Fraternisation was grudgingly approved but there was to be no official entertaining. Besides, a sour note had been introduced by the time the Delltschland weighed anchor. The story was still circulating in the Hood when Mid. Latham Jenson joined her in December 1940:
,. JI
IW~I, 91/711, p. 53. IWl\11 A. no. 13240. reel I.
n IWM/SA, no. 12422, reel 2. "IW~I, 91/711, p. 54. .. IWM/SA. no. 13240. reel J. H Schmid, Stellermaml dUTch Krieg WId Friede", p. 80. " Ibid., p. 8 I. Schmid uses the English word 'Sailors: " Ibid., p. 82. )I
Williams. Gone A Long fOllmey. p.125.
Football between Hood (left) and Deutschland at Gibraltar in
October 1938, just days after the Munich Conference. The exact score is uncertain but the tradition is that Hood emerged
victorious. HMS
Hood Auoc~tkxllH'99ifJSCKI CoIl«rlOfl
Tile Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
180
After a football game with German officers, Hood's officers were entertained aboard the cruiser. When it was time to go, the senior Hood officer thanked everyone, and said, 'Come on chaps; and one by one they dived off the quarterdeck to swim back to their ship. The last officer to go overheard a German scornfully say to another, 'These British officers are just overgrown schoolboys.''' So ended fraternisation in the Mediterranean. But had matters turned out differently the Hood might not have been in European waters at all. On 3 January 1938 Chatfield, the First Sea Lord, met with Rear-Admiral Royal E. Ingersoll, head of the .S. avy's delegation in London, to discuss the size and composition of the force the British would send east in the event of hostilities with japan.'· The meeting came three weeks after the bombing of the river gunboat ss PallaY by Japanese aircraft in the Yangtse had brought the United States to the brink of war. Among the large fleet subsequently promi ed by the Admiralty was the Hood, though how she would have fared against japanese naval aviation is a matter for conjecture. The fate of British and American units in the Pacific theatre in 1941-2 suggests that the apology and reparation offered by the japanese government that same month may have been a providential deliverance fur both navies.
.....~>--
In May 1938 Capl. Pridham ended two successful years in command of the Hood. Although not free of the showmanship and favouritism he derided in his first executive officer, Cdr Rory O'Conor, Pridham had accomplished a marked improvement in discipline, seamanship and fighting efficiency. Together with Cdr David Orr-Ewing he had clamped down on the laxity that characterised the last phase of O'Conor's tenure and cultivated a healthier atmosphere on the lower deck. Pridham's own assessment is not inaccurate: A long uphill task started for me and Orr-Ewing, but under the favourable conditions of the Mediterranean the ship and her company advanced steadily towards the objective to which we aspired. The ship's company seemed keen and not discontented when we drove them hard, as we had to for the first few months. Eventually they became a very happy lot and proud of their ship."
Jenson. Tin Hats, Oilskins & Scabools. p. 90. ..0 MurreH, Fool-Proof Relat;otlS, pp.l3o-ll. ~I Pridham. Memoirs, II. p. 152. e Ibid., p. 174. U Rea, A Curate's Egg, p. 154. Rea's
.tt
figure of an 80 per cent turnover
must refer to the seaman complement since the Engineering
Department $3\\' relatively little change before the ship was lost. "Ibid., pp. 15H. U For the composition of the wardroom, see ch. 5. pp. 135·6.
Pridham's 'Captain's Memorandum on Discipline', a copy of which was handed to every officer on arrival, left no one in any doubt where they stood on the matter. Where 0' onor had determined to excel in every sporting competition, Pridham focussed on sailing as the essence of good seamanship, and his zeal was rewarded in 1938 with victory in all five Mediterranean Fleet sailing cups, including the Combined Fleet Sailing Regatta. In this Pridham led by example, and his handling of the Hood at Malta and Gibraltar is remembered as one of the great naval spectacles of the late 1930s. But it was in fighting efficiency that Pridham, urged on by Cunningham, made his most significant contribution. On 20 May 1938, the day he turned over command to Capt. Harold Walker, Pridham looked back wistfully at the achievements of his tenure: I told Orr-Ewing about Sir Roger Backhouse's demand
when I first joined the ship--to get the Hood out of cotton wool-and remarked that together we had succeeded in doing so and a bit more, for we could each be proud of our service in the Hood for the rest of our lives. We had made of her not only a ship of faultless appearance but also of her ship's company a truly efficient fighting machine--our main purpose." Unfortunately, the reality of naval drafting, refit and recommissioning meant that this degree of efficiency could not be maintained and as war clouds gathered the departure of key personnel and constant disruption to training routines began to take effect. Three times between ovember 1937 and December 1938 the Hood pent a month docked at Malta for refitting and improvements to her anti-aircraft armament while drafts of men came and went every week. Add to this the undeniable fact that the 1936-9 commission was more eventful than any which had preceded it. The Spanish Civil War, the Abdication of Edward VIII and Accession of George VI-the proclamation of which was read by Pridham to an assembly of British and foreign consular officials on the quarterdeck at Tangier in December 1936-the Coronation Review of 1937 and the Munich Crisis of 1938 were played out against the backdrop of continuous service, training and protocol under the mounting threat of war. This disruption clearly had a marked impact on the atmosphere aboard as the commission wore on. The Rev. Edgar Rea: The Hood never really had an opportunity to settle down. ot only were some eighty per cent of the ship's company relieved in the course of the commission, but the civil war in Spain ... never allowed us to pursue a normal Mediterranean routine. [... J All this, especially the relieving of so many men, had an unsettling effect upon the ship and prevented that harmony of interests and singleness of purpose which are essential to a happy ship." Even so, perhaps Rea listened too closely to the veterans of the previous commission when he claimed that
... Hood undoubtedly left much to be desired. There was something lacking in fellowship; in clannishness; in continuity of interest; and in concerted endeavour. Hood seemed to be too big; too scattered and divided to have a single soul; a united will; and a common purpose.... When competing with other ships, either on the field of sport or on board at some service evolution, one never felt that behind the small competing party was concentrated the goodwill and the sympathy of the entire ship." Perhaps the limited success of his pastoral mission coloured Rea's assessment of the atmosphere aboard, though it is true that the Hood was of necessity much less a sporting ship than she had been under O'Conor. However, Pridham's mission lay in transforming the Hood from a ship of peace into a true man o'war and in this re pect there were several marked successes beyond the improvement of her fabric and fighting capacity. The wardroom was certainly far happier than it had been and a lasting improvement in shipboard relations was accomplished by encouraging comrade hip between boy seamen and the increasing number of young stokers joining the ship'S Banyan
War CLouds, 1936-1939
181
parties ashore at Malta and Greece cooking sausages over open fires and wa hing them down with bottles of beer and ouzo added greatly to the atmosphere aboard. Evening classes for stokers and artificers gave members of the Engineering Department an opportunity to relate their work to the operation of the ship. Permission was subsequently given for stokers to be stationed on the bridge structure when the Hood left or entered harbour where they could study the finer points of ship handling which governed the orders sent to the engine spaces. As one of the divisional officers involved recalls, these developments had a marked effect both on morale and effectiveness: Productivity and efficiency in boiler operation and cleaning increased dramatically. There were even requests, some granted, from boy seamen and young Royal Marines to change over to stoker!" The 1936-9 commission also gave birth to the Hood's Harmony Boys, the harmonica and accordion band which played to appreciative audiences throughout the Mediterranean and on into the war years. Certainly, neither Pridham nor Orr-Ewing had the charisma of an O'Conor, nor was their tenure crowned with the acclaim enjoyed by the preceding regime. But there are many criteria for measuring the success of a commission and theirs was of a similar magnitude. Pridham's successor was H.T.C. Walker, known as 'Hooky' for the brass gaff he wore on the stump of his left arm. Though it encompas ed the Munich Crisis, Walker's was no more than a stop-gap appointment while the ship completed her Mediterranean commission and he did not have time to leave a deep impression on the ship. Instead it was for the brass gaff announcing his presence on the ship's ladders and companionways and brandished vigorously at the defaulters' table that he would be remembered. On ew Year's Day 1939 the ship's company po ed on the forecastle under the ramparts of 5t Angelo for the traditional valedictory photo. ine days later the Hood sailed from Malta for the last time. The band of the Royal Marines struck up Rol/i/lg HOllie and her paying-off pendant caught the sirocco as she passed 5t Elmo point and into the Mediterranean. But the final act remained: the ship's company dance, organised by Lt (E) Louis Le Bailly: From la few days before Christmas] until we left Malta I spent my time in continuous session with the ship's dance committee or ashore in the Cable and Wireless office. The Lord Mayor of Portsmouth was massively helpful and the lovely old Guildhall was booked for what was one of its last functions before Hitler destroyed it. The equation between what number of tickets would be sold at what cost, how much we could afford to pay the band and the scale of eating and drinking, an integral part of any ship's dance, was not easy to solve. There was an increasingly hysterical series of telegrams to Brickwood's, the famous Port mouth brewery who were to do the catering. The last one before we sailed for England summed it all up: 'Cancel savoury brioche, substitute strawberry ice cream. Cannot exceed two shillings and sixpence per head for guaranteed 2000."
Top: Hood in the Admiralty Floating Dock at Parlatorio, Grand Harbour, Malta, in the autumn of 1937. HMS Hood Associ.tionlCl.rk ColiKtion
Left: The port battery being plated over to permit the addition of a 4in Mk V highangle gun at Malta in November 1937. The starboard battery received similar treatment. HMS Hood Auoc;"tlOf'llHigginson CoIl«tion
Left: In the autumn of 1937 a refit at Malta saw the removal of the after torpedo control tower and its replacement with a bandstand for a Mk VI pam-pam mounting. The position of the
bandstand was offset to starboard to permit the operation of a handling crane for the seaplane it was intended to install on 'X' turret. Neither of the latter measures were
adopted. HMS Hood Associ.tionlHigginson Cofl«rion
Bottom: A crane swings out one of the two 5.5;n boat-deck mountings removed at Malta in
Mayor June 1938. They were replaced by a pair of elderly 4in
Mk V high-angle guns as a stopgap until the modern 4in Mk XIX twin mountings could be installed the following year. Repulse lies beyond. HMS Hood AssocJ.tionIHigginson ColI«tion
46
he would never celebrate another.
~
Bailly, The Mati Around the Engine, p. 45.
., Ibid.• p. 48.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
182
8 To War What the anvil? What dread grasp Dare its deadly terrors clasp?
Hood, Tire Times published a letter by Admiral Lord Chatfield which remains the most cogent statement ever made on the subject. His closing words were these: OUR DAYS AFTER THE LOSS OF THE
P
The Hood was destroyed because she had to fight a ship 22 years more modern than herself. This was not the fault of the British seamen. It was the direct responsibility of those who opposed the rebuilding of the British Battle Fleet until 1937, two years before the second great war started. It is fair to her gallant crew that this should be written.'
I
The Times, 28 May 1941.
: Pridham, Memoirs, II, p. 166.
If anyone was in a position to know it was Chatfield, who had occupied the office of First Sea Lord between 1933-8 and served at the heart of naval planning and administration for virtually all of the Hood's career. Delayed first by financial restrictions, disagreement over the future of the capital ship and then by international power politics, as the 1930s wore on circumstances made it impossible to immobilise the world's most prestigious warship for a lengthy reconstruction. When the long overdue proposals were finally tabled in 1936, diplomatic considerations, the spectre of war and the urgency of refitting older and weaker vessels meant that neither they nor their successors could ever be put into effect.' By the time the Hood returned from the Mediterranean in January 1939 the opportunity to make her a truly battleworthy unit had thus long since passed and the Admiralty could only offer another refit before she turned her bows towards the enemy. However, as war grew imminent, even the year-long 'reconditioning' envisioned in 1936 had to be reduced to a six-month effort pending a complete reconstruction beginning in 1942.' Of the original measures, which included the addition of 4 inches of plating over the magazines, only the installation of two twin 4in mountings and a magazine on the platform deck could be effected.' Though this went some way towards rectifying the Hood's woeful anti-aircraft defence, in adding more topweight the 1939 refit placed further strain on an already overloaded hull and aggravated a series of existing problems.' Lt (E) Louis Le Bailly:
) For details of the reconstruction, outlined in 1938 and planned for
1942-5, see Northeon, HMS Hood, pp. 55-7. • CAC, LEBY 112, MS of Tile Man ArolUld tl,,! £"gille, ch. 12, p. 4.
) For details of the refit, see Roberts. rile Battlecruiser Hood, p. 21.
, Le Bailly, The Man Arowld tile Engine, p. 49. , AC, LEBY 112, MS of n,e Man Around the Engine, ch. 12. p. 3. • Jenson. Ti" Hats, Oilskins 0Soohoors, p. 90. 'CAC,LEBY 112,MSofn,eMm, Around the Engine, ch. 12, p. 3. Le Bailly. Tile Mati Arowrd the Engine, pp. 49-50.
I.
Due to extra anti-aircraft armament, ammunition and crew to man it plus the tons of paint applied during Hood's 20 years howing the Aag, the ship was a foot further down in the water than her designed draught. In anything but a Aat calm, waves now broke over the quarterdeck and salt water penetrated, corroded and immobilised the roller path of'y' 15in turret thus reducing the main firepower by 25%.A Le Bailly added elsewhere, there were simply 'not enough skilled maintainers to meet the needs of an aged ship'.' By March 1940 the contamination of the argolene oil and
hydraulic systems was affecting both 'A' and 'Y' turrets, requiring the use of deck tackle for them to be trained. And with salt water came rust, the mortal enemy of all steel construction. Mid. Latham Jen on R.C. . who joined the Hood in December 1940 gives a vivid impression of a ship that had never been allowed to complete the transition from peace to war: I don't think there was a great effort to make watertight the various bulkheads at every level, which since 1920 had been penetrated for new electrical leads and so on and were full of holes. In fact, the whole ship was full of little faults that compromised safety and which had accumulated over many years. There were rust holes and patches of endless coats of paint, as well as great lengths of lead-covered electric cable, much of which was redundant and extremely heavy.' So it was that countless layers of paint both above and below decks, amounting in places to several pounds per square foot, not only added to the ship's inAated tonnage but constituted a serious fire hazard in action.' To remedy this a major paintremoval drive instituted in 1939 resumed Capt. Pridham's assault on the work of a generation of painters and enamellers. or was this all. The Hood's boilers and condensers, the basis of her propulsion, were in a desperate condition. They were Lt (E) Louis Le Bailly's particular headache in 1939 and remained an acute problem for the rest of her career: The other nightmare affecting the ship's mobility was the feed water's worsening impurity which corroded our boilers. The tubes in the ship's main condensers under the great turbines were aged and rotting. Salt sea water drawn by vacuum into the condensing steam contaminated the water on its way back to the boiler, a constant problem in ships during World War One known as 'condenseritis'. In addition the reserve boiler feed water tanks in the double bottoms were leaking at their seams, causing more contamination. And these two problems fed on each other. When the boiler water became contaminated it was necessary to ditch it and replenish supplies from the evaporators which were sometimes of insufficient capacity to cope with the amount needing replacement. Then water, probably contaminated, had to be pumped from the reserve tanks'· o wonder Le Bailly spent the last summer of peace immured in the Hood's engine spaces trying to make good the neglect of years: Machinery spares, boiler bricks, oaken shores, jointing by the mile, extra hoses ... day and night merged as we strove to make up for a decade's neglect. Disparity widened between what had to be done and the blazing irrelevancies
To War
183
the Admiralty poured on us. Endless hours were spent cajoling officials torn between instincts and orders. '1 Relentless work left little time for leisure: Sometimes, after the chipping was stilled for the night, we would e cape to the lovely Meon Valley and watch the mayfly rise and perhaps land a trout or two and drink good beer. Sometimes, if work was to go on all night, we would take an hour or so off and walk to Monk's oyster bar in Old Portsmouth or to the aval Club for a quick meal. Although spirits were high that summer I think, in our hearts, we began to realize that we faced an ordeal of a most terrifying nature. [... 1 Almost imperceptibly the pace quickened. Visits to town were abandoned and weekend trips to my home in Gloucestershire were rare. Longer leave was never considered." But time had almost run out. Thwarted by the Admiralty in his efforts to have the worst condensers attended to and regarding the ship as neither seaworthy nor battleworthy, the Chief Engineer Cdr (E) Peter !3erthon, 'prone on occasion to whitehot shaking rages', refused to pronounce the Engineering Department 'in all respects ready for war' on being relieved in May 1939." This integrity both delayed his promotion and cost him the post of Squadron Engineer Officer, though it was to prove a providential deliverance. Capt. (E) S.j. Herbert who assumed the post in his stead perished with the ship in J 941. When the Hood finally recommissioned on 2 june Lt Le Bailly found himself the only officer remaining from the previous regime as the ship entered the final stages of her preparation for war: Happily, the executive Commander, William Davis, later an admiral of great renown, had joined us some time before. The re-ammunitioning, re-fuelling, speed and gun trials all went far better than might be expected despite the sudden tragic death of the First Lieutenant. Problems there were of course by the hundred. But Davis, [Cdr (E) Terence] Grogan and our new Captain, Irvine Glennie, seemed to brush them off with remarkable phlegm and good humour. And the new wardroom too were full of fun." But despite the confidence and the effort expended it was still a rather dilapidated ship that left for Scapa Flow on 13 August 1939. Although those who lined the shore of Portsmouth and Southsea could not know it, the Mighty Hood was sailing never to return.
•.......tr-.. In view of the international situation it had been decided to retain most of the key ratings, including much of the Engineering Department, and only 500 were drafted to the naval barracks at Portsmouth when the Hood docked in January 1939. She recommissioned in june but the mobilisation which followed began to dilute her complement with re ervists and eventually Hostilities-Only ratings. By the time the Hood sailed after completing engine and compass trials off the Isle of Wight her crew had risen to over J ,400, approximately 15 per cent above peacetime levels. With war imminent
The Hood in dry dock at Portsmouth in the summer of 1939. Under the scrubbed de
and German V-boats known to be abroad, the voyage north wa not the autumn cruise of earlier years. Apart from the ceaseless drills, exercises and manoeuvres as the ship worked up to war readiness, the journey provided a first taste of the acute discomfort that was to become routine. Louis Le Bailly: We had often practised darkening ship but it had always
II Ibid., p. SO. "CAC, LEBY 112, MS of The Mall Arolmd tile Engine, ch. 12. pp. 7-8. u L~ Bailly. TIlt;' Mati Around rile Engine, p. SO. "CAC, LEBY 112, MS of n.. Mall Arollnd tile Eng;'le, ch. 12. p.9. The circumstances of the First Lieutenant's death are discussed in th. 5, p. 121.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
184
ended before midnight so that scuttles and hatches could be reopened to admit fresh air. This humid August evening permitted no such relaxation. German submarines were at sea and our departure surely known; a torpedo might strike at any time. Tension and, perhaps, fear added to the stinking heat permeating the ill-ventilated messdecks. We tried to alleviate the fug by drawing air through the ship to the boiler rooms but this involved opening too many watertight doors. For officers the situation was equally unpleasant: what had been the best cabins under the quarterdeck were abandoned and shut off. Those of us with previously less desirable residences behind the armoured belt now had to yield them to our seniors and take to camp beds in passages' s Indeed, the Hood was cramped and dulled as never before. Ted Briggs: o longer were there great, wide open spaces below decks: the full wartime complement of just over fourteen hundred men were embarked. At night hammocks were slung in every passageway, in every nook and cranny. Sleeping space was guarded jealously, and once a claim had been staked, it was rarely relaxed. At first I slung my hammock in one of the boys'locker spaces. Later I acquired the 'luxury' of hooking up in the warrant officers' cabin Aat aft. Black-out curtains were rigged, and 'darken ship' was piped at sunset. Polishing was down to the minimum, and apart from the working parts of the guns, equipment that sparkled was dulled by gallons of grey paint. The once white decks began to take on a greyi h tint, and most of the other woodwork was toned down. All the hangings and 'niceties'-including the many mess pianos-were landed. The Hood was never to know peace again.'o After a week patrolling the orwegian Sea against the passage of German commerce raiders into the Atlantic, the Hood put in at Invergordon to refuel and then made for Scapa Flow on 24 August. Here she lay as the strength of the Home Fleet gathered around her in preparation for war. At dusk on the 31st, the day the Royal Navy mobilised, Hood weighed anchor and sailed from Scapa Flow. PO Len Williams remembers the moment: On almost the la t day of August Hood and her destroyer escort of three sailed from Scapa Flow out into the westering sun, and as we watched the low hills of the Orkneys turn to purple and slowly dip below the horizon we knew in our hearts that when next we saw them we would be a country at war."
So it proved. At 04.00 on I September the Hood went to action Le Bailly, The: Mati ArOlmd tile Engi"e, p. 51. 16 Coles & Briggs. Flagship Hood, p.137. IS
11
Williams. Gone A Long Journey.
p.128. Ibid.• p. 129. "Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, p. 137. ,. Geary, H.M.S. Hood, p. 16. " IWM, 66/45/2. 8 September 1939.
stations, the first in a succession of alarms over the next three days. On Sunday 3 eptember, while cruising between Iceland and the Faeroes, news was received that Germany had invaded Poland at dawn and that Britain had issued an ultimatum for her withdrawal set to expire at 11.00 that morning. Len Williams:
II
On receiving this information we realised that it could now only be a maller of hours before the balloon would go up. Our ship's company had taken up cruising stations
and our shell was fuzed. Our torpedoes had their warheads fitled and in all respects we were ready." At 11.00 Ted Briggs made what was at once the first and most momentous operational signal of his career: The £lag 'E' was hoisted as a preliminary for a general semaphore message, and Chief Yeoman George Thomas ordered: 'Briggs, get a pair of hand-£lags and get up to the fifteen-inch director and show up 46.' It was with a strange sort of pride and yet a sinking feeling in my belly that I spelt out to the Aeet: 'Commence hostilities against Germany.'" Twenty minutes later came Chamberlain's sombre announcement. It was a beautiful morning as men stood down from their action stations to gather beneath the messdeck tannoys or around private radios tuned to the BBC. The news was received with solemn reAection, with optimism, and, in ome quarters, with gung-ho enthusiasm: A prominent member of the crew thus described the scene, 'I remember passing along the Mess Deck and everyone was crowded round the loudspeakers, waiting for the news which told us we were at war. There was much talk as to how long it would last, and one heard such phrases as 'we shall have them whacked by Christmas' and 'what battlewagons have the Jerries got?"· The Royal Navy as a whole viewed the coming conflict with optimism, a sentiment neatly captured in Paymaster Lt A.R. Jackson's (1938-40) first wartime letter to his wife: People have been trying to kill my family for years, but they haven't had a chance and we've always passed out in our beds when we were old and decrepit. I bet you a much beller fur than last time that I'll be back with you before our third anniversary-and I'll try and throw in the wreath on the zircon ring as well if I'm wrong. Make no mistake we've got them on the run already, and they have started moaning about the blockade. I'm looking forward to a quiet and successful conclusion to this skirmish, in a very much shorter time than a majority of people believe." But for Len Williams, sitting in the autumn sunshine with his companions on 3 September, the riot of thoughts and preoccupations tumbling through his head must have echoed in the minds of many: After hearing the declaration of war we sat for a while around the portable radio. We were sitting on ventilators, boat crutches, on anything else available, for we were up on the boat deck. It was a fine morning, with the ship lazily lifting her bows to the long Atlantic swell. [... J It was a day to be at sea. Only one thought marred the peaceful scene and beauty of the morning. Somewhere beneath this heaving ocean, enemy submarines were at their war stations, and we were a prize target. As a single man with no responsibilities, I received the news with a certain amount of indifference. I was annoyed, of course, because the tenor of my life was now about to be disturbed, which
To War
185
was I suppo e a selfish way of looking at it. There was the other side to be considered too. For years we had trained for just such a possibility as this. Now it was up to us to see that the taxpayer got a return for his money. [ tried to assess my ability to face up to the new situation. [ knew my limits under normal conditions. but how would [ react under war conditions, possible action, with all it could mean? [ tried to detach myself like a shadow, and study myself from a position outside. 'Will you be afraid: I asked myself, 'or will you be the stuff of which heroes are made?' [ am afraid we all asked ourselves similar questions, and, like myself. received the same answer. 'Wait and see!'" His would ultimately prove the most accurate perception, though to a greater degree than he could possibly imagine. But for now life and routine had to go on. We went on talking until the hands were piped to dinner, then, going below, we partook of our first wartime Sunday dinner. At least the news had not affected our appetites." And indeed, on reflection, there was a certain comfort in knowing that the die was finally cast, that all lingering doubts could be set aside and that it remained only to meet the challenge with all the resolution one could muster: It was a relief.
ow we knew where we were going. However long and difficult the road ahead, we had to get to the end. And so Hood and her company went to war."
·.....11>. .. Within hours of the outbreak of war the sinking of the liner ss Athellia by U-30 served notice that the German navy again intended to prosecute the war at sea through its submarines. [n the Hood, already zigzagging with her destroyer screen, steps were taken to ensure her watertight integrity in the event of an attack. Len Williams: ow the war had started each of us took stock of our situation. From now on we had to be very particular about closing and properly clipping all watertight doors and hatches behind us. There was that little e,:tra alertness and awareness about us as we went about our tasks. 2S Two weeks later the torpedoing of the aircraft carrier Courageous in the Western Approaches brought home the danger posed by submarines to even the largest warships. The Hood's crew had been issued with inflatable lifebelts which were worn night and day, but Williams, who kept watch in the main switchboard, felt he knew enough about the ship's circuitry to take added precautions: One of the first things [ did was to provide myself with an electric torch and a wlUstIe, the latter [ tied to my lifebelt. It was obvious to me that if the ship received damage sufficient to sink her, then it was practically certain that all the lights and power would fail, therefore one had to find one's way out of the ship. Then, once in the water, particularly at night. it was essential to attract attention. Hence the torch and whistle. My job was still at the main switchboard. although
my action station was in the engine room attending one of the dynamo supply breakers. It was not a comforting thought to realize that the switchboard was well down in the bowels of the ship, and directly over the forward IS" magazines; and that in order to get out, one had to squeeze through numerous manholes (fitted in the armoured hatch covers) just large enough to pass one's body through.'" However, there can be little doubt that, justified or not. such fears gradually yielded to the sheer inconvenience of war stations at sea. The need to keep watertight doors and hatches closed below the main deck confined men to a particular area of the ship and required the installation of makeshift sanitary arrangements, often of questionable efficacy. As Louis Le Bailly recalled, the Hood's damage control regulations placed a particular strain on some of her older ratings: Bert Hemmings, the artificer who had presided over the workshop for decades, was a fitter and turner of irreplaceable skill, but also of enormous bulk. Under the new Damage Control rules the only way into the workshop was through a small manhole in the deckhead. To insert Hemmings in the morning, and remove him in tlle evening, was a major task requiring the help of several pairs of hands; whilst special arrangements had to be made to provide for his wants during the day. But like the great soul he was he made light of the problem; and his gratitude to those who catered for his needs only increased their willingness to help" For Paymaster Lt Robert Browne, meanwhile, the chief enemy in the early months of the war was boredom: The war seems to be as uninteresting as ever. othing seems to be really happening and I do not expect it will now till the fine weather comes along in the spring. We are still waiting to meet his surface vessels, but after the Graf Spee 10 s [ expect they will stop at home for a bit." By the end of 1939 the Hood had settled into a pattern of endless sweeps for enemy raiders and blockade runners in northern waters which, with one or two significant interruptions, would be her lot for the rest of her days. The routine was unwavering. Tanks brimming with fuel. the Hood would unmoor, gather her destroyer screen and exit the immense anchorage of Scapa Flow through the boom defence guarding the Hoxa ound between Flotta and South Ronaldsay. Having cleared the swept channel the squadron would begin zigzagging at 25 knots and at length pass into the Pentland Firth. The departure from Scapa might be enlivened with a practice shoot against a towed battle target at ranges of up to 12,000 yards. But henceforth there was only the strain of maintaining the avy's lidless eye on the straits through which the German navy had to pass to reach the Atlantic convoys, of remorseless zigzagging in enormous seas and brutal weather. of exhaustion, discomfort and boredom; of being one of the handful of storm-tossed ships that stood between survival and defeat. The effectiveness of the Battle Cruiser Squadron's vigil depended to a considerable extent on good station-keeping. Paravanes streamed, the Hood proceeded with her anti-submarine screen of three to six destroyers fanned out ahead at
Williams, Gone A Long joumey. p.132. lJ Ibid., p. 133. " Ibid., p. 129. " Ibid.. p. 133. " Ibid. "CAC,lEBY 1/2, MS of 111< Mall Around tire Ellgi",!, ch. 13. pp. 2-3. "R M, 1981/369 no. 134, at sea, 22 January 1940. The Admiral Graf Spee had scuttled herself off U
Montevideo on 17 December.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
186
distances of 2,500-3,000 yards and any other ships in company stationed five to ten cables astern, her fog light shining from the stern if necessary. The Rev. Gordon Taylor, then chaplain to the 3rd Destroyer Flotilla in HMS Arrow, recalls the following incident while escorting the Hood south of Iceland on Easter Sunday, 13 April 194 J: As we were e corting the Hood on her starboard side that Easter Morning J remember the Hood hoisted a nag signal at the yard arm, and our Chief Yeoman of Signals put up his telescope to read it. Our captain was anxious to know what it said. 'What's she making, Chief Yeoman?' he hOllted, and got the reply: 'H42, Sir'. Whereupon the Captain said 'My God, that's our pennant!'. We were being rebuked by the admiral for being 'out of station'.'"
19
Letter to the author, 30 December 2002.
The zigzag consisted of deviations from the base course of 20-30 degrees made at irregular intervals of between five and ten minutes to a pre-arranged hourly pattern. Lt-Cdr Joseph H. WelJings U.S. ., who had been observing the operations of the Home Fleet at close quarters since September 1940, made
The Hood seen from the Dunkerque while patrolling in mountainous seas off Iceland in November 1939. The photo was apparently made available to the Hooels crew at the suggestion of Vice-Amiral Marcel Gensoul as a gesture of fraternity between the two ships. The crews never met ashore but gifts were exchanged. many of Hoods destined to be returned to her after the action at Mers-el-Kebir. HMS
Hood Awxiationl~rt~ CoIl«tlOl1
187
To War
these remarks on the cruising arrangements employed by the Hood and her escorts during the hunt for the Admiral Scheer between 5-1 I ovember: It is of interest to note that only two zigzag plans were used during the days at sea (a 6-day period), with the same plan being used on at least two successive days. The two plans employed are the only zigzag plans the observer has seen to date in any operation. A total of 33 zigzag plans are provided for use under various conditions. [... 1 The various screening diagrams indicate the confidence the British place in their Asdic. The observer has not had an opportunity to observe an actual contact by the Asdic but is inclined to believe that the British place too much confidence in the ability of the Asdic to detect and to prevent submarine attack.'"
The speed maintained by the Battle Cruiser Squadron usually made it a difficult target for V-boats with or without a zigzag plan, but operational experience had already borne out Wellings'last assessment. By the end of 1939 the Hood had nar-
rowly escaped at least one V-boat attack without her crewmuch less her escorts-being aware of it. On 30 October the elson, in company with Hood and Rodney north of Cape Wrath, had been struck by two torpedoes from V-56 after Kapitanleutnant Wilhelm Zahn unwittingly penetrated their destroyer screen. On this occasion only the defective quality of German torpedoes saved the Home Fleet from an even greater disaster than had befallen it with the sinking of the Conrageous and the Royal Oak. Asdic did score some successes but the first years of the war were to take a terrible toll of the whale population of the North Atlantic. PO Len Williams did well to arm himself with lifebelt, torch and whistle. The Hood preserved the four-hour watch system of the peacetime avy but circumstances called for a far greater proportion of her crew to be closed up at any given moment. The standard routine for daylight hours at sea was Cruising Stations which required a third of the crew to be on duty. Action Stations at dusk demanded every man in the ship to be closed up for an hour. The hours of darkness were spent at Defence Stations with half the crew at their posts, followed by Action Stations for a further hour around the crack of dawn. Cdr Robin Owen recalls a
lO
Wellings. 0" His Majesty's Service, pp.62-3.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
188
typical night watch on deck in the
orth Atlantic:
In these pre-radar days lookout duty was a vitally important but boring and unpopular job for junior ratings, particularly at night when they had to work half-hour tricks scanning a sector of the horizon with binoculars. My Action and Night Cruising Station was Officer-in-Charge of lookouts, of whom there were up to twelve, stationed on each side of the bridge, at the aft end of the open boat deck and in the spotting top. Unlike most watchkeepers who had to remain at their particular station for four hours, [ was free to patrol the lookout positions as [ saw fit and actually found it quite an interesting job. Also I could occasionally go below for a warm-up, quick smoke or some tea or cocoa from the gunroom pantry. At the start of each watch the lookouts were mustered by a petty officer who detailed them for their positions and tricks. For the rest of the watch he and [ between us patrolled the positions to make sure the men were alert, changing tricks every half hour and understood their duties. Men off trick had to remain in the boat deck shelter, a cramped compartment at the base of the forward funnel containing the ship's incinerator. This was quite a popular and convivial place on a cold night where, in the dim red night-adaptation lighting, they could get warm, smoke and gossip, their wet duffel coats creating a damp fug one could have cut with a knife. To begin with, doing the rounds of the lookout positions at night in total darkness was quite an eerie experience but soon I could have done it blindfold, guided by touch, the steady roar of the forced draught fans and the noises and smells from the ventilation openings to machinery, galleys, bakeries, messdecks, heads and bathrooms. On clear nights the slow pitch and roll of the ship made the topmast truck sweep great arcs across the starlit sky, sometimes illuminated by the cold glare of the Aurora Borealis." Len Williams has a similar tale:
Cdr R.A.e. Owen, HMS Hood: October 194D-/anuary J941 (unpublished memoir), p. 2. .12 Williams, GOllf A Long ]oumey, pp.136-7. 33 le Bailly, The Man Around the Etlginc, p. 52. "Ibid. n NWC, Wellings, Remi/liscences, p. )1
82. l6
HMS Hood Association archives. 17 April 1941.
At night the crew went to Defence Stations, and my station in this particular organisation was the searchlight control sight on the starboard wing of the bridge. Two of us shared this duty, and high up on the open sweep of the bridge wings we felt the full blast of the icy wind. Muffled up to the ears in woollies, we braced ourselves against the bitter elements and swept the tumbled horizon with our binoculars. For four hours at a stretch we shared this duty, working in conjunction with each other so that one of us could squeeze under the bridge platform for a cup of hot cocoa and a temporary respite from the freezing wind. Always we had to be in the immediate vicinity of the searchlight control position, and always it was bitterly cold. Far below us, we could hear the swish of the sea as it broke against our huge hull, whilst above us, the heavens spread wide in a black ve.lvety void, on which lay a million brilliant scintillating stars; bigger and brighter than any [ had seen before. Those short, star spangled nights in the Denmark Straits will always live in my memory. The sharp, biting, salty wind beating relentlessly against one's face and finding every loophole in one's clothing; and the brilliant display of the Aurora Borealis, weaving across the heavens like a gigantic silvery
fan, was an artistic feast to delight one's red rimmed eyes. After four hours in the crisp cold night air one's watch was over and, still wide awake, for the air was like wine, we were relieved by the morning watch, and we tumbled down below to get a cup of thick steaming cocoa before retiring on the mess table for what was left of the night." Evidently, war routine proved more demanding on some than on others. Louis Le Bailly: For engineer officers wartime watchkeeping routine was much as in peacetime, one watch in three. But for our executive messmates who in peacetime had kept a bridge watch of about one in 16 the shock was immense. Much of the main, secondary and anti-aircraft armament had now to be kept ready for action which reduced the executive branch to our sort of routine." Matters weren't improved by the requirement that all the officers' cabins on the main deck aft be abandoned at sea owing to the danger of torpedo attack, causing many to set up camp beds in passages or lobbies or else doss down in a wardroom that 'quickly became full of sleepy and often crotchety recumbent figures'." or were torpedoes the only threat. Arriving off the boom defence of Scapa Flow on the morning of 5 January 1941 the Hood's port paravane was found to have fouled a German mine which came uncomfortably close to the ship before floating away to be detonated by a fusillade of smalJarms fire from the forecastle party." On arrival at Scapa Flow from a lengthy patrol the first duty was to secure to a mooring buoy and hook up the telephone and teleprinter cable connection with London. Oiler, drifter, mail boat and ammunition barge if necessary then came alongside to replenish her. Boilers were kept at four hours' notice for steam, giving the Engineering Department an opportunity to perform essential maintenance before the next call on their exhausted machinery. For most men this might mean the first wash of body and clothing for ten days, the first opportunity to sleep more than three or four hours at a stretch, the first chance of a hot meal, of warmth, comfort, exercise and perhaps even a letter or two from home. But sometimes none of this was possible and within a few hours the Hood would be at sea once more. Lt-Cdr Roger Batley (1941): Glad Portia and Julian are well and fit-I must try to write to them by this mail if we don't push off again as soon as we are refuelJed. We did that last time. Most disappointing for everyone. Ten days at sea, eighteen hours in harbour, no leave, and then more days at sea. It does make a difference ifboth officers and men can land just one afternoon and play golf or football or just have a good leg stretch." As Lt-Cdr Wellings, the U.S. Navy's official observer, noted in one of his reports, this routine was extremely hard on the crews that had to endure it: After about four consecutive days of watch and watch with Condition I (Action Stations) just before dawn and darkness both officers and men were very tired and their effectiveness reduced considerably. The bad weather
189
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SCAPA FLOW
In 1912 the adoption by the Admiralty of a strategy of distant blockade against Germany brought the Royal avy to the immense anchorage of Scapa Flow in the Orkneys. Sitting astride the principal northern route to the Atlantic and bordered by islands around its 75mile perimeter, for 35 years Scapa Flow was one of the most important fleet bases in the world. Though undoubtedly of great scenic beauty, few anchorages offered less to those using it. The view of 00 B.A. Carlisle (L94D-I) was widely shared: I spent periods of three winters at Scapa and it certainly is a gloomy spot, with gales blowing for most of the time and daylight very brief in the winter months. In Hood 1 used to go ashore when shore leave was granted and walk round Hoy, on occasions having a delightful tea with some of the crofters. In my two other winters there I was an officer and would enjoy the comforts of the wardroom." Vegetation was sparse but Orkney was a paradise for birds and fishing. Lt-Cdr Roger Batley: We are having marvellous weather here. One day you must come with Leslie up here for a holiday-the bird life is wonderful. Heaps of gull of all types--eiderduck, cormorants, and lots of snipe & golden and green plover. Very few grouse-the gulls like their eggs. I raided a gullery on the moors the other afternoon & took about 100 eggs. Half of them were et, but the others were very good to be hard boiled and in an omelette. I've had two afternoons fishing since we got in, and had a
nice trout out of a big loch and 3Jt lb. sea trout of a wee burn which fUns into the sea in the most delightful cave I've ever seen. 3S But walking was the main recreation. During the Grand Fleet's long vigil at Scapa in the Great War Admiral Sir David Beatty had frequently taken brisk walks ashore and his successors were no different, as Lt-Cdr Ernest Eller U.S. discovered to his cost in the spring of 1941: I got on board in the afternoon and the navigator, Commander Warrand, one of the finest gentlemen I've met, suggested that we take a walle He said he needed some exercise. Of course, 1 hadn't had much real walking. I had been going from place to place riding trains, cars, and walking short distances. So that sounded good to me. We went ashore to one of the islands-I think it was Hoy-and he said 'Let's walk across the island.' I had never walked on heather before. It's just like walking on hummocks that want to break your ankle. So we walked across the island about three miles and came back. By then I was really dragging the ground. My feet were sore. I was tired out and lo!, there was no boat where we had left it. 1 was getting worried, but the navigator said 'Oh, I told them to go on up the coast about two miles so we'd get a little walk!'" Amenities at Scapa were few. ports pitches had been laid out for football and rugby but for officers at least the chief attraction was the ninehole golf course on Flotta, its greens tended by
Grey Queen of the North? The Hood at SCapa Flow in the winter of 1940. Bibliothefc fur ZeitgeKhichte. Stuttgiln
each major ship or flotilla in the anchorage. There was a 'wet canteen' serving beer and entertainments were laid on at the naval base in Lyness and in Kirl.:wall, the main town of Orkney. On 30 December 1940 Lt-Cdr Joseph Wellings U.S. . spent a typical evening ashore watching the comedian Will Fyfe perform in the recreation hall at Lyness followed by a few beers in the officers' club and a blustery ride back to the Hood in the ship's drifter." It took 20 minutes to reach the Hood's usual anchorage, guarded by boom defences in the centre of the Flow. The sinking of the Royal Oak on the night of 14 October 1939 exposed the vulnerability of Scapa Flow to submarine attack, though the breach was plugged during extensive work which kept the fleet away until the spring of 1940. Even after its return the Home Fleet remained subject to air attack and for this purpose an Anti-Aircraft Guard Ship was selected each day to add its firepower to the permanent defences ashore, a duty which required much of her crew to be closed up at action stations. Gunnery and torpedo exercises were also carried out, while the Engineering Department resumed the task of cleaning and maintaining their propulsion plant. With all this, Scapa offered little respite from the war and many either never left the ship or did SO only to visit the wardrooms and messdecks of others. With a few exceptions this and the broad Atlantic were to be the context of Hood's final year of life. "SWWEG, 2001/1376. BA. Carlisle, p. 5. Ja HMS Hood Association archives. 12 May 1941. Jt EUer, Reminiscenas, II, pp. 458--9. Cdr S.J.P. Warrand was lost with the ship in May 1941. «l Wellings, 0" His Majesty's Service, pp. 84-5.
The Bnttlecruiser HMS HOOD
190
\Vellings, 0" His Majesty's S~rvjce. p.63. 41 Le Bailly, Tile Mati Around the Engine, p. 53. U \Villiams. Gone A Long jOllmey. p.135. ... Vice-Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly in Naval Review, 90 (2002), p. 187. 41
conditions undoubtedly had something to do with the ineffectiveness of personnel." For much of the Hood's wartime career the scale of the Navy's commitments and the attrition to its fleets made her the most overworked capital ship in the world. The loss of the Royal Oak in October 1939, the departure of the RodlJey for repairs to her steering in ovember and finally the mining of elsolJ out ide Loch Ewe on 4 December briefly left her as the sole heavy unit at the disposal of Admiral Sir Charles Forbes, Commander-in-Chief Home Fleet. Nor did she escape damage herself. On 22 September HMS/M Spearfish was severely depth-charged by German anti-submarine escorts off the Horns Reef. After many hours on the bottom Spearfish surfaced and steered for home on one electric motor, unable to dive and with her radio temporarily out of action. When the Admiralty finally learnt of her predicament on the 25th the entire Home Fleet sailed to bring her in. Spearfish was met and escorted to Rosyth by the 2nd Cruiser Squadron with six destroyers on 26 September, but the Home Fleet was given it first taste of aerial attack at sea. Louis Le Bailly: The bombers struck at Ark Royal and, although they scored no hits, vast waterspouts hid her from our sight. The guns' crews on Hood's boatdeck, as well as my damage control party, were watching the attack on Ark Royal when a bomb, seemingly the size of a grand piano, fell out of the sun to the south of us towards the boatdeck, a few feet short. A frightening explosion alongside opened up the top of the anti-torpedo bulge and the port lower boom was shredded with splinters. All the hot and cold water pipes in the stokers' bathroom, abreast the explo ion, fractured
Off again: the Hood quits the Firth of Forth for S<:apa Flow on 24 August 1940. This photo was taken from the destroyer Javelin. BibiiotMk IUr Z";t~Khlcht ••
Slu"g~rt
Moreover, the concussion inflicted severe damage on the condensers which came close to leaving the ship dead in the water. But even if the Hood had not been crippled as Lord Haw-Haw
proclaimed from Berlin, the attack revealed both the inadequacy of her anti-aircraft armament and the ineffectual drill of their crews, a deficiency shared by the rest of the Home Fleet. Len Williams:
So sudden had been the attack we had not even been able to fire a shot. Captain Glennie immediately broadcast orders that the guns' crews were in future to open fire without waiting for orders. This had been a lesson to us. We were still versed in the peacetime practice procedure where one waited for orders before opening fire on the target. We had got off lightly on this occasion but there was to be no further dallying and the skipper made this point quite clear." Further indignity lay in store on arrival at Scapa the following day, when the ditching of the Hood's petrol tanks during the attack meant that of her flotilla only the two steam picket boats were of any use until fuel was embarked." That afternoon found Boy Signalman Ted Briggs and his pals eagerly digging splinters out of the port lower boom, but notice had again been served. Thus was HMS /-load blooded in combat. Three weeks later the sinking of the Royal Oak at Scapa Flow, the principal anchorage of the Home Fleet, further dented the Hood's morale. The Royal Oak had also been a Portsmouth ship and her loss while both were still crewed largely by regulars of the peacetime avy meant that there were few in Hood who could not count a friend or relative among the 835 men who died in her. For many the loss of this ship was the first time the war touched them personally, the first infallible indication that they were in it for the long haul against a skilled and determined enemy. Apart from this was the fear that the same fate might be visited on them, and for several months the Hood led an uneasy existence in northern waters, her lookouts jumpy and the crew under ever greater strain. The Hood had been at Loch Ewe on the night of the disaster and the unthinkable breach of the defences ofScapa Flow meant that she would be seeing rather more of this anchorage
To War
191
than any of her people wanted. Loch Ewe provided a welcome respite from the air raid alarms that had become a feature of life at Scapa. but for all its rugged beauty there was even less to do here than in the Orkneys. Len Williams: Loch Ewe, whilst being a fine natural harbour for the fleet. was far from being ideal for the personnel. The only civilisation was a small village containing one small pub to cater for the whole of the fleet! In view of this leave was restricted to only 25% of each crew per day and then only for about five hours. Since the tiny pub could only hold about forty people. it was allocated for the use of Chief and Petty Officers only. but junior rates could buy their beer through a side window and sit on the hillside and drink it. Glasses were at a premium. so Jack, not to be denied his beer, bought up all the galvanised buckets in the local hardware store, and men could be seen tottering up the hill carrying bucketfuls of beer. until. stocks exhausted, the publican had to frantically telephone to the nearest town for further supplies. Some months later, NAAFI erected a temporary canteen but those first few weeks at Loch Ewe were murder'S ot only this. but for the first time since 1667 the Royal avy had suffered the ignominy of being successfully attacked in one of its principal bases. When the Home Fleet finally returned to Scapa in March 1940. the First Lord of the Admiralty Winston Churchill was on hand to welcome it to its berths in the strengthened anchorage. By ovember 1939 the damage suffered during the Spearfish episode and the strain of unremitting service in northern waters had brought the condensers in the Hood's turbine rooms to the brink of collapse. Louis Le Bailly. then a Lieutenant (El, describes the situation and the primitive measures resorted to in the aftermath of the bomb hit on 26 September: Routine tests then revealed a near-critical contamination of the boiler feed water. Some tubes and tube joints had failed: we were in for a severe dose of condenseritis. Happily our predecessors had discovered a bizarre method of rendering first aid. Valves on the seawater side of the condenser permitted the injection of sawdust from hoppers. The condenser vacuum, which had been drawing in seawater through leaky joints or pinholes in the corroded tubes. also drew in grains of sawdust which temporarily plugged the leaks. one of us had seen this used, but if we were to reach Scapa without irreparable boiler damage we had to try it out speedily." Once at Scapa. a series of design faults and the need to effect emergency repairs called for extreme measures on the part of the Engineering Department: Once at anchor the complex testing of condensers began: although the portside condensers were worst affected. there was trouble in all four. Then we met another snag. The condenser designers had had the prescience to fit sawdust hoppers. but had underestimated the space between condenser tube plates and the outer casing. Sadly the avy does not recruit midgets so we turned instead to ERA Wigfall. our smallest artificer. Clad in a bathing slip
Wigfall crept into the worst condenser to tighten the joints and plug the leaking tubes. We kept him going with drafts of hot Shovril. increasing the proportion of sherry to hot Bovril as his weariness increased. Thanks to his 24-hour slog we were able to report readiness for sea but with restrictions on speed which galled our chief. Terence Grogan. Thenceforward Wigfall was given a high-protein diet so that his dimensions would not increase coupled with light duties when we were not in harbour. I can see him now as we lifted him out of the small manhole. his lips blue, his teeth chattering."
More than a scratch: crewmen
inspecting the damage to the ship's side caused by the bomb hit of 26 September 1939. The 7-inch belt is pitted and gouged while the edge strips joining the bulge
to the top of the 12-inch belt have been ripped away. External damage was quickly repaired but the Hood's condensers were brought to the verge of collapse. HMS Hood AJiocJation/Bullock CoIl«tion
o \Villiams, GOlle A Long Journey, .t(;
p.137. le Baill)', Tile Mcw Around tile
•7
Ibid., pp. 53-4. Engine Room
E"gi"e, p. 53 .
So it was that for some of the most critical weeks of her career the Hood's effectiveness as a fighting unit rested on a slender
A GATHERING OF QUEENS In the first year of the war the Hood was called on to escortlWo major troop convoys as they neared the British Isles. On 16 December 1939 she met TC I. the first of the Canadian troop convoys. with 7,450 men in RMSS Aquitania, Empress of Britain,
Empress ofAustralia, Duclless ofBedford and Monarch of Bermuda in the Atlantic. Apart from a collision involving the Aquitania. the carrier Furious and the liner ss Samaria which blundered into the convoy. the Hood and a 20-strong escort brought it into Greenock without incident. Nonetheless, the gesture was obviously appreciated for, as Sub- Lt John lago related. 'We were in harbour when they
Artificer 3rd Class Leslie \VigfalJ was 10SI on 24 ~Ia}' 1941.
arrived and "cheered ship"-it was a terrific noise!'" In June 1940 it was the turn of US3, the greatest troop convoy of the war, to receive the Hood's escort. In the
Queen Mary, Empress of Britain. Aqllitania, Mallretmlia, Andes and Empress ofCmlada were embarked 26,000 Australian and New Zealand troops, too late for the Battle of France but destined to play their part in the war in the desert. Sailing from Liverpool on 12 June with three Canadian destroyers, the Hood's squadron met US3 in the Bay of Biscay on the 14th, bringing it safely into the Clyde four days later. "'Iago. Letters (Greenock, 22 December 1939).
The BattlecrlJiser HMS HOOD
192
A MEASURE UNMASKED At Greenock in February 1940 the Hood, amid constant and fruitless patrols for German raiders, became the first ship in the Royal Navy to be fitted with a degaussing coil around her hull. By neutral ising the ship's magnetic field the coil provided an effective counter to the German magnetic mine. Sub-Lt John lago, an electrical engineer in civilian life, was a key figure in its installation: We did all the experimental work and the Hood was the first ship to be done. In fact I reminded the Torpedo Officer of the unit of magnetism, a 'gauss', and he called the process 'degaussing'. I did the electrical side of it and he did the constructional side. It was an obvious solution to the problem and many other people achieved the same results at the same time-we were not the only ones." The coil, in the form of hundreds of feet of two-inch copper cable, was manhandled into position and then stapled to the ship's side during several days and nights of killing work." However, greatly to (ago's annoyance, degaussing would not remain secret for very long. Further up the Clyde the new liner RMS Queen Elizabeth had been similarly filled for her hazardous maiden voyage across the Atlantic. Predictably
enough, her arrival in ew York on 7 March with a conspicuous band around her hull lead to the unmasking of the device by the American media. or was installation of the coil the end of the matter. A spell in dry dock required deperming to remove the accumulated magnetism of the ship, a procedure recalled by LS Len Williams at Rosyth in early 1941: On returning to the ship, we had to 'deperm' the hull and structure whilst she was in dry dock. This was done to remove the magnetism which had been put into the ship by our degaussing generators. In order to remove this magnetic effect, thick heavy cables were put around the ship in an opposite direction to the run of the degaussing circuit, i.e. the cables were run under the keel and up over the deck and bridge structure; and continued along the whole length of the ship until we were lying in the middle of a spiral of heavy cables. A heavy electric current was then passed through the circuit for a few seconds, thus de-magnetising the ship. It was heavy, backbreaking work, hauling the cables across the bottom of the dock, and up the sides of the ship, and it took us a week to complete the job, and all for a few seconds' flash of current!S
The Hood in the autumn of 1940 with her degaussing coil prominent along the forecastle deck. HMS Hood AssocI.rionlM.son CoIl«tion
artificer and quantities of sawdust from the shipwrights' workshop. By ovember the state of the Hood's condensers, revealed by Cdr (E) Terence Grogan to Churchill during his visit of 31 October, could be ignored no longer. The Hood's maximum speed was down to 27 knots and relentless service in heavy seas was exacerbating other problems. Louis Le Bailly: Constant pounding was tiring the old hull even more than the ship's company. Condenser leaks were now a fact of life; the working of the ship's bottom plates worsened the leaks into the reserve feed tanks, as predicted. Boiler cleaning, due to excessive sea time and contaminated water, became never-ending. Machinery maintenance increased daily as Berthon's prophecies came home to roost at the Admiralty." Besides, the burden on the Engineering Department was becoming intolerable, with a routine of eight hours on, four hours off at sea followed by constant maintenance in harbour.'" On I J ovember the Hood docked at Devonport for an overdue boiler cleaning and a week's leave for her crew, taken a watch at a time. But no sooner had the second watch departed on 20 November than news of the sinking of the armed merchant cruiser Rawalpindi caused the Hood to recall those on leave and slip her moorings with all despatch. On the 25th, just two weeks after reaching Devonport, the Hood sailed from Plymouth Sound in mountainous seas, her refit incomplete and 150 ratings drafted from Devonport barracks to make up numbers." It was to be another four months before her condensers received the thorough overhaul they so desperately needed. The Hood battled on through the winter of J 939-40 but her best speed was now down to 26.5 knots and the long-awaited refit could not be delayed much longer. By mid-February the Admiralty was making preparations for the retubing of her condensers at Malta from 3 March, anticipating that 45 days would be required for the job to be completed. However, continued patrol, escort and cover duties as well as deteriorating relations with Italy made this impossible and by 29 March the decision had been made to refit her at Devonport. Two days later the Hood reached Plymouth and on 4 April she was docked for repairs. Anxious over Mussolini's increasingly aggressive posture in the Mediterranean, on 12 April Churchill, still First Lord of the Admiralty, urged that 'The most intense efforts should be concentrated upon Hood, as we may need all our strength to meet an Italian threat or attack'." When informed next day that what he believed would be a 35-day refit would in fact take over eleven weeks he fairly exploded with rage: 'Pray give me an explanation of this extraordinary change'.56 It seems that he had leant on the assurances Cdr Grogan had given him in October 1939 that the Hood could carryon for another six months rather than the very different picture that would have been presented during his recent visit of 8-9 March. Whatever the case, Churchill professed himself much disturbed to have been inaccurately informed as to the availability of 'this vital hip' 'at the mo t critical period in the war'. As it turned out, the Hood's refit kept her from operational duty for a total of 74 days, by which time Churchill had become Prime Minister. Apart from the retubing of her condensers the principal work of the refit was the replacement of the last ten 5.5in guns with a further three dual-purpose 4in mountings and five UP (Unrifled Projector, or Unrotated Projectile) launchers togeth-
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er with their associated fittings and lockers. Fourteen days' leave was again given by watches, but for those who remained it was to prove an irksome interlude. Len Williams: During this refit period at Devonport, life for those left on board was most uncomfortable. The dockyard men were working day and night, getting the old guns out, and putting the new twin mountings in. The clattering of the riveting hammers kept us from getting any sleep, and it was a frequent occurrence to have a shower of red hot fragments and sparks descend on one's dinner when sitting at the midday meal, where the white hot giant rivets, holding down the new mountings came through the deck head." However, for a number of her crew the Hood's refit was to bring considerably greater excitement. In the early hours of 9 April J 940 Germany launched her attack on Denmark and Norway. Successful landings were made at Kristiansand, Egersund, Bergen, Trondheim and arvik on the Norwegian coast and after initial resistance Oslo fell later that day. However, the German position remained precarious and though the British had been taken completely by surprise the War Cabinet immediately resolved to send troops to intervene. Among the plans formulated in London was a pincer attack on Trondheim in central Norway following landings at Namsos and Andalsnes, the latter to be named Operation 'Primrose'. It is a measure of how thinly stretched were Britain's resources that the War Cabinet had to turn to the Navy in order to help man the expedition. In the Hood, berthed at Plymouth, the first inkling that something was afoot came on the morning of 13 April when orders codenamed 'Primrose' began reaching the ship." Within a few hours the Hood's ancient 3.7in howitzer, veteran of countless peacetime exercises and the Palestinian revolt at Haifa in 1938, was being swung out onto the quay. By evening an expeditionary force of 250 officers and men had been mustered under Lt-Cdr C.A. Awdry which at midnight boarded a train for Rosyth with a motley assortment of weapons, stores and ammunition. The Royal Marines under Major H. Lumley, who formed two-thirds of the force, were equipped with automatic weapons and Lewis guns. In the words of Mid. Ian Browne (1939-41) they 'gave the impression of knowing what they were about and regarded the seamen with some tolerance bordering on condescension'." The seamen, on the other hand, drawn mainly from Second Part of Port Watch, did not cut a particularly warlike figure. Mid. Browne: It must however be said that the seamen contingent hardly inspired confidence as a military force. [... J Very few of the sailors had ever fired a rifle or even handled ammunition. Nor, I fear, were the officers particularly familiar with the formidable .45 revolver. It was discovered on the train that not all the sailors had boots, a fact that they had somehow managed to conceal under their green gaiters. However it was understood that the Gunner's Mate knew something about howitzers which as it turned out was just as well." After a day's journey the party reached Rosyth where most of it boarded the sloop Black SWatl, the remainder being distributed with similar contingents from Nelson and Barham in
193
H.M. sloops Bittem, Flamillgo and Auckland. Originally destined for the port of Alesund, Black Swan's orders were changed for Andalsnes after the overloaded flotilla was obliged to put in atlnvergordon in heavy seas. The avy was prepared for opposition, but the Germans had yet to reach Andalsnes and the subsequent landing on 17 April passed off uneventfully. The nineteen-man howitzer detachment under Sub-Lt D.C. Salter was immediately sent by rail to Domb~s 60 miles away where on 19 April it scored its only success, assisting in the capture of 45 German paratroopers several of whose helmets ended up on the Hood's messdecks. Another party was taken to Alesund with the task of setting up a number of 4in guns commanding the Indreled while a contingent of Marines under Lt E.D. Stroud R.M. was charged with defending an airfield improvised on the frozen surface of Lake Lesjeskog. However, once the Germans became aware that the Andalsnes area was under British occupation the Luftwaffe began to make operations there untenable. From the 20th the main force in Andalsnes and its various contingents were subjected to constant aerial bombardment which reduced this and the nearby settlements to ashes and wounded nine of the Hood's party, two seriously. Meanwhile, the breakdown of the Allied offensive as a whole began to make evacuation inevitable and as the days passed the various forces ashore slowly fell into disarray, the men having to fend for themselves in caves and the surrounding forests as the Germans closed in. Spirits generally remained high in the Hood's contingent though some began to wilt under the pressure of constant bombardment and it was with some relief that the order to evacuate came at the end of April. The howitzer detachment was embarked in the sloop Fleetwood at Andalsnes on 29 April followed by the main body in the cruiser Galatea on the 30th, the rest being taken off from Afaianes shortly after. Among the very last to leave was a Lewis gun section from the Hood which held the final roadblock on the outskirts of Andalsnes before escaping in the sloop Auckland on 1 May. Its Marine crew under Lt Stroud received a D.S.C. and two D.S.M.s. By 6 May, a little over three weeks after they had set out, the Hood's party was back at Plymouth for the loss of four wounded men, including AB George Walker of Aberdeen, destined to spend the rest of the war as a prisoner of the Germans, and AB Harris who escaped into the Norwegian hinterland. Also missing was the howitzer which had been sent over a cliff to deny it to the enemy. Miraculous though this deliverance was, the Norwegian campaign as a whole had been an utter fiasco whose failure now brought on the collapse of the Chamberlain government. As Len Williams put it, 'So ended our efforts at playing soldiers'.·'
.........> -The great attraction of a lengthy refit was of course the opportunity it afforded for a good spell ofleave after many months on active service. To a man the prospect was almost too marvellous to bear thinking about. OD Algernon Foster of Hastings: The fellows aboard are all talking about leave, but it is not the custom to believe anything until you are in the train bound for home, but we all hope that it will soon be our turn-perhaps I should of said 'their' turn .. 62 However, even when free of the ship, leave was as subject to the
~9
Le Bailley, Ti,e Mall Around the E"gine, p. 54. ,. td, 'Rum, Bum & the Lash', p. 56. 51 I am grateful to one of those drafted, Mr Roy Pownall of Hamilton, Ontario, for assistance on this matter. The Hood's crewmen rejoined her at Greenock in mid December. s21 ago, Letters ($capa Flow, 10 l\'1arch 1940). The torpedo officer was probably Lt-Cdr Anthony Pares, lost in May 1941. )J
Author's collection, taped memoir
of Boy Jim Taylor (1939-40), reel 2. Sol Williams, Gone A LOlIg jOllmey, pp.150-1. )) ChurchiJI, The econd World War, I, pp. 752-3. "Ibid., pp. 753-4. )7 Williams, Gone A Loug fOllmey, p.143. sa On this episode see PRO, ADM 202/422, [Cdr I.W,V. Brownel, 'A Low Tech Naval Landing Party' in Naval Review, 77 (1989), pp. 263--Q, Geary, H.M.S. Hood, p. 26, and Hoyt, The Life and Dearh of HMS Hood, pp. 50-63. The assistance of Cdr I.W.V. Browne (1939-41) and All George Walker (1939-40) is gratefully acknowledged. J9 [Brownel, 'A Low Tech Naval Landing Party', p. 263. Awdry and LumJey were lost with Hood in May 1941. 60 Ibid. ltI \-Villiams. Gone A Long foumey, p.143. "R M, 1999119, no. 25, $capa Flow, 9 March 1940.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
194
vagaries of war as everything else. In November 1939 Len Williams learnt of the curtailment of his in a cinema: I was in a Portsmouth cinema when the telegram was received by my mother, who arranged with the manager to have my name and address projected onto the screen. The slide was superimposed on the film being shown, and to my surprise, I saw it appear on the side of a flying boat, which on the film was being launched down a slope. Leaving the cinema, I met my mother at the Box Office and she handed me the recall telegram. I hastily packed my few things and, taking a packet of sandwiches with me, I kissed mother goodbye and took a bus to the station, where I found about two hundred others from Hood and a special train laid on to return us to Plymouth·' Boy Bill Crawford: the cost of war at sea. Cd, J~ff,ey William CtawfOf'd
For many the return from leave, from the comforts of home and the love of family, represented the nadir of misery. Boy Bill Crawford of Edinburgh wrote as much to his mother in March 1941: It sure was lousy coming away yesterday, Mother, although it seems years ago. It seems funny that I was walking along Prince's St with you and Nunky just over 24 hours ago. 1 haven't eaten anything except for a few biscuits since that cup of tea we all had around the fire at to o'clock yesterday. I... 11 sure wish I hadn't come back yesterday, Mum, and I very nearly changed my mind and came back home again when I reached South Queensferry. I just missed a ferry across the river and had to literally force myself to wait for the next. Even when I got to Rosyth I walked from there to the dockl'ard arguing with myself whether I should go back or not. Still, I went on and was charged with being adrift and the ship under sailing orders. I haven't seen the Commander yet, but the Officer of the Watch said it was a pretty serious offence. I am telling you all this just so you won't worry and be worrying how I got on, Mum." His anguish was not confined to what he had left behind, but to the reality of what awaited his return to the ship:
6' Williams, Gone A L01lg fOllmey. p. 139. "IWM, 92127/1, at sea, 19 March J941. The ship's Executive Officer, Cdr W.K.R. Cross, was lost with Hood in May 1941. 's Ibid., at sea, 20 March 1941. 66 Ibid .• at sea, 19 March 1941. 61 l..e Bailly. Tile Mall Aroulld the Engine, p. 54. 68 Owen, HMS Hood (unpublished
memoir), p. I.
NWC. Wellings, Reminiscences, pp. 74 & 90. ro I\oVM/SA, Telegraphist James
69
Brock Webster, no. 13205, reel 3.
Conversation with the author, 5 January 2004. 7lIWM/SA, no. 16741, reel I. n Pertwee, Moon Boot's and Di"ner Suits, p. 159. Statistic in lago. Letters (al sea, 9 October 1939).
il
I thought it would be O.K. coming back after that long spell in harbour but boy oh boy I sure have found different. Mother, 1just feel suffocated, everything here seems to remind me of home, but does not make one feel so comfortable or anywhere near so happy. The wireless, day-old newspapers, and everybody seems to wait until I appear and then they start singing songs which you sung when I was home. I always feel like crying, mum, and there is a permanent lump in my throat."' Beyond the enervating atmosphere was the tyranny of routine and repetition, of a life deprived of physical comfort or mental rest: I don't know what's wrong with me, but I feel sick, tired and in every way fed up. I had about five hours' sleep last night as I had a watch to keep from 12 a.m. to 4 p.m. The thought of eating this food again-pooey!-the same things day in, day out. 66
Certainly, the ship to which Bill Crawford returned was at times barely habitable. Louis Le Bailly remembers conditions aboard off Norway in October 1939: In October, in the worst weather yet, we were off the Lofoten Islands escorting a precious convoy of iron ore from arvik. The messdecks grew colder, and the ship's steam heating (never before used) leaked so badly that it had to be shut off as the evaporators could not make up the water lost. Continuous rolling and pitching caused the deck joints between the great armoured conning tower and the upper deck to leak so badly that running water on the messdecks added to the miseries of overcrowding and cold·7 Things were little better in the gunroom. Mid. Robin Owen spent the winter of 1940-1 in Hood while the cruiser Fiji was under repair: As we joined her on a dark cold October evening she looked vast, like a great blacked out city anchored in the Flow but despite her size and reputation we were. not at all happy at this change. The Gunroom was overcrowded with 28 midshipmen, most of whom were older and senior to us and, in time-honoured manner did their utmost to treat us like dogs' bodies, and temporary ones at that. Most had formed themselves into small groups, rarely mixing with others, and coming from Fiji's closely knit Gunroom of only six we found this intimidating. The gunroom itself was dilapidated and uncomfortable, we had to take our meals in shifts and the catering was poor. Our hammock slinging space was cramped, cluttered with extra sea chests and noisy fans and with overhead ventilation ducts which leaked water in heavy weather. The bathroom and washplace were damp and smelly and being on a deck below the waterline, often inaccessible due to closure of the watertight hatch above." But the lower deck had it worst. Among the most hated chores was the 'Energy Party', the detail of men assigned to mop the rivers of water coursing through messdecks and passages at all hours of the day or night, while the shipwrights spent their time punching oakum into leaking hatches. Under such circumstances it proved impossible to maintain anything approaching peacetime standards of cleanliness at sea, but nonetheless the failure to do so in comparison with other ships points to a decline in morale and energy as the war dragged on.·' Visiting her to take an exam shortly before she sailed against the Bismarck, Telegraphist james Webster of the new battleship Prillce of Wales found the Hood generally 'shabby' and the torpedo tubes covered in rust.'· The admiral's barge was so unkempt that Boy james Gordon, also of Prince of Wales, got into trouble for ignoring it 71 Officer morale remained high, Cdr Brian Scott-Garrett, a Sub-Lieutenant (E) in 1940-1, recalling that 'There was always a feeling of superiority about the Hood, that she was a magnificent great ship, that nothing would ever go wrong with her'." But the perspective of the lower deck was rather different. For 00 jon Pertwee, also a veteran of 1940-1, the Hood, whose crew had an average age of not more than 23, was 'never a very happy ship'." The grind of sleep deprivation and cold food, of hours
To War
without a cigarette in sodden clothing and filthy weather, of seasickness and boredom; peace a distant memory, leave a cherished hope; and ultimately the frustration of an elusive and unwilling enemy. All took their toll as the war entered its second year and men reached a state of profound physical and mental exhaustion. The Hood remained a great ship to the end but it is clear that by 1941 life aboard her had become almost intolerable. On May Day another Hostilities-Only rating, aD Philip X, unburdened himself to a friend: I'm afraid I can give you absolutely no news. This ship is still regarded as the crack ship of the Fleet and any suggestion that might lead anyone to think that she is even afloat is immediately snipped out by the censor's scissors. 0 doubt to you and others who know her from the outside she is magnificent-the Queen of the Seas, one of eptune's nipples. I sometimes even think that myself when I see her off shore from the background of an open pub, but living inside her and doing her dirty chores day and night I have come to regard her as the biggest, bloodiest and most wanton and unsatiated bitch I have ever known. The work I do could be done far better by an illiterate factory handthough he would not have to work nearly so hard-and the life is plain hell. I have never been out of my clothes except to wash since I saw you, and sleep only occasionally touches me. If only the enemy would be induced to make less furtive and more frequent appearances in the open it might be almost worth while. The only thing that continually astonishes me is the docile patience with which my Lower Deck mates take everything that comes to them-an attitude of mind that can only come from lack of imagination and one that I find impossible to acquire. I... J It's a very strange life-utterly remote from anything you ever knew about the sea even in your trawler ventures. In fact, even in the heaviest weather, it's strangely remote from the sea, so much so that when I am thoroughly exhausted and embittered by all this ceaseless discipline I only need to look down at the sea to find the most perfect possible refuge. But it's a clean life, and we are fed well. One can't complain of any material defects. I only wonder sometimes if I will ever paint again, or think clearly." In these conditions it is no wonder men began cracking under the strain. Jon Pertwee: From what I have written in the last few pages it would seem as if wartime at sea was one endless sky-lark, but this was far from the truth. The combination of lack of privacy, living conditions and the weather with its freezing cold were enough to break the spirit of far stronger men than me." One whose spirit was broken was Bill Crawford, evidently on the verge of a mental breakdown by the spring of 1941: But the first chance I get, mum, I am leaving for good as I honestly feel that yesterday something died inside of me and now I don't care much about anything. When the news comes on here I feel a big lump rising in my throat when I know there is no soft chair to sit in and no fire to sit by. obodyelse seems to be as bad as me, mum, but most of them are English
195
and the longer we spent in harbour the more money they spent in going ashore ... even Ian Roy is not upset at all. I guess it is just my nature and the reason I'm telling you this, mum, is so that you won't be too ashamed if I do anything rash in the future. Please believe in me, mum, whatever happens, as I feel I'll go nuts if this carries on much longer. If only I could get off this ship it would not be SO bad and there is so many good jobs ashore if one could only get into them." I wonder if it would do any good, mum, if you wrote to the Admiralty and asked them if there is no chance of me getting in at Donnybristle (if that is how you spell it) or a shore job at Rosyth. You know, lay it on thick, tell them you have two sons away, etc., be sure and tell them my age. I don't suppose it would do any good but it might. 71 For Bill, as for Philip X, there was not much longer to wait. On 24 May his torture became his nemesis. Despite Philip X's remarks on the forbearance of the lower deck, tempers did occasionally reach boiling point. When it was learnt in early December 1940 that the ship would be spending her second Christmas without leave the mood of the Hood's stokers apparently bordered on mutiny. The incident, which allegedly required the intervention of Capt. Irvine Glennie, is related in Bill Crawford's diary: Tuesday 10th December. There sure is unrest as regards leave. The Captain spoke to us about it today, he said nothing could be done. Wedllesday 11th December. There is open talk about mutiny, especially among the stokers, who have already had one bit of trouble. Thursday 12th December. Things came to a head today. The stokers practically mutinied, locking up officers and saying they wouldn't work. The captain asked them all to come up into the battery, he told them he could do nothing about leave and asked all the ship's company to stand by him. Friday 13th December. Things have kind of eased off today. The Captain told us yesterday that he was doing all he could but he did not think we would get leave till next year. He said all he could, also saying he knew some things but he was only a captain and if he was to tell us it might cause unnecessary trouble."
o corroborating evidence has yet been found for this episode nor did it reach the ears of Lt-Cdr Wellings U.S.N., then aboard. It may be that Boy Crawford's entries do the stokers living on the adjoining messdecks a grave injustice. But if conditions in the Hood's engine spaces were as they had been a year earlier it is not beyond the bounds of possibility that the stokers, traditionally less inclined to discipline than their seamen colleagues, could have collectively reached the end of their tether. However, for a majority of the crew, increasingly made up of Ho tilities-Only officers and ratings, the drudgery was stoically borne. Capt. Sir David Tibbits has captured it perfectly:
"IWM.74/134-135/1. 7! Pertwee, Moon Boors and Di,mer S"iu, p. 159. "IWM, 92/27/1, al sea. 19 March 1941. 80)' Ian Roy perished on 24 May 1941. n Ibid., al sea. 18 March 1941. HM5 CochratJe 11, Donibristle. was a naval barracks near Rosyth. " Ibid., diary for 1940. pp. 124-5.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
196
brown liquid so essential to the operation of our sweat glands, had to be increased, as occasional visitors, wonderingly, and at first rather timorously, accepted invitations into our hot and steamy depths." For all their remoteness and isolation, the Hood's men found themselves as subject to the ebb and flow of life on the Home Front as any of their comrades in arms. Before they died on 24 May 1941 Lt john lago and Paymaster Sub- Lt Robert Browne had respectively announced to Iheir families Ihe affiancing of one relationship and the dissolution of another." 'or could they be spared the harsher realities of the Home Front. john lago:
Comrades: the crew of Starboard No.3 4in gun in the Mediterranean in June or July 1940. The trials of war bred a kinship among men hard for civilians to understand and impossible to reproduce in peace. The top of the starboard aft a.Sin machine·gun mounting
The men who took it all in their stride, never complained, and did whatever they had to do satisfactorily and well, were the quiet men, probably married WiUl children, who had worked in a factory, on a farm, or had a milk round. They had always gonen on with their jobs whatever happened, and they just went on doing them, whatever they might be."
I expect you have been having some air raid warnings by now. Portsmouth seems to be having a bad time and the majority of the men on board come from around there. The other day one man was punished severely for interfering with some gear that he shouldn't have touched; he lost a good conduct badge which means sixpence a day off his pay for life. However, a message came through that in an air raid a bomb had dropped on his house, killing his wife, mother-in-law and two children. The poor chap's punishment was forgotten." Where family was concerned, Bill for many when he wrote:
rawford no doubt spoke
can be seen just above the gun. Visible to the left are a group of ready-use lockers and one of the night lifebuoys rests against the rail on the right. HMS Hood AuociationlWhitewood Collection
Cited in Haines. Cruiser at \Var, p. 36. Capt. Tibbits did not serve in the Hood. 80 Pertwee, Moon Boots and Dinner 79
SI/;ts, pp. 153-4. Lt Horace Davies
R.M. and CPO Geoff Pope were both lost on 24 May 1941.
" CAC, LEBY 1/2, MS. of Tile Mall Around the Engine, ch. 13. p. 3. .l Jaga. Letters (Hvalfjord, 27 April 1941) and RNM, 1981/369 (letter of February 1940), respectively. u lago, Letters (Scapa Flow, 27 August 1940). Sol IWM, 92/27/1, al sea, 20 March 1941. IU lago. Letters (Gibraltar, 12 July 1940). A6 RNM, 1999/19. at sea, 13 April 1941.AB Fosler was lost wilh the ship. 111 Beardmore, The \Vnters of U"certaillt)', p. 24.
The end of the war was no more than a dream, but men were sustained by comradeship, love of family, romantic attachments ashore and hope for the future. But above all comradeship. jon Pertwee: Lucky count three was my friendship with the Second in Command of the Royal Marines on board, Lieutenant Davies. This was a somewhat dangerous situation for him, as having a lower deck rating as a friend was unheard of, and could've been suspecl. But this delightful man found ways of getting me into his cabin that defied any criticism. Running errands, discussing ship's concerts, tuning his guitar, and translating (very roughly) passages of French poetry. Once in, I was made very much at home and over endless cups of tea, laced with some of Geoff's 'neaters', we talked and talked. He was quite besoned by the theatre and the arts, and despairing of finding a kindred spiril among the Officers on board turned to me. Thank God he did! I... ] It was my friendship with Lieutenant Davies and Geoff Pope that kept me going through some of the most wretched and despairing periods of my young life'o The crucible of war also cemented an unlikely comradeship between younger seamen and stokers. Louis Le Bailly: The passageways above the machinery spaces were part of the ammunition supply routes for the 5.5" secondary armament and, as such, were the action and defence stations for young sailors. Many of them as Boy Seamen had mixed with my young stokers when we were all together in the Mediterranean. So the number of engine room and boiler room 'teaboats', those cauldrons of hot
That last leave was the happiesl I have ever spent, just because I was in the house more. Sitting round the fire talking, with a good dinner beneath my beIt---<)h mother, that I did not have to leave all those things behind." Clearly, it was being deprived of the ordinary things of life and of news from home that were among the hardest things to bear. john lago: Mails have been very bad and tomorrow we shall not have had one for a month, so I don't know what is happening at home. I do hope air raids are not too bad or too near. Your garden must be full of flowers; I wish I could see it.·5 Then there was the future, almost too distant and too wonderful to contemplate. In one of the last letters he wrote to his wife, AB Algernon Foster laid oul his plans for their life after the war that were destined never to come to fruition: I have not mentioned it to you, but the reason that I wish as much money as possible put away is because I am hoping to save enough to get a start in a Public House. Of course, it will need quite a bit of money. but I will tell you more about il next time 1 get home. I have been thinking a lot about what I will do at the end of this upheaval. But of course I will want your ideas as well." Although the Rev. Beardmore, the ship's chaplain, accepted that 'a large percentage of British people do not go to church these days', it was equally the case that many found solace in religion as the war broke over their homes and touched them personally." In the few minutes given him at 'Divisions' each
197
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morning, Beardmore tried to cater to their needs: The men appreciate a prayer for their homes. For nearly two years I said the following simple prayer of my own in H.M.S. Hood: We commend unto Thy loving care, 0 Lord, all those who are joined to us by the ties of kindred, friendship, and love; keep them, we beseech Thee, in all their dangers, their anxieties, and their fears, and enable us by Thy Spirit to do our duty by them and the country which we serve; through jesus Christ our Lord.
Turner, our commissioned Electrician, has just left because his wife is very seriously ill. ominally he and I held the same rank but he had been doing the job for some 20 years, was very well up in service matters, had poor technical knowledge and, not unnaturally, to begin with he rather resented my intrusion. In the event we got on very well together but it would have been a bit hard on him should I have gained my second stripe over him'l However, the majority of Hostilities-Only personnel could not expect this degree of adjustment, and the following passage by the Rev. Harold Beardmore captures their particular predicament:
I always noticed that there was an audible 'Amen' to that prayer and the Lord's Prayer, which seemed to indicate that they understood and appreciated its meaning. History, no doubt, will one day place on record how these men did their duty fearlessly to the end." The Second World War had a profound impact on the structure of British society, one that was accurately reflected in the Royal avy. With the onset of war came tens of thousands of reservist officers and Hostilities-Only ratings who were destined to transform its outlook and self-perception. The great influx of volunteers and conscripts did not begin until 1940, but once they started arriving in numbers the atmosphere in the Hood changed perceptibly. For the regulars of the peacetime Navy it was no doubt an exasperating yet fascinating spectacle. Here were men, drawn from every walk oflife, thrust in time of war into the unforgiving and largely closed world of the lower deck of the Royal Navy. Some wilted under the pressure, but curiosity and mutual respect caused many unlikely friendships to be struck up. OD Philip X, an urbane conscript struggling to cope with the hardships of war at sea, has left this testimony of his adjustment: .. .Since I'm the oldest Ordinary Seaman in the Squadron, probably in the whole Fleet, I get a few slIb rosa privileges from the real old timers in the Lower Deck. They are grand fellows, and a tot of rum from a Chief P.O. now is better than a kiss from Garbo in New York." For some, like john lago, their technical expertise in civilian life qualified them for an immediate commission in the R. .V.R. lago, an electrical engineer with Metropolitan Vickers of heffield, volunteered for the Navy on 28 August 1939 and within a month found himself a sub-lieutenant in charge of the Hood's high-power installations as her sole Electrical Engineer. As technology assumed an ever greater role in naval operations and attrition thinned the ranks of career officers, the Navy came increasingly to rely on both the R.N.V.R. and the R. .R., which was composed of volunteers from the Merchant Navy. As one regular of the 'pukka avy' recalled, 'We began to wonder how we ever got on without them'.'" There were tensions, of course, as reservist officers brought their technical expertise and breezy approach into the conservative environment of the peacetime Navy. john lago, on the threshold of promotion to lieutenant, relates his experience to his family in the autumn of 1940: There has been a change of officers in our department. Mr.
In war conditions in the Royal avy we have to accept the fact that a very large percentage of our parish have never known the meaning of the words 'foreign commission'. They have never been away from their homes for a long period, while only a few ratings on the lower deck attended boarding schools in their youth when they became accustomed to leaving their homes three times a year to go to school. It is, therefore, only natural that so many men feel the strain of being away from their homes"
CPO Supply Geoff Pope, purveyor of 'neaters' in the Victualling Office. HMS Hood Anoci.Hion
Conscious of their limitations, most chose to blend in with the herd as best they could. OD B.A. Carlisle, aboard in 1940-1, describes his strategy when the men were being told off for work: In harbour when the ratings fell in to be detailed for duties, I soon learned where to stand in the line to make sure I wasn't given a task with an element of skill such as splicing a rope but rather got detailed to pull on ropes to get the Admiral's barge into the water'" Nonetheless, life afloat had its mitigations, and among these was the provision of wartime comforts. In December 1939 the Hood had the great good fortune to be adopted by the R. .V.R. and R.N.D. War Comforts Fund. From its offices on Trafalgar Square this organisation spent the next eighteen months supplying the ship with an assortment of woollens, books, cards, games, gramophone records and much else that eventually reached a figure of over 18,000 items'" In February 1940 the liaison officer, Lt-Cdr R.E jessel, was able to report the arrival of no less than seventeen parcels while the ship was lying at Greenock. Among the items received were a large white sweater presented to a midshipman of the Royal Australian Navy getting his first taste of snow, a number of ludo sets which formed the basis of an 'uckers tournament, and decks of cards for evening games on the messdecks and in the wardroom. A subsequent package of soap found its way somewhat pointedly to the boys' messdeck. The War Comforts Fund assisted with even the most minute requests. In his final letter to it on 16 May 194\ jessel's successor, Lt-Cdr john Machin, asked for some cribbage score boards and a selection of French-language books for the handful of Free French ratings aboard. He also sent apologies for the ship's inability to send a representative to the benefit concert arranged for her in London on 7 June, and the loss of the Hood before it could take place evidently hit the War Comforts Fund very hard. However, there can be no doubt that its efforts over the previous year and a half had been both valu-
Electricaltt John lago, R.N.V.R. Technical expertise brought him from civilian life straight into the wardroom. Mn 8ft KMchingron
.. Ibid., pp. 34-5. 89
IWM, 74/13'1-135/l.3l sea, I May
t941. "'IWM,82/10/1. PO Plumber William Batters. HMS Danae. 91 lago, Letters (Scapa Flow, 23 November 1940). 9l
Beardmore, The Waters of Uncertainty, p. 43.
"SWWEC, 2oot/l376, B.A. Carlisle, p.6. .. Geary, H.M.S. Hood, pp. 32-8.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
198
able and appreciated. PO Len Williams: Most of these woollen garments were knitted and sent to the fleet by kind souls at home, who, by so doing, were helping the war effort in the only way they could. Let me assure them that we seamen blessed them for their efforts. I know I did, for the Denmark Strait in winter is not a nice place to know." Above all, the distribution of war comforts, particularly knitted garments, put crewmen in direct contact with those for whom they were fighting. Boy Jim Taylor: During the war ladies throughout the country formed all kinds of clubs and support organisations and made a big effort to provide 'comforts for the troops'. In November 1939 all the boys in Hood were given a pair of mittens and a balaclava helmet which had been knitted and distributed through these organisations. Pinned to mine was the name and address of the lady who had knitted them. All these years later I can still remember that my benefactor was a Mrs. Grant of Congleton in Cheshire. I wrote a letter of thanks to her and was quite surprised when I received a reply back from her." Nor was the R.N.v.R. and R.N.D. War Comforts Fund the only organisation to take the Hood under its wing. Sub-Lt John Iago: ... Last night a big parcel of knitted things [turned up] from the 'Stenographic Knitting Guild'. It included a pair of socks, just right for going underneath sea boots, mittens and a balaclava big enough to put six men in. I shall probably use it as a bedspread!" Another affiliation was Applegarth School at Northallerton in Yorkshire, whose pupils sent letters and comforts to the ship throughout her wartime service. Mrs Stella Young, then ten years old, recalls the spirit: We were very young but we took our task of knitting scarves, balaclavas and gloves very much to heart. They were for 'our sailors'. It was very hard using oiled wool for such small fingers but we succeeded with help from mothers and other family members. We had pictures on the walls and took our letters to be read out at school.. 's
fl
Williams. GOlle A Lo"g fOllmey. p. 138.
91
HMS Hood Association archives. lago, Letters (Clyde, 28 February
98
Letter to the author, 31 January
99
2004. lago, Letters (Loch Ewe, 3 October 1939).
96
1940).
100
Beardmore. The Waters of Uncertainty. pp. 17-18.
'" IWM, 92/27/1.
Among the correspondents was Chief Stoker Walden Biggenden who took time from his oil-fuel registers to write to a young Gerald Granger on 6 September 1940, and the school still competes for the pair of trophies presented it by a grateful ship's company in February 1940. By all accounts, the Hood received a super-abundance of comforts while other heavily-engaged vessels went comparatively ignored, evidence of the unique place she occupied in the affections of ordinary Britons and consequently of the damage done to their morale by her passing. The other great morale-booster was mail. Wartime mail deliveries were copious but enemy action and the ship's movements made them sporadic and unreliable. Lengthy periods without mail reinforced the overwhelming sense of isolation and added a concern for those keeping the home fires burning to the ordinary
pressures of shipboard life. Equally, its arrival was a cause for jubilation and the morale of the crew rose perceptibly when the mail-often several tons of it-finally came aboard and the Royal Marine postal staff were put to work. Meanwhile, outgoing mail had to be censored to avoid the passage of sensitive information about the ship and her work. At the outbreak of hostilities this had been the duty of the ship's chaplain, the Rev. Harold Beardmore, but as the war intensified and lengthy separation from friends and family became the norm, the volume of letters made this an intolerable burden. Before long the task had devolved on divisional officers who had eventually to devote much of their spare time to it. John Iago was among those assigned to this duty by the end of September 1939: I am now one of eight censors who have to wade through miles of literature from blokes to their wives and sweethearts. They all say the same kind of thing and we rarely have to cut anything out. It is interesting because one gets an idea of the feeling in the ship. I think all hands are having a good time and are very optimistic. They all realize that it is probably going to be a long do and are not going to do anything other than enjoy it." By August 1940 lago was censoring 3S letters a day. The men were of course conscious of this added intrusion into their privacy and extremely sensitive on the subject, not least since officers were spared the same indignity. In the manual he wrote for aspiring naval chaplains, the Rev. Beardmore felt the need to issue the following warning to his readers: Never discuss a rating or the affairs of the ship's company in the Wardroom, as one must remember that the Royal Marine attendants are all ears, and though they are a very loyal lot, the rating or ratings concerned will soon learn that they are being talked about by the Chaplain in the Wardroom. You will in this way lose their confidence. This is also a very important point when a number of officers are censoring letters (try and avoid doing this in the Wardroom where ratings are present, that is, messengers or Marine attendants)-quite unconsciously you may laugh at some joke or remark, and sometimes I have seen officers foolish enough to repeat it. The ship's company are naturally sensitive about the censoring of their letters, and if word is passed for'ard that the officers laugh at their letters, or discuss their contents, then serious harm is done which can have far-reaching effects upon the relationship between officers and men.'OO In this way censorship not only deprived the enemy of information of value but also closed the avenue by which many ratings would otherwise have let off steam to friends and family. Many was the lelter which ended in the same vein as Bill Crawford's to his mother on 6 April 1941: Well, mum, as usual there is nothing to say, at least nothing that would pass censor. So for just now I will say cheerio and lots of love. Bill 101 But it wasn't all misery on the lower deck, not by any means. For those who survived it was not the strain and discomfort that
To War
abided in the memory but the camaraderie of hardships shared in an unforgiving environment. Both visitors and veterans testify to the warm and cheery atmosphere that invariably prevailed in harbour. There was intense boredom, of course, but the war brought enough characters into the Hood to enliven it with a variety of pranks and entertainments. Cdr Robin Owen: On one occasion, somewhere north of Iceland, on an unusually calm sunny day at dinner time, the Captain (I.G. Glennie), making one of his rare addresses over the ship's broadcast, announced that the edge of the Arctic icepack was about fifteen miles away and visible from the spotting top. A few minutes later the rumour went round the ship that we were actually in the ice. Many sailors rushed up from below to see it and there was great excitement and cheering when a smallish block of ice was seen floating down the starboard side amidships. Only later was it revealed that the stoker in charge of the refrigeration machinery had removed it from the icemaking plant, carried it up several decks and pushed it out through a forecastle scuttle, a typical but much appreciated example of Lower Deck humour. i . ' Then there were the 5.0.0.5. operas, one of which John lago described to his family in January 1941: We had an excellent ship's fancy dress ball a few nights ago with a large number of very good costumes, mostly made on board. The officers all rambled around after dinner, judging the costumes, the most topical, the funniest and so on and then we stayed on for a cabaret afterwards. One of our ordinary seamen, before the war, was Marmeduke Brown of Radio Luxembourg; you may have heard of Marmeduke Brown and Mathilda. He told stories very well. I.' The Marmeduke Brown in question was in fact 00 Jon Pertwee who would make his career in theatre and television. Pertwee was extremely popular and, even allowing for a degree of post-war embellishment, his birthday celebration was clearly an event of some moment: In my case, on one birthday I was in luck, or in retrospect, perhaps out of luck, for 'Old Manny' was sufficiently liked to be invited to 'sippers, all round' by two or more messdecks [sic] of a dozen or so ratings. My rum intake therefore was around 36 sippers, which plus my own tot, nine sippers, equalled 4S sippers in all. Within ten minutes I was falling down drunk, and remained so for two days and two nights. Endearingly, I was joshed, picked up, picked up again and finally hidden away to sleep it off, my mates performing my duties and keeping watch for me. 104 When he awoke it was to find a large cobra tattooed onto his forearm, a lasting memento of the occasion. However, there were less demanding forms of entertainment. Rugby and football continued informally at Scapa, but the outbreak of war had curtailed most organised sport and the men were obliged to fall back on shipboard recreations. Darts, cribbage, chess and mahjong were widely played as were whist and bridge under the auspices of the chaplain, prizes being drawn from the war comforts packages. The Rev.
199
Beardmore's 'Deep Sea Scouts' and handicraft competitions kept men's minds off the war while demonstrating 'what an abundance of talent there is in the service. lOS Band Corporal Wally Rees R.M. of Port Talbot led a ix-piece swing outfit with his 'effervescenttrumpet'.I06 Films shown on messdecks and in recreation spaces were much appreciated while the wardroom had screenings every Sunday to which the gunroom was usually invited. Charlie Chaplain's The Great Dictator premiered to an audience of 200 at Scapa on 17 ovember 1940 while Rembrandt with Charles Laughton, The Doctor Takes a Wife with Lorella Young, Disney's Pinocchio and The Texas Rangers Ride Again were among the films seen in the wardroom in 1940 and 1941. Under these circumstances the flooding of the ship's cinema equipment during a harsh patrol in the Norwegian Sea in late October 1939 must have seemed something of a calamity; no wonder Sub-Lt John lago, the ship's Electrical Engineer, devoted half a day to restoring it. I.' Photography was popular though film became increasingly hard to come by as the war progressed and for security reasons could not be developed ashore, the crew having to make do with processing aboard. Cdr (E) Terence Grogan went a step further, shooting colour footage of the ship at sea with a 16mm cine-camera. The intended result, a film titled The War from the Hood with soundtrack, may never have been completed but the surviving footage provides a unique and fascinating glimpse of the ship as she passed from peace into war. Above all there was reading. Apart from the ship's bookstall and library there was a wardroom library together with that set up by the Rev. Beardmore 'offering books of the better type, books of travel, music, art, biography, history, and science. lOS Books and magazines were, however, in very short supply and the consignments donated by The Times and the War Comforts Fund eagerly awaited and later exchanged with those of other ships. Then there was smoking, banned between decks (except on Christmas afternoon) but still the support and consolation of many an exhausted or dejected sailor. Cigarettes were cheap and plentiful, but the cartons of American Chesterfields that Lt-Cdr Joseph Wellings presented to Vice-Admiral Whitworth and Captain Glennie on Christmas morning 1940 were clearly much appreciated. I.' For 00 Philip X, meanwhile, his heartfelt desire in May 1941 was for nothing more than a pipe: About the pipe-I want a cherry wood pipe-small and with a downward curved stem, so that the bowl can repose on my beard (yes, I have a beard now-I wonder what Diana says to that!). I hate to bother you but if I wrote to one of those small London tobacconists the chances are that they would be bombed out and I'd get no reply-and if I wrote to my brother John he would probably produce an early Victorian meerschaum which wouId encourage the Commander to tear off my beard ... 1'. Traditional celebrations were observed as well as circumstances allowed. The first Christmas of the war was spent on the orthern Patrol but festivities went ahead nonetheless. Sub-Lt John lago: Christmas Day was the oddest Christmas I have ever had. I managed to go to church two days in succession. After
101
Owen, HMS Hood (unpublished memoir), p. 2.
10)
lago, Letters (Scapa Flow,S
January 1941). lo-t Perhvee. Moon Boots and Dinner Suits, pp. 147-8. 1M
Beardmore,
Tire Waters of
Uncertaimy. p. 44. 106 Band Corporal Rees was drafted from the Hood in January 1941. I am grateful to his daughter Mrs Diane Morris for kindly making his papers available to me. 107 lago. Letters (al sea, 23 October t939). 108 Beardmore, The Waters of Uncertainty, p. 44. 109 Wellings, 0" His Majesty's Service, p. 83. '" IWM, 74/134--135/1. The Commander was W.K.R. Cross, lost wilh the ship.
200
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
church, all the officers went round the mess decks to inspect the very highly decorated messes. The last was the Warrant Officers' mess where we had a bit to drink and then we went on to the Gun Room and had a drop more, and finally to the Ward Room again to have more! We celebrated mainly on the best champagne at 2/6d a bottle! Christmas Lunch was fun-we all had presents, crackers, paper hats and musical instruments. Afterwards everyone retired to bed to sleep it off and before tea I went on duty in the drifter until midnight. lit The Hood did not return to harbour until 5 January 1940. Fate also decreed that she would be at sea over Christmas! 940, the orders to sail being piped just as the men were decorating the messes on the afternoon of the 24th. The Beating the Retreat planned by the Marine Band for that evening had to be abandoned as the ship prepared for sea. After what may have been a near-mutiny over leave earlier that month this must have been a difficult moment but the men made the best of it. Ted Briggs: It was my second Christmas of the war at sea, but we were all in the same boat and the greyness and knifing coldness of the fringe of the Arctic Circle melted below decks as carols echoed through the messes and as 'sippers' from tots were freely exchanged before the arrival of the turkey and plum pudding. Mess decks were decorated with flags and bunting cadged from the flag deck; the captain carried out a parody of'rounds', preceded by a boy seaman dressed in a master-at-arms uniform. As far as possible discipline was relaxed below deck, but for those on watch it was 'business as usual'.1'2 However, the New Year was seen in at Scapa and celebrated accordingly. Lt-Cdr Wellings has left this description of the wardroom festivities as the Hood entered the last year of her life and the Royal avy the most desperate in her history:
lago. Letters (at sea, 28 December \939). III Coles & Briggs. Tile Mighty Hood, p. \91. II) WeLiings. 0" His Mlljesry's Service, p. 85. The piper was Mid. I.W. V. Browne (1939--4\), for whose comments on this chapter , should like to express my thanks. 11. lago. Letters (Scapa Flow, 28 September 1939). 115 Ibid. (Scapa Flow, 27 August \940). 116 I\"/M, 74/134-135/1, at sea, 1 May 1941. The padre in question 111
Just before midnight the officers returned from the c.P.O. party [actually the Warrant Officers' mess]. Paymaster Lt Browne rigged up ship's bell in Anteroom of wardroom. At 24.00 bell was struck 16 times, an old custom. Captain, Admiral, his staff, exec. and practically all officers returned to Wardroom. We all drank a toast to I94 I-Peace and Victory. One of the midshipmen from the gunroom came in with a bagpipe and played Scotch tunes. Everyone started to dance the various Scotch dances from the Admiral down to the lowest midshipman. The Wardroom tables were cleared away and a regular party was in full swing. It was a very unusual sight to see the Admiral, Captain, staff, Wardroom, gunroom, and Warrant officers dancing. Included in the party but not dancing was the chief Master-at-Arms and Sergeant Major of the Marines. Such a comradeship one would never suspect from the English who are supposed to be so conservative. I was impressed very much. Such spirit is one of the British [sic] best assets. This spirit will go far to bring about victory in the end. At 0).45 I left the party in full swing and turned in .. .'"
was the Re\'. R.J.P. Stewart, also
lost with the ship. 1I7 Letter to the author, 8 March 2004.
With their fine food, cases of sherry, frequent parties and Royal Marine attendants, the life of the Hood's officers was rather more
comfortable than that suffered on the lower deck. Among the wardroom guests at Greenock in January) 940 was Gracie Fields herself and several officers were able to bring their wives up to Scotland with the prospect of spending time with them when the ship was at Rosyth or in the Clyde. Sub-Lt lago for one found his lot decidedly less taxing than his peacetime occupation: We have great fun on board, especially in the evenings. When we are in harbour we have a proper dinner for which we dress and we have a Royal Marine band in attendance twice a week. At sea it is only a 'running dinner', as then we have to work harder. Breakfast at 8.30 a.m. is a bit of a treat after early rising in Sheffield. Lunch at noon, tea 3.30 p.m. (we usually sleep off lunch until teatime) and then, if we are in harbour, we can usually get a run ashore till dinner at 8 p.m. So you see all the work is done between 9 a.m. and 12 o'clock-quite a change after a 47-hour week at Metro Vicks. ' " Indeed, one of the few concerns lago expressed during his first months afloat was the provision of sufficient clean collars for the nightly dinners in harbour. On 27 August 1940 (ago wrote to his family that It seems extraordinary that tomorrow I shall have been in the service for a year. Time has gone very quickly and it has been very pleasant. 115 Though his experience was decidedly untypical and was soon to became markedly more onerous, this state of affairs was clearly not lost on the lower deck, which, in war as in peace, preserved its suspicion and resentment of the wardroom. OD Philip X, a Hostilities-Only rating, wrote as much in one of his last letters: Except for routine orders one never sees the officers. They are as remote and as inhuman as Chinese Emperors-all except the padre who is exceptionally human and intelligenL ' " Evidently, insofar as conditions in the wartime Hood could be recalled with any lasting pleasure it was to the life of her wardroom officers that this memory was owed. But what of the relations between officers and men in the same period? Cdr I.W.V. Browne, a midshipman aboard between 1939 and 194), puts it in perspective: ... The very high morale retained by the Navy throughout the war ... in unspeakable conditions would not have been possible without genuine respect and cooperation between officers and ratings, helped by tradition and cust0I11. 117 There is surely much in this but as in so many other areas insufficient evidence survives to draw any firm conclusions where the Hood was concerned. Her life and community were too varied and opinions too polarised for a definitive assessment to be made from available sources. Nor does the coherent study of officer-sailor relations in the Royal Navy exist against which any comparison might be made. Until further sources appear and unless more veterans record their experiences this reality is fated to recede into oblivion.
To War
201
........,...-
Early on the morning of 10 May 1940 the German Army launched its great offensive in the West. Within two weeks the War Cabinet, its troops outmanoeuvred and its strategy in disarray, was taking the first steps towards the withdrawal of the British Expeditionary Force from the Continent. As these momentous events unfolded across the Channel the Hood was quietly completing her refit first at Plymouth and then at the Gladstone Dock in Liverpool where Mussolini's declaration of war was greeted with looting of businesses and boarding of Italian vessels berthed there. A boarding party from the Hood was detailed to take over the freighter Erica whose crew promptly surrendered. The party returned soon after with the Italian ensign, an autographed portrait of Mussolini for the gunroom, and generally rather the worse for drink, the British matelot's unerring nose for alcohol having taken him directly to the spirit store.!1S When the Hood finally emerged from Liverpool on 12 june it was to find the evacuation from Dunkirk over and the Royal avy girding itself to lift the remnants of the Allied armies from northern and western France. On 17 june, as the Hood lay at Greenock with the liners of convoy US3 about her, the French government asked Germany for an armistice. Five days later the new premier, Marshal Petain, accepted Hitler's terms, thereby bringing the Battle of France to a close. That night in one of his periodic broadcasts to the ship Capt. Glennie asked his crew to remember that, though 'we were likely to have certain dislikes for our previous allies, ... we were to treat them, even now, as our friends and try to realize their terrible fate in the hands of the azis'.!!· There was certainly frustration but also relief that another dismal episode was over, that 'On consideration, not having to defend France may be a blessing in disguise'.!'· But, as the Hood's company was shortly to discover, France's agony was not yet over. With the entry of Italy into the war the Admiralty began taking steps to fill the void created by the collapse of French power in the western Mediterranean with a significant force of British ships. However, once the terms of the Franco-German armistice became known in London, as they had by 25 june, it was plain that this squadron must have a far more urgent remit. Under the terms of the armistice, the French fleet, still largely intact, was to be 'demobilized and disarmed under German or Italian control'. This clause did not satisfy the British government which was already moving to prevent scattered units and squadrons of the French Navy falling into the hands of the Axis. The officer chosen to enforce this policy in the western Mediterranean was Vice-Admiral Sir james Somerville who assumed command of Force H on 27 june. First constituted as a hunting group during the search for the raider Admiral Graf Spee in October 1939, Force H was now transformed into an independent command based on Gibraltar but directly responsible to the Admiralty in London. Over the next eighteen months Somerville's 'detached squadron' asserted a control over the western Mediterranean which would not be relinquished while the war lasted. This accomplishment, together with the many famous actions in which it was involved, gives Force H a special place in the history of the Royal avy. It was to join this squadron as flagship that the Hood was ordered south from Greenock on 18 june, reaching Gibraltar five days later with the carrier Ark Royal.
Above: Vice-Admiral Somerville's 35ft fast motor boat slung beneath the main derrick in July
1940. The canvas-covered mounting on the left is Port No. 3 4in gun. The ready-use ammunition lockers on the right are nestled beneath the pompom bandstand. Bibliothek fUr Zeltgeschichte. Stuttgart
Left: A photo of 'X' and 'Y' turrets supposedly taken during the bombardment of Mers·el-
Kebir, 3 July 1940. HMS Hood Association/MilSon Col/«tion
III
See RNM, 1998/42, Journal of Mid. P.). Buckett, R.N.V.R., t t June 1940, and tWM/SA, Sub-L!
(E) Brian Scott-Garrett. no. 16741, reel I. 119 RNM, 1998/42, Journal of Mid. P.). Buckett, at sea, 22 June 1940. 120 lago, Letters (at sea, 18 June (940).
202
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
The first task to which Force H was committed was the neutralisation of the French Atlantic Fleet at Mers-el-Kebir near Oran in Algeria. After two days of earnest deliberation in Somerville's cabin, Force H sailed from Gibraltar on 2 July stiffened by units of Admiral Sir Dudley orth's orth Atlantic Command. There can be no doubt that Somerville's task was among the most unenviable ever assigned to a Briti h commander. His brief from the War Cabinet was to lay before his French counterpart, Amiral Marcel Gensoul, the following options for the disposal of his fleet, which consisted of two modern battlecruisers, two elderly battleships, a seaplane carrier and six large destroyers: that he (a) put to sea and continue the fight against Germany; (b) sail with reduced crews to a British port; (c) do likewise to a port in the French West Indies; or (d) scuttle his ships at their berths. Should these prove unacceptable a fifth was to be offered, namely that Gensoul demilitarise his force at Mers-el-Kebir. Any measure resorted to would have to be enacted within six hours, a proviso which greatly hindered both admirals' freedom of manoeuvre. In the event of these proposals being rejected Somerville was to present Gensoul with the ultimatum of having his fleet destroyed at the hands of Force H. Shortly after 08.00 on the morning of 3 July Force H appeared off Mers-el-Kebir. Somerville had already sent the destroyer Foxholllld ahead with his emissary Capt. Cedric Holland, but it was not until 16./5 that the latter gained direct access to Gensoul. The protracted and ultimately fruitless negotiations between the British and Gensoul, the stirring of the French navy across the western Mediterranean and the mounting pressure from London all lie beyond the scope of this volume.'" Suffice to say that by 17.30, some three hours after the expiry of his original ultimatum, Somerville found himself with no alternative but to open fire. Within a few minutes Boy Signalman Ted Briggs was hoisting the order for instant action to the starboard signal yard. Shortly before 18.00 it was the order to open fire that he bent on to the halyard: The response was immediate. Just as I turned round to watch, the guns of the Resoll/tioll and Valialll roared in murderous hair-trigger reaction. Then came the ting-ting of our firing bell. Seconds later my ears felt as if they had been sandwiched between two manhole covers. The concu sion of the Hood's eight fifteen-inch guns, screaming in horrendous harmony, shook the flag deck violently. '"
III
See Warren Tute. Tile Deadly Stroke (London: Collins, 1973) and Brodhurs(. CJlllrchill's Ancllor, pp. 152-66.
Coles & Briggs. The Mighty Hood, pp. 167-8. IU Simpson, (eel), Tile Somerville Papers, p. 109. '" Ibid.. p. 108. III lago, utters (Gibraltar, 6 Jul)' 1940). oz. RN~t, 1998/42, lournal of ~tjd. P.I. Buckett, 3 July 1940. lU
Moments later the harbour at Mers-el-Kebir was being crucified by the first salvoes of British 15in ordnance. Within three minutes the battleship Bretaglle had blown up with huge loss of life. Her sister Provellce and the battlecruiser DI/nkerqlle had to be beached after sustaining repeated hits, the laller mainly under Hood's fire. The destroyer Mogador lost her stern to a direct hit which left her a smouldering wreck in waters turned black with oil and writhing bodies. With the harbour shrouded in a dense pall of smoke, at 18.04, nine minutes after the action had commenced, Somerville gave the order to cease fire. A few minutes later increasingly accurate salvoes from the shore battery at Fort Santon obliged the Hood to return a withering fire while the squadron sailed out of range under a smokescreen. This might have been the end of the affair except that at 18. I8 reports began reaching Hood that a battlecruiser
was emerging from the harbour. Initially dismissed by Somerville and his staff, by 18.30 it was apparent that the Strasbollrg, unscathed by the holocaust enveloping her companions, had negotiated the mine barrage laid by aircraft from Ark Royal and was making for Toulon with five destroyers. Hood turned to give chase, working up to over 28 knots at the cost of a stripped turbine while Ark Royal prepared to launch an air strike in the fading light. The Hood again came under attack as the pursuit developed, first from a salvo of torpedoes fired by the light cruiser Rigal/ld de Genol/iIly and then by a flight of bombers from Algeria. However, bomb attacks by Swordfish aircraft failed to slow the Strasbol/rg and at 20.20 a dispirited Somerville called off the chase. A second Swordfish strike at 20.55 reported two torpedo hits but the Strasbollrg's speed remained unimpaired and she reached Toulon without damage the following day. Three days later an announcement by Amiral Jean-Pierre Esteva at Bizerta that'The damage to the DlInkerqlle is minimal and the ship will soon be repaired' brought Force H back to Mers-el-Kebir where Swordfish from Ark Royal put paid to her operational career. So ended one of the most regrettable episodes in the history of the Royal avy. As Somerville put it in a letter to his wife, We all feel thoroughly dirty and ashamed that the first time we should have been in action was an affair like this. [... ] I feel sure that I shall be blamed for bungling the job and I think I did. But to you 1don't mind confessing I was half-hearted and you can't win an action that way.1lJ It was, he added, 'the biggest political blunder of modern times and I imagine will rouse the world against us"" Those who expressed an opinion did so largely in the same vein. Writing to his family on 6 July, Sub-Lt (ago echoed Somerville's fears for the wider implications of the engagement: I think that the events in Oran were a great pity-they solved the problem of the French fleet but I hope we shall not look back on it as too much of a mistake. Lord HawHaw ha evidently been rendered speechless with anger--<>r perhaps it is that we just can't pick him up on the wireless. '" In fact, Lord Haw-Haw, like the rest of the German propaganda machine, made enormous capital out of the incident, christening Force H 'Somerville's assassins' in one particular broadcast. There was grim amusement to be had from this but also anger; anger against the Axis for precipitating the disaster, and anger against Gensoul for not continuing the war alongside the British. Above all there was chagrin and astonishment that matters should have come to such a pass. But for all that there was no shortage of pragmatic opinion in the Hood. Mid. Philip Buckett's was one: Coming back past the harbour we could still see large columns of smoke and small fires coming from the ships and the town behind. We reali ed, too, how unpleasant the action had been. evertheless it had been our duty and we had done it successfully.'" There were other voices too, overheard by Somerville and related with some disgust to his wife: 'It doesn't seem to worry the
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sailors at all as "they never 'ad no use for them French bastards"'.'" Though they certainly existed, surviving accounts suggest that such opinions were neither widely held nor deeply felt. It was a vile episode from which no one could derive any lasting pride or satisfaction. Years later Mid. Ross Warden recalled the atmosphere aboard as the Hood made for Gibraltar: There was no elation aboard our ship that night. The gunroom was for once subdued, and from the Admiral down to the youngest seaman there were heavy hearts. I28 The Hood emerged largely unscathed from her second action. Towards the end of the engagement she was straddled by a salvo from Dl/l'lkerqlle which blinded AB Patsy Ogan in one eye, wounded Lt G.E.M. Owens in the arm and caused splinter damage to the funnels and starboard side. But that was all and again it seemed that she had got off lightly. For the crew, however, it was a different matter. The engagement off Mers-eJ- Kebir was the Hood's first prolonged experience of battle and it left an impression on all who endured it. From the time the Hood cleared Gibraltar at 17.00 on 2 july to her return at 19.00 on the 4th there was barely a moment's rest for any of the crew. The hands, changed into clean underwear, were piped to the usual dawn action stations at 04.45 on the 3rd and then again at 08.30 as Force H closed Mers-el-Kebir. Then the waiting began. Grog was issued followed by a lunch of soup and bully beef sandwiches for the men and stew and rock cakes for officers in brutal heat, but, as Mid. Buckett wrote in his journal, 'the anxiety of waiting for the French admiral's decision began to have its effect on us in the afternoon'. I,. At 16.00 the ship briefly went down to Defence Stations, giving the Rev. Beardmore an opportunity to hand out cigarettes and offer what encouragement he could as the men waited at their posts: ... 1 remember we had been closed up at action stations since dawn, having had meals at our action stations, but the ship did not open fire until 6 p.m.; thus, the canteen having been shut and the men confined in one space, cigarettes were hard to come by as the evening approached, so that when I went round during a lull in the action and handed out cigarettes, they were as welcome as another meal uo By 16.30 he was back at his post as broadcaster on the bridge, after which the ship was in action almost continuously until 21.00. The intervening period gave the Hood her first taste of heavy-calibre gunfire as the DIIl'lkerqlle and then the Strasbollrg began to range on her. Ted Briggs: Suddenly pinpoints of amber light punctuated the blackness. Above the roar of our guns came the high-pitched, bloodcurdling, crescendoing, low whine of being under fire ourselves by warships for the first time. There were vivid red flashes as a salvo fell just short of the starboard side. Within seconds came a series of blue f1ashesYI Peering through the periscope of'B' turret, OA Bert Pitman watched the French salvoes burst in towering geysers of red and blue water, ingeniously coloured to assist the officiers de tir in spotting their fall of shot. 132 Meanwhile, battened down under armoured hatches in a damage-control party on the lower
203
deck, AB Len Williams struggled to conquer his fear: It was not a pleasant experience to be fired on, particularly when it is known that the projectiles coming your way weighed almost a ton. I, and most everyone else, was scared stiff. To begin with, my action station was three decks below, in an electrical repair party, and although we could hear the shells passing over us like express trains, we could not see what was going on. We did see our two wounded men being helped down to the dressing station below us, and their blood-stained appearance did not help us any. I had often searched my soul to try and analyse my feelings should I ever be faced with this sort of situation. How would I react? Would I show my feelings? Could I take it? Yes, fear was present without a doubt, but I was consoled by the fact that none of the others looked very happy either! And this made me realize that it was only a question of mastering it, and not breaking down under the strain. Had we been given something to do, it would have helped. We just had to wait for a shell to come through the deck and if it did not either kill or wound us, we could then proceed to repair the damage. We talked when we did not feel like talking and we walked up and down in the limited space at our disposal, and in this way we tried to forget what was going on above us. We were all very thankful when the gunfire ceased and we were told that the action was over. Our highly strung nerves relaxed and we began to live again. It was some time before the memory of Oran faded from our minds. I3J In the Torpedomen's mess, meanwhile, AB joseph Rockey and his companions were distracted by one of the ventilation fans, which began to disintegrate in clouds of rust once the Hood's main armament opened fireY' After it was over came the exhaustion that only battle can bring. Ted Briggs describes the crew's first rest in perhaps 60 hours of exertion, tension and combat: When I finally got below at 22.00 [on 4 july) the messdecks were quiet. Everyone was dog tired, and off-duty watches were collapsed all over the ship. Many, like myself, were too exhausted to sling their hammocks. I joined a bunch of friends dozing on top of the hammock stowage. They were still fully dressed, with anti-flash gear onY' It had been, Mid. Buckett concluded, 'a very terrifying experience for all of us, but a very necessary one'. 136 Sixty years on, the events of 3 july 1940 continue to resist judgement, a mark of the immensely complex situation from which they evolved. In retrospect, the tragedy of Mers-el-Kebir accurately reflects the scale of the disaster that had befallen Britain and France in the space of less than two months. It also foreshadowed the dark night of war that lay ahead for both countries. For the Hood there was the lingering sadness that her guns had received their baptism of fire against not only an ally but, in the case of Dlll1kerqlle, a companion in arms. The return by the DlInkerqlle's officers of souvenirs presented to them by members of the Hood's wardroom in happier times made this all the more poignant and impropitious. With them came this bitter note:
Simpson, (cd), The Somerville Papers, p. 111. 12' Warden. 'Memories of the Battle Cruiser H.M.S. "Hood.. •• p. 83. Il7
", RNM, 1998/42, )ourn,1 of Mid. P). BuckeIl, 3 )uly 1940.
uo Beardmore. The Waters of U"certai",y. pp. 41 & 40. HI Coles & Briggs, Tire Mig"ty Hood, p. 168. m rWM/SA. no. 22147, reel 4.
Dllnkerque's were red and Strasbourg's either blue or green. IH Williams, Gone A Long Journey. pp.147-8. nVM/SA. no. 12422, recl 3. m Coles & Briggs, The Mighty Hood, p. 174. 1)6 RNM, 1998/42, Journal of Mid. P.). BucketI, 3 July 1940. l}ol
204
The Hood under attack from Italian S.M.79 bombers in the western Mediterranean. 9 July
1940. The stern of the battleship Valiant can be seen on the left. The photo was taken from the flight deck of the carrier Ark Royal. HMS Hood A»oc"'JOnlS.rk~ CoIl«tion
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
The captain and officers of the DII/lkerque inform you of the death for the honour of their colours on 3rd and 6th july 1940 of nine officers and 200 men of their ship. They return to you herewith the souvenirs they had of their comrades in arms of the British Royal avy, in whom they had placed all their trust. And they e>''Press to you on this occasion all their bitter sadness and their disgust at seeing these comrades having no hesitation in soiling the glorious flag of St George with an ineffaceable stain-that of an assassin.'" Worse still, a number of civilians, some of them pushing prams, had been seen on the harbour mole just before the squadron opened fire. l38 When Mid. Latham jenson joined the Hood at Rosyth five months later it was to find veterans of the action still reticent on the subject:
Adapted from Tute. Tile Deadly lroke, p. 204. I)' l\\r~IISA, AB Robert Ernest Ui
Tilburn, no. 11746. reel 1.
u, Jenson. Tin Hats, Oilskins 6SroboolS, p. 89.
When I joined, Hood had just arrived from the Mediterranean, where she had taken part in the destruction of the Vichy French naval ships at Mers el Kabir, Oran, Algeria. This was sad and no one wanted to talk about this terrible affair. Some of the midshipmen who were junior to me were envious of people who had seen action and said they hoped that soon we would see some real action. [... J Our'[snotties'J nurse' overheard the conversation and interjected, 'My young friends. You have no idea of what you are talking about. Action means seeing your friends lying dead and wounded in pools of blood. ""ho would
ever wish to see such a thing?' The worst of this exchange was that almost all of them, including the 'nurse' himself, would suffer a fate far worse than he had described.
I"
There was one souvenir, however, that the French did not return. To this day an unexploded shell from the Hood rests in a glass case outside the wardroom of the naval barracks at Toulon.
·......11>... For a month after the Mer -e1-Kebir affair the Hood continued in the van of Force H as Somerville took the battle to the Italians in the western Mediterranean. On 8 july Force H sailed from Gibraltar to mount a diversionary attack on the airfield at Cagliari, Sardinia to cover the passage of two convoys between Malta and Alexandria. just before 16.00 on the 9th the squadron began coming under unexpectedly heavy air attack from Italian S.M.79 bombers. There were no hits but sticks of bombs came uncomfortably close, one of which flung Boy Signalman Ted Briggs into a heap under the flag-deck ladder. Len Williams describes the experience of aerial bombardment at sea: One gets a tingling sensation down one's spine when being deliberately bombed, which is not relieved until you see the splash of the missile striking water; then one heaves a sigh of relief, relaxes one's taut nerves and hopes that there won't be any more like that. It is one thing to be bombed in a city, where you are not the prime target, but in a ship,
205
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particularly a much sought after ship like Hood, it is not so funny, especially when you know it is your vessel they are after. We were glad when darkness descended and we were left in peace.'" Indeed, no sooner had dusk fallen than Somerville decided that the risk of damage was hardly worth the objective and promptly cancelled the operation, ordering his force to return to Gibraltar. Recent events evidently convinced Somerville that his crews were raw and the Hood's anti-aircraft defence still inadequate. However, Force H was now able to spend three weeks at Gibraltar being welded into a cohesive force under the admiral's genial personality, the major units taking their turn as Anti-Aircraft Guard Ship against the daily incursions of Italian aircraft. There were constant exercises, of searchlights against aircraft and motor-boat attack, against the possibility of torpedo hits or gas bombs. In many of these the Hood's crew was found wanting in drill and organisation, focussing too many beams on one target or proving laggardly in taking basic precautions. Practice shoots with the main armament were characterised by ineffectual drill, control failures and poor accuracy, though by early August it was obvious that the inner lining of the port gun of 'A' turret was in need of replacement.'" Even so, efficiency in this area remained poor for some time. Matters were not helped by the anti-flash garb of asbestos hood and gauntlets that all gun crews and exposed personnel were required to wear, though, as OA Bert Pitman admitted, 'if we were doing anything we used to take it off'.'" Worse still was the burden of ineffectual equipment. The UP launchers installed in the spring refit misfired during the attacks off Cagliari and again at Gibraltar on 27 July when the forward mounting discharged an impromptu barrage over the harbour leaving three ratings severely burnt.'" The launchers, of which five were installed, were designed to fire a salvo of20 rockets or 'unrotated projectiles' at attacking aircraft. Once aloft the rockets would release an explosive charge dangling from a small parachute by a series of wires which, it was confidently expected, would be snagged with dire consequences for the aircraft in question. Not only did this improbable scenario fail to eventuate, but the charges had an alarming tendency to drift boomerang-like back towards the firing vessel and ultimately proved of considerably greater danger to the ship than to the enemy. On the other hand, it is clear that the Hood was quietly absorbing the lessons of war, though it required the absurdities of peacetime naval structure to be overcome for a truly effective organisation to emerge. Damage control was a case in point. Louis Le Bailly: Damage control, a new phrase to us, spawned a more comprehensive organisation than the old 'Fire and repair parties' ever did. Essentially technical, it should have been under the direction of an engineer or shipwright officer, but in those days no (E) officer could give orders to shipwrights or sailors and no artificer, mechanician or stoker would take them from a chippie. So the first lieutenant whose knowledge of pumping, flooding, shoring, the cross connecting of damaged fire and hydraulic mains and the running of emergency electrical
Above: The Mk III High-Angle Control System on the starboard signal platform, seen with its crew in the autumn of 1940. The Hood's three HACS directors supplied fuse settings for the 4in shells along with elevation and training pointers to the guns. The guns could then be fired remotely under director control.
Left: Professor lindemann's abortion: an Unrotated Projectile
(UP) launcher of the type filted in the Hood.
1..0
Williams, Gone A Long Jotlmey.
p. t48.
'4' R M, 1998/42, Journal of Mid. •4l
'4J
P.I. BuckclI, at sea, 7 August 1940. IWM/SA, no. 22147, reel 4. RNM, 1998/42, Journal of Mid.
P.). Buekell. Gibrahar. 27 )uly t940.
206
n,e Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
leads could have been written on a postage stamp, had perforce to become the damage control supremo, all orders being issued over his name.'" Len Williams gives a flavour of some of the work undertaken as time passed and experience accumulated: As one would expect, the first few months of the war revealed loopholes in our fighting efficiency. Reports were received by the Admiralty from various ships who had received damage in action. This information was thoroughly gone into by experts and various remedies were produced, which were put out in fleet orders. For instance, it was found that a 'close by' underwater explosion caused messdeck steel ladders to jolt out of their housings, thereby crashing to the deck and preventing escape to the upper deck. To overcome this, we fitted all such ladders with wire strops, shackled to the ship's structure, so that if the ladder lifted out of its housing, the strop prevented it falling to the deck. Other ships had reported that 'near miss' e"lJlosions caused the dynamo supply switches to be automatically thrown off due to shock, thereby plunging the entire ship into darkness, and bringing all ventilation and auxiliary machinery to a standstill. This meant that should it become necessary for the crew to abandon the ship, they would have extreme difficulty in finding the ladders and escape routes, apart from the additional hazards of falling kit lockers, loose equipment, and the possible acute angle of the listing ship. We adopted two cures for this trouble. First we drilled the covers of all the dynamo switches and fitted a bolt into the hole, which penetrated the insulated part of the switch arm, thereby locking the switch in the 'On' position. This, of course, upset the overload safety arrangement, but the risk had to be accepted. Secondly, we fitted automatic electric batten lanterns, which, when the mains failed, the battery took over and automatically lit the lamp. These were placed in strategic positions throughout the ship, such as near ladders, hatchways and corridors.'" But it wasn't all work. Between whiles the Hood's crew was able to savour the pleasures of the Mediterranean at the very moment that Hitler was turning his attention to the metropolis. For officers there were regular visits to the beach at Sandy Bay on the opposite side of the Rock. John lago wrote home of idyllic days in the sun: We wondered last week what sort of a war you would be imagining us to be fighting, as we spent the afternoon bathing on a beach! The sun was hot and my shoulders were badly sunburned. This particular beach is very fine and is reserved for Officers and nurses. There are heaps of fish in the water and they sometimes catch small octopuses and basking sharks-not dangerous ones! ,<6 As in earlier years there were carley-float and swimming races between the ship and the South Mole along with the more traditional recreations. For most it was a chance to unwind and for the 'Jack-my-Hearties' among the crew the moment to strut about like battle-hardened veterans, picking fights with the
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Black Watch garrison. A three-week drought of beer was broken towards the end of July by the arrival of a convoy from Britain. 00 Howard Spence of Portsmouth recalls the atmosphere. We had shore leave and the main street in Gibraltar was a seething mass of sailors, soldiers, airmen and refugees. I remember having a few drinks in a bar and moving with mates to the main street and it was a mass of sailors and soldiers fighting each other. The next that I knew was being dumped in a picket boat and eventually it was dark and I fell asleep aboard the Hood. 147 But the war was never very far away. Fears of attack from Spain kept the ship ready to slip her moorings at a moment's notice. Then there was 'George', the Italian reconnaissance aircraft which appeared daily at 18.00 but occasionally proved the harbinger of something worse. 00 Spence: Eventually being awoken by crashes, explosions and gunfire, I staggered to the upper deck to my position as loader in the 4" AA gun's crew and my mates warned me of trouble because there was an Italian air raid going on. CPO Sheppard listened to my excuses and I explained that my promotion board was coming up and that it would be a disaster if I went on Commander's Report. He relented and told me not to be so stupid in future and that kindness saved my life.!" In Vice-Admiral Sir James Somerville Force H had a charis-
207
matic leader with an unmatched grasp of technical matters and an instinctive feeling for the character of his men. His penchant for risque signals and blue jokes assured his popularity and reminiscences of Hood's time in Force H are spiced with his easy banter and powerful personality. John lago: I must leave this for a moment to drink sherry with the Admiral (Somerville). He is a tremendously popular man on board and wonderful at his job; ... one frequently meets him in odd corners of the ship just strolling around looking at things and he is always very friendly and conversational.'"
Above: Swimming races alongside at Gibraltar in June or
July 1940. HMS Hood Association/Mason CoJle
opposite: A posed shot of men being instructed in the fusing of 4in shells on the forecastle in the autumn of 1940. The censor has
made a not altogether successful effort to obscure the UP launcher on 'B' turret.
00 Howard Spence: Later I even had a chat with Admiral Somerville (a fine man) as I nipped up through the Admiral's bridge and he suddenly appeared and said 'Oil Get your hair cut!' 1 replied 'Yes, Sir!' and went to my look-out pOSt.!50 There remained just one more sortie, a second diversionary attack on CagJiari while the carrier Argus flew off a dozen Hurricanes for Malta, before the Hood turned her bows northward on 4 August. Her coveted position as Flagship Force H was to pass to the Renown. It was with regret that the Hood's company watched Somerville haul down his flag at Scapa Flow, to be replaced by the uncharismatic regime of ViceAdmiral William Whitworth. Nor was this aiL The meridian sun that had kissed the Hood's decks and men for a generation had shed its last beam on her.
.... Le Bailly, Tile Man Arowld the Engi"e, p. 51. 145 Williams, Gone A Long fOllmey. p. 141. 1-46lago, Leners (Gibraltar, 17 July 1940). 147 HMS Hood Association archives. ,.. Ibid. Acting PO L.F. Sheppard was lost on 24 May 1941. See also Williams, Corre A Long Journey, pp.144-5.
lago, Letters (at sea, 9 August 1940). ISO HMS Hood Association archives.
149
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
208
9
The End of Glory When the stars threw down their spears, And water'd heaven with their tears N MONDAY II NOVEMBER 1940 HMS Hood gratefully entered Scapa Flow from a six-day patrol in the Bay of Biscay, her tired crew observing Armistice Day with red poppies fastened to their uniforms. A year later they and their ship would form part of that remembrance, another 1,400 flowers in the harvest of war. This final chapter covers that year from the bleak winter of 1940-1 to the holocaust of the Denmark Strait and its repercussions in Britain and elsewhere. It attempts to provide the structural, operational and psychological context of one of the greatest tragedies to befall the Royal Navy during the Second World War. The Hood was and remains the most celebrated symbol of British sea power since Nelson's Victory. On her rested much of the pride and hope of the British people for their avy at its darkest hour and her sinking had a profound and lasting impact on the morale of both, made the more unbearable by the cale of her annihilation. In the years since that moment the relative decline of Britain and her Navy and the many unresolved questions surrounding the loss of the Hood have added ever more poignancy and symbolism to her destruction. To everyone's surprise, the discovery of the wreck in the summer of 200 1 served not to settle but to broaden the technical issues raised by this event. If the condition of the wreck is anything to go by, the answers to these questions may be a very long time coming. But, pertinent as they are, these issues bear less on her life than her legacy. The Hood died as she had lived, in the vanguard of the avy. Her sinking, like that of no other ship, marked the passing of an era. How that event took place and how this realization dawned is the subject of the following pages.
O
1
AUlhor's colleclion, Lt (E) Tristram Spence to Mr & Mrs EW. pence, SC3pa Flow, 21 December 1940.
Hood seen from Rodney at Scapa Flow in the autumn of 1940. Astern are Renown and then Repulse. Note the boom defences to the right. Bibliofhek fOr Zeirgeschkhte, StuUgarl
•......lIb . .As related earlier, the autumn of 1940 was among the bleakest periods in the Hood's career. In December news that she would pass a second Christmas without leave reportedly brought part of her stoker complement to the brink of mutiny. The threat of invasion was past but the Luftwaffe had now turned its resources to the bombing of British cities, placing an added strain on any whose family was on the receiving end. It was a depressing period which not even the raid on Taranto and the collapse of Italian arms in orth Africa could lighten. Constant patrolling in terrible weather had left many exhausted and for the first time the strain of war began to take its toll on the Hood's company. On 21 December Lt (E) Tristram Spence wrote a letter which captures the frustration and despair of the moment: Dear Uncle Frank and Aunt May, Herewith card to wish you, shall we say, a happier new year, for I doubt if there will be much to crow about in 1941. But we hope that we may emerge next year from this winter of our discontent a little more prosperously. [... 1 The ship is a little restless for leave having been at sea on and off since May and never having been in touch with wine, women and song for the entire nine months. We find our minds get a little diseased in this acrid bachelor atmosphere. It is rather refreshing to find that everybody manages to live in comparative harmony, boxed up as we are together, day in and day out.'
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The End oJ Glory
Christmas Day was spent between Iceland and the Faeroes but the men made the best of it. Boy Bill Crawford's illicit diary records it thus: (3.30 p.m.) Considering where we are we had a good Christmas to-day. She went to action Stations early this morning, there has been no work, smoking in the Messdecks and plenty to eat. Made up concerts down below.' Plenty to drink, too. Mid. Robin Owen: Some of us were invited to join in the traditional 'rounds' of the messdecks where the sailors had just had their rum ration and some were doing their best to enjoy themselves with a singsong. One of my boat's crew invited me to join in with a particularly graphic song about the attributes of his 'Girl Salome'. Never having heard it before, about all! could do was to laugh and applaud loudly and move on as soon as I decently could.' Hard as the circumstances were, the spirit of comradeship never faltered in Hood, and the remarkable coming-together of branches and ranks which characterised the avy at war was echoed in this ship as much as any other. On Christmas morning the midshipmen hosted the sergeants of Marines together with the chiefs and petty officers to drinks in the gunroom before lunch. On New Year's Eve it was the turn of the warrant officers, the Master-at-Arms and the Marine Colour Sergeant to join every officer in the ship from Vice-Admiral Whitworth to the most junior midshipman for Hogmanay in the wardroom. Whitworth led his party in highland reels to the kirling of bagpipes though the dignity of Colour Sergeant Gough and PO handler the Jaunty prevented them going this far.' Two short patrols later and the Hood found herself at Ro yth, her crew dispersed by watches on their first leave in six months. On 16 January 1941 the Hood edged into Rosyth dockyard for what would be her final refit.' Drained of oil and emptied of ammunition, the ship was hauled by tug through the outer lock from the Forth and over to the flooded dry dock. Hawsers were then secured to her fairleads and she was drawn by electric capstans bow-first into No.1 dock, one of the few capable of accommodating her 860 feet. Once her bows had filled the niche at the head of the structure the cai son was closed and the water pumped out until the ship had come to rest on an arrangement of carefully-laid baulks of timber chained to the bottom of the graving dock. Over in the fitting-out basin the new battleship Prince of Wales was in the final stages of completion. Immediately parties of dockyard maties began coming aboard, welders, caulkers and shipwrights to replace fittings and equipment and effect repairs on her tired hull and structure. Particular attention was paid to the deck seams on the forecastle through which water poured into the ship at sea. Planking was renewed and pneumatic caulking tools put to work on the overlapping plates to staunch the leak that were making life unbearable on the lower deck. The hull itself was inspected and scraped clean before a squad of formidable ladies with brushes on lengthy poles began applying a new layer of red lead paint. In earlier years prolonged spells in harbour and in temperate waters would have revealed a layer of marine growth encrusted on the ship's bottom. This time
inspection showed it to be largely stripped of paint by the severity of her wartime ervice, fresh coats being applied over bare metal. Also at Rosyth was a team of engineers from John Brown & Co. led by Willie Mclaughlin, eventually that company's chief engine designer· The Hood was completed with Clyde-built Brown-Curtis geared turbines which Mclaughlin and his men now spent a week dismantling and inspecting for damaged nozzles and misaligned wheels. Blades were renewed in the starboard inner turbine, stripped in the pursuit of the Strasbollrg after the bombardment of lers-el-Kebir.' However, the main work centred on the installation of radar, namely a Type 284 gunnery set on the spotting top and Type 279M air-warning equipment on the mainmast. The matter was of course shrouded in the greatest secrecy. One of the dockyard welders was Ian Green of Glenshee: I welded a platform below the cross-trees and the shipwright and me were told that this was a crow's nest for a look-out. Radar was not mentioned for obvious security reasons but it could well have been fitted by electricians subsequent to our work. It did not occur to me at the time that there was no direct access to this position as we had worked off bosun's chairs set up by Dockyard riggers-a hairy experience in the conditions at that time. [... J Any seaman given the look-out job up there would have died of hypothermia in no time!' These installations also required the removal of the fore topmast and the hanging of new yards on both the mainmast and the spotting top. Green recalls a brief interruption to his work on the latter: My job was to weld new signal yardarms to the fore and after masts. Having completed the task of hauling heavy welding cables I tacked the arms into position but had to stop work as a young Signalman appeared to tell me that
The long hard winter of 1940-1. The crew of Port No.3 4in gun stand down for a mug of tea or kyo They are rigged for Atlantic patrol duty in duffel coats together with caps and balaclavas knitted on the Home Front. HMS Hood Anoci.tlOnlWhill!WOOd CoIl«tion
IWM, 92/27/1, diary for 1940, p.128. J wen, HMS Hood (unpublished memoir), p. 2. 4 Colour Sergeant John M. Gough and CPO Alfred J. Chandler werc IDS! on 24 May 194 I. J This section owes much to the assistance of ~'1r Ian A. Green. welder at HM Dockyard Ros)'th from 1939-42. • J owe this information to the kindness of Ian Johnston of the Glasgow School of Art. 'Robertson, 'H.M.S. "Hood'" in II ips l'fonrllly. 16 (1981), no. 4. p.28. • Letter to the author. 7 January 2004. 2
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
210
• Letter to the author, 25
ovcmber
2003. 10 RNM,l998/42. Th~ turbine repair actually consisted or replacing the blades in the starboard inner turbine stripped during the pur uit of the Strasbollrg in July 1940. Both of the ship's steam pickel boats were replaced by motor boats.
" IWM, 92/27/1, at sea, 18 March 1941. Crawford \\'35 lost with the ship in Ma)' 1941. Il IWM/SA, no. 16741, reel l. u lago. Letters (at sea, 9 October 1939). .. Ibid. (Rosyth, 20 August 1940).
King George VI was coming aboard. From our high viewpoint we watched him piped onto the Quarter Deck to be greeted by Admiral IWhitworth] and the Captain before going below. Sleet was beginning to blow in the wind 0, anxious to get down into a warm mess-deck, the Signalman asked me if he could crawl out on the yards to fix the halliards. Considering we were 80 ft. up plus another 57 ft. to the dock bottom I told him he would have to wait until the work was finished otherwise he would be going down with the ironwork." It was 6 March 1941 and by the time Mid. Philip Buckett returned from leave on the 17th the refit was well nigh complete. His journal entry summarises the changes:
The refit has been a fairly extensive one, and many improvements and long-needed repairs have been made, more especially to the gunnery section. High-Angle and Low-Angle Radio Direction Finding has been installed and vast alterations have been made in the compass platform and on the Evershed Bearing Transmitter platforms on the wings of the bridge. Many repairs have been carried out in the Engineer's Department including the replacement of the broken turbine and the renewal of many other parts and machinery. The installation of Radio Direction Finding has led to much more intricate control systems in the Air Defence Position and of course in the directors. We have had a very difficult job trying to learn the position of all the instruments and the job they perform. Other smaller items of interest completed recent.ly include the new screens in t.he after ends of the batteries and the removal of the fore-t.op mast. The second picket boat has been replaced by a 35-foot motor-boat.'· King George VI received on the Haocfs quarterdeck during her
final refit. Rosyth 6 March 1941. Ordinary Signalman Ted Briggs was surprised to note that he seemed to be wearing make·up. M~Dcx~M"~
There had been another change also. On 15 February Capt. Irvine Glennie, recently promot.ed rear-admiral, had left the ship t.o be replaced by Ralph Kerr, who had made his name in destroyers. Kerr's new command had still to work up after her refit but as so often these plans were disrupted by news that
German raiders had broken out into the Atlantic. On the afternoon of 18 March the Hood passed under the Forth Bridge for the very last time and hast.ened in search of the enemy. After a few blessed weeks of leave, the sight was more than Boy Bill Crawford of Edinburgh could bear: Dearest Mum, Well, I got. back to the ship and we are now away. Gee, I wish you had said for me to stay awhile, I know it's wrong to say that, but I sure am fed up. I got aboard at 2 o'clock, and have to see the Commander for being 6 hours adrift and not two as un],.-y thought. They must have thought. I was in the dockyard when un],.-y phoned. I don't. know what I will get and 1don't really care. I feel kinda sick, can't eat and my heart is in my throat. It took me all my time not to cry as we came down the river. But I'll have a good one when I manage to get turned in, Mum, and I might feel better after it." There was further disappointment for, despite hopes of an interception on 20 March, Admiral Giinther Llitjens, the German squadron commander, slipped through the net and reached Brest with Schamhorst and Gneisenau on the 22nd. Low on fuel, dawn on the 23rd found the Hood back at Scapa Flow. It was at this time that the name' Bismarck' was first uttered in the Hood. On 14 February 1939 the first German battleship since the Great. War was launched at the Blohm und Voss shipyard in Hamburg. The Bismarck mounted eight 38-cm guns on a standard displacement of 41 ,800 tons, nearly 40 per cent of which was devoted to armour protection (as against 33.5 per cent in Hood). She was 823 feet long and capable of 30 knots. Commissioned in August 1940, she underwent extensive trials and exerci es in the Baltic before being deemed ready for service in April J 941. The appearance of the Bismarck for the first time present.ed the Hood with an opponent armed and powered to the same standard as she. ntil that. moment much of t.he Hood's crew had been glad to regard her as largely invulnerable t.o German surface vessels. As SubLt (E) Brian Scott-Garrett (1940-1) later recalled, 'There was always a feeling of superiority about the Hood, that she was a magnificent great. ship, that nothing would ever go wrong with her'. t2 The fate of the Courageous and Royal Oak soon demonstrated V-boat attack to be a serious threat but the danger of air power seems to have had rather less impact despite the known weakness in her horizontal protection. Two weeks after Hood was bombed by a Ju 88 in the North Sea Sub-Lt John lago advised his family to 'Console yourself about air attack on us; we think it would be quite impossible for aeroplanes to sink us-you should see our armour plate!'" Nor, by all appearances, did Italian high-level bombing in the Mediterranean the following year shake his confidence: The more I have t.o do with it, the more faith I have in this ship. Bomb splint.ers only spoil the paintwork and aircraft are finding out that it is better to keep clear of us." Admittedly such opinions may owe more to a desire to calm family nerves than any firm conviction on the subject; Paymaster Lt-Cdr A.R. Jackson (1938-40) can't very well have been erious when he penned the following to his wife on 20 September 1939, three day after the loss of t.he Courageous:
211
The End of Glory
Hood's nemesis: the Bismarck seen at Kiel on 15 September
I shouldn't be too worried in relation to me when you think of the Courageous. Hood is a very different kind of ship, and also is constructed quite differently, and so the chances of our being sunk, even if we are hit, can be considered negligible. IS
1940 shortly after commissioning. The radar and rangefinder installation on the foretop has yet to be fitted.
But the Bismarck was a very different matter. AB Len Williams remembers the tenor of messdeck discussions during his last months in the ship in 1941: As an ex-member of Hood's crew I can recall numerous discussions we had in our mess about a possible meeting with either Bismarck or her sister Tirpitz. We were not at all happy about such a prospect. We knew our weakness and the risks of not having an armoured deck. We had the speed, yes, and we had the gun power; but we did not have our armour in the right piaceP6 By the end of April few in the Hood can have had much doubt as to the vulnerability of their ship in the event of a confrontation with the Bismarck. On the 19th, following reports that Bismarck had sailed from Kiel towards the North Sea, Vice-Admiral William Whitworth issued his battle orders should contact be made. Sub-Lt R.G. Robertson R.NVR., who joined the ship at Devonport in May 1940, recalls Whitworth's instructions: Next day Admiral Whitworth made known his plans if an enemy report was received; our escorts, the cruiser KerJya and three destroyers, would act as a searching force, and if the Bismarck were encountered we would close on the enemy at speed in order to bring the guns of the Hood within effective range. If possible, we would make the approach end-on so as to present the minimum largeLI' For the first time, too, a fatalistic note emerges in correspondence from the Hood. On I May Lt-Cdr Roger Batley wrote this to his sister Mary: I am sorry Uncle Roger has gone. But quite agree, suddenly-like he & Charlie-is by far the best way to go, & I hope when my time comes that I shaU go that way also.l· Even Boy Bill Crawford sensed that something was up: We haven't been away very long, but have had some tense hours since I left. And now that Germany has started sending her warships out there looks as if there will be action for the Fleet soon. Anyway, the sooner we get them the better. I. That day was not far off. Almost a decade earlier a walk on the shores of the Cromarty Firth in May 1932 had left Mid. Louis Le Bailly with a terrible premonition of the fate that awaited his ship: We trained so hard that one day in the Cromarty Firth the chaplain gave us an afternoon off to play the wardroom at golf on the lovely course at Nigg (alas no longer in use). Later we were also to be the wardroom's guests in the pub (still there). Thus it was, at peace with ourselves, and pleasantly tipsy from a modest, but, for us, unusual
quantity of McEwans Scotch Ale, that we walked back to the jetty through the heather-scented twilight to the sorrowful questing note of the curlew. I remember shivering, as if drenched in ice, and putting it down to the McEwans I had imbibed. But it was late in May, possibly the 24th, the day HMS Hood blew up in action with the Bismarck and all but three of her 1500 crew lost. 20 For Le Bailly, now Senior Engineer of the cruiser Naiad, there was to be one last visit: Seventeen months [after leaving her], in April 1941, HMS
Naiad anchored close to Hood in Scapa Flow. The midshipmen for whose engineering instruction I had been responsible, had just passed for sub-lieutenant and were celebrating their success and departure and requested my assistance. Hearing that! had accepted, [Ll-Cdr (E) J.G.M.] Erskine invited me to supper after the gunroom had finished with me. When leaving I found a couple of dozen or so of the ship's company, not a1l from the engine department, waiting to say goodbye and to wish me luck. Who arranged this, I shall never know. In less than six weeks they all were dead. 21
"IWM,65/45/2. Williams, COrle A Long Journey. p.153. 17 Robertson, 'The Mighry Hood' in Ships Mon/IiI)', 10 (1975), no. 6, p.7. HMS Hood Association archives. At sea, I May 1941. "IWM, 92127/1, Scapa Flow, 23 March 1941. 20 Le Bailly, The Mati Around tire 16
.......111>_Death in battle has an arbitrary quality impossible for any survivor to explain or grasp. To be spared the fate of one's comrades, to find oneself preserved when they have lost everything, is beyond the capacity of reason; for some, indeed, physical survival proved to be beyond mental endurance. The fate of the Hood, annihilated in a matter of seconds, affords this reality a
I'
£tlgitle, p. 26. " Ibid., p. 55. Lt-Cdr John Erskine was lost on 24 May 1941.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
212
Jenson, Till Hars, Oi/skim & SCllboots. p. 96. "SWWEC, 200111376, p. 6. The
!2
May Board in fact look place H
before the loss of the ship. Penwee. Moot! Boots (/lid Ditmer Suits, pp. 164-5. Pertwee slales
Capl. Glennie as his interviewer but this must be an error.
HMS Hood Association archives. There were several deserters from the Hood. 16 I am grateful to Mr Adrian Burdett for sharing this memory with me. H HMS Hood Association archives. Scapa Flow, 12 May 1941. "RNM, 1981/369 no. 148. II
The boat deck seen from the spotting top in the autumn of 1940. Note the two 44-inch searchlights on the platform abaft the funnel and four more installed on the after superstructure. Starboard No.2 UP launcher lies on the left of
the photograph together with four of the seven 4in Mk XIX mountings. Numerous ready·use ammunition lockers are distributed across the boat deck. The grime of a year of war service is apparent. See the
photograph on p. 3S for a peacetime comparison. 8ibliolhek fur Ze;lgeschkhte. Sluttgart
starkness which sets her loss apart from most others. Submarine crews were routinely wiped out but ships' companies much less often: the destroyer Exmollth, the corvette Giadioills and the cruiser Sydney are among the few examples in the Second World War. Others suffered a slow and lerrible attrilion by fire and water: the cruisers DlInedin, Neptllne and Indianapolis, the Scharnhorst and Bismarck herself. But one needs to return to the First World War to find precedent for large ships being destroyed with all but a handful of men: the vanquished of Coronel and the Falklands; above all the disasters at Jutland which prefigured that of Hood herself. The experience of those who survived the loss of the Hood will be dealt with in due course. But what of those who were spared death yet had to live the experience vicariously in the sufferings of those who replaced them, who escaped through an inscrutable turn of fate' Some like PO Len Williams, drafted on promotion in February 194\ after five years in the ship, had reached the end of a particular phase in their career. The time had come to move on. Others like OA Bert Pitman got an unexpected 'pierhead jump' to another ship, in his case the battleship Barham whose sinking he survived later that year. In April Latham jenson was one of the last party of midshipmen to take their Sub-Lieutenants' exams in Hood. The stakes couldn'l have been higher: ... Those of us facing our examinations for acting sublieutenant those lovely Scapa days in Apri.! had lots to reflect upon, more than we knew, Failure, and consequently remaining on board for another run, in this case would actually mean death!"
Others survived by being selected for officer training. After a statutory three months as Ordinary Seamen onthe lower deck, those who wished to receive a commission or who had otherwise been identified as being of officer material were tesled and, if successful, drafled for further training ashore. One such was B.A. Carlisle: Despite the fact that I was a clumsy Ordinary Seaman it fortunately did not stop me from being chosen to go for a Commission. About every three months the Captain of the ship (Glennie at the time) presided over a Board to decide who was potential Officer material, and my Board must have been in January 1941. Having had the privilege of public school education and having been a prefect and an officer in the school OTe., I fortunately ctid satisfy the Board that I was Officer material, although very sad.!y some of my friends from a similar background fai.!ed the Board, and as there was no further Board until May, went down with the ship ..." Another was jon Pertwee, unwittingly passed as a CW ('Commissions and Warrants') candidate after half an hour explaining the finer points of broadcast radio to Capt. Kerr." He and OD Howard Spence were part of the last draft to leave the Hood on or about 21 May, the eve of her sailing against the Bismarck. But as Spence's memoir reveals, there were other ways of escaping the Hood: Some 13 of our crew, myself and jon Pertwee included, had draft chits to go south. Another was a matelot who had hit a PO with a rifle. On route to Pompey I stopped at a pub near Victoria station in London (Waterloo had been bombed) and at the end of the bar was a stocky chap in nondescript clothes-he was a deserter from the Hoodneither of us spoke, but went our separate waysH Lucky as they were, there were men who enjoyed even greater good fortune. A day or two before she left Scapa for the last time Sub-Lt R.G. Robertson was taken ill with a perforated duodenal ulcer and transported across the Flow to the hospital ship Amarnpoorn. Another, Mid. Harold Carnell, given compassionate leave from the Hood, was recalled by telegram but failed to reach Scapa thanks to a protracted wartime rail journey.'· Then there were those for whom Fortuna's wheel turned in the contrary direction. As Lt-Cdr Roger Batley, a member of Vice-Admiral Whitworth's staff, informed his sister on 12 May, his remaining in the ship depended on whether the new admiral, Lancelot Holland, liked the cut of his jib." The admiral evidently did. Two days later another staff officer, Paymaster Lt Robert Browne, wrote telling his parents that I am staying on here for about 5 weeks with the new Admiral until they are all settled in, then I will be relieved. As to what follows once again I cannot say." Others went to their deaths with an eagerness that haunted those who remembered them. Surgeon Lt-Cdr R. Ransome-Wallis R. .V.R, was Principal Medical Officer of the cruiser London: I also recollected sadly a very young midshipman who had spent a couple of days in LOlldon's Sick Bay. He had
recently been sunk in another ship and had only survived after a bit of an ordeal. He said to me rather bravely 'But [ shall be all right now sir, [ am going to the Hood'.'" A similar tale is told by Mid. Ross Warden, drafted from the Hood in February 194 I: One day late in the month of February [ was told to report to Lieutenant-Commander Pares and was informed that I had been reappointed. This was a blow but worse was to follow. 'What to, sir?' 'First Lieutenant of a patrol drifter' was the an wer. There was an ex-pression to go 'From the sublime to the Gor-Blimey'. This was it! Commander Pares was a very fine officer and one of the gunroom favourites. [ protested and said it was like going from the Ritz-Carlton to a flop-house. In return [ was given almost fatherly advice, that appointments were final and the sooner I learnt this the better. It was then a question of packing and saying farewell to the finest bunch of boys with whom it was possible to serve. The next stage was a depressing rail journey to Loch Ewe on the north-west coast of colland, where [ relieved a midshipman Williams as First Lieutenant of His Majesty's Drifter Fairweather. The crew looked like a bunch of pirates; the armament consisted of an antiquated three-pounder gun, five rusty depth charges and a temperamental Lewis gun. It came as an almost unbelievable shock two months later when the loss of the Hood was announced. [... J I could not help but think ofWiUiams' enthusiasm. At least he went with the most gallant of company.'" For those who were spared like Warden and Carnell there was
no doubt enormous relief, but also a measure of guilt, guilt that they had not been there with their friends, guilt that someone had died in their place. So it is when a great ship and her company are destroyed. Short of nuclear war, only in naval combat is it possible for a unit to be annihilated in battalion or double battalion strength in the twinkling of an eye. On this awful reality re ts much of its depth and fascination. For HMS Hood that dread moment had come.
.........> -We turn now to the most challenging aspect of the Hood's career, the manner in which she met her end. Detailed as it is, this volume makes no claim to technical mastery of the Hood's labyrinthine structure and systems. Its perspective is that of those who served in her in peace and war and its aim is to provide a framework of information within which this community can be understood. Though study of the history, structure and functioning of the ship inevitably permits certain ideas to be advanced regarding the conduct of her final battle and the nature of her sinking, those reading it wiJl find no new theory on the causes and process of that disaster. The complexity of the task and the wealth of new but disparate information provided by the discovery of the wreck makes this a matter for expert analysis rather than uninformed speculation. Rather, the pages that follow attempt to describe the Hood's last battle from the largely conjectural point of view of tho e who experienced and in almost every case died in it; and from the actual point of view of those who witnessed or otherwise lived the event by proxy, people fated to suffer its emotional consequences for the rest of their days. The events leading up to the sinking of the Hood have been
Painting the ship's side in Hood's final colour scheme, APS078 (Home Fleet medium grey), at
Scapa Flow in October 1940. Note the splinter protection around the four installations visible along the port side of the
boat deck (left to right): Port porn-porn ('Peter'), Port NO.1 4in gun, Port No.2 UP launcher and Port NO.2 4in gun. Obscured behind No.1 4in gun is the No.1 UP launcher beside which AS Bob lilburn sheltered during the last action. The battery is empty and largely plated over. On the
spotting top the IS-loot rangefinder has been removed but the director and its hood remain. These alterations were all made in three successive refits
between February 1939 and May 1940.
Ransome- Wallis, Tl,,'O Red Stripes, p.34. JO \Varden, 'Memories of the Battle Cruiser H.M.S. "Hood". p. 85. llCdr (T) Anthony Pares and Mid. Roderick \\'ilIiams R.N.V.R. were bolh 1051 with the ship. 19
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
214
Bismarck seen from Prinz Eugen en route to Gdynia (Gotenhafen) in March 1941. She is wearing the Baltic camouflage pattern which was overpainted during Rheinubung.
recounted many times and need only be summarised here from the massive bibliography generated by it. By the spring of 1941 the Admiralty was girding itself for an onslaught of German commerce-raiding sorties against convoys in the Atlantic. On 14 February the heavy cruiser Admiral Hipper returned to Brest having sunk over 30,000 tons of merchant shipping. At the end of March the armoured cruiser Admiral Scheer reached Norway after a prolonged sortie during which sixteen merchantmen and the armed merchant cruiser Jervis Bay had been destroyed for a total of nearly 115,000 tons. All the while the battlecruisers Scharnhorst and Cneisenau were abroad in the Atlantic, making Brest on 22 March after a twomonth operation during which 22 ships had been sunk or captured and the entire Atlantic convoy system disrupted. Then on 19 April came reports that the new battleship Bismarck had sailed from Kiel steering north-west towards the orth Sea. These proved false, but apart from drawing the Hood into the Norwegian Sea on another wild goose chase they decided Admiral Sir john Tovey, Commander-in-Chief Home Fleet, to maintain a permanent vigil on the northern exits leading to the Atlantic. Meanwhile a concerted campaign of minelaying and above all aerial bombardment greatly reduced the options open to the German High Command. In early April it seemed as if the Scharnhorst and the CneiserwII might be unleashed with Bismarck and the heavy cruiser Pril1z EIIgel1 in a catastrophic breakout into the Atlantic. In the event, boiler repairs to the Scharnhorst made her unavailable before June while the Cl1eisenau was heavily damaged in repeated attacks on Brest by RAF Bomber and Coastal Command. To the north, extensive minelaying in the Denmark Strait and the Iceland-Faeroes gap narrowed the already constricted waterways through which any German force had to pass in order to reach the Atlantic shipping lanes. By early May persistent German aerial reconnaissance between Greenland and jan Mayen Island had made it increasingly plain to the Admiralty that the long-awaited appearance of
the Bismarck was nigh. Already on 28 April the Hood had sailed from the dismal anchorage of Hvalfjord in southern Iceland as distant cover for two eastbound convoys against surface attack. For a time it was thought that an attack on Iceland or jan Mayen might be afoot but by 18 May Tovey and his staff had concluded that a naval breakout was the more likely outcome and on that day the heavy cruiser Suffolk, then on patrol in the Denmark Strait, was warned to be on her guard for the appearance of German warships. These fears were confirmed on 21 May with news that a German squadron was refuelling near Bergen in Norway. This was the Bismarck and the Pril1z Eugel1 which had sailed under Admiral Liitjens from the Baltic port of Gdynia (Gotenhafen) on either side of midnight on the 18th. Their departure had been delayed almost a month by the mining of Prinz Ellgell in the Fehmarn Belt off Kiel; Liitjens would have had it delayed until the Schamhorst or Tirpitz were ready to join him but he was overruled by Grossadmiral Erich Raeder, the head of the German Navy. The aim was to enter the Atlantic on a commerce-raiding sortie via the Denmark Strait, but 'Rhine Exercise' (Rheiniibllllg) as it was called was compromised from the outset. Even before it had cleared the Kattegat, the body of water separating Denmark and Sweden, the German squadron was sighted by the Swedish cruiser CotlaTld which promptly reported the matter to the naval authorities ashore. Liitjens' foreboding was to be realised for by the end of that day, 20 May, the report had reached the Admiralty in London. On the morning of the 21st the Bismarck reached Grimstadfjorden near Bergen and it was here that an RAP Spitfire photographed Liitjens' force from an altitude of 25,000 feet. That evening, just as Bismarck and Prirlz Eugen put to sea once more, Admiral Tovey ordered the Battle Cruiser Squadron to sail from Scapa to Hvalfjord. At 23.56 Hood and PriTlce ofWales and six destroyers weighed anchor and exited the Flow shortly after midnight under a veil of rain and mist. By a1.00 on the 22nd they were through the Hoxa Boom and out into the Atlantic. The chase from which the Hood would not return had begun.
The End of Glory
Vice-Admiral William Whitworth struck his flag on 8 May, being succeeded four days later by Lancelot Holland, ViceAdmiral Battle ruiser Squadron and econd-in-Command, Home Fleet. Relatively little is known about Holland who was born at Eydon in Oxfordshire in 1887 and specialised in gunnery before the First World War. He first comes to prominence as Assistant Chief of Naval Staff at the Admiralty in 1937-8 and then as Rear-Admiral 2nd Battle Squadron in 1938-9. In 1939 he was briefly appointed as the naval representative to the joint Air Ministry-Admiralty staff advising on enemy attacks on shipping before being given command of the 18th Cruiser Squadron the following year. In ovember 1940 this force took part in Operation 'Collar', one of the early defended convoys in the Mediterranean which resulted in the inconclusive Battle of Cape Spartivento off Sardinia. Just a week before he joined Hood Holland had led his cruiser squadron north to Jan Mayen to capture the German weather trawler MiinclJen. On the 7th she was surprised and boarded by the destroyer Somali which managed to recover cipher material of great importance to the breaking of the Enigma code. 'Len' Holland, as he was known to his friends, was part of a clique of officers, eventually headed by Dudley Pound, which monopolised many of the senior posts in the avy from the early 1930s." The Battle Cruiser Squadron was to have been his last seagoing command before he returned to the Admiralty as Pound's Vice Chief of aval Staff in succession to Rear-Admiral Sir Tom Phillips in late 1941. He had hopes of one day becoming First Sea Lord. It was not to be. Holland had of course little opportunity to make an impression on the ship's company. A more reserved man than Whitworth, one of the very few opinions on him to have survived is that of Lt-Cdr Roger Batley to his sister on 19 May, three days before Hood sailed on her last voyage: Last night I dined with the new Admiral. I like him. We had gulls' eggs, soup, lobster & pheasant." Equally, little survives to record the atmosphere in the Hood as she sailed to her fate. The only source of note is Ordinary Signalman Ted Briggs' memoir of the bridge and boys' mess deck, but it is possible to imagine the preparations and emotions throughout the ship as she girded her loins for the coming battle. Initially, however, there was nothing to indicate that this sortie would not end as inconclusively as those which had preceded it. The squadron had been ordered to refuel at Hvalfjord on 22 May before joining the heavy cruisers Norfolk and Suffolk on patrol in the Denmark Strait. Routine range and inclination exercises were performed during the forenoon and then the afternoon watches of the 22nd. The crew viewed the chances of encountering the enemy on this their fifteenth war patrol since returning from Gibraltar the previous summer with some scepticism. The Hood, after all, had not laid eyes on an Axis man o'war since 1938. However, all this changed at around 20.30 when the Battle Cruiser Squadron was ordered to abandon its passage into Hvalfjord and make directly for its patrol line in the Denmark Strait. An RAF reconnaissance flight over Grimstadfjorden that afternoon had found the anchorage empty. Though Tovey and his staff did not know it, Bismarck and Prinz Eugell had been racing north for 24 hours. The news evidently came as something of a shock in the Hood:
215
As soon as the Hood had altered course in accordance with the [20.301 signal of the C-in-C, Commander Cross updated the ship's company of the situation, and for the first time the nervous feeling of an approach to battle began to build up. 'Perhaps this is it: I wondered. 'Perhaps this is the big one.' The feeling that [ was hungry, yet did not want to eat, nagged at my stomach. Looking around me, [ could see my mates yawning nervously and trying to appear unconcerned. We all knew it was an act, yet we did not discuss the possibilities of action seriously." For all this, the morning of the 23rd brought a familiar sense of anti-climax. The night had passed off uneventfully; the sun rose to the usual routine of action stations and endless vigil, of frigid watches staring into the grey unity of sea and s\..". AB Robert Tilburn, manning a 4in gun on the boat deck, was clad in long johns, a vest, sweater, overalls, trousers, overcoat, duffle coat, oilskins, anti-flash gear, tin helmet, gas mask and gloves." Another range and inclination exercise was held in the afternoon watch as the weather began to deteriorate. Those off duty played cards, read and wrote letters destined never to be sent as Vera Lynn echoed across the mess decks, the last woman's voice many of them would ever hear. At 19.30 that evening this reverie was abruptly and definitively broken. Ten minutes earlier the Suffolk, patrolling 100 miles north-west of Iceland, sighted the Bismarck and Prinz Eugen as they began the southward leg of their passage through the Denmark Strait. From the mists enveloping him Capt. R.M. Ellis signalled 'From Suffolk: Enemy in sight'. A few minutes later the orfolk, wearing the flag of Rear-Admiral W.E Wake-Walker, strayed too close to the edge of the fog bank shrouding her and was immediately given a taste of the Bismarck's gunnery, straddled before she could regain cover. Three hundred miles due south Holland left his admiral's bridge and installed himself on the compass platform with Capt. Kerr and his staff. At 19.39 he ordered the Battle Cruiser Squadron to work up to full speed and shape an intercepting course of 295 degrees. A little after 20.00 a signal from Suffolk, now shadowing by radar, confirmed that it was the Bismarck and her consort towards which he was heading at an aggregate speed of some 50 knots. After a day of routine the revelation that battle was again a distinct possibility had a sobering effect in the Hood. Nothing, not even Mers-el-Kebir, had prepared them for this impending collision. Ted Briggs: With this sudden diversion the ship's company were alive again to the realization that deadly action could be just ten hours away. The back of my neck began to prickle with excitement, and [ found myself stuttering slightly, a nervous habit which until then [ had managed to conquer since the age of ten'S Within an hour of the alteration of course Holland's squadron was crashing into a full gale at 27 knots, wind and water forcing Hood and Prince of Wales to train their forward turrets to port. The Hood, battered and riven by war, was as beautiful a ever as she steamed into her last battle. The sight offered her consorts in the hours left to her cannot have differed greatly from that recalled by the Rev. Gordon Taylor from the destroyer ArrolV off Iceland on Easter Sunday, 13 April 1941:
)) Stephen. The Fighti"g Ad",irals,
pp.3S& 117. HM Hood Association archives. Scapa Flow, 19 May 1941. )) Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, p.202. " IWM/SA, no. 11746, reel I. "Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, p.203. II
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
216
be casualties, which were to be expected."
Traditionally reckoned to be the last image of Hood as an effective unit, taken from Prince of Wales during the voyage to the Denmark Strait on the afternoon or evening of 23 May. The weather has required the forward turrets of both ships to
be trained to port. The relative positions of the two ships are almost identical to those they assumed as battle was joined the following morning.
I took no services that Easter Day, for the sea was too rough and the closest attention had to be paid to the Hood as she made flag signals to her escorts-but I watched her for hours on the Arrow's bridge. As she was only about two cables (or 1200 feet) abeam away from me she was truly a magnificent sight as she drove along, zig-zagging to foil Uboats, in the green and gold sea whenever the sun came out upon her. [ J I felt unbelievably privileged to be watching her and [ 1 had already decided the whole experience of seeing the Hood that morning would be completely imperishable, and so it has proved to be for 60 years." Before long the buffeting endured by the four destroyers left in the squadron had obliged them to reduce speed to avoid structural damage. At 22.00, as the destroyer screen fell astern, a broadcast by Cdr Cross informed the men that contact with the enemy was expected at 02.00 on the 24th and that they had two hours to change into clean underwear and ready themselves before the ship went to action stations. Ted Briggs: Apprehension was heavy in the air. I think that most of my mates, like myself, were fearing not instant oblivion but the horror of being fearfully wounded or mutilated and screaming out in painful insanity. I had the depressing dread of being afraid of fear and showing it. Yet I was not feeling afraid-just wound up. I wanted the action to be hurried on, and yet at the same time I did not want it to happen. Wouldn't I wake up tomorrow in my hammock and find it was all a mistake?"
36
Taylor. Remembrallce D(IY Sermol/,
pp.8-9. Coles & Briggs. Flagship Hood, p. 205. JoB HtvlS Hood Association archives, taped interview. oW Roberlson, 'HMS Hood: Battle· Cruiser 1916-1941', p. 165. .. PRO, ADM 239/261, Tile Figh/illg J7
ltlStruct;OtlS (1939), §3Q0-6.0
His sentiments are echoed by Bob Elburn: Everyone was prepared as far as they could be. Everyone knew that there would be casualties, but it would be someone else, not you. No one thought that the Hood would be sunk. No one gave it a thought. But there would
And so the last preparations were made. The last shells fused and torpedo warheads inspected, the fire and damage-control parties mustered, the gaBey fires extinguished and instruments laid out in the Medical Distributing Stations. Words exchanged, bladders emptied. At midnight the bugle sounded its galvanising call over the tannoy and the men hastened to the positions from which their minds had not strayed in many hours. Shortly after midnight Holland ordered the Hood's immense battle ensign hoisted, but even as it unfurled in the wind events 120 miles to the north were eroding his tactical advantage. By 00.30 it was obvious that the Suffolk, the only vessel in WakeWalker's force equipped with effective search radar, had lost contact with the enemy in a blizzard. At this Holland informed his squadron that if contact were not regained by 02.10 he would alter course to the south until such time as it had been re-established. In the event, Holland decided not to wait that long and at 02.03 he hauled Hood and Prince oj Wales round onto a course of 200 degrees, the last reported heading of the German squadron. Having now caught up with the heavy ships his destroyers were ordered to continue their search to the north and played no further part in the interception. The men went down to the second degree of readiness. Until then Holland had intended to close the Bisntarck at speed from her port bow, a tactic which would not only shorten the range between the two squadrons in quick time but minimise the number of guns that could be brought to bear against him as he did so. By the time Suffolk had reported regaining contact at 02.47 and the Hood's relative bearing on the enemy been determined, the Bismarck was 35 miles distant and steering a diverging course at 28 knots. This meant that Holland had not only 'lost bearing' on the enemy, but had no prospect of regaining it either. Rather than the end-on attack for which he had planned, any approach had now to be made on the Bismarck's port beam and in the teeth of her main armament. As at Trafalgar, the Battle Cruiser Squadron would have to endure a prolonged exposure to the fuB weight of enemy fire before being able to bring its own broadsides to bear. Aware of the Hood's vulnerability to plunging fire, on 19 May Holland had endorsed the tactics laid down by Whitworth a month earlier in the event of an encounter with the Bismarck, and from these he seems never to have strayed." Holland's adherence to this plan despite the adverse tactical situation that now presented itself has been the subject of trenchant criticism. The outcome of the Battle of the Denmark Strait leaves no doubt how disastrous it proved to be. However, like most a posteriori judgements of this sort, these criticisms generally fail to embrace the wider context of Holland's decision-making. For an officer who had served during the First World War, who recaBed the unbearable frustration of an unwilling and elusive enemy and the chagrin of tainted victory, there could only be one tactic against the principal unit of the new German navy. Despite Jellicoe's caution and the vague caveats of the Fighting Instructions as they applied to battlecruisers, the tradition of the Royal avy was to bring the enemy to battle no matter what the risk or tactical disadvantage implied by it.'O On this her matchless fighting record was built. On this, too, one of her greatest ships was to be sacrificed. At 03.40 Holland ordered revolutions for 28 knots and
The End of Glory
brought Hood and Prillce of Wales onto a course of240 degrees to force the enemy to battle. By 04.30 visibility had improved and dozens of pairs of eyes were scanning the north-western horizon where, 30 miles off, Bismarck and Prillz Eligell were steaming towards their unexpected encounter. Shortly after 05.00 Holland passed the order to 'Prepare for instant action', the men rousing themselves to the first degree of readiness. On the compass platform actors took their places for the final drama. Ted Briggs: In the dimness of the binnacle and chart-table lights I could make out a stage-like setting. On the starboard, facing forward, stood the robust figure of Commander E.H.G. 'Tiny' Gregson, the squadron gunnery officer, and Lieutenant-Commander G.E.M. Owens, the admiral's secretary. Alongside, centre of stage, in the captain's chair was Admiral Holland, with Captain Kerr on his right. Then on the port side were ILt-Cdr H.D.] WyldboreSmith, Commander S.j.P. Warrand, the squadron navigating officer, eighteen-year-old Bill Dundas, action midshipman of the watch, Chief Yeoman Cam, who was attending the captain, Yeoman Wright, who looked after the demands of the officer of the watch at the binnacle, and myself, who was required to attend the flag lieutenant and answer voice-pipes. All the officers, except Holland and Kerr, were huddled in duffle coats, over which was anti-flash gear, topped off by steel helmets. Some had their gas-masks slung on their chests. [... ] The short, slim admiral preferred to emphasize his rank by wearing his 'bum-freezer' type of greatcoat. He sat bolt upright, with his binoculars' strap around his neck, his fingers somewhat nervously tapping the glasses themselves"
217
ing Scapa on the 22nd Holland signalled Capt. john Leach of the Prillce of Wales what his gunnery tactics would be:
H
If the enemy is encountered and concentration of fire required, the policy will be G.I.e. (individual ship control); if ships are spread when enemy is met they are to be prepared to flank mark as described in H.W.C.O. 26." Translated, these instructions called for Hood and Prillce of Wales to concentrate their fire on Bismarck while the nowabsent escorts positioned themselves to provide corrections for gunnery range and deflection. This decision was confirmed in a second signal at 00.30 on the 24th which also stated Holland's intention that Norfolk and Suffolk should engage Pri'lZ Eligell. In the event, neither aspect of Holland's plan came to fruition. Radio silence prevented the orders being transmitted to Norfolk and Sliffolk, which consequently took no part in the battle. Moreover, in requiring Prillce of Wales to maintain such close order Holland not only denied Leach the freedom to manoeuvre his ship but made it possible for the Germans to find his range with a minimum of targeting adjustment after Hood was lost. The first circumstance was probably inevitable; the second rather less so. But this lay in the future. At 05.49 Holland ordered a further turn of20 degrees to starboard to close the range once more. A minute later he ordered concentration on the leading ship in the German squadron. This was not Bismarck but Prillz Eugen which Liitjens had ordered into the van after his flagship's radar
Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, pp. 205-6. Dundas had joined the ship on 6 January 1941. Ibid., p. 210. 'Pilol', the Navy
nickname for a navigator, here refers to Cdr S.J.P. \\farrand. -Ij Von l\tollenheim-Rechberg, Battleship Bismarck, 2nd edn, p.137. «PRO. ADM 116/4352, p. 392.
Captain J.e. Leach. 'Narrative of Operations against Bismarck', 29 Mal' 1941.
Sketch map of the Battle of the Denmark Strait, 24 May 1941. Courses, times, ranges and relative positions approximate.
0553 Bismarck 0553 Prinz Eugen 0555 Bismarck ~ German squadron opens fire 0555 _____ Prinz Eugen
Then they were upon the enemy. At 05.35 lookouts in Hood and Prillce of Wales sighted the German squadron at a range of approximately 38,000 yards. Ted Briggs: The sighting was reported by voice-pipe from the spottingtop as 'Alarm starboard green 40.' I did not have any binoculars, so I could not see the top-masts, which everyone else was focusing on, but the maximum visibility from our perch was seventeen miles at this time. Almost in a whisper Captain Kerr commanded: 'Pilot, make the enemy report.''' Holland's force was sighted almost simultaneously by the German ships but its presence was already suspected. At 05.15 hydrophone operators in Prillz Eligell had detected the sound of high-performance turbines to the south-east and it was on this horizon that two columns of smoke were spotted in the cold light of morning. At 05.37 Holland ordered a 40-degree turn to starboard which placed Liitjens' force broadside on and fine on his starboard bow. And so the Hood screamed into battle at almost 29 knots. Twenty degrees off her starboard quarter lay Prillce of Wales at a distance of four cables (800 yards). To Kapitanleutnant Burkard von MiillenheimRechberg, surveying the spectacle from Bismarck's aft gunnery control position, the squadron looked like 'an enraged bull charging without knowing what he's up against'." Waiting to be hoisted from the Hood's signal deck was Flag 5, the order to Prillce of Wales to open fire. Shortly after leav-
41
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The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
218
Wales followed against Bismarck a few seconds later.
The Hoods forward turrets and bridge structure seen from the
Elsewhere in the ship the moment of firing doubtle s came as an intense, almost exquisite release of nervous tension. Years later, Ted Briggs recalled casting his mind over the ship and her crew as she went into action:
forecastle in April 1941. The Type 284 gunnery radar fitted at Rosyth a month or so earlier is visible on the aloft director. Though operational it is not known to have been used in the Denmark Strait. Beneath the spotting top the Torpedo lookout platform has been dismantled. The UP launcher on '8' turret is hidden under canvas. The two forward Mk III HACS directors can be seen on either side of '8' turret and the two forward UP mountings (similarly wrapped in canvas) on either side of 'A' turret. The compass platform from which Briggs and Dundas escaped is the glazed structure above the armoured director. lilburn sheltered beside Port NO.1 UP launcher and got clear of the ship from the
I could visualize how the mates I knew in other departments would be preparing. Ron Bell was on the flag deck at the other end of the voice-pipe [ was manning. His voice did not betray any signs of funk, as [ was sure mine did. ear him would be [Frank] Tuxworth, helping to handle the halyards and still joking, no doubt. Alongside in charge of the flags [ guessed that Yeoman Bill evett would be as outwardly calm as ever, despite the pallor of his face. On the boat deck I knew another mate, Petty Officer Stan Boardman, would be readying the crew of [Sammy], the starboard multiple pom-pom. Would he be thinking of his adored wife and his newly born baby or would he be questioning what on earth he could do with his anti-aircraft guns against the Bismarck's fifteen-inchers? And what of the sick-bay, where [ had spent the first few days of my life in the ship? There the 'tiffies' under Surgeon Commander [Henryl Hurst and Sick-Bay Petry Officer [George] Stannard would be sterilizing operating instruments, laying out blankets, making sure bandages were handy....
fore
had broken down while engaging Norfolk the previous evening. The error was immedialely spotted in Pr;lIce of Wales and fire redistributed accordingly, but it was against Prinz E/lgell that /-lood's forward guns now trained with an awe-inspiring rumble. one would survive from the /-lood's turrets but the following passage by Admiral of the Fleet Sir Henry Leach, turret officer in Duke of York at the Battle of orth Cape, gives an impression of the atmosphere as their crews went into action:
Cited in Winton. Death of the Scharnhorst. p. 183. The only major difference between the Duke of York and the Hood in this description is broadside firing, which the Royal Navy employed in night actions; the Hood began with salvo firing. Admiral Leach is the son or Capt. John Leach or the Prince of Wales. .. Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, p.209. " IWM/SA, no. 10751, reel 2. .. CAe, LEBY 112, MS of The Mall Around rhe Engi"e. ch. 12. p. 9. ft The chronology followed in this account is based on the frequently updated distillation of r~rch provided in Paul Bevand & Frank Allen. 'The Pursuit of Bismarck and the Sinking of H.M.S. Hood' on www.hmshood.com. to which acknowledgement is hereby made. 4)
Then came the long-awaited order 'All positions stand to!' In an instant, tiredness, cold and seasickness were shed and all hands became poised for their individual tasks. 'Follow Director', and the huge turret swung round in line with the Director Control Tower. 'All guns load with armour-piercing and full-charge-Ioad, load, load!'; the clatter of hoists as they brought the shells and cordite charges from the magazines, the rattle of rammers as they drove them into the chambers of the guns and the slam of the breeches as they closed were music to all. Then a great stillne s for seemingly endless minutes, disturbed only by the squelch of hydraulics as layers and trainers followed the pointers in the receivers from the Director. 'Broadsides!', and the interceptors, connecting the firing circuits right up to the Director Layer's trigger, were closed; a glance at the range receiver whose counters were steadily, inexorably, ticking down .. 's Then the ticking stopped. At 05.52 /-lood fired her opening salvo against Prillz E/lgell at a range of 25,000 yards. Prince of
[n the damage-control centre the First Lieutenant Lt-Cdr John Machin awaited the first call on his organisation. Standing by to repair damaged circuitry or perhaps on duty in the high-power switchboard room for which he was responsible was the ship's electrical engineer, Lt John lago. ot far away the Marine bandsmen chased pointers and wound wheels in the Transmitting Station as the /-lood's guns struggled to find the range. There was ERA Bert Hemmings, immured perhaps in his workshop, and 00 Philip X and Boy Bill Crawford in ammo supply somewhere, listening as the Rev. Patrick Stewart broadcast what Briggs remembered as a 'very calm, maller-of-fact running commentary' of events over the tannoy." Further below, in spaces Stewart's voice would never penetrate, Sub-Lt (E) John Cambridge, late of the Yarrow Co., Glasgow, tended the ship's boiler rooms in an inferno of heat and hell of noise. Then there was the 'Chief' himself, Cdr (E) Terence Grogan, performing a miracle of naval engineering from the control platform of the Forward Engine Room. To this miracle the speed of his ship and the efforts of her consort to keep pace bear witness. ViceAdmiral Sir Louis Le Bailly (1932-3, 1937-9): I shall always hope that, just as he died, he became aware that the brand-new HMS Prince of Wales was having difficulty in keeping up with her twenty-year-old flagship as Grogan drove /-lood into her last battle."
Like much else during her last minutes, the number and placing of the Hood's salvoes is a maller for conjecture" AB Bob Tilburn recalled six salvoes from the forward turrets and Ted Briggs at least one from 'X' turret but the actual number may never be established. [t seems likely that she did indeed redirect her fire from Pri'lZ Eugen to BisnlOrck but at what stage and to what effect is not known for certain. Holland had prohibited the use of radar during the approach to battle but it
The End of Glory
must be supposed that Hood's Type 284 gunnery set was in action by the time she opened fire. "Vhat is certain is thal none of her shells registered on their targets. The reasons for this are not far to seek. ot only had her firepower been reduced by half by the angle of approach, but the turret rangefinders were being drenched in spray as she thundered into a head sea at 29 knots, the speed at which vibration in the spotting top became 'excessive'.'" Gunnery conditions that morning closely matched those recorded by Capt. Pridham in the spring of 1938 and the pneumatic cleaning apparatus attached to the rangefinder windows is unlikely to have coped with the deluge." The Is-foot rangefinder in the aloft director had been removed in 1940 so accuracy must therefore have rested on the 30-foot rangefinder in the armoured director, such information as may have been provided by radar and the Hood's inadequate Mk V Dreyer Table. In view of the conditions, the probable need to shift target and the high rate of change of range as Hood closed the enemy, her failure to land a hit is not to be wondered at. No such difficulty faced Bismarck and Prinz Ellgerl and the Battle of the Denmark Strait would provide a further demonstration of the lethal accuracy of German gunnery. After a brief delay the German squadron took Hood under fire against the morning horizon. Soon their shells were screaming in 'like an express train going through a tunnel'." Bismarck's first salvo, unleashed at OS.sS, fell just wide. Her second straddled, the Hood pressing on between towering geysers of water. But it was Prinz Ellgen which drew first blood. A shell from her second salvo struck Hood on the boat deck, the Rev. Stewart calmly informing the crew that 'That sound you heard was Hood being hit at the base of the mainmast'. As Briggs recalled, the blast sent those on the compass platform sprawling over the deck:
219
Then I was Aung off my feet. My ears were ringing as if I had been in the striking-chamber of Big Ben. 1 picked myself up, thinking I had made a complete fool of myself, but everyone else on the compass platform was also scrambling to his feet. [Cdr (G) E.H.G.] 'Tiny' Gregson walked almost sedately out to the starboard wing of the platform to find out what had happened." When he returned it was to inform Holland that 'She has hit us on the boat deck and there is a fire in the ready-use lockers'." Etched on Briggs' memory was the grin on Gregson's face as he uttered these words, the grim satisfaction of the fighting officer whose ship was at last to win her spurs. If so, the sensation was a Aeeting one because Hood's agony had already begun. Prinz Eugell's shell had starled an uncontrollable fire among dozens of ready-use lockers for 4in and UP ammunition which soon began to take a terrible loll of the boat-deck personnel. Mindful of Oran, orders had been passed for the gun crews to take cover in the lobby beneath the bridge structure when action commenced and it was here, between the Reading Room and the dental surgery, that many gathered." One of those who stayed behind was AB Bob Tilburn, a member of the crew serving Port o. I gun abreast the after funnel. As the ammunition began detonating PO Edward Bishop came aft and ordered Tilburn and two others to help put it out, to which they wisely told him 'When it stops exploding, we will'." However, others were spotted from Prince oj Wales making futile efforts to control the blaze with deck hoses." The same wind that was dousing the Hood's rangefinders with spray fanned this fire into an enormous conAagration that swept back over the roof of ,X' turret, pulsating in a lurid
"NorthcOIl, HMS Hood, p. 14. " See ch. 2, p. 52. "IWM/SA, no. 10751, reel 2. " Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, p.214. 50 PRO, ADM 116/4351, p. 364. 50 IWM/SA, no. t 1746, reel I. "Arthur (00), The Navy: 1939 to thr Present Day, p. 91. "PRO,ADM 116/4351, p. 251.
Bismarck silhouetted by her own gunfire during the Battle of the Denmark Strait.
The Battlecrlliser HMS HOOD
220
through the voice-pipes and telephones. On the amidships boat deck a fierce blaze flared. This was punctuated by loud explosion. The torpedo officer ILt-Cdr Anthony Pares] reported by phone: 'The four-inch ready-use ammunition is exploding: 1could hear the UP rockets going up, just as they had roared off accidentally in Gibraltar a year earlier. Fear gripped my intestines again as agonized screams of the wounded and dying emitted from the voice-pipes. The screeching turned my blood almost to ice. 1... 1But the bursting projectiles were making a charnel-house of positions above the upper deck. The screams of the maimed kept up a strident chorus through the voice-pipes and from the flag deck. I was certain I heard my'oppo' Ron Bell shouting for help.·' Echoing the assessment of Tilburn and his companions, Holland ordered the fire on the boat deck to be left to burn until the ammunition had been expended. He had, in any case, far more pressing concerns than thi . The Hood was being hammered and the moment when the squadron's full weight of fire was brought to bear could not be delayed much longer. At about 05.55 Holland passed the order for a 20-degree turn to port to open the 'A' arcs of ,X' and 'Y' turrets. Ted Briggs: 'Turn twenty degrees to port together: he commanded. Chief Yeoman Cam passed the word on to the flag deck, where surprisingly someone still seemed to be capable of obeying orders. Two blue-flag 2, a blue pendant-went up the yard-arm. I remember musing:' ot everyone on the flag deck is dead then:·'
The port side of the boat deck seen from the level of the after air-defence position in the autumn of 1940. All three portside 4in mountings can be made out. It was in this cluttered space that ready-use ammunition caused an uncontrollable fire during Hoods last minutes.
Y
Mr James Gordon, conversation
with the author,S January 2004. "PRO, ADM 11614351, p. 148. .. Arthur (ed), Tile Navy: /939 ta tile Present Day, p. 91. I. should be
noted that the incident related by Tilburn is corroborated in no other known source though a hit in this position was recorded by Flight Lt R.). Vaughn in a
Sunderland flying boat of 201 Squadron; PRO, AIR 151415. I am
grateful to Frank Allen for drawing this point to my allelltion.
'I Coles & Briggs, Flagsllip Hood, pp.214-5. " Ibid., p. 2 I5. "PRO,ADM 1161435I,p. 198.
pinkish flame as ammunition went off like fire crackers.>ll RearAdmiral Wake-Walker describes the scene from Norfolk, 30,000 yards off: I can describe it best as a brilliant rose colour with no yellow or white in it. I J This wa at the time the fire first appeared in the Hood. I J I watched this fire and it then spread forward until its length was greater than its height and after a time it died down, particularly at the forward end. I thought that they may be able to get this fire under. Previous to this I had been so impressed by the fire that II thoughtjthe ship would not continue as a fighting unit. s> But much worse was to come. 0 sooner had Bishop returned to the bridge structure to report the matter to an officer than a shell landed inside making a terrible execution of the 200 men sheltering there, a massacre only Tilburn lived to relate.'" Up on the compass platform this carnage unfolded not in the eyes but in the ears of those present. Ted Briggs: Then came a crazy cacophony of wild cries of'Fire'
On came the Hood, shells raining down as her after turrets strained against the stops to find bearing on the enemy. His approach completed, at approximately 06.00 Holland ordered another 20-degree turn to port. It was just seven or eight minutes since she had opened fire. Until now Holland and his officers had followed the progress of the battle with the steely composure of their forebears, outwardly unperturbed by the havoc being wrought on their ship. But this detachment was not to last. Even as the Hood began to execute her turn a shell from Bismarck's fifth salvo was hurtling in from about 16,000 yards. With it came the mortal hit. Capt. John Leach of Prince ofWales: I happened to be looking at Hood at the moment when a salvo arrived and it appeared to be across the ship somewhere about the mainmast. In that salvo there were, I think, two shots short and one over, but it may have been the other way round. But I formed the impression at the time that something had arrived on board Hood in a position just before the mainmast and slightly to starboard. It was not a very definite impression that I had, but it was sufficiently definite to make me look at Hood for a further period. I in fact wondered what the result was going to be, and between one and two seconds after I formed that impression an explo ion took place in the Hood which appeared to me to come from very much the same position in the ship. There was a very fierce upward rush of flame the shape of a funnel, rather a thin funnel, and almost instantaneously the ship was enveloped in smoke from one end to the other.·'
Ti,e End of Glory
For Ted Briggs, time, which had been passing with agoni ing slowness, seemed now to stop altogether: As the Hood turned, X turret roared in approval, but its Y twin sta)'ed silent. And then a blinding flash swept around the outside of the compass platform. Again I found m)'self being lifted off m), feet and dumped head first on the deck. This time, when I got up with the others. the scene was different. Ever)'thing was cold and unreal. The ship which had been a haven for me for the last two years was suddenly hostile." Bob Tilbum and his companions were face down in the lee of the port forward UP launcher when Hood received her death blow: The next shell came aft and the ship shook like mad. I was next to the gun shield, so I was protected from the blast, but one of my mates was killed and the other had his side cut open by a splinter. It opened him up like a butcher and all his innards were coming out·s This shell or another from the same salvo seems to have passed through the spotting top because the boat deck was now showered with debris and body parts from the upper reaches of the bridge structure. Tilburn, struck on his legs by a torso, turned to vomit excruciatingly over the side. Back on the bridge there was a fleeting air of normalcy before the enormity of what had taken place set in: After the initial jarring she listed slowly, almost hesitatingly, to starboard. She stopped after about ten degrees. when I heard the helmsman's voice shouting up the voice-pipe to the officer of the watch: 'Steering's gone, sir.' The reply of 'Ver)' good' showed no signs of animation or agitation. Immediately Kerr ordered: 'Change over to emergency
221
steering.' Although the Hood had angled to starboard. there was still no concern on the compass platform. Holland was back in his chair. He looked aft towards the Pri/lce o/Wales and then re-trained his binoculars on the Bismarck. Slowly the Hood righted herself. 'Thank heaven for that: I murmured to myself, only to be terrorized b)' her sudden, horrifYing cant to port. On and on she rolled, until she reached an angle of fort)'-five degrees."
Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, p.215. ,) Arthur (ed), The Navy: 1939 to tlte Prese1lt Day. p. 91. ll.a
.. Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood.
pp.2IH.
Realising the ship was finished, those on the compass platform began to file noiselessly out of the starboard door. Only Holland and Kerr remained, the admiral broken in his chair and beside him his flag captain. struggling to keep his footing as the Hood capsized. either made the slightest effort to escape. By the time Briggs emerged from the compass platform and began to move towards the Admiral's bridge the Hood was almost on her beam ends. Halfway down he was washed off the ladder and into the sea. For Mid. William Dundas, who had spent the baltle manning phones and voice pipes on the compass platform, the pitch of the deck prevented him reaching this exit and he was forced to kick hi way through a window as the platform met the water. Though these two cannot have been more than a few yards apart their subsequent experiences differed in several important respects. As Briggs recalled from their discussions later, Dundas struck out to put distance between himself and the ship but was soon dragged under by suction as the Hood left the surface. Almost as quickly he was caught in a burst of escaping air and shot to the surface far enough away to make good his escape. Briggs, on the other hand, had a much more prolonged ordeal: This was it, I realised. But I wasn't going to give in easily. I knew that the deckhead of the compass platform was above me and that I must try to swim awa), from it. I managed to avoid being knocked out by the steel stanchions. but I was
Hood explodes at 06.00 on 24 May 194t. u.s N.II.t Historic.' C~nr~
222
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
not making any progress. The suction was dragging me down. The pressure on my ears was increasing each second, and panic returned in its worse intensity. 1 was going to die. I struggled madly to try to heave myself up to the surface. I got nowhere. Although it seemed an eternity, I was under water for barely a minute. My lungs were bursting. I knew that I just had to breathe. I opened my lips and gulped in a mouthful of water. My tongue was forced to the back of my throat. I was not going to reach the surface. I was going to die. I was going to die. As I weakened, my resolve left me. What was the use of struggling? Panic subsided. I had heard it was nice to drown. I stopped trying to swim upwards. The water was a peaceful cradle. I was being rocked off to sleep. There was nothing I could do about it-good night, mum. ow I lay me down ... I was ready to meet God. My blissful acceptance of death ended in a sudden surge beneath me, which shot me to the surface like a decanted cork in a champagne bonle. I wasn't going to die. I wasn't going to die. I trod water as I panted in great gulps of air. I was alive. 67 On the boat deck Tilburn looked up from his retching to see the bows rising out of the water. Knowing the end had come, he immediately abandoned the UP launcher whose splinter shield had served him so well and dropped down onto the forecastle abreast the compass platform from which Briggs and Dundas were making their escape. There was not a moment to lose. The first waves were lapping onto the decking as the Hood began to heel over. He barely had time to strip off his battle helmet and many layers of clothing before being swept into the sea. Tilburn did his best to get clear of the ship but everywhere the speed of her destruction was outpacing the efforts of the crew to separate their destiny from hers:
"Ibid., pp. 216-7. 68 Arthur (cd), The Navy: 1939 to the Presem Day, p. 91. .. Bradford, The Mighty Hood, p.184. 70 The conclusions and transcripts (second board only) of the boards of enquiry arc in PRO, ADM 116/435 I & 4352. The war diary of the Pri"z Ellgen and reports of her officers are available on www.kbismarck.com. The major technical analysis is W.J. Jurens, 'The Loss of H.M.5. Hood-A Reexamination' in Warship hltematioflal,24 (1987), no. 2, pp.
122-61. See William Jurens et aI., 'A Marine Forensic Analysis of HMS Hood and DKM Bismarck' in Trarlsacr;orls of the Society ofNaval Architects and Marine Engineers, 110 (2002), pp. liS-53. "PRO, ADM 116/435 I, p. 40 1) Conversation with the author, 5 January 2004. 71
I had my sea boots on and a very tight belt. I paddled around in the water and took my knife and Cllt my belt so J could breathe properly, Then llooked around and saw the ship was rolling over on top of me. It wasn't a shadow, it was a big mast coming over on top of me. It caught me across the back of the legs and the radio aerial wrapped around the back of my legs and started pulling me down. I still had my knife in my hands so I cut my sea boots off and shot to the surface. I looked up to see the Hood with her bows in the air. Then she slid under." In each of these cases the time elapsed between the fatal hit and the moment of abandoning ship seems to have been little more than a minute. Tilburn was clearly the only man in the vicinity capable of getting away, testament to the attrition of her boat-deck personnel once the Hood came under fire. But at least three others were seen trying to escape from the compass platform, an unnamed Officer of the Watch, Cdr Gregson and Cdr John Warrand, the Squadron avigating Officer, who graciously gestured Briggs to pass ahead of him as they made their exit. Distinct as their experiences were, there is one aspect of their ordeal that unites the three survivors: the release of air from collapsing boilers and bulkheads which propelled them to the surface. As a result Dundas, Tilburn and Briggs all emerged on what had been the port side of the ship, some distance from her towering wreck and from each other. But for this phenom-
enon the Hood might have been lost with all hands. So it was that, a little after 06.00 on the morning of 24 May, the pitiful remnants of the Hood's crew found themselves adrift among the sparse wreckage of their ship in a 15-20 foot swell. The battle raged on under leaden skies. Beneath them the pride of the Royal Navy and 1,4 I5 of her company were sinking to the bottom of the Atlantic.
·.......t--
'If ever a ship died in action, the Hood did."· How was the greatest ship in the British Navy transformed from an effective fighting unit to a shattered wreck in a matter of seconds? How could she disappear from the face of the water within three minutes? For over 60 years these questions have exercised an increasingly broad spectrum of writers and readers. The opinions generated have frequently owed more to imagination than research but the raw material on which the more rational conclusions have been drawn rests principally in the transactions of the two boards of enquiry conducted in 1941, together with an increasing fund of structural and operational data and personal memoirs from both sides.'o To these sources must now be added the preliminary findings of the expedition which discovered the wreck in 200 1.7l It is on this material and the inferences that can be drawn from it that the following paragraphs are based. None of the survivors formed any great impression of the event which destroyed the ship beyond that she had been wrecked by a major explosion aft. The main visual evidence for that explosion comes from Prince of Wales, steaming 800 yards off the Hood's starboard quarter. As the battle unfolded most of those on her disengaged port side could do nothing but watch the flagship trading salvoes with the enemy. Their first impressions of note centre on the boat-deck fire resulting from the hit by Pril1z Ellgen in the early stages of the action. However, the dominant memory is of the cataclysmic explosion following Bismarck's fifth salvo. The result of this is not in any doubt. It ignited the 112 tons of cordite stowed in the Hood's after magazines. After a brief pause an immense pillar of orange flame towered 600 feet over the ship in a roiling cloud of grey smoke. A few seconds later it was seen to collapse outwards into a funnel-like shape leaving her wreathed in a shroud of smoke. The explosion was first seen in the vicinity of the mainmast, its strength venting through the engine-room exhaust housings on the boat deck and then among the after turrets themselves, which were tossed bodily into the sea. When the smoke began to clear those in Prillce of Wales beheld a desolate sight: some 300 feet of the after section of the Hood had been ravaged by the explosion. The inferno raging inside permitted Lt-Cdr A.H. Terry to distinguish the frames on her starboard side as the ship capsized, the bottom plating blown out between 'X' turret and the mainmast." Waves lapped against the shattered hull. The remnants of the stern stood up briefly before breaking off together with over 200 feet of wreckage. On Prillce of Wales' bridge Boy James Gordon found himself staring into a severed section of the ship." What had been whole and intact moments earlier now lay tortured and eviscerated. On both sides the sight was more than many could bear looking at. Hood's agony was not prolonged. As Capt. Leach related, once the quarterdeck had gone the remains of the ship settled quickly by the stern:
223
The End of Glory
I formed the impression that the gunwale of the Hood was just showing outside the cloud of smoke and quite a short di tance above the water, I should say about two to three feet. " By the time Tilburn got away the funnels were completely awash. Having heeled seven or eight degrees to starboard with the concussion of the explosion, the Hood righted herself before assuming the movement to port from which she never recovered. Soon her bows began to rise in respon e to the flooding of the stern, the dual motion causing her to pivot round on her axis as she subsided into the depths. The final plunge brought her bows up almost perpendicular, some 250 feet of the ship standing clear of the water. Then the end came, her bows pointing heavenward, the barrels of 'B' turret slumped hard over and the waves creaming over her hull one last time. To a German observer the spectacle seemed 'like the spire of a great cathedral'." The speed with which the Hood sank-under three minutes--<:an be accounted for by the enormous damage inflicted on her hull and internal structures and the flooding of her engine spaces. The extent of this damage was revealed when the upturned midsection of the ship was found in 2001. With this discovery the full magnitude of the disaster that had befallen her became apparent. What, though, was the ultimate cause and process of that event? This the boards of enquiry which followed the loss of the Hood were above all concerned to establish. ot only was the matter of the gravest importance to the avy but there were lessons to be drawn for the design and fitting out of its heavy ships; lessons, it was felt, that should have been learnt after jutland. The sense of dismay is captured in the letter the First Sea Lord, Admiral of the Fleet Sir Dudley Pound, sent to the Controller of the avy, ViceAdmiral Bruce Fraser, on 28th May: ow, after the lapse of 25 years, we have the first close action between one of our capital ships and that of the Germans since the Battle of jutland and the Hood has been destroyed in what appears to the onlooker to be exactly the same manner as the Queen Mary, Indefatigable and Invincible, in spite of the action which was taken subsequent to jutland to prevent further ships being destroyed as a result of'flash'.'· No one who witnessed the loss of the Hood could have had any doubt that it was the detonation of her after magazines that destroyed her. The question, both then and now, was quite how this had occurred. The first board convened under the presidency of Vice-Admiral Sir Geoffrey Blake (who had flown his flag in Hood from 1936-7) on 30 May and submitted its report just three days later. It determined that one or more shell from Bismarck had landed in the vicinity of the mainmast and reached the Hood's 4in magazines, which had been doubled in size in 1939-40. The explosion of these had in turn brought on the detonation of the 15in magazines. Though this finding was subsequently endorsed, the enquiry had taken no technical advice, left no minutes, and limited its interviews to a handful of officers; of Hood's survivors only Mid. Dundas had been called. Above all, it had summarily dismissed what many influential commentators regarded as a likely cause of
the explosion: the detonation of the upper-deck torpedoes. A second board had therefore to be convened under the presidency of the Hood's last peacetime captain, Rear-Admiral H.T.C. Walker. This began by taking evidence from 176 witnesses to the sinking while advice was solicited from a range of former officers and technical experts. The first interviews were held in the cruiser DevollSlrire on 12 August, continuing the following day in the Suffolk. The sessions were completed at Dorland House in London between 27 August and 5 September, to which both Tilburn and Briggs were summoned. Dundas was not able to attend but evidence gathered from the survivors of the Bismarck was taken into consideration. Throughout the proceedings the board took pains to establi h whether or not the boat-deck fire and the ship's torpedo armament had any bearing on her loss. Its conclusions, submitted on 12 September 1941, were little removed from those of the first board. They read as follows: I. That the sinking of Hood was due to a hit from Bismarck's IS-inch shell in or adjacent to Hood's 4-inch or IS-inch magazines, causing them all to explode and wreck the after part of the ship. The probability is that the 4-inch magazines exploded first. 2. There is no conclusive evidence that one or two torpedo warheads detonated or exploded simultaneously with the magazines, or at any other time, but the possibility cannot be entirely excluded. We consider that if they had done so their effect would not have been so disastrous as to cause the immediate destruction of the ship, and on the whole, we are of the opinion that they did not. 3. That the fire that was seen on Hood's Boat Deck, and in which P and/or 4-inch ammunition was certainly involved, was not the cause of her loss.n Though there continue to be dissenting voices, with these conclusions a majority of expert opinion is now in essential agreement. However, although the boards established with some certainty that a shell from the Bismarck had brought on the detonation of the Hood's after magazines, it was not possible for any determination to be made as to the trajedory of the projectile. The question, of course, turned on whether the Hood had been struck on the boat deck or whether penetration had occurred below the waterline. Essentially, whether it was horizontal or vertical armour that had been defeated. Both of these possibilities are consistent with the geometry of the ship, and credence was lent to the latter by the 15in shell which penetrated Prince of Wales below the waterline during the same action. However, in view of the highly uncertain trajectory of a shell under water this seems the less likely of the two scenarios. But, as W.j. jurens wrote in 1987, 'The exact origin of the explosion is now, and shall probably always remain, somewhat in doubt', destined ever to remain in the limbo of conjecture." This view was borne out in the summer of 200 I when the wreck of the Hood was filmed by Blue Water Recoveries at a depth of approximately 9,000 feet. Lying amidst three vast debris fields were the bow and tern sections (c. 165 and 125 feet respectively) and, at some remove, an upturned section of the hull some 350 feet long. Missing were approximately 225
"PRO,ADM 116/435I,p.198. " Jurens. 'The Loss of H.M.S. Hood', p.137. "PRO,ADM 116/435I,p.14. " Ibid., p. 108. 7. Jurens, 'The Loss ofH.M.S. Hood'. p. ISS.
The Battlecru;ser HMS HOOD
224
feet, corresponding to the area between 'Y' turret and the middle engine room inclusive." The stern section had been seen to break away at the surface, but the real surprise of the expedition was the severed bow section, lying on its port side wrapped in anchor cable. It seems probable that the break was owed first to structural weakening when the bow rose out of the water and then to implosion damage once the ship left the surface, though arguments have been made for a major explosion in the vicinity.80 The other revelation was the unprecedented degree of implosion damage inflicted on the hull as the Hood sank. This field of desolation stretching across a mile of the ocean floor yielded few reminders of the ship as a living entity. One item, however, could hardly have been more poignant: the ship's bell, on which the New Year had been tolled in on 31 December 1940. Where the process of the explosion is concerned, one can do no better than cite the conclusion reached by Jurens in 1987. His hypothesis is based on the detonation of a ISin shell in or near the 4in magazines aft: [f this occurred, and ignition of the propellant in the magazines followed from it, then a large part of the rapidly expanding gas bubble would have taken the path of least resistance and vented into the engineering spaces immediately forward of this area. For a time the sheer inertia of Hood's structure would have slowed expansion in any other direction. Once the expanding gasses had reached the engine rooms, the quickest exits to the outside would have been the series of massive exhaust vents located on the centreline immediately forward of and aft of the mainmast. These huge ducts, changing in size and shape as they rose through the ship, ended in roughly square vents 1.8 meters [eachl side on the boat deck. It was as spectacular, nearvertical columns of flame from these vents near the mainmast, foreshortened to observers on surrounding ships, that the explosion first became visible. Shortly thereafter, the entire stern of the ship exploded. At the time of the blast, the Board of inquiry calculated the 'X' IS-in magazine contained about 49 tons of cordite, 'Y' magazine contained 45 tons, and the 4-in magazines contained about 18.5 tons. The uncontrolled burning of this quantity of propellant in the after magazines might have slowed briefly as the volume of the engineering spaces served as a space into which the gasses could expand, and as the vents directed much of the combustion products outboard. But although this expansion and venting could temporarily relieve the pressure, it could never be enough to prevent an explosion from eventually tearing the ship apart."
79
It should be noted that there is
currently some doubt as to which engine room Ihis is. 80 The case for an explosion of the forward magazines is put in Mearns & While, Hood and Bismarck, pp. 206-7. and countered in Jurens et al., 'A Marine Forensic Analysis', p. 146.
Jurens, 'The Loss of H.M.S. Hood', pp. 155-7. 12 Williams. COile A Long !ollrtley. pp. 142-3. "PRO. AIR 15/415. III
But it takes a former crewman to convey the reality of this event as it engulfed his friends and smashed through passageways and messdecks long frequented and fondly remembered. Leonard Williams (1936-41): [n a tremendous flash, a split second of searing time, Hood was gone, rendering all our efforts null and void. After serving for four and a half years in the ship [ knew every compartment, nut and bolt in her. [ can almost picture the terrible scene between decks when that fatal shell struck. The gigantic sheets of golden cordite flame sweeping through the
narrow corridors and passages, incinerating everything in its path. The terrific hot blast, the bursting open of the armoured huIJ under the colossal pressure; and, finally, the merciful avalanche of the cold sea, cleansing the charred and riven wreck, and bringing peace to those gallant souls I knew so well. On more than one occasion [ have dreamed this scene and have returned to consciousness with the thought that 'There, but fOrlhe grace of God went [,'82 The lack of survivors was due not only to the enormity of the explosion but the speed with which it brought on the sinking of the ship. Except for a few, sealed in compartments as yet untouched by the unfolding catastrophe, the end must have come very quickly in fire, water and displaced machinery. Only those in exposed positions had any hope of survival but the hit on the spotting top and the terrible attrition on the boat deck and in the bridge shelter had accounted for most of these when the end came. Fewer than a dozen men can have got into the water, where layers of protective clothing worn over uninflated lifejackets will not have improved their chances. Those who survived to be rescued did so by the greatest providence. Those who see warships as pieces in an elaborate board game abstracted from the reality of combat would do well to remember the hell of destruction brought down on their crews at the hour of their death, their vessel become a storm of fire and metal, burning oil and escaping steam, of collapsing bulkheads and walls of water. As much as any ship, the Hood was destroyed with the energy of her creation. One can put it no simpler.
·. . . . .11>. .Having reached the surface Dundas, Tilburn and Briggs each swam away from the wreck and at length selected one of the numerous three-foot square biscuit floats with which the Hood had been equipped during her final refit. Dundas was able to manoeuvre himself into a seated position on his but the others couldn't perform the feat of balance necessary and lay belly-down on their floats. [n this way they paddled towards each other, dodging patches of oil and wreckage and looking in vain for any other survivors. Overhead a Sunderland of201 Squadron spotted 'one large red raft and a considerable amount of wreckage amidst a huge patch of oil'." Briggs and Tilburn were exhausted from their ordeal and only Dundas' encouragement prevented them succumbing to the sleep from which they might never have awoken. The first hour or so was spent singing and recounting the stories of their escape but they had drifted apart by the time Electra, a destroyer of Holland's escort, appeared on the scene at about 08.00. Aboard the storm-battered Elec/ra the crew readied themselves for a flood of survivors which never came. Edward Taylor: The truth slowly dawned on us as we made ready to pick up hundreds of injured and wounded men from the grey cold sea. We could not turn out our boats as they were smashed, hanging in the davits. Blankets, medical supplies, hot beverages and rum were got ready. Scrambling nets were flung over the ship's side, trailing into the water. Men were lining the side ready with hand lines, eyes straining into the greyness ahead. [t was only what seemed like a matter of minutes when we broke out of a mist patch into the clear. And there it was. The place where the Hood had sunk.
The End of Glory
225
Wreckage of all descriptions was floating on the urface. Hammocks, broken rafts, boots, clothes, caps. Of the hundreds of men we e:l.l'ected to see there was no sign. An awestruck moment and a shipmate next to me exclaimed 'Good Lord, she's gone with all hands.' We nosed our way slowly amongst all the pitiful remains of books, letters, photos, and other personal effects floating by and a shout went up as a man appeared clinging to a piece of flotsam a little further away. Two more were seen-<>ne swimming, the other appeared to be on a small float. I went down the scrambling net with several other men and the water was around our knees. We hung on to the net, our arms outstretched as the first man floated alongside. Quickly we grabbed him and lifted him onto the net. Careful hands on deck reached down and hauled him up to the deck. He was wrapped in a blanket and taken forward onto the Mess deck, our ship's Doctor and sick berth attendants taking care of him. Another man had been brought in further along the hip's side and a line had been passed to the third one and he was hauled to the side and brought aboard.S< Ted Briggs recalls the moment of rescue: Slowly the Electra approached my raft, on which I was prostrate. Then a rope sailed into the air in my direction. Although I could not feel my fingers, somehow I managed to cling on to it. A man yelled unnecessarily at me from the scrambling net: 'Don't let go of it.' I even had the heart to retort: 'You bet your bloody life I won't.' Yet I was too exhausted to haul myself in and climb the net. After nearly four hours in the sea my emotions were a mess. Tears of frustration rolled down my oil-caked cheeks again, for rescue was so close and I could not help myself. I need not have worried. Several seamen dropped into the water, and with one hand on the nets they got me alongside and manhandled me up to the bent guard-rail, which had been battered by the storm, and into the waist of the Electra." o bodies were to be seen. Among the few items recovered was a Marine's cap in cribed RM B/X 738, to Musician William Pike who no doubt met his death in the Transmitting Station. After a forlorn search through the wreckage the Electra, desperately low on fuel, turned for Reykjavik where she arrived that evening, discharging the survivors to hospital. The destruction of the Hood was an awesome pectacle which caused a temporary lull in the Battle of the Denmark Strait. In the Bismarck astonishment turned swiftly to unbridled exultation. Kapitanleutnant von Mullenheim-Rechberg: They just stared at one another in disbelief. Then the shock passed and the jubilation knew no bounds. Overwhelmed with joy and pride in the victory, they slapped one another on the back and shook hands. Their superiors had a hard time getting them back to work and convincing them that the battle wasn't over and that every man must continue to do his duty." In the Prillce of Wales, by contrast, the sight was met with stunned silence. 'Not a word was said.''' There was, in any case, precious little opportunity for reflection. No sooner had the
Germans regained their composure than a storm of shell fire began to burst round Prillce of Wales which was struck seven times in as many minutes by both Bismarck and Prillz Ellgen. Among the hits was a l5in shell which passed through the compass platform killing or wounding everyone on it save Capt. Leach and the Chief Yeoman of Signals. However, the Bismarck was not to emerge from her moment of triumph unscathed. Despite problems with her turrets that eventually reduced her to only three operational guns, Prillce ofWales was able to score three hits on the Bismarck, one putting a boiler room out of action and the other contaminating two of her oil tanks. With this the battle ended, Prillce ofWales retiring under a smoke screen while Lutjens turned for Brest. 'Rhine Exercise' was effectively Over but the Royal avy was to have its revenge. A wrathful Admiralty summoned every unit at its disposal to prevent Bismarck reaching harbour. Force H was brought up from Gibraltar and convoys ruthlessly stripped of their escort. Three days after the Hood was sunk the Bismarck suffered her own calvary under the withering fire of Rodlley and King George V. After a savage two-hour engagement Bismarck disappeared with over 2,200 of her crew.
Three stokers resting against one of the boat deck crutches in 1940 or 1941. Behind them is the base of the mainmast and beyond it the after superstructure with two of its 44-inch searchlights. The structure on the left is the old Secondary battery room. To the right is the port aft a.Sin machine gun and Port NO.2 4in mounting; the barrels of Port NO.3 mounting are just visible
beyond. M" Oorren Mill,..,
.......>._. The first indication of disaster in the Denmark Strait came in a terse signal from Rear-Admiral Wake-Walker to the Admiralty and Tovey, then at sea in Killg George V: 'Hood blown up in position 63 0 20' ., 31 0 50' W.' This signal, made at 06.15 and classified as' ecret' by Wake-Walker, took some time to reach its intended recipients. However, the' Hood sunk' signal made by Prince of Wales shortly after was intercepted across the Atlantic and beyond. Capt. Philip Vian was commanding the escort of convoy WS8B west of Ireland when the news reached him in the destroyer Cossack: 'I believe I felt no stronger emotion at any time in the war than at the moment when I read this signal.''' So it was throughout the avy. In the cruiser HalVkills lying at Durban Paymaster Lt Keith Evans (1938--9) was one of many veterans unable to control his emotions;
HMS Hood Association archives. Coles & Briggs, Flagship Hood, p. 221. The amount of time the survivors spent in the water seems to ha\'e been nearer two hours. 86 Von MUllenheim-Rechberg, Battleship Bismarck, 2nd edn,
&t
U
p.144. James Gordon. conversation with the author. 5 January 2004. 8lI Vian, Action IIIi5 Day, p. 56. •1
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
226
On that fateful day, after visiting Capetown and the Seychelles, we were coming alongside Mayden Wharf in Durban when on the tannoy of another ship (I think Dorsetshire) we heard the announcement 'We regret to announce that in action with the German Battleship Bismarck in the Denmark Strait off Greenland, H.M.S. Hood has been sunk, it is feared with considerable loss of life'. All hands on deck seemed to stop what they were doing for about a minute (in fact more likely several seconds). As a former shipmate I just could not comprehend that the Mighty Hood had gone and am not a bit ashamed to say that I began to cry." For others, grief for lost friends was tinged with a desire for revenge. Lt-Cdr George Blundell, a midshipman in the Hood between 1922 and 1924, was First Lieutenant of the Nelson off Freetown: ...The captain came on to the bridge and said 'The Hood's been sunk by the Bismarck.' I thought for a moment he was fooling. [... 1J felt terrible thinking ofTony (Lieut. Commander Anthony Pares ... )... I can hardly believe that lovely ship is gone nor that one IS-inch shell can do such a horror. [... J AlII hope and pray for is that we gel the Bis,narck in revenge. It would be terrible for her to get away. Those poor fellows in Hood-Tony, Tiny Gregson, dear old Grogan, Tubby Crosse [sicl. r... llt is a ronen war. What is the point of it?9" At the same moment the Navy was suffering terrible losses in the withdrawal from Crete. Lt-Cdr (E) Louis Le Bailly was Senior Engineer of the cruiser Naiad: ... When I went aft ... the commander broke the near unbelievable news that Hood had blown up. That there was another world outside the conflict in which we were engaged was difficult enough to comprehend, that the navy should be fighting two such great sea battles, so many thousand miles apart, was almost beyond understanding; but that the ship in which I had been weaned and had come to love should have disappeared in seconds was a kick in the stomach." In the Rodney, escorting the troopship Britannic westwards across the Atlantic, news of the death of her 'chummy ship' came as a numbing blow. Her chaplain, the Rev. Kenneth Thompson, describes the atmosphere in a ship which, days hence, would exact the Navy's revenge: 89 90
91
92
HMS Hood Association archives. IWM, 90/38/1. diary entries for 24 & 25 May 1941,vol.lI,p. 63. Cdr W.K.R. Cross was the Hood's Executive Officer. Le Bailly, TheMa1l Around the Etlgine. p. 83.
Thompson, H.M.S. Rodney at lVar, pp. 40-1.
'J I am grateful to Mr Peter Cambridge for drawing this circumstance to my attention. 9~ Miss E.G. Wilkin,lNter to the author, 6 December 2003. "CA ,ROSK, file 4/7 'Note by Admiral Sir William Davis', pp.5-6.
We have taken some hard knocks this war, and there were others still to come, and many, for all we know, still in store. But it is doubtful if anything could equal the Captain's tragic broadcast that the Hood had been sunk with very few survivors, and that the Prince of Wales had been hit and forced to break off the engagement. It is difficult adequately to describe the gloom that existed; food went untouched in most messes, and many men, especially those who had served in the Hood, went about their work in a daze. For a time one of the chiefs cheered his mess with the suggestion that perhaps the signal had been misread, but that consolation was very quickly
removed. The Hood had indeed been lost, together with most of her ship's company." Others knew of the action before they learnt its outcome. Two hundred and fifty miles to the south-east stokers in the steamer Zouave, sailing in convoy SC31, picked up the reverberations of a distant battle. On the bridge Capt. William Cambridge was losing his son John in one of Hood's boiler rooms." In Berlin Goebbels crowed triumphantly at the news. At the Admiralty, meanwhile, it was received with a mixture of shock and stoicism. Civil Service Telegraphist Gladys Wilkin was on duty in the Admiralty Signals Department on what had been a heavy night of bombing: The Signals Department was situated beneath Admiralty Arch; roughly beneath the left hand pillar looking down the Mall. [... J On the night of 24th May 1941 there was a particularly bad air raid on London and a direct hit struck the above mentioned pillar, killing a dispatch rider standing beside his motor-cycle at that spot and damaging a portion of the Signals Department below. ow, it just so happened that at that particular time several members of the Signals staff were either at rest, supper, off sick or just not on duty. There was not terribly much 'traffic' that night and I was working two positions. On one position I received the signal that H.M.S. Hood had been sunk; this was marked 'MOST SECRET and needed to be handed immediately to the Officer in Charge. I was shocked, stunned and unhappy. For another reason also. One of the telegraphists with whom I was particularly friendly at this time was a girl we all called 'Len' because her surname was Leonard. [... J Her fiance was a member of the crew of the Hood and when she came back from supper I was unable to tell her of the signal because of its classification. Naturally, she learned eventually when lists of the casualties began coming in .... Though no less of a shock, for any aware of the Hood's design the news came as no particular surprise. Capt. William Davis, a Deputy Director of Operations at the Admiralty, had been Hood's Executive Officer until September 1940: The loss of the Hood was a tremendous shock to all of us, and especially to me as her last Commander, but I certainly knew of her extreme vulnerability to 15 inch fire with only 3 inches of mild steel armour protection over her magazines. [... J The Hood's destruction was unlud,l', but to me not unexpected for she was not fit to take on modern 15 inch gunfire. os Luck was one of the themes of the communique released by the Admiralty later that day. At nine p.m. on the 24th the country at large was made aware of the disaster in a BBC radio broadcast: British naval forces intercepted early this morning, off the coast of Greenland, German naval forces, including the battleship Bismarck. The enemy were attacked, and during the ensuing action H.M.S. Hood (Captain R. Kerr, C.B.E., R. .), wearing the flag of Vice-Admiral L.E. Holland, C.B., received an unlucky hit in a magazine and blew up. The
The End oj Glory
Bismarck has received damage, and the pursuit of the enemy continues. It is feared there will be few survivors from H.M . . Hood. The news was received with utter disbelief. 00 James Edwards ( 1933-4): I was in a pub and had just ordered a pint of beer when the news came over the radio and the pub went totally quiet. I looked at my pint and could no longer face it, so I walked out, leaving it untouched on the bar. I had lost friends and companions but above all I had lost the beautiful ship which gave me my first real sea-going experience and I felt shattered."
00 Howard Spence, part of the last draft to leave the ship before she sailed against the Bismarck, got home just as the news was breaking: I arrived home at Portsmouth by 24th May 1941 and heard a radio announcement that HMS somethingorother had been sunk-we could not catch a name, but I had a presentiment that it was the Hood, and this was confirmed the next day. A telegram arrived for my parents and I took it from the telegraph boy: 'Regret your son missing, presumed killed.' A further telegram arrived dated 29th May 1941: 'Your son not on board, regret anxiety caused.''' But most relatives had no such reprieve and for them life would never be the same again. Some, indeed, suffered a double tragedy. At least four pairs of brothers were 10 t in the Hood, including George and Arthur Brewer of Newfoundland. For Portsmouth, heavily blitzed since 1940, the loss of its greatest ship together with virtually her entire crew was almost beyond endurance. Sheila Harris, just five at the time, recalls the atmosphere: H.M.S. Hood and its loss became the topic of conversation that permeated everything. I can only describe the atmosphere now when I look back as that of a pall of shock and misery descending on the city and its environs. Every conversation wherever people gathered was constantly punctuated by the word' Hood'."
or was Portsmouth the only city to grieve. In their undemonstrative way the people of Glasgow also mourned the loss of 'oor ship'. On 30 May, Sir Stephen Pigott, Managing Director of John Brown & Co., submitted the following in his report to the Board of Directors: The loss of this great Clydebank-built ship has caused genuine depression and regrets with all at Clydebank, and through the medium of the shop stewards we are endeavouring to exhort the workers to give expression to their feeling by increased effort on the work in progress... A letter expressing sympathy and regret at the loss of HMS Hood has been sent to the Controller of the avy." Before the 24th was over one of the ladies entrusted with the task of maintaining the Admiralty's warship index made a final entry on the Hood's card: 'At 06.35 today blew up and
227
sank in action in the Denmark Strait."oo That evening Churchill descended to the parlour at 10 Downing Street in a sombre mood. The Hood had been destroyed and the Bismarck was at large in the Atlantic: [Vic Oliver, his son-in-law] wrote of an evening in 1941 when Churchill came down from his study 'looking inexpressibly grim'. Scenting there had been a disaster but knowing he would not reveal it, Mrs Churchill quietly poured him a glass of port. Oliver went to the piano and, on reflection, began Beethoven's Appassiollata sonata. Churchill rose to his feet and thundered: 'Stop! Don't play that!' 'What's the mat1er?' asked Oliver. 'Don't you like it?' , obody plays the Dead Marcil [sic] in my house,' said Churchill. Knowing that Churchill was notoriously unmusical, the company laughed. Oliver turned back to the piano. 'But surely, sir, you can tell the difference between this '-and he struck a few chords of Appassiollata'and ' Before he could finish hurchill thundered again: 'Stop it! Stop it! I want no dead march, I tell you."·'
Ted Briggs as a Yeoman of Signals in the headquarters ship
Hilary. c. , 944. He is the last surviving member of Hood's final company. Ted Briggs
The outlook, indeed, could hardly have been grimmer. As Churchill recalled, The House of Commons... might be in no good temper when we met on Tuesday. [... 1 How would they like to be told ... that the Hood was unavenged, that several of our convoys had been cut up or even massacred, and that the Bismarck had got home to Germany or to a Frenchoccupied port, that Crete was lost, and evacuation without heavy casualties doubtful?'·2 On the morning of the 27th Churchill was able to announce the sinking of the Bismarck to Parliament but nothing could efface the destruction of the Hood on, of all days, Empire Day-24 May. From a material standpoint Germany's loss had been much the greater. Her only commissioned battleship had been sunk with huge loss of life including that of the Kriegsmarine's most distinguished seagoing commander. But the Hood had a symbolic power out of all proportion to her value as a fighting unit and her annihilation had an effect on morale exceeded only by the fall of Singapore in February 1942. Both events raised in the minds of ordinary Britons the spectre of total defeat. And both in their different ways had farreaching consequences for the prestige of the British Empire. But that lay in the future. For now the gleaming sword of the avy had been unmade, never to be reforged. So to the aftermath. In Yorkshire Applegarth School transferred its affiliation to Killg George V, the battleship that had led the final at1ack on the Bismarck. From Bubulu, Uganda, a young Jeremy Woods sent Churchill his accumulated savings of two shillings towards the construction of a replacement. LtCdr Wellings had a letter to his friend Warrand returned to the U.S. embassy in London as hundreds must have found their way back to families and friend truggling to cope with their loss. In March of 1942 Canon Thomas Browne of ewmarket received from the avy the sum of £ 18 7s. 2d., the balance of his son Robert's pay. The final reckoning came to 1,415 men including four Polish midshipmen and four Free French ratings; representing the Empire were men from the Australian
t6
Cited in Ta,"erner. Hood's L~gacy. p. \\9.
HMS Hood Association archi\·~ . .. Letter to the author. 2 December W
2003.
.. Cited in Johnston, Ships for a Natiotl, p. 224. 100 The actual time was of course 06.00.
W.F. Deedes in nll'Daily Telegraph, January 2001. 101 Churchill, Tile Second World War, 101
III, p. 312.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
228
WAR ORGANISATION OF THE BRITISH RED CROSS SociETY AND
ORDER OF ST. JOHN OF JERUSALEM
Wounded. Missing and Relatives Department 7, Belgrave Square, London S.W.1 181h July, 1941
(four), Canadian (three), Indian and New Zealand navies (one each), and several ratings from Newfoundland. The loss of the Hood was very much present as the conAict drew to a close. There are many descriptions of Sunset, the ceremony which closed the naval day, but none more moving than Louis Le Bailly's memory of evening on 2 September 1945, the day the Second World War ended. The ship was Duke of York and the place Tokyo Bay: When Admiral Fraser arrived the Quartermaster reported 'Sunset, sir'. The 'Still' sounded. The Royal Marine Guard presented arms and the band played The day ThOll gavest Lord is ended, interspersed with the Sunset call as only Royal Marine buglers know how. For the first time in six bitter years the White Ensign came down. Many, perhaps most, had never before savoured the magic of this moment when the busy life of a warship is hushed and the evening comes. Others of us, standing at the salute, were in tears as we remembered those who would never again see 'Colours' in the morning or hear the bugles sound 'Sunset' at dusk. I thought of all those friends in Hood who had come to see me off and the many many others ... As the White Ensign came into the hands of our Chief Yeoman and the 'Carry on' sounded, we realised that on board all the great US ships around us every activity had stopped, their sailors facing towards the British Aagship and saluting US. 103
Dear Mrs. Foster. We have received yOUf letter asking (or news of your husband:· Algernon Thomas Foster, A.B., PIJX. I 72627. H.M.S. Hood. J am sorry that we have no news that we can send you of your husband, and in view of the sad fact thai he has been officially posted as 'missing. presumed killed', I am afraid we must not encourage you 10 hope too much that we shall be successful in obtaining any further information about him. We would like to assure you, however, that should any news of him be received at any lime. you will be informed immediaTely. May we send you the deep sympathy of this department in your sorrow.
Yours sincerely, Margaret Ampthill (Chairman) [RNM. 1999119. unnumbered.)
WAR ORGANISATION OF THE BRITISH RED CROSS SociETY AND ORDER OF ST. JOt-IN OF JERUSAL£l,'!
\A.'ounded. Missing and Relatives Department 7, Belgrave Square. London 17th December.
In the years that followed Band Corporal Wally Rees R.M., he of the effervescent trumpet, could never speak of his companions in the Transmitting Station without tears welling in his eyes. In the United Slates Rear-Admiral Ernest M. Eller would remember how 'Her loss hurt me deeply'W4 For his compatriot Rear-Admiral Joseph H. Wellings, who learnt the news in the Rodney, shock and sadness were accompanied by a sense that things had changed for ever:
S.W.1
I was shocked because the Hood had been the symbol of British naval supremacy for over 20 years, and saddened because of the loss of so many friends. lOS
1941
Dear Mrs. Foster, We have received your letter of December 15th with reference to your husband: Algernon Thomas Gloster Foster, P/IX.I72627. H.M.S. Hood.
And so the Hood passed into history. Her epitaph? Leonard Williams: It was a very long time before I got over the shock of Hood's loss. As a ship's company we had been together a very long time. We had shared the joys and excitement of peace. In war we had welded ourselves into true comradeship that had weathered the Arctic gales and outshone the Mediterranean sun. As long as sea history is written, Hood and her gallant band of men will be remembered, and theirs will be a golden page in the book of time. I"
We deeply regret that we have no further news to send you of him and in view of the fact that only three survivors, whose names haw: been published in the press. have been heard of, we dare not encourage you to hope that we shall ever succeed in obtaining further news of him. Had your husband been picked up by a German U-boat, he would be a prisoner of war and his name would have been sent to us long before this by the International Red Cross Committee at Geneva whose delegates visit all prison camps and who send us the name of every prisoner as soon as he has been given his registered number and the address of his prison camp is known. We are so sorry to write )'ou such a discouraging letter and would like to tell you how much we feel for you in your great sorrow at the loss of your husband who gave his life gallantly for his country. Yours sincerely, Margaret Ampthill (Chairman) [RNM, 1999/19, unnumbered.)
10)
Le Bailly, The MatI Aroulld the Engine, pp. 125-6.
Eller, Reminiscences, II, p. 429. NWC, \·Vellings. Remi/lisce1lces. p. 167. lOt> Williams, Gone A LOllg jounle)', p. 154. IQ.4
10)
229
Conclusion HERE IS A SPECIAL QUALITY about the battlecruiser Hood which resists any single definition. It has to do with her beauty and her destructive power, with her gilded years of peace and then her annihilation in war, of sinuous strength and desperate fragility. Most of aLi, perhaps, it has to do with the association between these elements and what she represented. The Hood came to symbolise two things above all: the perpetuation of the British Empire and all that the Royal avy wished for itself. Once she had gone nothing could or would ever be quite the same again and the passage of time has only sharpened that impression. In the fifteen months that separate the destruction of the Hood in May 1941 and Operation 'Pedestal' in August 1942 the Royal Navy lost many of her most famous ships: the Barham off North Africa and Ark Royal off Gibraltar; Repulse and Pri/lce ofWales off Malaya; Hermes in the Indian Ocean and Eagle in the western Mediterranean; and of course Hood herself at the beginning of this period together with dozens of cruisers, destroyers, submarines and escorts. Though these disasters did not alter the outcome of the war they encapsulate a loss of power and prestige from which there would be no recovery. And of these blows none fell heavier than that of Hood, lost with virtually her entire company in a tragedy which has come to stand for the calvary of the Royal Navy as a whole during the Second World War. Nor is this all. For many the passing of the Hood represents not only the closing phase in the Royal Navy's age of greatness but also a vanished era in British industrial power. One needs to look back to the age of the great cathedrals and monasteries to find a parallel for the enormous technical and financial endeavour represented by the 'Great Naval Race' of the early twentieth century. As in the High Middle Ages, the construction of the Hood united the zeal, skills and energy of entire communities, and as then the scale of the enterprise reflects the confidence and vaulting ambition of her creators, to build bigger and better to an end and for a purpose greater than themselves. Despite her flaws, this circumstance makes the Hood as much a triumph of the shipbuilder's art and organisation as she was of naval power and administration and it must be a source of profound sadness that not one of the great British warships of the first half of the twentieth century has survived to mark this achievement for posterity. There is another tragedy, too, and this is that Hood went illprepared to her moment of reckoning in the Denmark Strait. This circumstance had not only to do with unsatisfactory protection, a motley assemblage of secondary armament and the inscrutable turns of Fortuna's wheel. It was also the product of economic decline and financial parsimony, diplomatic incompetence and political upheaval; of the strategic and military failure that placed her under Bismarck's guns when she might otherwise have been quietly scrapped or in the throes of reconstruction. Then there is the Battle of the Denmark Strait
T
The bridge seen at nightfall on
20 May 1937. HMS Hood AnociationlHigg;nSOll Collection
I
Williams,
p.141.
Gone A Long IOllmey,
itself, a particularly stark example of the dichotomy between strength and power in capital-ship design. Here, after a brief engagement between two ships of comparable armament, the Hood blew up with virtually her entire crew and before she could land a single hit on the enemy. Over the next three days the Bismarck was hunted down and finally battered to destruction without inflicting any significant damage on her tormentors. There are lessons to be drawn from the experience of both vessels: that what makes a ship in peace is assuredly not what makes her in war; that the power of a capital ship equates to the strength which permits her to suffer a measure of the punishment she would mete out to others; and that there is a further distinction to be drawn between what keeps a ship fighting and what keeps her from sinking. For Bismarck that distinction was very great; for Hood it was barely perceptible. Two great ships, each vulnerable in her own way. To have witnessed the collapse of the World Trade Center on II September 200 I is to appreciate how a great entity many years in the making can be destroyed in the passage of a few seconds. But the tragedy is not one of structure so much as of humanity. With Hood as with Bismarck, Arizona and Yamalo, it was less a ship than a community that was destroyed, the community evoked here by LS Leonard Williams (1936-41); Here we lived together as a giant family. We knew each other's failings and weaknesses, and liked each other in spite of them. We slept in close proximity, in swaying hammocks. We even bathed together in the communal bathrooms. In fact we lived candidly with one another, accepting the rough with the smooth. This sharing and living together forged a comradeship which one can never find in civilian life. or was the ship herself left out of our lives, for everything we did was for her. On our smartness, the way we dressed, in fact everything we did depended our ship's efficiency rating in the fleet. She was our constant task mistress. While we could, and often did, call her all the rough names under the sun when things went wrong, heaven help those, not of our company, who tried to do the same. This is the team spirit we miss when we leave the service, for it is something very fine. Something which, through countless ages, has scaled the highest mountains, fought and won hopeless battles... ' It was her men who breathed life into her, made her rich in history, character and memory from the splendours of Rio to the stygian waters of the North Atlantic. In Hood the notion of the warship as a tool of peaceful diplomacy reached its zenith, not only in her graceful form, speed and armament but also in the qualities of her people. The Hood was undeniably an engine of war, but as with the greatest weapons her career was as much about preserving life as about taking it. Of her many legacies this shall perhaps prove the most enduring.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
230
Appendix I Admirals, Captains, Commanders and Chaplains by Commission Commission
Flag Officer, BCS
Commanding Officer
Commander
Chaplain
I. 29 March 1920
Rear-Admiral Sir Roger B. Keyes 18 May 1920
Capl. Wilfred Tomkinson I january 1920
Cdr Lachlan 0.1. MacKinnon May 1919
Rev. William R.F. Ryan March 1920
Rear-Admiral Sir Walter H. Cowan 31 March 1921
Capt. Geoffrey Mackworth 31 March 1921
Cdr Richard H.O. Lane-Poole 31 March 1921
Rev. Arthur D. Gilbertson 19 April 1922
Rear-Admiral ir Frederick L Field 15 May 1923
Capt. john K. 1m Thurn 15 May 1923
Cdr Francis H.W. Goolden 15 May 1923
Rev. Harold Q. Uoyd 6 June 1923
Rear-Admiral Cyril T.M. Fuller 30 April 1925
Capt. Harold O. Reinold 30 April 1925
Cdr Arthur
3. 7 January 1926
27 July 1925
Rev.G. , L Hyde Gosselin 20 july 1925
4. 28 August 1928
Rear-Admiral Frederic e. Dreyer 21 May 1927
Capt. Wilfred F. French 21 May 1927
Cdr Douglas A. Budgen 15 July 1927
Rev. Gerald P.O. Hill I September 1926
2.15 May 1923
Under dockyard co""ol at Portsmouth 17 May 1929-10 March 1931 5.12 May 1931
6. 30 August 1933
7.8 September 1936
J. Power
Lt-Cdr (T) W.M. Phipps-Hornby 29 April 1929 Lt-Cdr (T) j.F.w. Mudford 8 December 1930
Rear-Admiral Wilfred Tomkinson 12 July 1931
Capt. Julian F.e. Pallerson 27 April 1931
Rear-Admiral William M. James 15 August 1932
Capt. Thomas H. Binney 15 August 1932
_ _--,_--,_--,_ _--, Rear-Admiral Sidney R. Bailey 14 August 1934
Capt. F. Thomas B. Tower 30 August 1933
Cdr Rory e. O'Conor 30 August 1933
Vice-Admiral Geoffrey Blake 22 July 1936
Capt. A. Francis Pridham I February 1936
Cdr David Orr-Ewing 15 July 1936
Cdr e.R. McCrum 9 March 1931
Rev. James c. Waters 5 January 1932
Vice-Admiral Andrew B. Cunningham.,,-_--,_--,::-::-,---, 15 July 1937 Capt. Harold T.e. Walker _ _-,-_.,...-_::~20 May 1938 Vice-Admiral Geoffrey Layton 22 August 1938 [Cdr William W. Davis] 30 January 1939 (acting)
23 January-12 Augus, 1939 8. 2 June 1939
Rear-Admiral William J. Whitworth I June 1939
Rev. David V. Edwards 11 August 1934
Rev. W. Edgar Rea Sep'ember 1936
[Capt. A. Francis Pridham] 25 June 1937 (acting)
Refitti"g at Portsmouth
Rev. Archer Turner
25 April 1931
_ Rev. Thomas H. HO.rsfield 9 ovember 1938
Cdr William W. Davis 30 January 1939
Capl. Irvine G. Glennie 3 May 1939
Rev. Harold Beardmore
16 June 1939
Vice-Admiral Sir James Somerville 30 June 1940 Vice-Admiral William J. Whitworth 10 August 1940 _ _-,-_...,..Vice-Admiral Lancelot E. Holland 12-24 May 1941
.,,-_--,-,-,Capl. Ralph Kerr 15 February-24 May 1941
Cdr William K.R. Cross 8 September 1940-24 May 1941 Rev. R.J. Patrick Stewart 27 February-24 May 194 I
ote: Dates given are mainly those of arrival in the ship as against date of appointment. Dates of departure are often earlier than those of a successor's arrival.
Hood anchored in Cawsand Bay, c.1922. Author's CoI/«von
Appendices
231
Appendix II Scheme of Complement of HMS Hood, 12 December 1919 Tire Flag Officer alld I,is Staff I Rear-Admiral. Battle Cruiser Squadron
I Flag Lieutenant I Secretary I Chief S,aff Officer (may be Flag Captain in peace)
I War S'aff Officer (additional W.S.o. be appointed during
'0
manoeuvres)
I Squadron Gunnery Officer I Squadron Torpedo Officer I Squadron Signal Officer Officer I Squadron
wrr
Executi,'e Departme"t I Captain
I Commander 10 Lieutenants I Lieutenant for (G) duties I Lieutenant for (T) du,ies I Lieutenant for ( ) duties I Sub-Lieutenant or Mate 1 (nstrudor Commander, Lieutenant-Commander or Lieutenant 3 \\'arrant Officers for Quarterdeck duties (2 may be Chief Pelly Officers) 12 Midshipmen
1 Engine Room Artificer for duty
with Squadron Engineer Officer 1Second ''''riter for duty with Squadron Engineer Officer I Secretary to Chief Staff Officer I Coxswain (Chief Petty Officer) 2 Secretary's Clerks 2 Chief or First \Vriters
1 Second '\Triter Staff Retiuue for Rear-Admiral 2 Chief Officers' Stewards or Cooks 1Officers' Steward or Cook 1st Class 2 Officers' S'ewards or Cooks 2nd Class I Officers' Steward 2nd Class for Squadron Engineer Officer I Officers' Steward 2nd Class for Flag Lieutenant
I Officers' Steward 2nd Class for Secretary I Ro}'al Marine Officer (Officer of Flagship) I Private R.M.L.I. 2 Royal Marines as Printers
Art'isam a1ld Artificers
1Commissioned or \\'arrant Shipwright I Chief hipwrigh, 12 hipwrights 3 Joiners 3 Blacksmiths 3 Plumbers 3 Painters I Cooper ) ail maker I Chief Armourer [Chief Ordnance Artificer! 2 Armourers [Ordnance Artificersl 2 Armourer's Mates IOrdnance Artificers) 7 Armourer's Crew [Ordnance Artificers) 1 Warrant Electrician 1Chief Electrical Artificer 13 Electrica] Artificers
For \\'arra"t Officers I Officers' Steward 2nd Class I Officers' Cook 2nd Class 3 Officers' Stewards 3rd Class
For Gu"room I Officers' Steward Ist Class I Officers' Cook Ist Class 3 Officers' Stewards 3rd Class I Officers' Cook 2nd Class may be borne in lieu of 1 Officers' Cook 3rd Class, in which case I Officers' Steward 3rd Class is to be borne in lieu of 1 Officers' Steward 2nd Class Medical Departme"t
I"eluded i" tile above: I Yeoman of Stores I Engineer's Writer
I"eluded in tile above: 2 Gunner's Mates, Gun La}'ers 1st lass 2 Gunner's Mates, Other 4 Gun La}'ers 1st Class; see also under Ro}'al Marines 4 Gun La}'ers 2nd Class; see also under Royal Marines 14 Rangetakers 3 Turret Director Layers 2 Secondary Director La}'ers 176 Seaman Gunners 4 Torpedo Gunner's Mates 23 Leading Torpedomen 56 Seamen Torpedomen 3 Buglers 8 Searchlight Opera'ors 24 Searchligh, Manipulators 1 Lieutenant (G)'s '''riter
Bos'n I Chief Yeoman of Signals 3 Yeomen of Signals 6 Leading Signalmen 10 ignalmen 10 Ordinary Signalmen or Boy Signalmen I \Varrant Telegraphist 1 Chief Pelly Officer Telegraphist
I Officers' Cook Ist Class 2 Officers' tewards 2nd Class 3 Officers' Stewards 3rd Class I Officers' Cook 3rd Class
1 Engineer Commander or Commander (E) 1 Engineer LieutenantCommander or LieutenantCommander (E) 8 Engineer Lieutenants or Lieutenants (E); Engineer SubLieutenant or Mate (E); Commissioned Engineer or '",'arrant Engineer 6 Chief Engine Room Artificers 27 Engine Room Artificers 6 Mechanicians II Chief Stokers 34 Stoker Petty Officers 39 Leading Stokers 170 S,okers
6 Chief Gunners or Gunners 2 Chief Gunners or Gunners for (T) duties 1Chief Boatswain or Bos'n 4 Chief Pelly Officers 66 Petty Officers 70 Leading Seamen 474 Able or Ordinar}' Seamen 88 Bol" 1st Class
Commll1licatiolrs Departme1lt I Chief Signal Bos'n or ignal
4 Gun Larers 2nd Class 48 unners R.~t.A. 1st Class, or Q.~t. R.M.L.t.
£1Igi"eering Department
1 Squadron Engineer Officer
I Squadron Navigation Officer (Officer of Flagship) I Squadron Medical Officer (Officer of Flagship) J Squadron Accountant Officer (Officer of Flagship) 1 Squadron Physical and Recreational Training Officer (Officer of Flagship) 1Senior Master (Officer of Flagship)
For \Vardroom 1 Officers' Steward 1st Class
2 Petty Officer Telegraphists 3 Leading Telegraphists 14 Telegraphis,s, Ordinary Telegraphists or Boy Telegraphists
1 Surgeon Commander or
4 Ading Leading Stokers 5 Engine Room Artificers trained in hydraulics 2 Stoker Petry Officers for Hydraulics party 3 Stokers for H}'draulics party
Lieutenant-Commander 2 Surgeon Lieutenants I Chief Sick Berth Steward 1 Sick Berth Steward I Second Sick Berth Steward I Sick Berth Attendan' (plus 2 Sick Berth ratings in war) Royal Marines I Major
Supply Departme"t
1 Paymaster Commander or Lieutenant-Commander 3 Paymaster Lieutenant, SubLieutenant or Commissioned or '''arrant '''riter 4 Third \Vriters 1'\'arrant Victualling Officer I Victua.lling Chief Petty Officer J Victualling Petty Officer 1 Leading Vidualling Assistant or Victualling Assistant 2 Victualling Assistants or Boys 2 Chief Petry Officer Cooks (I may be Pett), Officer Cook) I Petry Officer Cook
ForCaptai" 1 Officers'Steward 1st Class I Officers' Cook Ist Class I Officers' teward 2nd Class 1 Officers' Cook 3rd Class
2 Lieutenants I Chief R.M. Gunner or R.M. Gunner 8 Colour Sergeants and Sergeants (4 R.M.L.t.,4 R.M.A.) 6 Corporals (3 R.M.L.t., 3 R.M.A.) 2 Buglers (I R.M.L.t., I R.M.A.) 79 Priva,es (R.M.L.I.) 80 Gunners (R.M.A.) ) Bandmaster 1st Class I Band Corporal 15 Musicians 2 Privates as Butchers 2 Privates as Lamptrimmers 1 Private as Servant to Commander; one in addilion if Commander ( ) is borne
Miscella"eous 1Chaplain I Master-at-Arms 5 Regula'ing Petry Officers
I Physical and Recreational Training Instrudor 1st Class 6 Divers (to include Artificer Diver) 2 Schoolmasters 2 Acting Schoolmasters
3 Seamen or Stokers as \"arrant Officers' Sen'lUlts Total Complement: 1,433
Tote: Ordinary peacetime complement fluctuated between c.I,ISOand 1,3SOmen.War complement exceeded 1,400. [Derived from PRO,ADM 136/131
Included in the abolle: 1Gunnery Instructor 2 Gun Layers Ist Class
Appendix III Composition and Family Attachments of HMS Hood, c.1934 Branch/Department
Total no. ofmco
Men under 20 16 (19.8%)
Men in second eriod of service
Men taking ro
Tolal married 41 (50.6%)
Married under 25 0
o.of fathers 34 (42%)
0 ccrs 81 I"clfldes Commissioned ami \"'"rraut (6.1%) Officers alld Midshipme'l Executive Branches 791 330 205 117 261 204 8 (59.7%) (41.7%) (25.9%) (14.8%) (33%) (1%) (25.8%) I"el"des Marilles, CO""lJImications a"d Suppl)! rarings aud Boys Miscellaneous 146 I 68 43 92 2 78 (11%) I"eludes OAs, EAs, Artisans, Cooks. (0.7%) (46.6%) (29.5%) (63%) (1.4%) (53.4%) SBAs etc. 307 En~ineering Branch 68 124 124 5 91 37 (22.1%) (23.2%) (40.4%) (40.4%) ( 1.6%) Inc "des ERAs 02.1%) (29.6%) 1,325 341 284 15 Total 384 407 518 (29%) (100%) (25.7%) (21.4%) (39.1%) (1.1%) (30.7%) Source: RNM, 1993/54. Note: Percentages in bold type express proportions of the total number of men in the ship (1,325); those in light face express proportions of the tOla] number of men Department listed in the left-hand column.
No. of sons 26
No. of dau hters 23
178
190
7S
72
80
75
359
360
in each Branch or
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
232
Appendix IV Daily Routines in Peace and War Note: Peacetime routines based on RBS, pp. 229-34; war routines on Beardmore, The \Vaters of Uncertainty. pp. 46-51.
IIARBOCR ROUTINE DAILY-PEACETIME 05.05 05.15 05.25 05.30 05.35 05.45 05.50 05.55 06.00
06.15 06.25 06.30 06.45 06.50
Call Ratings under Punishment and Boy Cooks. Call the Boys, Duty Divi iona! POs, Bugler and Emergency Party. Boys fall in with hammocks on Messdeck. CaU the hands. Lash up and stow. Emergency Party fall in. Cooks to the GaUey for cocoa. Hands to cocoa and wash. Duty Boys of the Morning Watch fall in. Boys fall in for Physical Training. Out Pipes. Hand fall in. Clean Ship. Lower and dean out Duty Boats. Power Boals to oil and water. Up Guard and Steerage hammocks. Steerage Hammock Boys fall in. Dry down the Upper Deck. Off Boat-ropes and Stern fasts. Open 'B' doors.
Guard and band call. (08.45 in winter.) Out Pipes. Duty Boys of the Forenoon Watch fall in for inspection. Quarters Clean Guns. Special parties excused Clean Guns fall in. FORENOON WATCH. Colours. (09.00 in winter.)
08.20 Commander's Requestmen and Defaulters. 08.25 Return rags. 08.30 Both Watches fall in. Clean Messdecks and Flats. Finish off the Upper Deck and clean
brightwork. 08.45 Boat for Commander. 08.50 Watch-keepers OUI Pipes. 09.00 Buglers' call. Cooks fall in when there are no Divisions.
09.05 10.30 10.40 11.15 11.30 11.40
Divisions. Prayers. Physical Drill, etc. Then: Both Watches. Stand Easy. Out Pipes. Hands carry on with work. Up Spirits. Afternoon Watchmen and relief boats' crews to dinner. Clear up decks.
11.50 Secure. Cooks. Grog. 12.00 At,'ER 00 WATCH. Dinner. Pipe leave. 12.20 Duty Boys of Afternoon '''atch fall in for inspection. 13.10 13.15 14.20 14.30 15.30 15.45 15.50 15.55 16.00 16.45 17.00 17.50 18.00
OS.IS Call Ratings under Punishment.
05.30 Call Duty Divisional POs. Ratings under Puni hment fall in with hammocks. 05.45 Call the hands.
06.10 Clear off Messdecks. Emergency Party fall in. 06.15 Hands fall in. Wash down Upper Deck. 06.30 Up Guard and Steerage hammocks.
ooks. Uncover Guns. Respread awnings.
07.00 Hands to breakfast and clean. Pipe rig of the day. 07.45 07.50 07.55 08.00
DAILY-WAR
Out Pipes. Both Watches faU in. Stand easy. Hands carryon with work. First Dog "Vatchmen to tea. Secure. Take off overaUs. Both Watches fall in. Clear up decks. Duty Boys of the First Dog Watch faU in for inspection. Buglers' caU. FIRST DOG WATCH. Evening Quarters. Then: Cooks. Tea. Hands shift into night clothing. Libcrtymen to clean. Libertymen fall in. Engineering Department to Evening Quarters. Duty hands fall in. Up fresh provisions. Duty Boys of the Last Dog Watch fall in for inspection. LAST DOG WATCH. Libertymen fall in.
19.00 Supper. DUly Boats' crews shift into night clothing. 19.45 Officers' Dress Call. Boys stand by hammocks. 20.00 FIRST WATCH. Officers' Dinner Call. Stand by hammocks. 20.30 Cooks and Sweepers clear up Messdecks and Flats. Remainder of the Duty Part of Watch of Hands raU in. Stand fast Torpedo Party. Sweep down Upper Deck. Place Scrub Deck Gear. Close 'B and 'C' doors. Slope awnings. 20.45 First Post. Boys turn in. 20.50 Emergency Party fall in with oilskins. 21.00 Rounds. Last Post.
07.00 Cooks. Uncover Guns. 07.10 Hands to breakfast and clean. Pipe rig of the day.
08.00 FORENOO WATCH. Clear off Messdecks. 08.05 BOlh Watches for Exercise. Clean Messdecks.
08.40 Mess cleaners and sweepers fall in. 09.00 09.05 10.30 10.40 11.00 11.30 11.40 11.45 11.50 12.00 12.25 12.30 13.10 13.15 14.25 14.40 15.30 15.40
Clear off Messdecks. Both ""atches for Exercise. Prayers. Stand Easy. Out Pipes. Hands carryon with work. Up Spirits. Afternoon ""atchmen to dinner. Classes under instruction fall in. Clear up decks. Secure. Cooks. Grog. AFTERNOO WATCH. Dinner. Duty Boy of the Afternoon Watch fall in for inspection. Ratings under Punishment faU in. Clear off Messdecks. Both 'Vatches for Exercise. Stand Easy. Out Pipes. Hands carryon with work. Classes under instruction fall in. First Dog 'Vatchmen to tea. Cover guns. Both Watches for Exercise. Clear the decks.
15.55 Clear off Messdecks. Duty Boys of the First Dog Watch fall in for inspection. 16.00 FIRST DOG WATCH. Evening Quarters. Then: Cooks. Tea. Hands shift into night clothing.
17.00 Engineering Department to Evening Quarters. Ratings under Punishment fall in. 17.55 Duty Boys of the Last Dog Watch fall in for inspection. 18.00 LAST DOG WATCH. 18.50 Cooks. 19.00 upper. 20.00 FIRST WATCH. Ratings under Punishment fall in. Duty Men and Duty BoalS' crews shift into night clothing. 20.15 Duty Part of the Watch of Hands fall in. Clear up Messdecks and Flats. 20.40 Ratings under Punishment fall in. 20.45 Rounds. 21.30 Boysturn in.
22.00 Pipe Down. 22.30 Chief and Petty Officers Pipe Down.
22.20 Spitkid Party muster in the Sick Bay flat-Sweep oul Smoking Room and Recreation pace. 22.30 Pipe Down. 22.50 Spitkid Party sweep out POs' Smoking Room. 23.00 Chief and Petty Officers Pipe Down.
Appendices
233
00.00 MIDDLE WATCH. 04.00 MORNI G WATCH.
00.00 MIDDLE WATCH. 04.00 MORNI G WATCH.
SATURDAY-PEACETIME
SATURDAY-WAR
As for daily harbour rouri"e except: Upper Deck not 10 be dried down before breakfast. No Guard and Band. 07.55 Both Watches of Hands fall in. Clean Messdecks and Flats. Finish off Upper Deck. Uncover Guns after the Hands have been detailed. 08.00 FORENOON WATCH.
As for daily l",rboLlr rOll tine then: 07.10 Hands 10 breakfasl and clean. Scrub dilly boxes.
10.00 10.10 10.15 10.20
08.00 FORENOON WATCH. 08.10 Clear off Messdecks. 08.15 Both \Vatches for Exercise. Clean Messdecks.
Up all deck cloths on Messdecks and Flats. Stand Easy. Band Call. Out Pipes. Quarter Clean Guns. Captain's Rounds of Messdecks and Flats. 10.30 Stand Eas)'. 10.40 OUI Pipes. Quarters Clean Guns.
10.45 10.50 11.00 11.1 0 11.20 11.25
Return rags. Up Spirits. Both Walches fall in. Clear up decks for Divisions. p all Upper Deck deck cloths. Hands to clean into No.I's. Band Call and buglers. Officers' Call. Divisions. Fall in as for Sunday Divisions. Captain's Inspedion of Di\'isions, Upper Deck, Boat Deck and Bridges.
11.30 Afternoon 'Watchmen to Dinner.
11.55 Disperse. Cooks. Grog. 12.00 AFTERNOON WATCH.
Dinner. Pipe leave. Hands to Make-and-Mend clothes. Then as for daily harbour routine.
11.00 Up Spirits.
11.25 Disperse. Both \\'atches for Exercise. Clear up decks. 11.30 Afternoon 'Vatchmen to Dinner. 11.50 Cooks. Grog. 12.00 AFTERNOON WATCH. Dinner. Off ovemUs. Hands to Make-and-Mend clothes. 12.25 Duty Boys of the Afternoon Walch fall in for inspection. 13.00 Ratings under Punishment faU in. 15.30 Fir t Dog "Vatchmen to tea. 15.45 Both Walches for Exercise. Clear Ihe decks. 16.00 FIRST DOG WATCH. Evening Quarters. The" as for daily harbour routi"e.
SUNDAY-PEACETIME
SUNDAY-WAR
06.00 06.15 06.50 07.00 07.40 07.45 08.00 08.05 08.10
As for daily lrarbour routi"e the,,:
Reveille. Up Guard and Steerage hammocks. Cooks. Breakfast. OUI Pipes. Quarters Clean Guns. FORENOO WATCH. Relurn rags. BOlh Watches fall in. Clean Messdecks and Flats.
08.00 FORENOON WATCH.
Remainder clear up decks and clean brightwork. 09.10 Hands to clean. 09.30 Clear off Messdecks and Flats. Hands carryon smoking. 09.40 Pipe Down. 09.45 Church. 11.15 P Spirits. 11.30 Afternoon \Vatchmen to dinner. 11.50 Cooks. Grog. 12.00 AFTERNOON WATCH. Dinner. Pipe leave. 15.35 Out Pipes. 15.40 Both Watches fall in. Clear up decks. Cooks and Sweepers clear up Messdecks. 15.55 Buglers' call. The" as for dail)' harbour rowine.
08.25 09.05 09.20 09.25
Church Rigging Party fall in. Hands to clean. Officers' Call. Divisions. After Disperse, Stand Easy.
10.15 Church. After Church, Pipe Down. 11.00 Up Spirits.
11.30 Afternoon 'Vatchmen to dinner. The" as for Saturday Ilarbour routi"e.
SEA ROUTINE DAILY-PEACETIME
DAILY/SATURDAY/SUNDAY-WAR
As for dail)'IJarbollr routi"e except: 03.45 Call the Morning Watch. 03.55 Morning ""atch to muster.
'Vartime conditions prevented any fixed routine being adhered 10 at sea and certainly none appears to have survi\'ed for posterity. The walch system was preserved but the life of the ship was entirely subverted to the need to defend her against anack and search out the enemy, a remit which kept many at their posts for upwards of sixteen hours a day. The whole ship went to action stations for an hour at dawn and dusk each day.
04.00 MORNI.NG WATCH. 05.15 Morning Watch 10 muster. (Place Wash Deck Gear and sweep down the Upper Deck.) Call RPO and Bugler. 05.40 Morning \"atch men fall out. Hands to cocoa and wash. 07.00 Seaboat's Crew of Morning \"atch to muster. 07.55 Seaboat's Crews of Morning and Forenoon \"'atches to muster and relieve. Morning \"'atch Crew to breakfast. 08.00 FORENOO WATCH. 09.00 Morning Watch Seaboat's Crew fall in. 11.30 Seaboat's rew and First Trick of Afternoon 'Natchmen to dinner.
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
234
DAILY-PEACETIME (continued)
Chronology, 1915-1941
12.00 AFTERNOO WATCH. 12.25 Seaboat's Crew of Afternoon \Valch to muster. 13.15 Middle \>Vatchmen, Seaboat's Crew of Forenoon '''alch and Last Tricks of Forenoon
Watch stand fast from Both Walches of Hands fall in. BOlh Watches of Hands fall in. 13.45 Seaboat's Crew and Last Trick of Forenoon \Valch fall in. 15.30 Seaboat's Crew and First Trick of Dog \Vatchmen to tea. At Evening Quarters: First Dog Watchmen and Seaboat's Crews of Afternoon and First Dog '''3Ich to fall in and relieve after disperse. 16.00 FIRST DOG WATCH. 17.00 Duty hands fall in. 17.55 Last Dog ""atchmen and Seaboat's Crew to muster. 18.00 LAST DOG WATCH. 19.45 tand by hammocks. 19.55 First Watchmen and Seaboat's Crew to muster. Clear up Messdecks and Flats for Rounds. 20.00 FIRST WATCH. 20.30 ight Rounds. 21.25 Out Pipes. 21.30 Pipe Down. First "'"atch to muster. 23.45 Call Ihe Middle Watch. 23.55 Middle ''''atch to muster. 00.00 MIDDLE WATCH. 04.00 MORN I G WATCH. SUNDAY-PEACETIME Call Ihe Morning Watch. Morning Watch to muster. MORNING WATCH. ReveilJe. Up Guard and Steerage hammocks. ooks. Breakfast. Seaboat's Crew of Forenoon Watch to dean into rig of the day. OUI Pipes. Quarters Clean Guns. Seaboat's Crews of Morning and Forenoon \"'atches to muster and relieve. FORENOO WATCH. Return rags. Bolh Watches fall in. Clean Messdecks and Flats. Remainder clear up decks and clean brightwork. 09.10 HandSlo clean. 09.30 Clear off Messdecks and Flats. Hands carryon smoking. 09.40 Pipe Down. 09.45 Church. 11.15 Up Spirit . 11.30 Afternoon \Vatchmen to dinner. 11.50 Cooks. Grog. 12.00 AFfERNOO WATCH. Dinner. Pipe lea\'e. 15.35 Out Pipes. 15.40 Both Watches fall in. Clear up decks. Cooks and weepers clear up Messdecks. 15.55 Buglers' call. The" as for daily sea routine.
;if (
HMS Hood AnocJ.rJO(l/H'99'nson CoJl«tlon
1915 ?October The Admiralty orders Sir Eustace Tennyson d'Eyncourt, Director of laval Construction, to e\'oh'e battleship designs of reduced draught and using the latest ideas in underwater protection. 29 ovember D'Eyncourl produces the firsl of five designs based on the Queen Elizabeth class.
1916
03.45 03.55 04.00 06.00 06.15 06.50 07.00 07.40 07.45 07.55 08.00 08.05 08.10
Refit, rearmament and repair. The Hood spent a good proportion of her career in dockyard hands. Here the raised Mk III mounting of the starboard aft O.Sin machine gun can be seen in the process of assembly at Malta in the autumn of 1937.
The following chronology is based chiefly on the 'Pink Lists' of ship's mO\'ements in the 'aval Historical Branch supplemented by Ihe card index to the AdmirallY War Diary for 1939-41, and of course the ship s deck logs in the Public Record Office, ex~ant from 29 March 1920 10 30 April 1941 inclusi\'e. Considerations of space ha\'e required the entries to be simplified and generally no mention is made of the lengthy and circuitous exercises which often took place on passage between ports. lor, as a rule. do they record brief sorties during otherwise prolonged stays in harbour. Nonetheless, this chronology represents a significant addition and correction to existing data and is offered with some confidence as to its accurac)'- Details of the work carried out during the Hood's frequent refits can be found in Roberts, The Battlecruiser Hood, pp. 20-1 supplemented b)' Northcott, HMS Hood,passim.
?January D'Eyncourt's five designs submitted to Admiral Sir John Jellicoe, Col11mander-in-ChiefGrand Fleet, who responds with a detailed memorandum setting Ollt requirements for a class of large battlecruisers. ?January In light of Jellicoe's memorandum the Admiralry orders d'Eyncourt to evolve six battJecruiser designs of not less than 30 knots and eight ISin guns. 1-17 February Admiralty presented with six designs produced under the supervision of E.l. Attwood. 27 March Two modified versions of one of Attwood's designs presented to the Admirally Board. 7 April Design 'B' of above approved by Admiralty Board. 19 April Admiralt)' Board places orders for three 'Admiral' class banlecruisers at John Brown, C1ydebank; Cammell laird, Birkenhead; and Fairfield, Govan. 31 May-Ilune Battle of Jutland. 13 June Order placed for fourth 'Admiral' class bardecruiser at Armstrong Whitworth, Newcastle upon Tyne. 51uly Two versions of design 'B' ('N & 'B') presented 10 Admiralty in lighl of Battle of Jutland. 141uly Admiralt)' informs John Brown thaI ship is to be named Hood; others: Howe (Cammelllaird), Rodney (Fairfield) and Amo" (Armstrong \Vhitworth). 20 luly Further three designs ('B' 10 'D') presented to Admiralty based on 'A' of 5 July. 261uly Designs ('A' 10 'D') presenled 10 Controller of the Navy. 4 August Admiralty approves Design 'A' from 5 July. I September Keel of Ship No. 460 laid at John Brown, Clydebank. 13 September Improvements made to deck and turret protection of approved design. 2 October Further improvements made to deck and turret protection. 7 November Recommendations as to deck and magazine proteoion made by Admiral Sir John Jellicoe. ? November AdditionaJ recommendations made by Admiral Sir David Beatt)', Commander-in-Chief Battlecruiser Force, Grand Fleet.
1917 9 March Admiralty suspends construction of Howe, Rodney and Anson, declaring them a secondary priority. ?June Further recommendations as to
protection made by Admiral Sir David Bealty. 30 August Final design approved b)' Admiralty Board.
1918 ?January Test firings against armour reveal vulnerability of design 10 plunging fire from heavy shells. 22 August launched by lady Hood al 13.05. ?August Further increase in protection over magazines authorised by Admiralty. 12 September First barbene armour added. 28 Octobcr First turbines installed.
1919 27 Fcbruary Admiralty cancels rest of 'Admira)' class battlecruisers. ? May Further increase in deck protection in vicinity of magazines authorised by Admiralty. 2 May Mainmast shipped. 19 May Explosion in watertight compartment beneath the Shipwrights' working space forward kiUs two dockyard workers and injures a third. ?July Further modifications as to protection over magazines made (never implemented). 7 August First ISin gun instaUed. 12 September Hauled OUI into the Clyde for shipping barbette plales. 16 September DillO. 9-10 December Basin trials. II? December Visited by H.R.H. Prince Albert (Ialer King George VI). 20 December Steam trials.
1920 I January Caplain Wilfred Tomkinson assumes command. 9 January Departs John Brown under own power for first time; proceeds to Greenock. 9-12 January At Greenock for initial builder's trials off Isle of Arran. 10 January Preliminary trial. I2lanuary Departed Greenock for Ros)'th. 12-13 January Ell route to Rosyth. 13lanuary-5 March AI Ros)'th. 20 January-c.22 February Taken in hand for docking. 21 February Inclined. 23 February-3 March Torpedo trials. 5 March Further increase in deck protection in vicinity of magazines aUlhorised b)' Admiralt)'. 5 March Departed Ros)'th for Greenock. 5-c.6 March En rotlte to Greenock. c.6-23 March At Greenock. 8 March Official trials commence off Isle of Arran. 18 March Full-power trials. 19 March Circle-turning and steering trials. 22-23 March Deep-load trials. 23 March Departed Greenock for Ros)'th. 23-24 1arch En route to Rosyth. 24 March-IS May At ROS)1h. 26-27 March ISin and S.5in gunnery trials.
ell r0l101ogy
29 March Commissions with De\'onport crew from Hr..1S Lion.
15April-15 May Taken in hand for docking. 14 Mar Inspected b)' Royal Navy; ba in trialo main engines. 15 May Accepted from builders and fully commissioned into Royal Nav),. 15 May Departed Rosyth for Cawsand Bay. 1S-17 May En route to Cawsand Ba),. 17-19 May In Cawsand Bay. 18 May Flag of Sir Roger Keyes, RearAdmiral Commanding Battle Cruiser Squadron, hoisted. 19 May ~lO\·ed to Plymouth. 19-25 May Al Plymoulh. 25 May Moved to Cawsand Bay. 25-29 May In Cawsand Bay. 26-27 May Torpedo trials off Pol perro. 29 May Departed Cawsand Bay for Portland. SCANDINAVIAN CRUISE
(Battle Cruiser Squadron) 29 May-3 July 1920 29 May Departed Portland with HMS Tiger, HMS Spellser and eight olher deslroyers (including Vega, Veetis, Westm;llsterand \-vi,lChelsea) for K0ge Bugt. 29 May-I June ell rOil Ie to K0ge BUg!. 1-4 June Anchored in K0ge Bugt. 4 June Departed K0ge BUg! for Kalmar, Sweden. 4-7 June At Kalmar. 7 June Departed Kalmar for N)'nashamn (for Stockholm). 7-13 June At I yniishallln. 10 June Visited by King Gustavus V and Prince Eugen of Sweden. J 3 June Departed ynashamn for exercises and henri, Denmark.
13-15 June ell rollte 10 Abem". 13 June Exercises in the Ballic. 15-I7/une Al benr.l. 17 June Departed Abenr.l for Copenhagen. 17-18 June En roUle to Copenhagen. 18-23 June Al Copenhagen. 19 June Hood visited by King Christian X of Deomark. 20 June Again visited by King Christian, with Queen Alexandrine. 23 June Departed Copenhagen for Christiania (now Oslo). 23-24 June En rollle to Christiania. 24 Jun.,...1 July At Chrisliania. 26 June Visited by King Haakon VII of Nonvay. 27 June Again visiled by King Haakon VII, with Queen ro.'laud and Crown Prince Olaf. 1 July Departed hristiania for Scapa Flow. 1-3 July En route to Scapa Flow. END OF ScANDINAVIAN CRUISE
3-16 July At Scapa Flow. 16 July Departed Scapa Flow for Invergordon. 16 July-3 August Al Invergordon. 3 August Departed Invergordon for Dunbar. 3-4 August Etl route to Dunbar. 4 August Departed Dunbar for Rosyth. 4 August Hood provides search parties and armed guards to board three surrendering German ships: SMS Helgoland, \o\'estphalet' and Riigetl. 4-5 August En route to Rosyth. 5-10 August At Rosyt.h. 9 August ircJe turning trials. 10 August Deparled Rosyt.h for Lamlash, Isle of Arran. 10-11 August Etl route to Lamlash. 11-26 August At Lamlash. ? August Hood wins Battle Cruiser Regatta. 26 August Departed Lamlash for Penzance. 26-28 August En route to Penzanee. 28 August Anchored off Isles of Scilly.
235
28 August-6 September Anchored in t>.lounts Bay off Penzance. 6 September Departed Mounts Bay for De\·onport. 6 September En rollle to De\·onport. 6 September-8 October At De\'onporl. 8 Odober Departed De\"Onport for Portland. 8 October Ell route to Portland. 8 October-3 December Al Portland. II ovember Hood supplies Marines to form guard of honour for interment of the Unknown 'Vanior at 'Vestminster Abbey. 3 December Departed Portland for Devon port. 3-4 December Ell route to Devonport. 4 December-7 January 1921 At Devonport. 6 December-6 January 1921 Taken in hand for refit.
1921 7 January Moved to Cawsand Bay. 7-11 January In Cawsand Bay. II January Deparled Cawsand Bay for POrlland. 11-12 January E" route to Portland. 12-I7)anuary At Portland. 17 January Departed Portland for Arosa Bay, Spain. 17 January Ell route to Arosa Bay. 17-19 January At Falmouth to ride out storm. 19 January Departed Falmouth for Arosa Ba)'. 19-22 January E" route to Arosa Ba)'. 22-26 January At Arosa Bay. 23 January Visited by King Alfonso XIII of Spain. 26 January Departed Arosa Bay for Vigo. 26 January-7 February At Vigo. 7 February Departed Vigo for Gibraltar. 7-9 February E" route to Gibraltar. 9-23 February At Gibraltar. 23 February Departed Gibraltar for Arosa Bay. 23-25 February Ell route to Arosa Bay. 25 February-18 March Al Arosa Bay. 18 March Departed Arosa Bay for Devonport. 18-21 March Etl route to Devonport. 20 March In company with Banle Cruiser Squadron, holds memorial service over position of loss of HMS/m K50n 21 January, 120 miles SW of Isles of SciUy. 21-28 March At Devonport. 28 March Departed Devonport for Rosyth. 28-30 March ell rollle to RoS)'th. 30 March-21 May Al Rosyth. 31 March Flag of Sir Walter Cowan, RearAdmiral Commanding Battle Cruiser Squadron, hoistedi Captain Geoffrey Mackworth assumes command. I April-12 May Taken in hand for docking. 5-21 April Three ballalions deployed to Cowdenbeath and Dunfermline to render assistance during rail, bus and coal strikes. 21 May Departed Rosyth for Portland. 21-23 May E" route to Portland. 23 May-I 0 June At Portland. 10 June Departed Portland for Devonport. 10-12 June Anchored in Cawsand Bay. 12 June Moved to Devonport. 12 Jun.,...13 July Al Devonport. 13 July Departed Devonport for exercises with Atlantic Fleet, thence to 'Weymouth. 13-15 July On exercises. 15-22 July Al Weymoulh. 22 July Moved to Portland. 22-27 July Al Portland. 27 July Departed Portland for De\"Onport. 27-28 July Anchored in Cawsand Bay. 28 July Moved to Devonport. 28 July-2 September At De'·onport.
2 September Departed De\'onport for Invergordon. 24 September Ell route to Invergordon. 4-14 Scplcmber At Im'ergordon. 14 September Departed Invergordon for Scapa Flow. 14-24 Seplember Al Scapa Flow. 24 September Departed Scapa Flow for Invergordon. 24 September-5 Odober At Im·ergordon. 5 October Departed Im'ergordon for Scapa Flow. 5-7 October At Scapa Flow. 7 Odober Deparled Scapa Flow for Invcrgordon. 7-10 October At Invergordon. 10 October Departed Invergordon for handwick Bay, Moray Firth. 10-11 October Al Shandwick Bay. II October Departed Shandwick Bay for Invergordon. 11-12 October At Invergordon. 12 October Departed Invergordon for Tarbal Ness. 12-13 October At Tarbat t ess. 13 October Departed Tarbat Ness for Invergordon. 13-17 October At Invergordon. 17 October Departed !m'ergordon for Scapa Flow. 17-29 October Al Scapa Flow. 18-27 October Combined Fleet Regalla. 18 October Hood retains Queenstown Cup. 19 October Hood loses Battle Cruiser 'Cock' to Replllse. 24 Odober Hood wins Battenberg Cup. 25 October Hood wins Hornby Cup. 29 OClober Departed Scapa Flow for South utor, Cromarty Firth. 29 Od.ober-2 November Al South Sutor. 2 ovember Deparled South Sutor for Pt Knocks, Cromarty Firth. 2-3 ovember At PI Knocks. 3 ovember Deparled Pt Knocks for 111\·ergordon. 3-9 ovember At ll1\'ergordon. 9 'ovembe,r Departed Invergordon for South Sutor. 9-11 November Al South SUlor. II ovember Departed South Sutor for Invergordon. 11-13 November At Invergordon. 13 ovember Departed Invergordon for Portland. 13-15 November £11 route to Portland. 15 November-3 December At Portland. 24-26 November Concert parties given by 'The Frolics~ 3 December Departed Portland for Devonport. 3-5 December In Plymouth Sound. S December Moved to Devonport. 5 December-9 January 1922 At Devonport.
1922 9 January Departed Devonport for Falmouth Bay. 9-17 January In Falmouth Bay. 17 January Departed Falmouth Bay for Arosa Bay. 17-20 January Ell rowe to Arosa Bay. 2(}-25 January At Arosa Bay. 25 January Departed Arosa Bay for Gibraltar. 25-27 January Etl route to Gibraltar. 27 January-6 February At Gibraltar. 6 February Departed Gibraltar for Combined Fleet exercises and Pollen,a Bay. 6-9 February En route to Pollenc;a Bay. 9-20 February Al Pollen", Bay. 20 February Departed Pollen,a Bay for Toulon. 20-21 February Ell route to Toulon. 21 February-I March At Toulon.
I March Departed Toulon for VaJencia. 1-2 March Ell roWe to Valencia. 2-6 March Al Valencia. 6 March Departed Valencia for Malaga. 6-8 March £11 rowe to ro.l3Jaga. 8-14 March At ~laJaga. 14 March Departed Malaga for Gibraltar. 14-22 March At Gibraltar. 22 March Departed Gibraltar for Vigo with HMS Replllse. 22-25 March £" rowe to Vigo. 25 March-8 April At Vigo. 8 April Departed Vigo for Plymouth. 8-10 April ell route to Plymouth. I(}-II April Anchored in Cawsand Bay. II April Mo ed to Plymouth. 11-14 April At Plymouth. 14 April Departed Plymoulh for Rosyth. 14-17 April ell rOllte 10 Rosyth. 17 April-8 May At Rosyth. 19 April-8 May Taken in hand for docking. 8 May Departed Rosyth for Devonport. ~IOMay E" route to Devonport. 10 May-22 June At Devonport. 22 June Deparled Devonport for Weymouth. 22-26 June At Weymoulh. 26 June Departed Weymouth for Swanage Bay. 26-27 June At Swanage Bay. 27 June Departed Swanage Bay for Devonport. 27 June At Devonport. 27 June Departed Devonport for Swanage Bay. 27-28 June At Swanage Bay. 28 June Deparled Swanage Bay for Portland. 2~29 June En route to Portland. 29-30 June At Portland. 30 June Departed Portland for Weymoulh. 30 Jun.,...1 July At Weymouth. I July Departed Weymouth for Torbay. 1-2 July E" rOllte to Torbay. 2-6 July At Torbay. 5 July Visited by King George V. 6 July Departed Torba)' for Weymouth. 6-7 July At Weymouth. 7 July Departed Weymouth for Devonport. 7-8 July Ell route to Devon port. 7 July Sinks ex-German light cruiser SMS iimberg as a targel. 8 July-14 Augusl At Devonporl. 14 August Departed Devonport for Gibraltar. 1~17 August E" rOllte to Gibraltar. 17-20 August At Gibraltar. BRAZILIAN AND WEST INDIES CRUISE
(Battle Cruiser Squaclro,,) 20 August-4 ovember 1922 20 August Departed Gibrallar with HMS Replllse for sao Vicente, Cape Verde. 20-24 August E1I route to Sao Vicente. 24-26 August At Sao Vicenle. 26 August Departed Sao Vicente for Rio de Janeiro to take part in centennial celebrations of Brazilian independence. 26 August-3 September EI1 route to Rio de Janeiro. 29 August Crossing the Line ceremonies at the Equator. 3-14 September At Rio de Janeiro. 7 September Centenary of Brazilian independence; Hood's aval Brigade marches through Rio; illuminates ship. 8 September Hood 'At Home~ 9-13 September Hood participates in international sports competition. 10 September Hood wins Midshipmen's cuttcr but second in Seamen's cutter. 12 September Hood hosts grand ball altended by Presidenl of Brazil. 13 September Participates in illuminated water pageant in Botafogo Bay.
236
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
14 September Departed Rio de Janeiro for SanlOS (for Sao Paulo).
SCANDINAVIAN CRUISE (BATTLE CRUISER SQUADRON)
14-15 September Etl route t.o Santos.
26 June-18 July 1923 26 June Deparled Bournemouth with HMS Repulse and S,wpdrago" (destroyer) for Christiania (Oslo). 26-29 June E" route to Christiania. 29 June-7 July At Christiania. 2 July Visited by King Haakon VII and Queen Maud of Nonvay. 7 July Departed Christiania for A1borg Bugt, Denmark. 7-16 July At A1borg Bugt. 16 July Deparled Alborg Bugt for Portland. 16-18 July £/1 rOllte to Portland.
15-20 September At Santos. 18 September olour trooped through
Santos. 20 September Departed Santos for Trinidad. 2~30 September
En route to Trinidad.
30 September-IO October At Trinidad. 10 October Departed Trinidad for Barbados.
10-11 October En route to Barbados. 11-16 October At Barbados. 16 October Departed Barbados for SI Lucia.
16-17 October En roWe to 5t Lucia. 17-20 October Al St Lucia. 20 October Departed St Lucia for Las Palmas. Canary Islands. 20-30 October En roWe to Las Palmas. 21 October Anchored off Roseau, Dominica. 30 October-2 November Al Las Palmas. 2 November Departed Las Palmas for GibraJtar. 2-4 November En route to Gibraltar. END OF BRAZILIAN AND
WEST INDIES CRUISE
4-30 November Al Gibrallar. 15-17 November Participates in Bartle Cruiser Squadron Regatta.
30 November Departed Gibraltar for Devonport.
30 Novcmbcr-3 December £11 Devonport.
roWe
to
3 December--jj January 1923 Al Devonport.
1923 6 January Departed Devonport for Portland. 6-10 January At Porliand. 10 January Departed PorLland for Gibraltar. I(~IS January En route to Gibraltar. 15 January-I February Al Gibrallar. 1 February Departed Gibraltar for Malaga. l--jj February At Malaga. 5 February Squadron 'At I-lome' to residents of Malaga. 6 February Departed Malaga for Cartagena. 6-7 February E" route to Cartagena. 7-8 February At Cartagena. 8 February Departed Cartagena for VaJencia. 8-16 February At Valencia. 14 February Squadron 'At Home'lo residents ofVaJencia. 16 February Departed Valencia for Gibraltar. 16-17 February Ell route to Gibraltar. 17 February-24 March At Gibraltar. 24 March Departed Gibraltar for Arosa Bay. 24-26 March En route to Arosa Bay. 26-31 March At Arosa Bay. 31 March Departed Arosa Bay for Devonport. 31 March-3 April En route to Devonport. 3-21 April Al Devonport. 21 April Departed Devonport for Ros)~h. 21-23 April £/1 rOll" to Rosyth. 23 April-I 2 May At Rosyth. 23 April-II May Taken in hand for docking. 12 May Departed Rosyth for Devonport. 12-14 May En route to Devonport. 14 May-21 June At Devonport. 15 May-20 June Taken in hand for refit. 15 May Paid off and recommissioned for further service a Flagship, BanJe Cruiser Squadron, Atlantic Fleet; flag of Sir Frederick Field, Rear-Admiral Commanding Battle Cruiser Squadron, hoisted; Captain John K. 1m Thurn assumes command. 21 June Departed Devonport for Portland. 21-25 June Al Porliand. 25 June Departed Portland for Bournemouth. 25-26 June AI Bournemouth.
END OF SCANDINAVIAN CRUISE
18-19 July At Portland. 19 July Deparled Portland for Torbay. 19-20 July £/1 rollle to Torbay. 2~27 July At Torbay. 27 July Deparled Torbay for Devonport. 27 July-3 September At Devonport. 31 July-31 August Taken in hand for refit. 3 September Departed Devonport for Portland. 3-28 September At Portland. 28 September Departed Portland for Invergordon. 28--30 September En route 10 Invergordon. 30 September-IS October At Invergordon. 15 October Departed Invergordon for Rosyth. 15-16 October En route to Rosyth. 16-31 October At Rosyth. 17-30 October Taken in hand for docking. 31 October Departed Rosyth for Portsmouth. 31 October-2 November E" route to Portsmouth. 2-3 November At Portsmouth. 3 November Departed Portsmouth for Devonport. 3-4 November En route to Devonport. 4-27 November At Devonport. 5 November Sir Frederick Field assumes command of the Special Service Squadron as acting Vice-Admiral. 5-26 November Taken in hand in preparation for World Cruise. WORLD CRUISE OF SPECIAL SERVICE SQUA.DRON (Banle Cn,iser Sqlwdro1J
6-
1st UgI,t Cruiser Sq"adrmJ) 27 November 1923-28 September 1924 27 November Departed Devonport with HMS Repulse, Delhi and Dauntless for Freetown, Sierra Leone. 27 ovember-8 December En roWe to Freetown. 28 November Squadron joined by HMS Danae, Dragon and DUIJedi". 3 December Off Tenerife, Canary Islands. 7 December Special Service Squadron adopts tropical rig. 8--13 December At Freetown. 13 December Departed Freetown for Cape Town. 13-22 December E" route to Cape Town. 14-15 December Crossing the Line ceremonies at the Equator. 22 December-2 January 1924 At Cape Town. 24 December Naval Brigade of 900 sailors and 300 Marines marches through Cape Town. 27 December Tanker SS British Lantem damaged while refuelling Hood at Cape Town.
1924 2 January Departed Cape Town for Mossel Bay. 2-3 January En route to Mossel Bay.
3 January Departed Mosse! Bay for Port Elizabelh. 3-4 January En route 10 Port Elizabeth. 4 January Off PorI Elizabelh; sailed for East London. 4-5 January Ell route to East London. 5 January Off East London; sailed for Durban. 5--6 January Ell route to Durban. 6 January Off Durban; sailed for Zanzibar. 6-12 January E" route to Zanzibar. 12-17 January Al Zanzibar. 16 January Visited by Khalifa bin Harud, Sultan of Zanzibar. 17 January Departed Zanzibar for Trincomalee, Ceylon. 17-26 January En route to Trincomalee. 26-31 January At Trincomalee. 30 January Squadron 'At Home~ 31 January Departed TrincomaJee for Port Swettenham, Malaya. 31 January-4 February En route to Port Swettenham. 4-9 February At Port Swenenham. 7 February Squadron 'At Home~ 9 February Departed Port Swenenham for Singapore. 9-10 February En route to Singapore. I ~ 17 February At Singapore. 15 February Naval Brigade marches through Singapore. 17 February Departed Singapore for Fremantle. 17-27 February E" route to Fremantle. 20 February Off Christmas Island. 27 February-I March At Fremantle. 28 February Naval Brigade marches through Fremantle and then Perth. I March Departed Fremanlle for Albany. 1-2 March En route to Albany. 2--jj March At Albany. 2 March Special Service Squadron resumes regular rig. 6 March Departed Albany for Adelaide. 6-10 March En route to Adelaide. 1~15 March Al Adelaide. 15 March Departed Adelaide for Melbourne. 15-17 March En route to Melbourne. 17-25 March At Melbourne. 18 March Naval Brigade marches through Melbourne. 25 March Departed Melbourne for Hobart. 25-27 March £11 rOllte to Hobart. 27 March-3 April At Hobar!. 3 April Departed Hobart for Jervis Bay, New South Wales. 3-5 April En roWe to Jervis Bay. 4 April At Twofold Bay, New South Wales. 5-8 April At Jervis Bay. 8 April Departed jervis Bay for Sydney. 8--9 April En route to Sydney. 9-20 April At Sydney. 9 April Naval Brigade marches through Sydney. 10 April Hood 'At Home: 14 April Musical revue of'The Cheer Oh Girls' in Hood. 20 April Departed Sydney for Wellinglon; HMAS Adelaide joins Special Service Squadron. 20-24 April E" route to ,"Vellington. 24 April-8 May At Wellington. 8 May Departed Wellington for Napier with Admiral the Earl Jellicoe, Governor-General of New Zealand, aboard. 8--9 May E" route to Napier. 9 May Departed Napier for Auckland. 9-10 May E" route 10 Auckland. 1~18 May At Auckland. 12 May Squadron 'At Home' in Hood. 13 May aval Brigade marches through Auckland; Hood'At Home~ 16 May Squadron 'At Home' in Hood. 18 May Departed Auckland for Suva, Fiji. J 8--21 May En route to Suva. 21-27 May Al Suva.
27 May Departed Suva for Honolulu. 27-29 May En route to Western Samoa. 27 May Squadron crosses International Dateline. adding a calendar day to the journey. 29 May Departed Western Samoa for HonoluJu. 29 May~ June En rollle to Honolulu. 6-12 June At Honolulu. 12 June Departed Honolulu for Victoria, British Columbia. 12-21 June E" route to Viaoria. 21-25 June AI Victoria. 25 June Departed Victoria for Vancouver,
B.C. 25 June-5 July At Vancouver. 4 July Hood 'At Home: 5 July Departed Vancouver for San Francisco. 5-7 July En route to San Francisco. 7-11 July At San Francisco. 8 July 'At Home' for British CommuniI}' of San Francisco and Bay Cities. II July Departed San Francisco for Panama Canal Zone. 12 July 1st Light Cruiser Squadron parts company with Battle Cruiser Squadron for last time until reuniting on 28 September. 11-23 July En route to BaJboa, Panama. 23-24 July Traversed Panama Canal. 23-24 July Anchored at Pedro Miguel. 24 July Departed Col6n, Panama for Kingston, Jamaica. 24-26 July E" route to Kingston. 26-30 July At Kingston. 28 July Naval Brigade marches Ihrough Kingston. 30 July Departed Jamaica for Halifax, Nova Scotia. 30 July-S August E" route to HaJifax. 5-15 August At Halifax. 15 August Departed Halifax for Quebec. 15-19 August En route to Quebec. 18--19 August Anchored awaiting tide al Murray Bay (R. St Laurence). 19 August-2 September At Quebec. 2 September Departed Quebec for Topsail Bay, Newfoundland. 2-3 September Anchored awaiting tide off lie d'Odeans (R. SI Laurence). 2~ September En route to Topsail Bay. 6-21 September At Topsail Bay. 21 September Departed Topsail Bay for Devonport. 21-28 September E" route to Devonport. 28 September 1st Light Cruiser Squadron rejoins Battle Cruiser Squadron off Lizard Point. END OF WORLD CRUISE
28 September-5 November At Devonport. 1 October-5 November Taken in hand for refit; not completed. 5 November Departed Devonport for Rosyth. 5-7 November En route to Rosyth. 7-23 November At Rosyth. 7-22 ovember Taken in hand for docking. 23 November Departed Rosyth for Devonport. 23-25 November E" route to Devonport. 25 November-14 January 1925 Al Devonport. 25 November-IO January 1925 Taken in hand for completion of refit.
1925 14 January Departed Devonport for Portland. 14-19 January Al Portland. 19 January Departed Portland with Battle Cruiser Squadron to participate in Vasco da Gama celebrations in Lisbon. 23-30 January At Lisbon.
ChronoLogy
30 January Departed Lisbon for Gibraltar. 30-31 January E" route to Gibraltar. 31 January-23 February Al Gibraltar. 23 February Departed Gibraltar for Palma,
Majorca. 23-24 February Ell rOllte to Palma. 24 February-2 March Al Palma. 2 March Departed Palma for Almeria. 2-3 March En route to Almeria. 3-5 March At Almeria. 5 March Departed Almeria for Gibrallar. 5-6 March En roule to Gibraltar. 6-11 March At Gibraltar. II March Departed Gibraltar for Palma. 11-14 March Ell route to Palma. 14-17 March Al Palma.
17 March Departed Palma on exercises. 17-18 March On e.'tcrci.ses. 18-21 March Al Palma. 21 March Departed Palma for Gibraltar. 21-22 March E" route to Gibraltar. 22-29 March Al Gibraltar. 29 March Departed Gibraltar for
Devonport. 29 March-I April En route to Devonport. I April~ May At Devonport. 3 April-7 May Taken in hand for
alterations while available. 30 April Flag of Cyril T.M. FuUer, Rear-
Admiral ommanding Battle Cruiser Squadron, hoisted; Captain H.G. Reinold assumes command. 8 May Departed Devonport for Invergordon. 8-11 May En roule to Invergordon.
11-31 May At Invergordon. 31 May Departed Invergordon for Rosyth. 31 May-l June Ell route to Rosyth. 1-22 June At Rosyth. 22 June Departed Rosyth for Portree, Isle of Skye. 22-23 June £11 rollte to Portree. 23 June-I July At Portree. I July Deparled Portree for Port rush, Co. Antrim. I~ July At Portrush. 6 July Deparled Portrush for Greenock. 6-10 July At Greenock. 10 July Departed Greenock for Lamlash. 10-17 July Al Lamlash. 15 July Participates in Baltle Cruiser Squadron Regalia. 17 July Departed Lamlash for Portland. 17-19 July Ell rollte 10 Portland. 19-28 July Al Portland. 28 July Departed Portland for Devonport. 28 July-I September At Devonport.
4-3 I August Taken in hand for repairs. I September Departed Devonport for Portland. 1-14 September At Portland. 14 September Departed Portland for Invergordon. 14-17 September E" roWe to Invergordon. 17 September-19 October At Invergordon. 190etober Departed Invergordon for
237
12 January Departed Dc\'onport for Arosa Bay. 12-IS January £11 route to Arosa Bay. I S-21 January At Arosa Bay. 21 January Departed Arosa Bay for
Gibraltar. 21-23 January Ell rollte 10 Gibraltar. 23 January-24 February At Gibraltar. 24 February Departed Gibraltar for Palmas Bay, Sardinia. 24-27 February Ell route to Palmas Bay. 27 February-3 March At Palmas Bay. 3 March Departed Palmas Bay for Palma. 3-S March £11 route to Palma. S-9 March At Palma. 9 March Departed Palma for Gibrahar. 9-11 March £n route to Gibraltar. 11-18 March At Gibraltar. 18 March Departed Gibraltar for Arosa Bay. 18-20 March En route to Arosa Bay. 20-27 March At Amsa Bay. 27 March Departed Arosa Bay for
Devonport. 27-29 March Etl route to Devonport. 29 March-3 May At Devonport. 28 April-3 May Taken in hand for
alterations and additions. 3 May Departed Devonport for Greenock to assist during General Strike. 3-4 May Etl rollle to Greenock. 4-31 May At Greenock. 31 May Departed Greenock for Irials 01T
Arran. 31 May--4 June Trials. 4-24 June At Greenock. 24 June Departed Greenock for Rosyth. 24-26 June £11 route to Rosyrh. 26 June-2 July At Rosyth. 2 July Departed Rosyth for Shoeburyness. 2--4 July E/I route to Shoeburyness. 4-7 July At Shoeburyness. 7 July Departed Shoeburyness for Torbay. 7~ July E/I route to Torbay. 8-15 July At Torbay. 15 July Departed Torbay for Portsmouth. 15 July-2 September Al Portsmouth. 24 July-30 August Taken in hand for docking. 30 August Proceeds to Spithead. 2 September Departed Portsmouth for Scarborough. 2~ September E1I rOllte to Scarborough. 4-7 September Al Scarborough. 7 September Departed Scarborough for
Invergordon. 7-9 September E1I route to Invergordon. 9 Septcmber-24 October Atlnvergordon. 24 Odober Departed Invergordon for
Portland. 24-28 October E" route to Portland. 280dober-17 ovemberAt Portland.
30 October Participates in tactical exercises staged by the Atlantic Fleet off Portland for delegates of the Imperial
Conference.
Rosyth.
17 November Departed Portland for
19-20 October Err roure to Rosyth.
Devonport.
20 Odober-21 November At Rosyth.
17 November-7 January 1927 Al
4-16 November Taken in hand for docking and repairs. 17-20 November Taken in hand for
repairs. 21 November Departed Rosyth for
Devonport. 21-23 November EtJ roUle to Devonport. 23 November-12 January 1926At
Devonport. 26 November~ January 1926 Taken in hand for refit.
1926 6 January Paid off at Devonport.
7 January Recommissioned for further seNice as Flagship, Battle Cruiser
Squadron, Atlantic Fleet.
Devonport. 22 November-24 December Taken in hand for refit.
1927 7 January Departed Devonport for Portland. 7-17 January At Portland. 17 January Deparled Portland for Arosa Bay. 17-20 January En route to Arosa Bay. 20-25 January At Arosa Bay. 25 January Departed Arosa Bay for Gibrallar. 25-26 January Ell route to Gibraltar. 26 January-2 March At Gibraltar. 2 March Deparled Gibraltar for Lagos. Portugal. 2~ March £11 route to Lagos.
_
March At Lagos.
8 March Departed Lagos for exercises and Gibraltar.
8-10 March On exercises. 10-17 March At Gibraltar. 17 March Departed Gibraltar for Arosa Bay. 17-19 March En route 10 Arosa Bay. 19-26 March At Arosa Bay. 26 March Deparled Arosa Bay for
3 April Departed Portland for Devonport. 3--4 April En roule to Devonport. 4-30 April At De\'onporl.
9-28 April Taken in hand for repairs while available. 30 April Departed De\'onport for
Invergordon. 30 April~ May En route to Invergordon. 4 May-4 June At Invergordon.
Devonport. 26-28 March En route to Devonport.
4 June Departed In\'ergordon for Scapa
28 March-2 May At DC\·onport.
_ June Al Scapa Flow. 8 June Departed Scapa Flow for South
5-30 April Taken in hand for repairs while available. 2 May Departed Devonport for Invergordon. 2~ May En route to Im·ergordon.
6 May-7 June At Invergordon. 21 May Flag of Frederic C. Dreyer, Rear-
Admiral Commanding Battle Cruiser Squadron, hoisted; Captain Wilfred F. French assumes command. 7 June Departed Invergordon for Gareloch. 7-8 June En route to Gareloch. 8-15 June Al GarcJoch. 15 June Deparled GarcJoch for Hclensburgh. 15-16 June Etl route to Helensburgh. 16-24 June At HcJensburgh. 24 June Deparled Helensburgh for
Flow. Queensferry. 8-9 June E" route to South Queensferry. 9-11 June At South Queensferry. 11 June Departed South Queensferry for
Invergordon. 11-12 Ju.ne Ell route to Invergordon. 12 June Departed Invergordon for Loch Kishorn. 12-13 June Ell rOflte to Loch Kishorn. 13-18JuneAI Loch Kishorn. 18 June Departed Loch Kishorn for Ballachulish. 18-19 June Ell rOllte to Ballachulish. 19-25 June Al Ballachulish. 25 June Departed Ballachulish for
Newcastle, Co. Down. 24-29 June At Newcastle. 29 June Departed Newcastle for Portland. 29 June-I July E/I rO/lte to Portland.
Portsmouth. 25-27 June Ell roWe to Portsmouth.
1-7 July Al Portland. 7 July Departed Portland for Portsmouth. 7-8 July £11 route to Portsmouth. 8 July-30 August At Portsmouth. 13-19 July Taken in hand for docking.
2 August Departed Portsmouth for Devonport. 2-3 August En route to Devonport.
30 August Departed Portsmouth for Invergordon. 30 Augusl-2 Seplember Ell rOllte to Im'ergordon. 2 September-26 October Atlnvergordon. 26 Odober Departed Invergordon for South Queensferry. 26-27 October En rollte to South Queensferry. 270dober-2 ovember Al South Queensferry. 2 ovember Departed South Queensferry for Portland. 2~ November En route to Portland. 4-7 November At Portland.
7 November Departed Portland for De\'onport. 7 ovember~ January 1928 At Devonport. 10 November-29 December Taken in hand for refit.
1928 4 January Departed Devonport for Portland. 4-10 January At Portland. 10 January Departed Portland for Vigo. 10-13 January E" route to Vigo. 13-23 January At Vigo. 23 January Departed Vigo for Gibrallar. 23-25 January Etl route to Gibraltar. 25 January-7 March At Gibraltar. 7 March Departed Gibraltar for Malaga. 7-10 March At Malaga.
9 March Visited by Queen Ena, Prince Jaime and Infantas of Spain. 10 March Departed Malaga for Gibraltar. 10-13 March Al Gibraltar. 13 March Departed Gibraltar for Malaga. 13-14 March E" roUleto Malaga. 14 March Departed Malaga for exercises and Gibraltar.
14-16 March On exercises. 16-22 March Al Gibraltar. 22 March Depart.ed Gibraltar for Portland. 22-28 March £11 route to Portland. 28 March-3 April At Portland.
27 June-2 August Al Portsmouth. 3-31 July Taken in hand for refit.
3 AuguSI-5 Seplember Al Devonport.
7-31 August Taken in hand for alterations. 27 Augusl Paid 01T. 28 August Recommissioned for further service as Flagship, Battle Cruiser Squadron, Atlantic Fleet. 5 September Departed Devonport for
Invergordon. 5-8 September En route to lnvergordon. 8 September-23 Odober At Invergordon. 29 Seplember--4? Odober Admiral the Earl Jellicoe aboard for autumn gunnery cruise. 23 Odobe.r Departed Invergordon for South Queensferry. 23-24 October Ell rollte to South Queensferry. 24-31 October Al Soulh Queensferry. 31 Odober Departed South Queensferry for Portland. 31 October-2 November Ell rOllte to Portland. 2-14 November At Portland. 14 November Departed Portland for Devonport. 14-15 November E" route to Devonport. 15 November-9 January 1929 At Devonport. 16 ovember-l January 1929 Taken in hand for repairs.
1929 9 January Departed Devonport for Portland. 9-12 January At Portland.
12 January Departed Portland for exercises and Falmouth. 12-15 January Al Falmouth.
IS January Departed Falmouth for Arosa Bay.
15-18 January Ell route to Arosa Bay. 18-22 January At Arosa Bay. 22 January Departed Arosa Bay for Gibraltar. 22-25 January Ell route to Gibraltar. 25 January-26 February At Gibrallar. 26 February Departed Gibraltar for
Barcelona. 26-28 February En route to Barcelona. February~
3 April Participates in tactical exercises
28
staged by the Atlantic Fleet 01T Portland in honour of King Amanullah of Afghanistan.
6 March Departed Barcelona for Palma. 6-7 March Ell route to Palma.
March Al Barcelona.
238
7-13 March At Palma. 13 March Departed Palma for Pollen,a Bay. 13-23 March At Pollen,a Bay. 23 March Departed Pollen,a Bay for Gibraltar.
23-26 March En route to Gibraltar. 26 March-2 April At Gibraltar. 2 April Departed Gibraltar for Portsmouth.
2-6 April En route to Portsmouth. 6 April FlagofSir Frederic Dreyer, ViceAdmiral Commanding Battle Cruiser Squadron, transferred to HMS Repllise.
6 April Departed Portsmouth for Devonport. 6-7 April Ell route to Devonport. 7 April-I May At Devonport. 10-27 ApriJ Taken in hand for repairs. t May Departed Devonport for Portsmouth. I May-16June 1931 At Portsmouth. 17 May Paid off into dod.-. yard control; crew commissions HMS Tiger for service in Battle Cruiser Squadron. 3 )une-IO March 1931 Taken in hand for major refit. ? Participates at Portsmouth avy Week.
1930 REFITTING AT PORTSMOUTH
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
1932 CARIBBEAN CRUISE
(Battle Cruiser Squadron) 6 January-4 March 1932 6 January Departed Portsmouth with HMS Replllse, Norfolk, Dorsetslrire and Delili for Spring Cruise in Caribbean. 6-12 January E" route to Faial,Azores. 12-13 January At Faial. 13 January Departed Faial for Barbados. 13-21 January Ell rollleto Barbados. 21 January-s February At Carlisle Bay, Barbados, 5 February Departed Barbados for St Vincent. 5--12 February At St Vincent. 12 February Departed St Vincent for Grenada. 12-15 February At Grenada. 15 February Departed Grenada for Trinidad. 15--16 February Ell rOllte to Trinidad. 16-25 February At Port-of-Spain, Trinidad. 25 February Departed Trinidad for Faial. 25 February~ March En rollle to Faial. 4-7 March At Faial. 7 March Departed Faial for Portsmouth. 7-13 March E" rollle to Portsmouth. END OF CARIBBEAN CRUISE
UNTIL MARCH 1931
1931 10 March Commissioned for trials at Portsmouth as tender to HMS Victory. 27 April Captain J.E . Patterson assumes command. 12 May Completed with a full crew of Portsmouth ratings for service as nagship of the Battle Cruiser Squadron, Atlantic Fleet. 16 June Departed Portsmouth for Portland. 16-17 June E" rollle to Portland. 17 June-IO July At Portland. 26 June Loses Fairey IIIF plane on take-off at ~'eymouth. 10 July Departed Portland for Torbay. 10-17 July At Torbay. 12 July Flag of Wilfred Tomkinson, RearAdmiral Commanding Battle Cruiser Squadron, transferred from HMS RellOwn. 17 July Departed Torbay for Swanage. 17-21 July At Swanage. 21 July Departed Swanage for Portsmouth. 21 )uly-il September At Portsmouth. 27 July-7 September Taken in hand for repairs whiJe available. 1-8 August Participates at Portsmouth Navy Week. 8 September Departed Portsmouth for Invergordon. 8-11 September Ell rOllle to Invergordon. 11-16 September At Invergordon. 15--16 September Invergordon mutiny. 16 September Departed Invergordon for Portsmouth. 16-19 September Ell route to Portsmouth. 19 September-il October At Portsmouth. 8 October Departed Portsmouth for Rosyth. 8-11 October Ell rollle to Rosyth. 11-19 October At Rosyth. 19 October Departed Rosyth for Invergordon. 19-20 October E" rollle to Invergordon. 20-27 October At Invergordon. 27 October Departed Invergordon for Rosyth. 27-28 October E1I route to Rosyth. 28 October-I 7 November At Rosyth. 17 November Departed Rosyth for Portsmouth. 17-19 November Ell route to Portsmouth. 19 November-6 January 1932 At Portsmouth. 27 November-S January 1932 Taken in hand for repairs while available.
13 March-14 May At Portsmouth. 31 March-I 0 May Taken in hand for repairs. 14 May Departed Portsmouth for Invergordon. 14-16 May En rOllte to Invergordon. 16-28 May At Invergordon. 28 May Departed Invergordon for Scapa Flow. 28 May-4 June At Scapa Flow. 4 June Departed Scapa Flow for Rothesay. 4-5 June En route to Rothesay. 5-13 June At Rothesay. 13 June Departed Rothesay for Bangor, Co. Down. 13-25 June At Bangor. 25 June Departed Bangor for Guernsey. 25-26 June Ell roWe to Guernsey. 26 June-7 July At Guernsey. 7 July Departed Guernsey for Wel'mouth. 7- I4 July At Weymouth. ? July Participates in tactical exercises staged by the Atlantic Fleet for Dominion premiers; visited by King George V. 14 JuJy Departed '·Veymouth for exercises and Portland. 14-15 July At Portland. 15 July Departed Portland for Sandown Bay. 15-2 I July At Sandown Bay. 18 July Southsea photographic firm of Wright & Logan takes numerous photos aboard. 21 July Departed Sandown Bay for Portsmouth. 21 July-30 August At Portsmouth. 25 July-? Taken in hand for repairs while available. 30 July-6 August Participates at Portsmouth avy ''''eek. 15 August Flag of ''''illiam M. James, RearAdmiral Comlnanding Battle Cruiser Squadron, hoisted; Captain Thomas H. Binney assumes command. 30 August Recommissioned for further service as Flagship, Battle Cruiser Squadron, Home Fleet. 30 August Departed Portsmouth for Southend. 30-31 August Ell roWe to Southend. 3 I August-7 September At Southend. 7 September Departed Southend for Hartlepool. 7-8 September E" roWe to Hartlepool. 8-14 September At Hartlepool. 14 September Departed Hartlepool for Rosyth.
14-15 September E" route 10 Rosyth. 15 September-IO October At Rosyth. 10 October Departed Rosyth for Invergordon. 10-20 October At Invergordon. 20 October Departed Invergordon for Rosyth. 20-21 October Ell roWe to Rosyth. 21 October-IS November At Rosyth. 15 November Departed Rosyth for Portsmouth. 15--17 November Ell route to Portsmouth. 17 November-II January 1933 At Portsmouth. 7 December-9 January 1933 Taken in hand for repairs.
1933 II January Departed Portsmouth for MOsa Bay. 11-13 January En rOllte to Arosa Bay. 13-21 January At Arosa Bay. 21 January Departed Arosa Bay for Gibraltar. 21-23 January E" roWe to Gibraltar. 23-26 January At Gibraltar. 26 January Departed Gibraltar for Algiers. 26-28 January Ell roWe to Algiers. 28 January-7 February At AJgiers. 7 February Departed AJgiers for Gibraltar. 7-9 February En route to Gibraltar. 9 February-9 March At Gibraltar. 9 March Departed Gibraltar for Tangier. 9-14 March At Tangier. 14 March Departed Tangier for Gibraltar. 14-21 March At Gibraltar. 21 March Departed Gibraltar for Arosa Bay. 21-23 March En rowe to Arosa Bay. 23-25 March At Arosa Bay. 25 March Departed Arosa Bay for Portsmouth. 25--28 March En rOll Ie to Portsmouth. 28 March-9 May At Portsmouth. 9 May Departed Portsmouth for Invergordon. 9-12 May Ell route 10 Invergordon. 12 May-3 June At Invergordon. 3 June Departed Invergordon for Scapa Flow. 3-10 June At Scapa Flow. 10 June Departed Scapa Flow for Oban. 10-11 June En roufe to Oban. 11-14 June At Oban. 14 June Departed Oban for Portsmouth. 14-16 June Ell rowe to Portsmouth. 16 June-6 September At Portsmouth. 20 June-4 September Taken in hand for refit. 30 August Paid off and recommissioned for further service as Flagship, Battle Cruiser Squadron, Home Fleet; Captain F.T.B. Tower assumes command. 6 September Departed Portsmouth for Rosyth. 6-8 September En roWe to Rosyth. 8-24 September At Rosyth. 10-26 September Flag of William M. James, Rear·Admiral Commanding Battle Cruiser Squadron, temporarily transferred to HMS RellOw". 24 September Departed Rosyth for IIl\·ergordon. 24-25 September Ell roWe to Invergordon. 25 September-II October At Invergordon. 11 October Departed Invergordon for Banff. 11-13 October E" roWe to Banff. 13-16 October At Banff. 16 October Departed Banff for North Berwick. 16-24 October At North Berwick. 24 October Departed North Berwick for Rosyth. 24 October Departed Rosyth on exercises. 24-26 October On exercises. 26 October-7 November At Rosyth.
7 November Departed Rosyth for Portsmouth. 7-13 November E" route to Portsmouth. 13 ovember-12 January 1934 At Portsmouth. I December-6 January 1934 Taken in hand for repairs while available.
1934 12 January Departed Portsmouth for Arosa Bay. 12-16 January En rOllte to Arosa Bay. 1~20 January At Arosa Bay. 20 January Departed Arosa Bay for Madeira. 20-22 January En rOllte to Madeira. 22-29 January Al Madeira. 29 January Departed Madeira for Gibraltar. 29-31 January Ell roWe to Gibraltar. 31 January-6 March At Gibraltar. 6 March Departed Gibraltar for exercises and Lagos Bal'. 6-7 March On exercises. 7-9 March At Lagos Bay. 9 March Departed Lagos Bay for exercises and Gibraltar. 9-16 March On exercises. 16-23 March At Gibraltar. 23 March Departed Gibraltar for Portsmouth. 23-27 March En route to Portsmouth. 27 March-II May At Portsmouth. 12 April-4 May Taken in hand for docking and repairs. II May Departed Portsmouth for Portland. I I May-I June At Portland. I June Departed Portland for Plymouth. 1-4 June At Plymouth. 4 June Departed Plymouth for Scapa Flow. 4-7 June En route to Scapa Flow. 7-16 June At Scapa Flow. 16 June Departed Scapa Flow for Loch Eriboll. 16-25 June At Loch Eriboll. ? 'Hood' stones laid overlooking loch. 25 June Departed Loch Eriboll for Rosyth. 25--26 June Ell roWe to Rosyth. 26 June-IS July At Rosyth. 15 July Departed Rosyth for lorbay. 15--17 July Ell route to Torbay. 17-24 July At Torbay. 24 July Departed Torbay for Portsmouth. 24 July-7 September At Portsmouth. I August-s September Taken in hand for refit and repairs. ? August Participates at Portsmouth Navy ~'eek.
14 August Flag of Sidney R. Bailey, RearAdmiral Commanding Battle Cruiser Squadron. hoisted. 7 September Departed Portsmouth for Hull. 7-8 September En rOlife to Hull. 8-13 September At Hull. 13 September Departed Hull for ROS)1h. 13-15 September En roltte to Rosyth. 15-21 September At Rosyth. 21 September Departed Rosyth for Invergordon. 21-22 September Ell route to Invergordon. 22 September~ October At Invergordon. 4 October Departed Invergordon for Rosyth. 4-5 October Ell rOllte to Rosyth. 5-15 October At Rosyth. 15 October Departed Ros)1h for Invergordon. 15--16 October E" roWe to Invergordon. 16-25 October At Invergordon. 25 October Departed Invergordon for Rosyth. 25-26 October Ell rollte to Rosyth. 26-30 October At Rosyth. 30 October Departed Ros)1h for Portland. 300ctober-3 ovember E" rOllte to Portland. 3-14 ovember At Portland.
Ch rOlJology
14 ovember Departed Portland for
239
1936
Portsmouth.
14 November-I 5 lanuary 1935 At Portsmouth. 19 November-l 4 January 1935 Taken in
hand for docking while available.
1935 15 January Departed Portsmouth for Arosa Bay. 15-18 January Ell roWe to Arosa Bay.
18--23 lanuary Al Arosa Bar 23 lanuary Departed Arosa Ba)' on
exercises, thence to Gibraltar. 23-25 January On exercises and etl route to
Gibraltar. 23 January In collision with HMS ReflowtJ off Arosa Bay in position 42° 06~N, ()90 23W. 25-30 lanuary At Gibrallar. 30 lanuary-22 February Flag of Sidney R.
Bailey, Rear-Admiral Commanding Battle Cruiser Squadron, temporarily transferred to HM Retlowli. 30 lanuary Departed Gibraltar for
Portsmouth.
30 January-4 February Ell route to Portsmouth. 4 February-5 March At Portsmouth.
8 February-4 March Taken in hand for docking and collision repairs. 5 March Departed Portsmouth for exercises
and Gibraltar. 5 March Observed air crash off St Catherine's Point; recovered body of officer and returned to Spithead. 5-16 March On exercises. 1&-21 March At Gibraltar. 21 March Departed Gibraltar for Portsmouth. 21-25 March En route to Portsmouth. 25 March-I 3 May At Portsmouth. I April-13 May Taken in hand for repair of defects. 13 May Departed Portsmouth for Portland. 13-14 May Ell route to Portland. 14-15 May Al Portland. 15 May Departed Portland for Southend. 15-22 May Al Southend 22 May Departed Soulhend for Scapa Flow. 22-24 May Ell route to $capa Flow. 24 May-7 lune Al Seapa Flow. 7 June Departed $capa Flow for Portland. 7-10 June En route to Portland. 10 lune-II Iuly At Portland. II luly Departed Portland for Sandown Bay. 11-12 luly At Sandown Ba)'. 12 luly Departed Sandown Bay for Spilhead. 12-17 luly At Spithead. 16 luly Participates in Silver lubilee Review of King George V. 17 Iuly Departed Spithead for Portsmoulh. 17 July-30 August At Portsmouth. 3-10 August Participates at Portsmouth avy ,",reek. 12-28 August Taken in hand for repairs while available. 30 August Departed Portsmouth for Portland. 30 August-I 4 September At Portland. 31 August On exercises. 14 September Departed Portland for Gibraltar. 14-17 September En route to Gibraltar. 17 September-5 December At Gibraltar. ! Visited b)' the Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia. 5 December Departed Gibraltar for Madeira. 5-7 December En route t'O Madeira. 7-12 December At Madeira 12 December Departed Madeira for Gibraltar. 12-14 December Ell route to Gibraltar. 14 December-13 lanuary 1936 At Gibraltar.
13 January Departed GibraJtar for Portsmouth. 13-16 January Ell route to Portsmouth. 16 January-21 February At Portsmouth. 21 lanuary-20 February Taken in hand for docking. I February Captain A. Francis Pridham assumes command. 21 February Departed Portsmouth for Portland. 21-22 February At Portland. 22 February Departed Portland for Arosa Bay. 22-24 February En route to Arosa Bay. 24 February-2 March At Amsa Bay. 2 March Departed Arosa Ba)' for Vigo. 2-5 March Al Vigo. 5 March Departed Vigo for Gibraltar. 5-7 March En route to GibraJtar. 7 March-4 May At Gibraltar. 4 May Departed Gibraltar for Las Palm... Canary Islands. 4-7 May Ell rotlte to Las Palmas. 7-15 May Al Las Palmas. 15 May Departed Las Palmas for Gibraltar. 15-18 May E" ratite to Gibraltar. 18 May-20 lune At Gibraltar. 30 May Again visited by Emperor HaUe Selassie. c.6-<:.19 June Taken in hand for repairs to damaged turbine at Gibraltar owing to international situation and congestion at Portsmouth Dockyard. 20 June Departed Gibraltar for Portsmouth. 20-23 June E" ratite to Portsmouth. 23 lune-IO October At Portsmouth. 26 lune-17 September Taken in hand for repairs. 22 Iuly Flag of Geoffrey Blake. ViceAdmiral Commanding Battle Cruiser Squadron, hoisted; Hood comes under Mediterranean administration. ? August Participates at Portsmouth Navy
'''«k. 8 September Recommissioned for service in the Mediterranean Fleet. 12 September-30 November Flag of ViceAdmiral Geoffrey Blake temporarily transferred to HMS Bar/ram. 3-? October Taken in hand for cleaning condensers. 10 October Departed Portsmouth for Gibraltar. 10-14 October En route to Gibraltar. 14-20 OClober At Gibraltar. 14 October Accident while berthing results in death of two men and injuries to a third. 20 October Departed Gibraltar for Malta. 20-24 October E" ratite to Malta. 24 October-2 December \Vorking-up at Malta. 2 December Departed Malta for Gibraltar. 2-5 December Ell route to Gibraltar. 5-11 December At Gibraltar. II December Departed Gibraltar for Tangier. 11-14 December At Tangier. 12 December Proclamation of Abdication of Edward VIII and Accession of George VI read on Hood's quarterdeck. 14 December Departed Tangier for Gibraltar. 14 December Departed Gibraltar for Tangier. 14-23 December At Tangier. 23 December Departed Tangier for Gibraltar. 23 December-4 lanuary 1937 Al Gibraltar.
1937 4 January Departed Gibraltar for Tangier. 4-9 lanuary At Tangier.
9 January Departed Tangier for Gibraltar. 9-12 January At Gibraltar. 12 lanuary Departed Gibraltar for Malta. 12-16 January En route to MaJta. 1&-21 lanuary At 'Ialta. 21 January Departed Malta for Plateia Island. Greece. 21-23 January E" route to Plateia Island. 23 lanuary-I February At Plaleia Island. I February Departed Plateia Island for exercises and MaJta. 1-3 February On exercises. ~27 February Al Malta. ~13 February Taken in hand for docking. 27 February Departed MaJta for exercises and Gibraltar. 27 February-{i March On exercises. &-9 March At Gibraltar. 9 March Departed Gibraltar for exercises. 9-12 March On exercises. 12-20 March Al Gibraltar. 20 March Departed Gibraltar for Malta. 20-23 March Ell roWe to Malta. 23 March-3 April At Malta. 23 March-2 April Taken in hand for changing of propellers. 3 April Departed Malta for Gibraltar. 3-6 April Ell route to Gibraltar. &-10 April At Gibraltar. 10 April Departed Gibraltar for St-lean-deLuz. 10-12 April En roflte to St-Jean-de-Luz. 12-13 April At St-Iean-de-Luz. 13 April Departed St-Jean-de-Luz for patrol in Bay of Biscay. 1~15 April On patrol. 15-19 April Al La Pallice. 19 April Departed La PaUice for St-lean-deLuz. 19-20 April Ell route to St-Jean-de-Luz. 20-22 April At St-lean-de-Luz. 22 April Departed St-lean-de-Luz for patrol in Ba)' of Bisca)'. 22-24 April On palrol wilh HM destro)'ers Firedrake and Fortulle. thence to La Pallice. 23 April Confrontation with Nationalist warships Almiratlte Cen'f'ra and Galerna over passage of 55 Hamsterlcr. MacGregor and Sta"brook into Bilbao. 24-26 April At La Pallice. 26 April Departed La PaI1ice for Portsmouth. 26-27 April En route to Portsmouth. 27 April-I lune At Portsmouth. 7 May Participates in Coronation Review of King George VI at Spithead. 20 May Visited by King George VI. I lune Departed Portsmouth for Gibraltar. 1-5 June En route to Gibraltar. 5-7 lune Al Gibraltar. 7 lune Departed Gibraltar for Tangier. 7-12 June At Tangier. 12 lune Departed Tangier for Gibraltar. 12-15 lune At Gibraltar. 1S June Departed Gibraltar for Malta. 15-19 June En route to Malta. 19 lune-24 August At Malta. 25 lune Flag of Vice-Admiral Sir Geoffrey Blake struck following his being admitted to Bighi Hospital; Captain Francis Pridham (Hood) assumes command of Battle ruiser Squadron. 15 luly Flag of Andrew B. Cunningham. Vice-Admiral Commanding Battle Cruiser Squadron, hoisted. 26 luly--<:.20 Augusl Taken in hand for repairs. 24 August Departed MalIa for Argost6li. Greece. 24-26 August En route to Argost6li. 2&-30 August At Argosl6li. 30 Augusl Departed Argost61i for Split. 30 August-I September En route to Split. 1-8 September At Split. 8 September Departed Splil for Ialta. 8-10 September En route to Malta. 10-30 September Al Malta.
! Dr)'docked. 30 September Departed ~Ialta for Arn,w. Algeria. 30 September-3 October En ratite to Arzew. 3-S October At Arzew. 5 October Departed Anew for Gibraltar. S-6 October En route to Gibraltar. &-21 October Al Gibraltar. 21 October Departed Gibraltar for Tangier. 21-23 Octobe.r At Tangier. 23 October Departed Tangier for Gibraltar. 2>--27 October At Gibraltar. 27 October Departed Gibraltar for Palma. 27-29 October Ell route to Palma. 2c)"'31 October At Palma_ 31 October Departed Palma for Barcelona. 31 October-I ovember E" route to Barcelona. I ovember Departed Barcelona for Valencia. 1-2 November En route to VaJencia. 2 ovember Departed Valencia for Palma. 2-3 November Ell route to Palma. 3-4 November At Palma. 4 November Departed Palma for Malta. 4-6 November En route to MaJta. 6 November-5 lanuary 1938 At Malta. 8 ovember-16 December Taken in hand for docking and refit.
1938 5 lanuary Departed Malta for Palma. 5-7 January En route to Palma. 7-11 lanuary Al Palma. II January Departed Palma for Barcelona. 11-12 January Elf route to Barcelona. 12-13 January At Barcelona. 13 January Departed Barcelona for VaJencia. 13-14 January En route to Valencia. 14 lanuary Departed Valencia for Palma. 14-15 January Ell route to Palma. 15-19 lanuary At Palma. 19 lanuary Departed Palma for Marseilles. 19-20 January En route to Marseilles. 20-22 lanuary Al Marseilles. 22 lanuary Departed Marseilles for Palma. 22-23 January En route to Palma. 2~27 lanuary At Palma. 27 lanuary Departed Palma for Barcelona. 27-28 January En route to Barcelona. 28 January Departed Barcelona for VaJencia. 28-29 January At Valencia. 29 January Departed Valencia for Palma. 29-30 January Ell route to Palma. 30 lanuary-3 February Al Palma. 3 February Departed Palma for Malta. 3-S February Elf route to Malta. 5 February-3 March Al Malta. II February-3 March Taken in hand for docking. 3 March Departed Malta for Gibraltar. 3-7 March En rOflte to Gibraltar. 7 March DeparteJ Gibraltar for exercises. 7-11 March On exercises. 11-14 March Al Gibraltar. 14 March Departed Gibraltar for exercises. 14-18 March On exercises. 18--26 March At Gibraltar. 26 March Departed Gibraltar for Palma. 26-28 March Elf route to Palma. 28 March-I April Al Palma. I April Departed Palma for Caldelas. NE Spain. 1-2 April En route to Caldetas. 2 April Departed Caldetas for Barcelona. 2 April Departed Barcelona for Valencia. 2-3 April En route to Valencia. 3 April Departed Valencia for Palma. 3-4 April En route to Palma. 4-6 April At Palma. 6 April Departed Palma for Barcelona. 6-7 April Ell route to Barcelona. 7-9 April At Barcelona. 9 April Departed Barcelona for Caldet... C)...IOApril Al Caldet...
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
240
10 April Departed Caldelas for Valencia. 10-11 April Etl rowe to Valencia. I) April Departed Valencia for Palma. 11-12 April Ell route to Palma. 12-15AprilAt Palma. 15 April Departed Palma for Barcelona. 15-16 April £11 rolllela Barcelona. 16 April Departed Barcelona for Caldelas. 16-18April At Caldelas. 18April Departed Caldelas for Valencia. 18April Departed Valencia for Palma. 18-19 April Ell route to Palma. 19-21 April At Palma. 21 April Departed Palma for Golfe-Juan. 21-22 April Ell route to Golfe-Juan. 22 April-2 May At Golfe- Juan. 2 May Departed Golfe-Juan for SI-Florenl, Corsica. 2-5 May At St-Florent. 5 May Departed SI-Florenl for Malta. 5-7 May Ell roWe 10 Malta. 7 May-28 June At Malta. 16 May-22 June Taken in hand for rearmament and docking. 20 May Caplain H.T.C. Walker assumes command. 24 May Enters floating dock. 5 June Visited by King George VI. 28 June Departed Malta for exercises and Corfu. 28-30 June On exercises. 30 June-{; July Al Corfu. 6 July Departed Corfu for Navarin Bay, Greece. 6-7 JuJy En route to Navarin Bay. 7-20 July At Navarin Bay. 20 July Departed Navarin Bay for Malta. 20-22 July Ell route lO Malia. 22-26 July At Malta. 26 July Departed Malta for Palma. 26-28 July Ell rollte to Palma. 28-31 July At Palma. 31 July Departed Palma for Caldelas. 31 JuJy-l August E" rollte to Caldetas. 1-2 August At Caldelas. 2 August Departed Caldelas for Gandia. 2-3 August E" roWe to Gandia. 3-4 August At Gandia. 4 August Departed Gandia for Palma. 4-5 August E" rollie to Palma. 5--7 August At Palma. 7 August Departed Palma for Gandia. 7-8 August En rallle to Gandia. 8-9 August At Gandia. 9 August Departed Gandia for Caldetas. 9 August Departed Caldetas for Marseilles (with refugees embarked). 9 August Rescues crew of SS Lake Lugmlo after being bombed at Palam6s. 9-10 August En route to Marseilles. 10-11 August At Marseilles. 11 August Departed Marseilles for Caldetas. 11-12 August E" route to Caldetas. 12 August Departed Caldetas for Barcelona. 12-13 August At Barcelona. 13 August Departed Barcelona for Palma. 13-18 August At Palma. 18 August Departed Palma with Htv1S Sussex for Malta. 18-19 August En rollle to Malta. 19 August-3 September At Malta. 22 August Flag of Geoffrey Layton, ViceAdmiral Commanding Battle Cruiser Squadron, hoisted. 3 September Departed Malta for Gibraltar. 3--6 September Ell route to Gibraltar. 6-7 September At Gibraltar. 7 September Departed Gibraltar for Tangier. 7-10 September At Tangier. 10 September Departed Tangier for Gibraltar. 1ll-28 September At Gibraltar. 20 September Grounded while leaving harbour; minor damage. 28 September Royal Navy mobilises for war.
28 September Departed Gibraltar to escort RMS Aqllital1ia in company with 3rd Destroyer Flotilla. 28 September-l October Escorted Aquital1ia, thence to Gibraltar. 1-17 October At Gibraltar. 17 October Departed Gibraltar for Gandia. 17-18 October Ell route to Gandia. 18 October Departed Gandia for Palma. 18-19 October Ell route to Palma. 19-22 October At Palma. 22 October Departed Palma for Caldelas. 22-23 October El1 route to Caldetas. 23 October Departed Caldotas for Marseilles. 23-24 October Ell route to Marseilles. 24-26 October At Marseilles. 26 October Departed Marseilles for Palma. 26-27 October Ell rOllte to Palma. 27 October-2 November At Palma. 2 November Departed Palma for Gandia. 2-3 November En route to Gandia. 3 November Departed Gandia with 150 Cuban refugees for Marseilles. 3-4 November En route to Marseilles. 4-7 November At Marseilles. 7 November Departed MarseiJles for Malta. 7-9 November En roWe to Malta. 9 November-IO January 1939 At Malta. 10 November-I 2 December Taken in hand for repairs to 'Y' turret. 24 November-I 0 December Taken in hand for docking and repairs.
1939 I January Photo of ship's company on forecaslle taken by R. Ellis of Vallella. 9 January Flag of Vice-Admiral Geoffrey Layton transferred to HMS Barham. 10 January Departed Malta for Gibraltar. 10-13 January En roWe to Gibraltar. 13-14 January Al Gibraltar. 14 January Departed Gibraltar for Portsmouth. 14-18 January En rOtlte to Portsmouth. 18 January-13 August At Portsmouth. 23 January-I 2 August Taken in hand for refit (including replacemenl of HA armament) and repairs to turbines and outer bottom. 3 May Captain Irvine G. Glennie assumes command. I June Flag of William j. Whitworth, RearAdmiral Commanding Battle Cruiser Squadron, hoisted. 2 June Recommissioned for service as Flagship, Battle Cruiser Squadron, Home Fleet. 13 August Departed Porlsmouth for Scapa Flow. 13-14 August En rotlte to Scapa Flow. 14-15 August Al Scapa Flow. 15 August Departed Scapa Flow for Rosyth. 15-16August En rotlte to Rosyth. 16-17 August Al Rosyth. 17 August Departed Rosyth for Scapa Flow. 17-18 August En rollte to Scapa Flow. 18 August Departed Scapa Flow for Rosyth. 18-19 August Ell rollle to Rosyth. 19-20 August Al Rosyth. 20 August Departed Rosyth for Invergordon. 20-21 August En route to Invergordon. 21-24 August Atlnvergordon. 24 August Departed Invergordon for Scapa Flow. 24-25 August Ell rOllte to Scapa Flow. 25--31 August At Scapa Flow. 31 August Royal Navy mobilises for war. 31 August Departed Scapa Flow to form palrol between Iceland and Faeroes with Battle Cruiser Squadron (HMS Repllise and RellowrJ) and three destro)'ers. 31 August-ti September Al sea. 3 September Britain declares war on Germany.
6-8 September At Scapa Flow. 8 September Departed Scapa Flow with I-IMS Renown, Belfast, Edi"bllrgh and four deslroyers to form palrol between Iceland and the Faeroes. 8-12 September At sea. II September Rear·Admiral Whit,,~'orth ordered by Admiral Sir Charles Forbes, Commander-in-Chief Home Fleet, to return to Scapa Flow with enlire Battle Cruiser Squadron. 12-14 September At Scapa Flow. 14 September Departed Scapa Flow for Loch Ewe with HMS Rodne}' and four destroyers. 14-15 September En rOflte to Loch Ewe. 15--20 September At Loch Ewe. 17 September Visiled by the Rt Hon. Winston Churchill, First Lord of the Admiralty, and Admiral Sir Charles Forbes, Commander·in·Chief Home Fleet. 20 September Departed Loch Ewe for Scapa Flow. 20-21 September E" rOllle to Scapa Flow. 21-22 September At Scapa Flow. 22 September Departed Scapa Flow to cover raid in the Skagerrak. 22-23 September At sea. 23-25 Seplember At Scapa Flow. 25 September Departed Scapa Flow with HMS Nelson, Rodney, Repulse, Ark Royal, 18th Cruiser Squadron and destroyer escort to provide distant cover for rescue of HMS/m Spearfish from Horns Reef. 25--27 September At sea. 26 September Struck by 500-lb. bomb from Ju 88 bomber; port bulge amidships nooded and condensers damaged. 27 September-I October At Scapa Flow. I October Departed Scapa Flow for Loch Ewe with HMS Nelson, etc. 1-2 October En rOllte to Loch Ewe. 2-5 October At Loch Ewe. 5 October Departed Loch Ewe for Scapa Flow with HMS NeisOll, etc. 5 OClober Admiral Sir Charles Forbes, Commander-in-Chief Home Fleet: 'Retubing of all main condensers advised soon in Hood.' 5-6 October En route to Scapa Flow. 6-8 October At Scapa Flow. 8 October Departed Scapa Flow with HMS Repulse, Allrora, Sheffield and four destroyers (Force E) towards Norwegian coast to intercept Glleisenall, Ka/" and nine destroyers reported steering north off Obrestad Light, Norway. 8-11 October On patrol in the Norwegian Sea. 10 October Makes for Loch Ewe with HMS NelsOlI and six destroyers. 11-15 October At Loch Ewe. 15 October Departed Loch Ewe on patrol. 15-22 October On patrol ben"een Scotland and Iceland. 16-17 October Covers armed merchant cruisers of Northern Patrol wilh HMS
Nelson, Rodt/ey, Furious, Allrora, Belfast and nine destroyers. 22-23 October At Loch Ewe. 23 October Departed Loch Ewe with HMS Nelson, Rodlley and six destroyers to search for 55 Cityo! Flillt off Ihe Lofoten Islands and to cover iron ore convoy between Nan,ik and the Forth. 23-31 October On patrol in the Norwegian Sea. 26 October Covers Narvik convoy. 30 October Force unsuccessfully attacked by V-56 west of the Orkne)'s. 31 October-2 ovember At Greenock. 31 October Visited by the RI Hon. \·Vinston Churchill, First Lord of the Admiralty.
2 November Departed Greenock with HMS Nelson etc. to cover operations of orthern Patrol wesl of the Hebrides. 2-9 November On patrol off Ihe Hebrides and in the orwegian Sea. 4 November Dispositions made to intercept German SS New York. 6-7 November Covers first outbound Scandinavian convo), of the War (ON I) with HMS Nelso" etc. 9 November At Rosyth. 9 November Departed Rosyth for Plymouth. 9-11 November En roule to Plymouth escorted by destroyers HMS Ilttrepid, Imnhoe and Fearless. 11-25 November At PI),mouth. 13-25 November Taken in hand for repairs. 25 November Departed Plymouth to intercept ship presumed to be Deutschla"d (actuaUy Schamhorst and GrJeisenau) following sinking of armed merchant cruiser HMS Rawalpindi. 25 ovember-2 December Eu rollle to and then on patrol south of Iceland escorted by three'E' class destroyers and in company with DII1Jkerqlle, Georges Leyglles, MotHealm and two destroyers of the French navy; entire force under command of Vice-Am ira I Marcel Gensoul; thence to Greenock. 2 December Departed Greenock escorted by three'K' class destroyers for patrol north of the Faeroes. 2-11 December Ell route to and then on patrol north of the Faeroes escorted by HM destroyers Somali, Mashoua and Punjabi. 5-8 December ''''ith four destroyers acts as distant cover for Norwegian convoy. 9 December Hood and escorting destroyers ordered by Admiral Sir Charles Forbes, Commander-in-Chief Home Fleet, to proceed to Greenock. 11-13 December At Greenock. 13 December Departed Greenock with HMS Warspite, Barham and seven destroyers to intercept Leipzig, Niimberg, Kalil and five destroyers in North Sea, then rerouted to cover First Canadian Troop Convoy TCI (RMS Aqllilflrlia, Empress of Britain, Empress ofAustralia, Of/chess of Bedford and MOIlarch of Bermuda) in the Atlantic. 13-17 December At sea. 16-17 December Meets Canadian Troop Convoy north of Ireland, escorting it to Greenock with HMS H'arspite, Bar/lam, Resolution, Repulse, Furious, Emerald and fourteen destroyers. 17-27 December At Greenock. 27 December Departed Greenock on patrol. 27 December-5 January 1940 On patrol in the North Atlantic and Norwegian Sea. 23-24 December With HMS Ediltbllrgh and Glasgow covers convoy DHN6 carrying arms for Finland. 28 December From area west of Hebrides proceeds north with four destroyers 10 patrol north of the Shetlands. 29 December-2 January 1940 On patrol north of the Shetlands with three destroyers.
1940 2-5 January ''\lith four destroyers covers H N convoy and operations by Northern Patrol north of the Shetlands. 5-15 January At Greenock. 15 January Departed Greenock on patrol with HMS \Varspile and 8th Destroyer Flotilla 15-24 January At sea. 15-22 January Patrols Shetland-Faeroes gap with HMS lVarspite and 8th Destroyer Flotilla.
Chronology
22-24 January Carries out gunnef)'
practice with HMS Warspite and 8th Destroyer Flotilla east of North Rona. 24 January-9 February At Greenock. 9 February Departed Greenock on patrol with I-IMS Warspite and eight destroyers. 9-18 February At sea. 10 February From area west of Hebrides
proceeds northwards with HMS Warspite and eight destroyers to cover Scandinavian convoys. 12-14 February On patrol north-west of
the Shetlands. 16 February Heads east with HMS Warspite and seven destroyers 10 support the boarding of the Aftmark if necessary. 18-19 February At Greenock.
19 February Departed Greenock with HMS
Warspite and Rodney to cover convoy ON 14 (Kirkwall-Scandinavia). 19-24 February At sea. 20-22 February Covers convoy DN 14 from position north-east of Shetlands. 21 February From Admiralty: 'Owing to congestion in home yards it will be necessary to carry out retubing of condensers of Hood at Malta where she can be taken in hand about 3 March. Minimum time required for this work is 45 days. Hood should be sailed for Malta after Renoum has finished giving leave.' (Order later rescinded.) 23 February Makes for the Clyde with HMS Rodney and eight destroyers after providing distant cover for convoy HN 14. 24 February-2 March At the Clyde. 2 March Departed the Clyde with HMS Valimu and six destroyers to cover of\vegian convoys and Northern Patrol. 2-7 March At sea. 3 March On patrol 60 miles East of the Faeroes. 5 March With HMS Valiallt and five destroyers including HMS Kelly covers convoy ON 17 and 0 17a from Norway. 7-14 March At Scapa Flow. &-9 March Visited by the Rt Hon. Winston Churchill, First Lord of the Admiralty. II March Flag of William j. Whitworth, Rear-Admiral Commanding Battle Cruiser Squadron, transferred to HMS Renown 14 March Departed Scapa Flow for Greenock. 14-15 March Etl route 10 Greenock escorted by three destroyers. 1S-30 March At Greenock. 25 March Declared unavailable for operations in Freetown-Dakar area in view of need to retube condensers. 29 March 'Owing to political situation it has been decided that retubing of condensers of Hood is to take place at Devonport instead of Malta. Ship can be taken in hand now.' 30 March Departed Greenock for Plymouth. 30-31 March £11 rOllte to Plymouth escorted by three destroyers. 31 March-27 May At Plymouth. 4 April-23 May Taken in hand for refitting, retubing of condensers, etc. 13 April Landing party of 250 Marines and Seamen from Hood (together with ship's howitzer) depart by train for Rosyth to participate in Operation 'Primrose', the occupation of Alesund, Of\\'3Y. 15 April Party departs Rosyth in HM sloop Black Swan. 17-18 April Party disembarks at Andalsnes. 30 April-I May Main body of landing Earty reembarks in HMS Galatea at Andalsnes. 3 May Twenty members of expeditionary force return to Hood.
241
6 May Rest of expeditionary force (except three injured men) return to Hood. 27 May Departed Plymouth for Liverpool escorted by HM destroyers Witch, Escort and \.vo/veri/le. 27-28 May En route to Liverpool. 28 May-12 June AI Liverpool. 28 May-12 June Taken in hand for refitting and repairs in Gladstone Dock. II June Boarding parly from Hood captures Italian SS Erica. 12 June Departed Liverpool escorted by HMC destroyers Skeena, RestigollclJe and St Laurellt to cover Al\1ZAC Troop Convoy US3 (RMS Qlleen Mar)', Empress oJ Britain, Aquitatlia, Mauretania, Andes and Empress of Cn/lnda) from Bay of Biscay to the Clyde. 12-16JuneAt sea. 14-16June Meelsconvoy US3 in Bay of Biscay, escorting it to the Clyde with HMS Argus, Dorsetsllire, ShropslIire, Cumberland and nine destroyers. 16-18 June At Greenock. 18 June Departed Greenock escorted by HM destroyers Fraser, Restigouche, Wallderer, Skef!fla and St Laurent to join HMS Ark Royal 250 miles west of Malin Head and proceed to Gibraltar. 18-23 June En route to Gibraltar. 18 June Meets H MS Ark Ro!,al. 23-26 June At Gibraltar. 26 June Departed Gibraltar towards Canary Islands with Force H including HMS Ark Royal and five destroyers to intercept Riche/ieu, reported sailed from Dakar, and escort her if possible to Gibraltar. 26-27 June At sea. 27 June /-Iood turns for Gibraltar after Richelieu reported returned to Dakar after sighling HMS Dorselshire. 27-28 June At Gibraltar. 28 June Departed Gibraltar towards Canary Islands with HMS Ark Royal against reports, later proved incorrect, that RichelieLl had left Dakar; returned to Gibraltar immediately. 28 June-2 July AI Gibraltar. 30 June Flag of Sir James Somerville, ViceAdmiral Commanding Force H, hoisted. 2 July Departed Gibraltar with Force HHMS Ark Royal, Valiant, Resolution, AretllUsa, Etlterprise and eleven destroyers: 8th Destroyer Flotilla (Falliknor, FoxJlowld, Fearless, Forester, Foresight and Escort); 13th Destroyer Flotilla (Keppel, Active, Wrestler, Vidette and Vortigem)-to carry out Operation 'Catapult', the neutralisation of Ihe French neet al Mers-el-Kebir,Algeria. 2-3 July En route to Mers-el-Kebir. 3-4 July Off Mers-eJ-Kebir. 3 July 17.sS-18.04: Force H shells French Oeet in harbour resulting in destruction of Bretaglle and serious damage to DlIIlkerque and Provence; 18.09-18.12: shore batteries engaged; escaping Strasbourg pursued until 20.22; Hood suffers splinter damage and two slight casualties. 4 July En route to Gibraltar. 4 July Unsuccessfully attacked by French bombers. 4-5 July At Gibraltar. 5 July Deparled Gibraltar with Force H (HMS Ark Ro)'al, Valiatll,Arethusa, Emerprise and ten destroyers) to implement Operation 'Lever', air strike against Dfmkerque beached at Mers-el-Kebir. 5-6 July En rollle to Mcrs-el-Kebir area. 6 July Off Mers-el-Kebir; air strike launched from HMS Ark Ro)'al90 miles north-cast of Oran. 6 July Eu route to Gibraltar. 6-8 July At Gibraltar. 8 July Departed Gibraltar with Force HHMS Ark Ro)'al, Valiam, Resollltioll, Aretlwsa, Etlterprise, Delhi and tcn destroyers: 8th Destroyer Flotilla (FnII/blOr,
Foresight, Fearless, Foxho"1Id and Escort); 13th Destroyer Flotilla (Keppel, DOllglm, Vortigertl, Wishart and \Vatcllmml~-t~ mount diversionary attack on Italian airfield at Cagliari, Sardinia while t\\"o convoys sail from Malta to Alexandria. &-11 July At sea. 9 July Force H suffers high-level attack from Italian S.M.79 bombers; no damagc; planned air strike against Cagliari airfield abandoned; Forcc H turns for Gibraltar. 11-31 July At Gibraltar. 27 July UP mounting on 'B' turret accidentally fires off 20 charges over harbour; three ratings badly burnt. 31 July Departed Gibraltar with Force H (HMS Ark Royal, ValimJt, Resolution, Enterprise and nine destroyers: FalllhIDr,
Foxllowld, Forester, Foresight, Hotsp"r, Gre)'lIofmd, Gallatlt, Escapade, Encowrter and Velox) to carry out Operation 'Hurry', diversionary attack on Cagliari airfield while Argus flies off aircraft for Malta. 31 July-4 August At sea. I August Force H suffers high-level attack from Italian S.M.79 bombers; no damage. 2 August Escorted by Hood, HMS Ark Royal launches air strike on Cagliari airfield while HMS Argus flies off twelve Hurricanes for Malta from a position south-west of Sardinia; Force H turns for Gibraltar. 2-4 August £11 route to Gibraltar. 4 August Departed Gibraltar with HMS Ark Royal, Valiant, Arethusa, Etlterpr;se and nine destroyers (including Falliknor, Foresight, Forester, FoxhOfmd and Escapade) for Scapa Flow. 4-10 August £t1 route to Scapa Flow. 6 August In company with HMS Aretlwsa and FoxhOfmd, meets HM destroyers Tartar, Bedouh, and Punjabi. &-10 August Escorted to Scapa Flow by HM destroyer Escapade. 1~16August At Scapa Flow. 10 August Flag of Sir James Somerville, Vice-Admiral Commanding Force H, transferrcd to HMS Renown; that of William J. Whitworth, Vice·Admiral Commanding Battle Cruiser Squadron, transferred from Re'lOwtl. 16 August Departed Scapa Flow for Rosyth escorted by HM destroyer Vimiera. 16-24 August At Rosyth. 17-24 August Taken in hand for replacement of'A' turret's left lSin gun. 24 August Departed Rosyth for Scapa Flow escorted by four destroyers. 24-25 August Etl rOllte to Scapa Flow. 25 August-I 3 September At Scapa Flow. 13 September Departed Scapa Flow for Rosyth with HMS Nelsoll, Rodlle}', Bonaventure, Naiad, Cairo and seven destroyers against possible German invasion. 13-28 September At Rosyth. 28 September Departed Rosyth with HMS Naiad to intercept enemy cruiser and convoy reporled off Stavanger. 2&-29 September At sea. 29 September-IS October At Scapa Flow. 15 October Departed Scapa Flow with HM destroyers Somali, Eskimo and Masltona to cover attack by Force D (HMS Furious, Berwick and Norfolk) on Tromso, NOf\vay. 1S-19 October At sea. 17 October Made for Scapa Flow in view of bad weather. 19-23 October At Scapa Flow. 23 October Departed Scapa Flow with HMS Repulse, Dido, Phoebe and destroyers Matabele, Prmjabi and Somali towards Obrestad to investigate reported enemy movement. 23-24 October At sea. 24 October Made for Scapa Flow. 24-28 October At Scapa Flow.
28 October Departed Scapa Flow with HMS Repulse, Furiof/s and six destroyers (including HMS £Skill/o) to intercept enemy raider reported by SS Mahoflt in North Atlantic. 2&-31 October At sea. 31 October-5 November At Scapa Flow. 5 November Departed Scapa Flow with HMS Replllseand 15th Cruiser Squadron (Dido, Naiad and Bonallenture) and six 'Tribal' class destroyers including HMS Eskimo. Mashotla, Matabele, Prmjahi and Somali to cover approaches to Brest and Larient against return of Admiral Scheer following attack on HMS Jervis Bay and convoy HX84. 5-11 November At sea. 9 November Abandoned patrol area west of Land's End to refuel at Scapa Flow. 9-11 November En route to Scapa Flow with HMS Phoebe, Naiad and three destroyers including HMS Eskimo and
Sikh. 11-23 November At Scapa Flow. 23 November Departed Scapa Flow with HM destroyers Cossack, Sikh, Eskimo and Electra to cover operations by 1st Minelaying Squadron and HMS Aurora and destroyers Keppel, Bath and St Albans in the Denmark Strait. 23-29 November At sea. 24 November Joined with 1st Minelaying Squadron and HMS Aurora; Direction Finding hut on mainmast gutted by fire. 25 November Off Reykjanes, Iceland. 29 November-I 8 December At Scapa Flow 4 December Visited by new Commanderin-Chief Home Fleet, Admiral Sir John Tovey. II December Hood inspected by Admiral Tovey. 18 December Departed Scapa Flow with for tactical exercises with HMS Nelson, Repulse. Nigeria, Edi"burgh, Mallchester. Aurora and numerous destroyers south-west of Faeroe Islands. 1&-20 December At sea. 2~24 December At Scapa Flow. 24 December Departed Scapa Flow with HMS Edillburgh, Cossnck, Echo, Electra and Escapade to form patrol in Iceland-Faeroes gap against passage of Admiral Hipper. 24-29 December At sea. 29 December-2 January 1941 At Scapa Flow.
1941 2 January Deparled Scapa Flow with HM destroyers Echo, Sikh, Electra and Eskimo to cover operations by 1st Minelaying Squadron north and south of the Faeroe Isfands. 2-5 January At sea. S-II January At Scapa Flow. II January Departed Scapa Flow with HMS Repulse, Edinburgh, Birmingham and destroyers Somali, Eskimo, Tartar, Bedouin, Escapade and Eclipse to cover two large convoys against suspeded German raider. 11-13 January At sea. 13 January Off Dunnet Head; etl route to Rosyth with HM destroyers Echo, Electra and Keppel. 13 January-18 March At Rosyth. 16 January-I 7 March Taken in hand for refit and turbine repairs. 17 January Visited by the Prime Minister, the Rt Hon. Winston Churchill 15 February Captain Ralph Kerr assumes command. 17 February Fire in ''''arranl Officers' galley. 6 March Visited by King George VI.
The Banlecrl/iser HMS HOOD
242
18 March Departed Rosyth to search for SclzamlJorst and Gneisenau 200 miles southwest of the Faeroe Island. 16-23 March At sea. 19 March Joined HMS Queen Eliwbeth, Nelso,J, London and destrorers Eskimo, Electra, Arrow, Jnglefield, Echo and Eclipse off Dunnet Head to intercept Scham/Jorst and C"eisenau. 20 March Joined HMS King George V (Admiral Sir John Tovey, Commander-inChief Home F1eel) between Iceland and the Faeroe Islands. 21 March Hood ordered to steer south at maximum speed to intercept Scharnhorst and Cneisenau. 22-23 March En route to Scapa Flow with HMS Qlleen Eliznbeth and four destroyers. 23-28 March At Scapa Flow. 28 March Departed Scapa Flow with HM destroyers Escapade. Electra and Tartar to act a5 ocean escort for convoy HX 118 from Halifax. 28 March--6 April At sea. 28 March Diverted to western Bay of Biscay with HMS Nigeria and Fiji to
Roll of Honour HoUand, Lance10t E., C.B.
HMS
relie\'e Force H against breakout of
21 April Diverted to Hvalfjord, Iceland
Schorn/IOTst and Gneisenau from Brest. 4 April Relieved off Brest by HMS King
with HM destroyer Inglefield against breakout of Bismarck into Atlantic.
George Vand London. 4-6 April Ell roWe to Scapa Flow to refuel with HM destroyers Escapnde, £Jeam and Tarlar. 6 April At Seapa Flow. 6 April Departed Seapa Flow with HMS ZUlli, Maori and Arrow to resume patrol in Bay of Biscay against breakout of Scharnhorst and Cneisenau from Brest. 6-14 April At sea. 13-14 April E" route to Scapa Flow with HMS Ke"}'D and destroyers Cossnck, Zul". Maori and Arrow. 14-18April At Scapa Flow. 18 April Departed Scapa Flow with HMS
6-22 May At Scapa Flow. 8 May Flag of William J. Whitworth, Vice-
Admiral Commanding Battle Cruiser
12 May Flag of Lancelot E. Holland, Vice-
orwegian Sea
foUowing reports (later prm-ed false) that the Bismarck had left Kiel and was heading north-west with two Leipzig class cruisers and three destroyers.
Captain
PO/X 4821 P/JX 251542
PO/X 328 P/MX 64885 PI]X 172597 RMB/X 546
PO/X 2029 PI]X 158912 P/K 75215 P/JX 234551 P/KX 96072 PI]X 201132 AAFI
Ordinary Seaman
P/jX 223041
Petty Officer Boy 1st Class Leading Stoker Leading Seaman
PI] 112089 PI]X 162068 P/K 62900 PI] 101995 PI]X 227794 P/KX 100482
Ordinary Seaman Stoker I st Class
Allen, William E.S.
Able Seaman
A1lott, George Almond, Frederick A1tham, Arthur Ambridge, Walter C.
Marine
PO/X 2182 P/IX 98121 POI 22532
Able Seaman Stoker 2nd Class Sergeant, R.M. Able Seaman Able Seaman Able Seaman
PI]X 171643 P/SKX 625 POI 22128 PI] 94783 PI]X 173852 PI]X 159545
Anderson,lohn
Chief Engine Room Artificer
P/M 5709
Anderson, joseph M. Andrews, Cecil V. Annis, James E. Applegarth, Richard Appleyard, John A.E Ardley, jack C. ArkinstaU, John Armstrong, John C.
Ordinar)' Seaman PI]X 157287 Ordinar)' Seaman PI]X 197467 Stoker 1st Class P/KX 98129 Leading Signalman PI]X 131360 Ordinary Seaman PI]X 22598 Boy Ist Class P/jX 16230 I Leading Seaman PI]X 129315 Leading Stoker P/KX 84345 Able Seaman PI]X 158626 Petty Officer Stoker P/KX 80686 Able Seaman PI]X 173851 Petty Officer Stoker P/K 14731 Alias o[Andre Blondel Chief Petty Officer C1111409
Marine
Awdry, harles D. Ayling, Frank R. Ayling, Ronald Ayres, Henry D. Badcock, John H. Baildon, Frank Bailey. Frederick V'l. Bailey, Leonard W.I. Baines, Godfrey j.
Baker, Andrew L. Baker, George E_
Baker, Kenneth A.
Alland, Henry C. Allcock, William S. Allen, Arthur EI. Allen, Charles W. Allen, Edward B. Allen, James E. Allen, John G.
Squadron, hoisted. 13 May Hood carries out range and inclination exercises with HMS King George V in the Pentland Firth.
Able Seaman Petty Officer Stoker Able Seaman Able Seaman
Barker, Thomas Barnes, Thomas G. Barnes, \\'alter J. Barnet, \Villiam L. Barnett, h'or G. Barrie, Walter R. Barringer, \\'illiam H. Bartley, Archibald E.T
Barton, Kenneth c.F. Basham, Howard Bassett, Charles G.
P/SSX 28511
Basstone, Jack Batchelor, Arthur R. Bates, Frederick G. Bates, Leonard A. Bates, Reginald S. Batley, A. Roger T.
Batten, Herbert \V.L. Battersby, Clifford Baxter, John K. Baylis, Herber! I. Beard, R. Alan Beard, Thomas N.K. Beardsley, Geoffrey Y. Belcher, Cyril .V.
P/KX 83003
P/SSX 21827 PI]X 136464
BeU, Cyril K. BeU, Ronald TL. BeU, \\rilliam
Lieutenant~ ommander Canteen Assistant NAAFI
Able Seaman Ordinary Signalman Stoker 2nd Class Able Seaman Marine Ordinary Signalman Leading Seaman Ordinar)' Seaman Leading Stoker Petty Officer Telegraphist Able Seaman E.G. Stoker I st Class
Balch, Percy H. Baldwin, Kenneth Baldwin, Phillip R. Ball, Charles ED. Ball, Phillip A. Ball, William Ballard, Arthur Balsdon, Ernest E Bamford, Anthony B.I. Banfield, Kenneth J. Banks, George H. Banks, idne)' T. Barclay, Alex C.
Steward Atkinson, lohn H. Atkinson, Robert Austin, Albert G.L. Avery, Albert G.
other destroyers. 4-6 May fl" route to Scapa Flo\\'.
16-21 April At sea. 19 April Altered course for
Alger, Eric
Ashley, Robert G. Assirati, Albert EG. Aston, John Atkins, William E.
May At Hvalfjord. 4 May Departed Hvalfjord for Seapa Flow escorted by H~IS Eclzo, Amlzony and two
Admiral Commanding Bartle Cruiser Squadron, struck.
Vice-Admiral, Bailie Cruiser
Marine Ordinary Coder Marine Marine Able Seaman Musician Corporal, R.M. Midshipman, R.N.R. Adams, Vietor E. Ordinary Seaman Adams, Victor H. Leading Stoker Ainsworth, Frederick j. Able Seaman Stoker 1st Class Akehurst, Rodne)' G. Aldred, Gerald A_ Ordinary Telegraphist A1gat., Alfred K. Canteen Assistant
Armstrong, orman Arnold, ""illiam A.
~
Grimstadfjorden, Norway. 22-24 May At sea. 23 May Bismarck and Pri"z Ellgen sighted b)' HMS Suffolk in the Denmark Strait. 24 May 05.35 Prinz Euge" and Bismarck sighted by Prince o(\\'t1les in the Denmark
Strait at a range o(se\'enteen miles; 05.37 enemy sighted by Hood; 05.37 Holland turns his force 400 to starboard; 05.43 Hood signals enemy report; 05.49 Hood turns further 200 to starboard; 05.52.5 Hood opens fire on Prinz Ellgen; c.05.53-4 Hood shifts fire to Bismarck; c.05.55 Holland turns his force 200 to port towards the enemy; c.05.55 Hood hit on boat deck by Pri"z Ellgen; 05.5~.00 Holland turns his force another 200 to port; 06.00 Hood mortally hit by Bismarck's fifth sal\'o while executing this turn; c.06.03 Hood sunk; c.08.00 three survivors rescued by HMS Electra and landed at Reykjavik later that da)'; HMS Alltelope finds only wreckage.
Hood, 24 May 1941
Abbott, Frederick Abbott, Kenneth Ablett, Wallace A. Abrams, Robert G. Adon. Percival .H. Adams, Frank P. Adams, Keith H. Adams, Nigel N.
Ambrose, John Amery, Thomas c.F. Anderson, Arthur D.
cover for two convoys against surface attack.
Keu),o and three destroyers to resume patrol off Brest.
Squadron Kerr, Ralph, C.B.E.
21-28April At Hvalfjord. 26 April Assists in repair of H~1 destrorer Scimitar. 28 April Departed Hvalfjord on patrol with HMS Suffolk, Norfolk and destroyers Echo, Act;"e. Aelrates and Ant/JOIt),. 28 April-3 May At sea; provides distant
22 May Departed Scapa Flow with H~IS Priuce 0(\ \'t1les, Aclzates, Antelope, Antlzon)', Eello, Electra and Icarus to intercept Bismarck and Priuz Ellgen, reported to ha\'e left
Ordinary Seaman Able Seaman Stoker I st Class Leading Stoker Boy I st Class Stoker 1st Class Able Seaman Boy I st Class Stoker I st Class Leading Cook (S) Leading Cook (S)
PI]X 142821 PI]X 216602 P/KX 110312
P/SSX 24371 POI 18832 PI]X 159501 PI]X 154089 PI]X 212472 PliO, 67015
P/jX 147862 PIJX 126181 PIKX 103695 PI]X 237431 PIJX 174099 P/KX 98122 P/KX 75116 PIJX 164162 P/KJ( 96073 PIJX 157928 PIJX 171720 P/KJ( 100460 P/MX50364
P/MX 59308
Belsham, lames R.
Bembridge, Percy A. Bennett, Ernest Bennett, Percival Benoist, Donald G. Benton, Leonard BenweU, Ernest ET
Beresford, Kenneth Berner. Robert V. Betts, Robert Beveridge, Ro)'
Biggenden, 'Vaiden J. Binnie, John E. Bird, Herbert G.A. Bishop, Charles j. Bishop, Edward I.P. Bispham, Leslie W. Biss, John Blake, Harold G. Blann, Kenneth A.E Bleach, Arthur B. Blondel, Andre
Able Seaman P/J 93900 Ordinar)' Seaman P/IX 161691 Marine PO/X 3432 Boy lSi Class PIJX 162618 Able Seaman P/SSX 28581 Alias o[Leonard Goulstine Sick Berth Chief P/M 36898 Petty Officer Alias o[Kenneth Radle)' P/MX 60040 Leading Writer toker I st Class P/K 64411 Ordnance Artificer PI lX 62732 4th Class Chief toker P/KX 88862 Petty Officer Stoker P/K 66612 Ordnance Artificer P/MX 50730 3rd Class Chief Stoker P/K 49102 PI]X 151111 Pett), Officer
(Pensioner) Ordinary Seaman Able Seaman Leading toker Able Seaman Able Seaman
Elect rical Artificer
Ordinary Seaman PIJX 157016 Petty Officer Stoker P/K 62197
4th Class Bloodworth, Herbert W. Able Seaman
Able Seaman Cook (0) Stoker 2nd Class Able Seaman
Blow, Leonard
PIJ 54599
Ordinaf)' Seaman
P/JX 157878 PI]X 135430
P/KX 81252 PIJX 159936
P/SSX 24656 P/MX 72194 PI]X 172182 PIJX 158632
P/MX 63110
Blunt, William H.T.
Leading Cook (S)
D/MX 48111
P/KX 104186 PIJX 157059
Boardman, Stanle)' Bocuu, Alfred A. Boncey, William L.
Petty Officer Marine Petty Officer
PIJX 140291 POI 21632 PIJX 138206 PIJ 114908
Marine Signal Boatswain
PO/X 4223
Petty Officer Ordinary Seaman Pen)' Officer Marine Yeoman of Signals Leading Seaman Marine Wireman
PI]X 126991 PI] X·160189 PI]X 161546
PO/X 100574 PI] 54353 PI]X 153715
PO/X 1561
P/MX 78231 R. . V.R. Ordinary Seaman PI]X 158400 Able Seaman PI]X 154410 Petty Officer PI] 112529 Ordinary Signalman PI]X 224176 larine PO/X 3360 Midshipman, R.C.N. Joiner 4th lass P/~IX 58969 Electrical Artificer P/MX 51470 3rd Class Ordinary ignalman PIJX 216464 Ordinary Signalman P/IX 157978 Able Seaman, P/CD/X 2532 R.N.Y.R.
Bond, Sidne)' W.
Able Seaman
Boneham, Norman Boniface, Jack Bonner, Colin A. Boone, Bernard J.
Marine Able Seaman Able Seaman Engine Room Artificer 4th Class
Booth, George H.
Stoker 2nd Class
Borrer, Harold T. Borsberry, George
Able Seaman
Lieutenant~Commander,
Bosley, Frank \ V.
Pen y Officer Cook (S) Leading Sick Berth
PO/X 4228 PIJX 158220
P/JX 181870 P/MX 60188 P/KX 116710 PIJX 157334 P/MX 45410
P/MX 46291
Allendant Bostock, Cha r1es \ ".
Bower, Reginald P. Bower, Ronald Bowers, Leo S. Bowie, Duncan Bowyer, Thomas R. Bowyer, \\'alter F. Bradley, Harold Bradley, Kenneth I.
Chief Mechanician Able Seaman toker 1st Class
Ordinary Seaman Able Seaman, R.N.Y.R. Ordinary Telegraphist Stoker Ist Class
P/K 57520 PIJX 212274 P/KX 104052 PIJX 157338
P/CD/X 2180 PI]X 223160
Ordinary Seaman
P/KX 96060 PI/X 162374
Able Seaman
P/SSX 25711
Roll of Honour
Bradshaw, Thomas F. BramhaIJ, Harold Brand, William H. Brandon, Albert A.
243
Stoker 2nd Class Joiner 4th Class Corporal, R.M. Ordinar). Telegraphist
P/KX 103696 P/SR 598 PO/X 1776 P/SSX 33934
Able Seaman Ordinary Seaman
pnX 159522 pnX 157933 P/jX 212473 pnX 212474 P/SSX 33040 ClLD/X 5409
Bransden. Paul D. Brett, Benjamin A. Brewer, Arthur V,i. Brewer, George Bridge, Arthur T.
Telegraphist
Bridges, Kenneth C.
Ordinary
Bridges, Ronald W. Brierley, \<\'iIliam L. Bristow, Harr)' Brinon. Clarence V. Broadhurst, Dennis C. Broadie)', William N. Brookes, Donald A.
Brooks, Gordon B. Brooks, jack
Brooks. Terrence L. Broom, George \!I/. Brown, Arthur Brown, Eric F. Brown, Ernest Brown, George "V. Brown, Henry J. Brown, John L. Brown, Robert K.
Browne, Robert H.P. Brownrigg, John G.P. Bryant, Denis M. Buck, Arthur E.J. Buck, Herbert T.J. Buckett, Philip J.
Ordinary Seaman
Ordinaf)' Seaman
Clarke. David \11,'.
\'\fireman Leading Steward \Vireman Marine \"'ireman Leading Seaman
Clarke, Leslie H.
P/MX 62163 P/LX 23078 P/MX 71977 PO/X 100335 P/MX 8620 P/IX 143514 Telegraphist P/SSX 29952 Stoker Ist Class P/KX 98127 Stoker Ist Class P/KX 90930 Marine PO/X 4275 Shipwright 3rd Class P/MX 52995 Marine POI 21742 Boy ISI Class pnX 163151 Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 113257 Steward P/L 15186 Able Seaman pn 97379 Leading Seaman P/JX 138751 Petty Officer Stoker P/KX 78189
Paymaster Lieutenant Lieutenant-Commander Midshipman Mechanician P/KX 81986 2nd Class Petty Officer Stoker
P/KX 85480
Midshipman,
Bull, Percival H.
Leading Seaman
Bull, Robert J. Bullock, Edward H. Bullock, Henry W. Bullock, \<\'illiam F. Bolman, Kenneth F. BurcJott, John B.E.
Able Seaman Able Seaman
Burgess. Henr)' Burkin, Robert H. Burnell, Gordon R.
Warrant Ordnance Officer Marine CH/X 692 Ordinary Seaman PI)X 158664
Burningham,
Chief Petty Officer
PI) 79704 pnX 158398 PI) 57828 P/SSX 20506 PI)X 204031 pnX 164289 P/KX 98118 P/M 34338
Marine Able Seaman Petty Officer Petty Officer Cook
P/j 68168 pn 111735 P/IX 154427 PO/X 546 P/SSX 20035 P/I 103720 P/MX 46625
Butler, Horace A.
Able Seaman Able Seaman Able Seaman
Butterworth, Alfred N.
Able Seaman
Byrne. Franci
Boy ISl Class Stoker 1st Class Chief Petty Officer Cook Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 113786 PI)X 181939 Boy Ist Class Sub-Lieutenant (E), R.N.Y.R. PI)X 132380 Leading Seaman POI 22722 Marine Petty Officer Stoker P/K 19095 PI) 100264 Yeoman of Signals Ordinary Seaman P/IX 212275 Marine PO/X 3816 pnX 157966 Ordinary Seaman Supply Assistant P/MX 63625
Byrne, Thomas G. Cabell, Percy A. Cabrin, Roy V. CaIJon, William J. Cambridge, John H. Campbell, Albert G.
Cann, Herbert R. Cantrill, Joshua Canty, William D. Capon, Leslie A. Capstick, Arthur J. Carey, Arthur T. Carey, Daniel A.B.
Ordinary Seaman Leading Seaman Marine
Marine Ordinary Seaman Electrical Artificer
pn94291 P/IX 152636 pnX 159109 pnX 160603 P/JX 159718 pnX 136450 PO/X 100046 POIX 3361 P/IX 237281 P/MX 6095
4th Class Clarkc, Stanley W. Clayton, Stanle)'
Clayton, ""iUiam A. Cleeler, William G. Clements, Thomas 'VV. Cleton, Peter Y. Clitherow, Charles E Clothier, Kenneth R.J. Cloul, Cecil G. Cobb, William H. Cockhead, Alfred J. Cogger, Thomas E. Cole, Albert E. Cole, George D. Cole, John j. Cole, William G.
Coleman, Dennis J. Collett, Stanle)' J. Collings, John P. Collins, Arthur R. Collins, Reginald J. Collinson, Robert E. Collis, Gordon V. Collyer, Percy W. L. Comber, james D. Combes, Richard A.L.
Wireman "Vireman Ordinary Seaman Able Seaman Able Seaman
Engine Room Artificer 4th Class Stoker 2nd Class
Ordinary Coder Able Seaman
Ordinary Seaman Leading Stoker
Marine Ordinary Seaman Marine Able Seaman
Marine Marine Able Seaman
P/MX 78180 P/MX 78203 P/JX 159394 P/IX 164900 P/SSX 28480 P/MX 60191 P/KX 116939 P/JX 229354 P/JX 147368 P/JX 159593 P/K62317 PO/21115 P/JX 162181 PO/X 100756 P/SSX 28583 PO/X 1844 POIX 101102 pnX 143881
P/JX 137201 Able Seaman pn 98866 Boy 1st Class P/IX 181937 P/JX 162302 Boy Ist Class Boy ISI Class P/JX 160791 pnX 143775 Leading Seaman Ordinary Seaman P/FX 80523 Compton, William A. Leading Stoker P/K 55190 Conchie, 'VVilliam M. Boy 1st Class P/JX 170173 Conroy, Cornelius Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 116925 Constable, Alan R. Boy Ist Class P/IX 181902 P/K 20007 Cook, James E. Chief Stoker Able Seaman P/jX 160690 Cook, Joseph R. Cook, Vernon Blacksmith 4th Class P/MX 65501 Coombes, Gerald E. Sergeant. R.M. PO/X 22638 PI)X 158239 Cooper, Alan C. Able Seaman Cooper, Frederick GoO. Mechanician P/KX 81372 2nd Class Cooper, Geoffrey G. Able Seaman P/JX 143419 pnX 251213 Ordinary Coder Cooper, George "". Marine PO/X 3432 Cooper, John Boy 1st Class P/JX 159537 Copc, George R. Commissioned Gunner (T) Cope, Sidney j. Corddell, Harold L. Chief Petty Officer PI) 105588 P/MX 50371 Coriell, John Engine Room Petty Officer
Artificer 4th Class Cornock, James Cotton, Lewis A.
Cross, Joseph B. Cross, Robert C.
Commissioned Gunner PI) 91326 Able Seaman Able Seaman P/J 101951 P/jX 141664 Able Seaman Able Seaman PI) 114218
Cross, \!l/iUiam K.R.
Commander
Crouch, Cecil H.
Regulating Petty Officer
P/M 40093
Croucher, Lambert E.
Able Seaman
Crow, George L.
Leading Stoker
P/JX 153609 P/KX 82811
Chief Yeoman of Signals
pn 73437
Carpenter, Robert S.
Marine
Carr, John Carler, Robert J.w.
Stoker 2nd Class
PO/X 3508 P/KX 100455 PO/X 4247
Marine Cartwright, Thomas D. Captain, R.M. Stoker Ist Class Chamberlain, Henry S. Corporal, R.M. Master-at-Arms Chandler, Alfred J. Chaplin, Albert E. Boy ISl Class
Cottrell, Albert E. Coulson, John
CouJthurst, Francis B. Court, \"'illiam R. Cowie, John E.L. Cox, Arthur J. Cox, Cyril A. Cox, John E Cox, Leslie L. Cox, Stanley K. Craft, Thomas E.
Cranston, Aylmer .J. Crawford, William M. Crawley, Lawrence Crawte, Alfred E.).
Crumpton, Laurence
Leading Stoker
Crultenden, John E.
Able Seaman
Cunningham, John
Able Seaman
Cunningham, Richard F. Ordinary Seaman Currie, George Stoker Ist Class Currie. Robert Stoker 151 Class Cuthberl,A1bert T.
Czeroy. Stanistaw d'Abryde l'Arves, Robert C. Dade, William EL. Dakers, William B. Dale, Richard H.
Dall, Francis 0' Dalziel, Thomas Daniels, Charles G. Darby, Leonard
Davey, Frederick G. Davey, Reginald J.
Davies, Douglas A. Davies, Frederick M. Davies, Hamilton K. Davies, Horace D. Davies, Kenneth J. Davies, Ronald T. Davis, Gordon E. Davis, Herbert A. Davis, Percy J. Dawson, Philip J. Day, Frederick J. Day, William S.W.
Paymaster Midshipman
Crellin, William CressweU, Henry R.
Carn, George H. K.
Chappell, Robert E. Charker, Albert W. Charlton, Robert A. Chatfield, Edwin H.
Ordinary Seaman Able Seaman
pnX 137525 P/MX 50843
P/KX 91330 PO/X 3393 P/M 39791 P/IX 160792
Paymaster LieutenantCommander, R. 1.Y.R.
Chapman, James A.
Petty Officer Engine Room Artificer 3rd Class Chief Petty Officer Ch ief Pett), Officer
P/SSX 16202 P/KX 105643 PI)X 212231 Ordinary Seaman Musician RMB/X 60 Stoker 2nd Class P/K 113300 pnX 141945 Able Seaman Shipwright 4th Class P/MX 58470 Ordinary Seaman P/JX 162299 Stoker Ist Class P/KX 106938 \'\fireman P/MX 68619 pnX 251510 Ordinary Coder Leading Seaman P/JX 144840 PI) 45098 Able Seaman Stoker 1st Class P/KX 96050 PI)X 159411 Boy Ist Class Stoker 1st Class P/KX 91649 Musician IUvIB/X 1037 P/KX 108230 Sloker Ist Class Marine PO/X 1856 pnX 136123 Petty Officer Cook (0) P/MX 57537
Carlin, George V.
Cavell, Percy H.
Choules, Sydney). Chowncy, \·Villiam H. Churchill, Ronald). Claringbold, Leon J. Clark, jack c.P. Clark, John E Clark, Leonard A. Clark, Robert G.
Telegraphist, R.N.V.R.
R.N.Y.R.
William ER. Burns, Albert S. Bussey, Harry F.
Cheadle, Henry).
Chivers, William A.
Able Seaman Stoker 2nd Class
De Gernier, James B.
Corporal, R.M. Marynarz Podchor~zy (Midshipman), Polish Navy Able Seaman P/JX 225878
Petty Officer Steward P/LX 20311 Sick Berth Attendant P/MX 72345 Lieutenant (E) Able Seaman P/JX 158264 Ordinary Siinalman P/IX 225377 Stoker 1st C ass P/KX 105533 Ordinary Signalman P/IX 261080 Leading Telegraphist P/J 73964 Able Seaman P/JX 158389 Able Seaman P/JX 140190 Able Seaman pnX 172620 Midshipman, R.N.V.R.
Lieutenant, R.M. Boy Bugler
PO/X4687
Senior Master Commissioned Warrant Officer Able Seaman P/SSX 17865 Marine POI 19475 Stoker lSI Class Signal Boy Chief Electrical
P/KX 97430 P/IX 162941 PO/X4017 P/M 39061
Artificer Able Seaman,
P/ESD/X 1470
Marine
R.N.V.R. De St George, Edward O. Able Seaman De Ste Croix, Cyril R. Leading Stoker Dean, Cyril A.J. Stoker Ist Class
Dean, George A. Dear, Nelson L. Dempsey, Martin Denault, Benjamin Dennis, Ronald
P/KX 91329 P/J 97707 pnX 148937 P/JX 223975 P/KX 83675 P/KX 98126 PO/X 1848
Signalman Musician Able Seaman Stoker 2nd Class Able Seaman
P/JX 160578 P/KX 86783 P/KX 96055 P/IX 157771 RMB/3013 pnX 172622 P/KX 116947 pnX 157895
Dent, Christopher H.C. Surgeon Lieutenant, R.N.V.R. Derrick, Charles T. Leading Supply P/MX 59635
Devereaux, Albert
Assistant Ordinary Seaman
Dewey, Edward D.G. Diggens. James B. Dilly, John H.C. Dinsdale, Stanley
Boy Ist Class Able Seaman Stoker Ist Class Stoker Ist Class
Discombc, Archie A.J. Dixon, Albert Dixon, "ViUiam Doak, Walter W. Dobeson, Nicholas
Musician Leading Stoker Able Seaman Petty Officer Chief Petty Officer
pnX 246579 pn 160579 pnX 155710 P/KX 100493 P/KX 91558 RMB/X 528 PIX 59353 pnX 184749 PI)X 13008 pn 21190
(Pensioner) Dobson, Charles W. Dodd, Henry Donaghy, Walter
Able Seaman Stoker 1st Class Able Seaman Boy Ist Class
Donald, James H. Donaldson, Walter M.H. Ordinary Seaman Doolan, Francis Stoker 2nd Class Douglas, Neil H. Douglass, Mark R. Dowdell, William ES. DowdIes, Malcolm M.
Able Seaman Boy Ist Class
Leading Seaman Able Seaman,
P/SSX 19239 P/KX 95910 PI)X 159517 pnX 162391 pnX 202427 P/KX 116934 P/SSX 31498 pnX 162386 PI) 111638 P/CD/X 2882
R.N.V.R. Down, John R.
Druken, Valentine Drury, Ernest Duckworth,
Sub-Lieutenant, R.N.V.R. PI)X 220988 Ordinary Seaman Ordinary Signalman PI)X 164198 PI)X 151617 Able Seaman
Kenneth R.R. Dudman, Caleb A. W. Duffield, john Dunn, Stephen E. Dunne, Patrick L. Dunnell, Graham G. Dunwell, William S. Dyas, Richard J. Dyment, Herbert R. Eagles, George R. Earl, Joseph W. Earwaker, Ronald C.
Mechanician 1st Class Stoker 2nd Class Able Seaman Petty Officer
Marine Able Seaman Stoker 2nd Class
Ordinary Seaman Midshipman Stoker 2nd Class
Able Seaman
P/KX 80932 P/KX 104064 P/jX 158051 PI) 108617 PO/X 3868 P/j 95509 P/KX 106580 PI)X 261751 P/KX 107115 pnX 159520
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
244
Eastwood, Waher C. Eaton, Raymond K.j.
Eaves, Leonard £des, Henry M. Edmiston, Reginald E
POI 22420 P/KX 92158 P/MX 68628 Able Seaman P/SSX 19031 Chief Engine Room P/M 33264
Marine
Leading Stoker Wireman
Gallant, William GalJio«, Howard W. GaUoway, Arthur
Able Seaman
Edwards, Melville Edwards. Robert
Marine
Writer
Stoker 2nd Class Edwards, Thomas W.G. Able Seaman Stoker Ist Class Eldred, Eric C. Stoker 2nd Class Eldridge, Bertie D.M. Elliott, john G. Petty Officer Stoker Ordinary Seaman Eltis, Donald O.
Emery, Lawrence A.
Musician
Emery, Richard C.
Petty Officer Stoker Telegraphist
Erridge, Frank A. Erskine, john G.M. Erskine, Roy D. Escott, Robert W.
Evans, David M. Ewart-James, David E.
Erres, Thomas 'VV.W. Fair, George W. Fairlie, Percy W. Farmer, Albert V.
Farnish, Frederick N. Farrar, Clifford Faulkner, Ronald E.
Fenner. Henry J. Field, Edgar C. Fielder, Jack H. Fielding, james O. Finch, John L.
Finlayson, David A.
PIJX 153215 P/MX 63510 PO/X 4154 P/KX 105271 P/j 97523 P/KX 100481 P/KX 116723 P/KX 77235 PIJX 159513 RMB/3064 P/K 63730 PIJX 151516
Lieutenant-Commander (E) Signalman P/SSX 29091 P/KX 116927 P/KX 10891 I P/jX 224005 Ordinary Seaman P/j91188 Able Seaman Shipwright 4th Class P/MX 59243 Stoker 1st Class P/KX 100500 P/jX 144242 Leading Seaman PI) I 12899 Petty Officer Telegraphist Marine PO/X 3163 Stoker Ist Class P/KX 100459 Marine PO/X 3495 Ordinary Signalman PIJX 157325 Able Seaman PIJX 146268 Stoker 2nd Class Stoker 2nd Class
Surgeon Lieutenant Bor. ISl Class
Ab e Seaman,
PIJX 161363 P/ESD/X 1916
Forrest, Ernest W. Forrest, George M.D. Forrest, Victor Forrester. John J.
R.N.V.R. Blacksmith 3rd Class P/MX 55781 P/SSX 24 I77 Able Seaman Ordinary Seaman PIJX 227655 Ordinary Seaman PIJX 157142 Petty Officer Stoker P/K 63995 Able Seaman PIJX 149979 Able Seaman PIJ 103340 Wireman P/MX62484 Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 11331 I P/jX 130988 Leading Seaman Chief Stoker P/K 57838 P/KX 78302 Leading Stoker Midshipman, R.N.R. Ordinary Seaman PIJX 246588 PIJX 158900 Able Seaman Writer P/MX 71781 Wireman P/MX 62483 Petty Officer Steward P/LX 2535 Chief Petty Officer P/M 27902
Forster, Frederick G.
Writer Engine Room
Fisher, Leslie Fitch, Edward G. Fitchew, Cecil A. Fitzgerald, Joseph V. Fletcher, Peter Fletcher, Victor W.J. Flint, Sydney G. Floyd, Charles Flynn, John T. Foden, Leslie j. Foley, Rodney A. Foot, Charles Ford, Douglas C. Ford, Harold E. Ford, jack
Foster. Algernon T. Foster, Colin E. Foster, Kenneth J.
P/MX 51255
Artificer 3rd Class Able Seaman
P/JX 172627 P/jX 162446 PIJX 151270 Foster, Ralph P/jX 212475 Able Seaman P/jX 156048 Foster, R~nald Fotherin am. George Marine PO/X 1639 Fowle, Henry j. P/jX 158758 Able Seaman Fowler, Frank S. Ordinary Signalman P/jX 162503 Fowler, Robert H. Musician RMB/X 313 Francis. Charles A. Boy 1st Class PIJX 194729 Francis. Victor R. Leading Stoker P/K 5965 I Freeborn, Frederick C. Warrant upply Officer Freeman, Douglas E. Ordinary Seaman PIJX 158145 Freeman, Mark H.P. Midshipman, R.N.R. French. Leslie V. Ordinary Seaman P/jX 158399 French, Ronald M. Ordnance Artificer P/M 60152 4th Class
Ordinary Seaman Able Seaman Ordinary Seaman
Friend, Leslie E. Frodsham, Neville H.
Lieutenant. R.N.V.R. Sub-Lieutenant
Fry, John C. Fullick, Frederick R. Funnell, Kenneth G. Gabbett, Cecil P. Gale, Ronald M.
PIJX 229360 Able Seaman PIJX 152369 Ordinary Seaman P/jX 158107 Ordinary Seaman P/jX 223832 Stoker Ist Class P/KX 95938 Ordinary Signalman P/jX 225375 Ordinary Seaman PIJX 212476
Gallacher. Cornwall Gallant, Joseph
Ordinary Coder
Engine Room
PIJX 212477 P/jX 212480 P/MX 58353
Artificer 4th Class Gardner, James D.
Artificer
Edmonds, Alfred G. Edmonds, Anthony R.
Ordinary Seaman
Ordinary Seaman
Garman, Vietor G. Garroway, Robert L. Garry, cviUe W.H. Gascoine, Thomas R. Gaudet., Samuel Genaway, Vietor W. Gibb, Stanley D. Gibbon, Isaac G.
Petty Officer Telegraphist Leading Stoker
Steward Ordinary Telegraphist Able Seaman Ordinary Seaman
Ordinary Seaman Wireman Chief Ordnance Artificer
Gibbs, Charles W.E.
Leading Signalman
Gibson, James
Stoker 2nd Class
Gibson, John H.
Signalman Marine
Gibson, Thomas Giffen, john A. Gilbert, Charles E.G. Gilbert, Harold Gillan, Joseph Gillett, George P. Gillis, john R. Glass, Leslie G.Y. Gledhill, james E. Glenn, Robert Goddard, Sidney Goff, jack Goldsmith, Horace W.
Stoker 2nd Class Sloker Ist Class Able Seaman
Gomer. Harry
Marine Ordinary Seaman Marine
Gomershall, Royston Good, Bernard E.C. Good, Frederick A. Goodbody, John W. Goodenough, Herbert H.
Marine Ordinary Seaman Ordinary Seaman Able Seaman Corporal, R.M. Petty Officer Stoker Able Seaman Boy Ist Class Petty Officer
Petty Officer Stoker 1st Class Cook (5)
P/KX 92979 P/LX 23416 P/jX 160682
Harkess. Robert 'A'. HaTkison, Thomas
Hardy, Henry EM.
P/SSX 24919 PIJX 2 I2478 PIJX 161472 P/MX68024 P/M 5439 PIJX 147543 PIJX 116933 PIJX 156619 PO/X 1764 P/KX 116946 P/KX 81040 P/SSX 23828 PO/X3429 PIJX 212479 PIJX 212482 PIJX 147481 PO/X 1814 P/KX 79270 PIJX 157751 PIJX 180564 P/j 41701 POI 216871 P/jX 162293 PO/X 1852 PIJX 152048 P/KX 95945 P/MX65214
Gough, John M.
Colour Sergeant.
Goulstine, Leonard
R.M. Able Seaman
PIJX 172598
Graham, Donald Graves, John R.
P/MX 71213 Supply Assistant Paymaster Lieutenant,
Green, John H.
Gregory, john
Gref:0n. Edward H.G. Gri n, Charles A. Griffiths, Leonard E
Grogan. R. Terence Groucott, Roland D. Groves, Stedman B. Groves. Thomas Grundy, Frederick E. Guest, Alan Gulliver, Edward G.V.
Haden-Morris, Alec B.-H. Hadley, Alan E.
Hadow, Norman W.A. Haeger, Edward G. Hales, Edward Hall, David G.
Harris, James H. Harrison, Robert C.
Hastings, Joseph
Hatherill, William H. Haughton, Cyril Hawkey, Derrick B., D.S.M.
PO/X 428
P/jX 184565 P/KX 107122 P/jX 210241 P/SSX 21656 P/MX50106 P/KX 114349 Alias o[Joseph Rannou Marine POI 21992
'""arrant Engineer Signalman
P/jX 151228
Cook (0)
Leading Seaman Ordinary Seaman
Heaton, Albert
Able Seaman
Leading Stoker Able Seaman
Engine Room
PIJX 144009 P/K64123 P/SSX 1821 I PIJX 212287 P/SSX 18431 P/MX 60193
Artificer 4th Class
Hemmings, Bertie
Heptonstall, George A. Herbert, Sidney j.
Hermon. Eric D. Herod, Maurice H.E. Heys, William W.
Engine Room Artificer 1st Class Signalman Marine Boy Ist Class Stoker 1st Class Boy Ist Class Able Seaman Caplain (E)
P/M 34585 P/JX 160320 PO/X 4894 PIJX 162460 P/KX 96061 P/jX 15942 I P/SSX 21654
Marine
PO/X 100265 Bandmaster 1st Class RMB/2826 P/Sick Berth P/MX 80399
Attendant Hibbs, Francis H.E Hibbs, Richard A.
Hickman, Leonard A. Hickmotl, William J.
Higginson. William Higgott, john N. Hill, Eric J.R. Hilton, Albert E Hiscock, Frederick J.
Hiscock, William A. Hives, Ronald Hoare, Cyril A.
Hoare, orris H. Hobbs, Frederick I. Hobbs, Robert
Corporal, R.M. PO/X 205 Midshipman, R.N.V.R. Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 115286 P/jX 177292 Boy Ist Class Stoker 1st Class P/K 59301 Engine Room P/MX 52489 Artificer 3rd Class Marine PO/X3870 P/KX 100451 Stoker 1st Class PO/X 1849 Marine P/jX 132271 Petty Officer P/KX 104208 Stoker Ist Class Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 114395 Paymaster Lieutenant, R. .Y.R. Chief Stoker P/K 23361 Engine Room P/MX 51264 Artificer 4th Class
P/JX 159532 P/jX 234929 POI 21804 PIJX 159101 PACT I GV9
Hogan, john M. Holdaway, Frank Holland, Charles
Paymaster Commander Joiner Ist Class P/MX 45982 Marine POI 22490
Holland, Francis H.
Ordinary Seaman,
PACTINGV8
Hollis, Bramwell G. Holmes, Edward ).
R.A.N.Y.R. Able Seaman
PIJ 76057
Holmes, Georfce Holmes, Haro d
Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 113269 Ordinary Signalman PIJX 231693 P/JX 162448 Boy Ist Class Leading Stoker P/K 65845 Able Seaman PIJX 145739 Sailmaker's Mate P/jX 139833 Chief Mechanician P/KX 89228 P/K51611 Chief Stoker Leading Stoker P/KX 84407 Leading Stoker P/K 58984 PIJX 159067 Able Seaman Leading Cook (5) P/MX51221 Petty Officer Steward D/LX 20902
Able Seaman
Ordinary Seaman,
Sloker Ist Class
Honeybun, Richard J.
Hall, Thomas
Marine
Hoole. Horace
Hanna, Robert Hannaway. Edward J.
Marine Alias o[Robert C. d'Abry de l'Arves Boy Ist Class Stoker 2nd Class
Hayde, Joseph A. Haynes, Albert E. Hayton, John W. Heath, David j.
Hall, Henry G. Hall, John W. Hall, 'eville T. Hall, orman V. Halls, Wilfred C. Hambley, Thomas H.
P/MX 51797
Hawkins, Ernest H. Shipwright Ist Class P/M 36757 Hawthorne, Arthur W. Wireman P/MX 62443 Hawthorne, John W. Chief Petty Officer P/L 12683
Ordinary Seaman Marine
Ordinary Seaman Ordinary Seaman Sergeant. R.M.
P/K 5534 I
Hartley, Arthur Hartley, orman Hartmann, Geoffrey H. Ordinary Coder Harty, Jack Leading Seaman Harvey, Edward R. Leading Cook (0) Harvey, Eric O. Stoker 2nd Class
R.N.V.R. Able Seaman
P/j 92162 PIJX 162383 PO/X 3394 Able Seaman P/jX 204057 Signal Boy PIJX 162297 Ordinary Signalman PIJX 224199 Ordinary Signalman PIJX 225337 Leading Stoker P/K 63048 Ordinary Signalman PIJX 225354 Leading Seaman PIJX 126810 Marine PO/X 3365 Commander (G) Marine PO/X 381 I Ordinary Seaman PIJX 159180 Commander (E) Able Seaman PIJX 154095 Musician RMB/X 50S PI 42697 Able Seaman \-Vireman P/MX69713 Bandboy RMB/X 1108 P/jX 136826 Leading Seaman Supply Assistant P/l\IlX 71229
P/KX 116940 P/K 64275 P/jX 159549 P/KX 91647 P/MX 57724 P/KX 100453 P/SSX 18423 P/jX 146014 P/MX 60186
4th Class
Henderson, John Hendry, William Hennessy. David T. Henshaw. Owen W. Henshaw, Ronald
R.A.N.V.R. Hall, George W.
Harler, Douglas B.
Hellens, Joseph S.
PIJ 115264 POI 216779
Green. William James Green. \-Villiam John Greene, Derek A. Gregory, Arthur H.
Artificer 4th Class Chief Mechanician Lieutenant, R.M. Ordnance Artificer
Harding, WiUiam
Able Seaman
Green. Benjamin L. Green. Harry Green. Herbert
Harris, Charles A. Harris, Desmond S.R. Harris, Frank R.
P/j 106214
Gordon, Leslie S.
Gray, Alfred E.E. Gray, John C.
Harmer, George
Telegraphist Stoker 2nd Class Chief Stoker Able Seaman Stoker 1st Class Cook (5) Stoker 1st Class Able Seaman Able Seaman Engine Room
Hannay, James D. Hanwell,Tom Harding, John S.
Lieutenant-Commander (Ret.) C/WRX 104 Signalman P/KX 92894 PO/X 2844 Ordinary Signalman P/jX 2131 14 Able Seaman P/SSX 26250 Plumber 3rd Class P/MX 56977 Ordinary PIJX 189625
Holroyd, Arthur
Homer,l-farold Hope, Ernest J.
Horner. Leslie Horsman. Lawrence Horton, George \"'.
Roll of Honour
245
Howard, Eric S. Howe, Reginald E. Ho";e, Robert G.\\'. Howlett, Patrick
Ordinary Seaman Stoker 2nd Class Marine Ordinary Seaman Haws, Gordon Marine Howse, Thomas Leading Seaman Ordinary Seaman Hoyle, Sidney Leading Stoker Hughes, HU~h Hughes, Wil iam E Marine HuU, Arthur W. Able Seaman Hulme, Arthur \Vireman Hulme, Owen E. Able Seaman Humphrey, Michael S.T. Lieulenant (E) Humphreys, William Marine
P/JX 159534 P/KX 103719 PO/X 3503
KeUy, Jack Y.K. Kelly, John
P/jX 212483 PO/X 3426 P/j 82821 PljX 159727 P/KX 84554 PO/X 1816 P/SSX 31050 P/MX 68004 PljX 172637
KeUy, Robert Kemish, Colin H.T. Kempton, Sylvius L KendaU, Albert J. Kerr. Alexander
POIX 3815
Hunns, John A. .
Marine
PO/X 3363
Hunt, George
Sloker 2nd Class
P/KX 116926
Ordnance Artificer
P/MX 58034
Hunt,William
1
1st Class Ordinary Seaman PljX 246526 Huntington, Ernest S. Sergeant, R.M. PO/X 1288 Huntley, Henry E Plumber Ist Class P/MX 45525 Supply Assistant Hurle, Ronald e. P/MX 69392 Hu.rst. Christ.opher W. Coder PljX 174810 Surgeon Commander Hurst, Henry Huskinson, Sydney Able Seaman P/SSX 27736 Hutchings, Leslie IV.R. Painter 3rd Class P/MX 51660 P/jX 127488 Hutchins, Albert J. Petty Officer lago, john M. Electrical Lieutenant, R.N.V.R. P/jX 156903 Ordinary Seaman lerston, Kenneth "'. PI 231078 Able Seaman Ingram, John W. Able Seaman P/jX 149964 Inf;,am, Leslie R. In en, Reginald S. Stoker 1st Class P/KX 100497 Able Seaman P/JX 154660 Innes, Alexander P/jX 159142 jack, George Ordinary Seaman jackson, George S. Marine PO/X 3337 Stoker 2nd Class P/K 104077 Jaggers. Eric james, Leonard A. Leading Stoker P/KX 95154 PI)X 159595 james, Phillip A. Ordinary Seaman Plj 103134 Jarvis, Arthur C. Able Seaman jarvis, Leonard R. Able Seaman P/SSX 27882 PI)X 251520 javan, Kenneth W. Ordinary Seaman jeffs, Norman Sloker Ist Class P/KX %933 jeUey, Stanley A. Boy 1st Class P/jX 160420 Jennings, Walter H.W. Chief Petty Officer P/j 104150 jesse, Harold Chief Electrical P/M 38439 Artificer john, Thomas PO/X 3481 Marine johnson, Frederick Leading Cook P/MX4%47 johnson, Ralph P/KX 104080 Stoker Ist Class johnson, Slanley E Leading Writer P/MX 58762 johnson, William E Petty Officer P/JX 136462 Johnson, William St e. Petty Officer Stoker P/KX 80098 Able Seaman P/SSX 21864 Johnston. James johnslon, William Assistant Steward P/LX 25060 jones, Albert j. Able Seaman P/JX 145006 jones, David J. Leading Stoker P/K 61422 Jones. Francis LL Midshipman, R.e.N. PI)X 151349 jones. Frederick R. Able Seaman jones, Gordon H. Stoker Ist Class P/KX 96932 Able Sean,an P/SSX 27631 jones, Gwilym jones, Harold H. Able Seaman P/SSX 22862 Sloker Ist Class P/KX 95866 jones, Hayden J. jones, James W. Petty Officer Stoker P/K 63904 jones, John W. Petty Officer P/JX 133486 jones, Kenneth Ordinary Seaman P/jX 159551 jones, Richard Seaman, R.N.R. PIX 20159 A Jones, Robert W. Boy Ist Class P/jX 175970 Ordinary Seaman P/JX 178821 jones, Ronald G.S. jones, Roy T.R. Boy Ist Class P/JX 182013 jordan, GeolTrey IV. Canteen Assistant AAFI jordan, Kenneth EA. Leading Cook (S) P/MX48946 P/JX 166424 joyce, Leslie R. Boy Ist Class julier, Alfred E. Marine CH/22942 Engine Room P/MX 51909 Kay, Norman Artificer 3rd Class Kay, Samuel PljX 162376 Ordinary Seaman Keal, George E Leading Stoker P/KX 92985 Kean, Albert A. P/jX 139048 Petty Officer Telegraphist Kearney, Thomas P. Seaman. R.N.R. PIX 17772 A PljX 128379 Keating, Kenneth H.IV. Able Seaman Keenan, Robert J. Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 116918 Keens, Eric G. Boy Telegraphist PI)X 163816 Keen, Robert Boy Ist Class P/JX 159401 Keith, Arthur W. Marine PO/X 3863 KeUy, Cornelius Ordinary Signalman PljX 221550
Ke.rr, Raymond IV. Kerridge, Herbert Kersley, Albert S. King, Ernest H. King, Howard Le. King, William A. Kingston, jack Kinmond, Charles H. Kirk, Alfred
Hunter, John M.J.
Kirk, Russell G. Kirkland, john D. Kitchener, Reginald J. Knapper, Joseph IV. Knight, James A.P. Knight, John
Able Seaman Ordnance Artificer 4lh Class Petty Officer toker Boy Ist Class Ordinary Signalman Able Seaman Engine Room Artificer 5lh Class Boy Ist Class Stoker Ist Class Marine Able Seaman Signalman, R. .Y.R. Able Seaman Able Seaman Able Seaman Ordinary TelegraphiSl Marine Able Seaman Able Seaman Able Seaman Stoker 151 Class Engine Room
P/SR8185 P/MX 69321
P/KX 75556 P/JX 182115 P/JX 210204
P/J 115000 P/MX 60185
P/JX 163139 P/KX 100492 POI 22368
P/JX 145240 ClLD/X 4228 P/jX 153217
P/SSX 2%73 P/SSX 28489 PI)X 223175 PO/X 3421 PljX 157354 P/SSX 27648
P/SSX 27453 P/KX 95919 P/MX 51267
Artificer 4lh Class Knight, Roy E Midshipman, R.N.R. Knight, Stanley R. P/MX 58038 Joiner 4th Class Knox, john A. Ordinary Seaman P/jX 158604 Knox, John D. P/KX 98124 Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 114797 Ladd, Charles J. Sloker 2nd Class Laidman, Reginald A. Able Seaman P/JX 158238 PI)X 251667 Laing, John Ordinary Seaman Laking, Andrew P/KX 113329 Sloker 2nd Class Lambert, Thomas W. Ordinary Seaman P/JX 159082 Lancaster} Howard Able Seaman P/JX 133010 Lane, Cyril E Shipwright 2nd Class P/MX 46660 Lane, Herbert EIV. Able Seaman P/SR 16563 P/JX 229372 Langley, James Ordinary Coder Lansdowne, Cecil R.E. Canteen Assistant AAFI Lapthorn, Peter R. Midshipman, R. .V.R. Latimer, Walter S. Ordinary Seaman PI SX 29467 Laughlin, John e.A. Boy Ist Class P/JX 162836 Laws, Albert E. Chief Stoker P/K 63728 Lawson, Jack Cook(S) ClMX 59364 PO/X22631 Laycock, Henry Marine Layton, Sidney G. Marine PO/X 3392 Le Bosquet, Cecil E. P/jX 235198 Able Seaman Le Noury, Alfred . Able Seaman PIS X 30157 PI)X 125909 Le Page, Edwin H.G. Able Seaman Leach, Harold G. Mechanician P/KX 76485 1st Class Boy IstCla P/jX 171791 Leaney, Robert T. Leason, Harry Y. Engine Room P/MX48686 Artificer 3rd Class Lee, Wilfred Assistant Steward P/LX 24398 Legsalt, George ES. Stoker 1st Class P/KX 96931 Ordinary Seaman P/jX 223834 ~It, Cyril A. Leis man, William Chief Stoker P/K 46594 VEnfant, Bertram H. Leading Sloker P/K 65505 Marine Levack, John S.L. PO/X 4826 Stoker Ist Class Lever, Stanley R. P/KX 96077 Levy, Albert P. Ordinary Seaman PI)X 227193 Lewington, George e. Yeoman of Signals PI)X 135560 Le";s, Alfred G. Stoker Ist Class P/KX 117516 Lieutenant Lewis, Edward P.S. Lewis, Michael E. PellY Officer Stoker P/KX 103815 Able Seaman Lewis, Thomas P/SSX 17969 LiddeU, Archibald T. Stoker Ist Class P/KX 100494 Liddle, Harold Leading Seaman P/JX 144571 Supply Assistant LilTord, Henry G. P/MX 66298 Boy 1st Class PljX 194760 Lirotbody, Robert Able Seaman Li ou, Owen EC. P/SSX 33666 P/KX 116932 Livingstone. Robert J. Stoker 2nd Class Stoker Ist Class Lloyd, Philip P/KX 88498 Lock, Herbert H. Pelly Officer Stoker P/KX 80023 Marine Lock, Robert H. PO/X 4804 Lockhart, Archibald IV. Boy Ist Class P/JX 162870 Able Seaman Locklin, James P/J 108881 London, Reginald j.e. Sergeant, R.M. POIX 911 Musician Long, George H. RMB/X 975 Boy 1st Class PI)X 162515 Long, Percy e.B. Loll, Frederick e. Able Seaman P/SSX 18429 Love, Herbert 'A'. Leading Stoker P/K51784 Lovegrove. Herbert E. Leading Seaman P/JX 138201 Lovelock, Charles IV. Stoker 1st Class P/KX%066
Lownds, John Luckhursl, John H.J. Lumley. Heaton Luxmoore, Thomas G.P. Luxton, Denis WA
Able Seaman P/JX 153966 Able Seaman P/J 115039 Major, R.M. Paymaster Lieutenant Engine Room
P/MX 51272
Artificer 4lh Class Lyle, james P. Able Seaman PljX 144292 Lynch, Augustine P. Able Seaman P/SSX 15628 Lynch, James E Supply Petty Officer P/MX 46884 Macdonald, Alastair D. Boy Ist Class P/jX 159746 Machin, John L Lieutenant-Commander Seaman,R. .R. PIX 20831 A Mackay, John Mackin, Ronald W. Able Seaman PljX 158227 PljX 215223 Maclean, Hugh IV.P. Ordinary Coder Mamamara, Robert T. Able Seaman P/SSX 32209 Madden, john E Ordinary Seaman P/jX 182342 Maidment, Harold L. Ordinary Seaman P/SSX 30653 Maitland, john W. Chief Shipwright P/M 8898 Malcolmson, Alexander Ordinary Seaman P/jX 224307 Malin, Walter G. PljX 160683 Telegraphist Mann, Arthur J. Ordinary Seaman P/JX 220863 Manser, Richard A. Marine PO/X 100888 Manton, Ernest P. Cook (S) ClMX 58162 Markey, Harold E. Joiner 2nd lass P/MX51063 Marr, Ian c.c. Able Seaman PljX 176702 Marsh, Eric PI)X 158382 Leading Seaman Marsh, Eric Supply Assistant P/MX 68544 Marsh, Joseph S. Able Seaman P/SSX 30168 Marsh, Percy G. Marine POI 22660 Marsh, Robert J.A. Leading Stoker P/K 66259 Martin, John IV. Boy 1st Class P/jX 182058 Martin, Thomas G. Stoker 151 Class P/KX 95944 Martin, William R. Sergeant, R.M. PO/X 1264 P/jX 163203 Martindale. Norman Boy 151 Class MaskeU, John Able Seaman P/JX 157589 Mason, Vernon R.K. Boy 1st Class P/jX 159597 Masters, Gordon H.T. Boy 151 Class P/JX 182064 Matthews, Albert G. Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 115246 Mallhews, Stanley G. Ordinary P/SR 8643 Telegraphi t P/)X 156636 Matthews. William D. Able Seaman PI) 83799 Maycock, Ernest V. Able Seaman McAJlen, John W.E Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 112016 McAteer, William P/KX 95952 Stoker 1st Class P/SSX 24519 McCart, George Telegraphist McCaughey, Daniel Stoker Ist Class P/KX 104972 McCaw, Robert W. P/)X 220086 Ordinary Seaman McCleary, William Able Seaman P/SSX 24644 McCormac, john PljX 166367 ignal Boy P/MX 57880 McCuUagh, John Engine Room Artificer 4th Class Mc.Donald, Ewen Able Seaman P/SSX 28420 McDonald, Harold Able Seaman P/j 115259 McDonald, Wallace Able Seaman P/SSX 14062 McDoweU, Albert Ordinary Seaman PljX 160583 McDueU, Alfred Able Seaman P/j 190516 McEvoy, Patrick j. P/jX 158768 Able Seaman McEwan, Mark Assi rant Steward P/jX 201408 McFadyen, Waher E. PO/X 859 Ser;teant, R.M. Or inary Seaman P/)X 161214 McGhee, John McGregor, Alfred Stoker Ist Class P/KX 98116 McGuire, Arthur T. Chief Engine Room P/MX48333 Artificer P/KX 100485 Mcllwraith, Geoffry J. Stoker 1st Class McKim, William Boy Ist Class P/JX 162377 Midshipman, R. .R. Mclaren, John B. McLatchie, William Ordinary Seaman P/JX 234745 McLean,AJexander Leading Stoker P/KX 97625 Mcleod, Ian M. Able Seaman P/SSX 32371 McNulty, John G. Chief Pelly Officer P/J 114793 Telegraphist McQuaid, Ernest G. Marine PO/X 3494 McRae, William R. Boy Telegraphist P/JX 164096 Ordinary Seaman PljX 261781 Meakin, Harry MeUalieu, Frank P/KX 107101 loker 2nd Class P/KX 116912 Melville, John Sloker 2nd Class PljX 162597 Mendham, Frederick G. Boy Ist Class P/MX 51626 Mepham, Henry J. Engine Room Artificer 3rd Class P/jX 149060 Metcalfe. Matthew Leading Seaman Middleton, Frank R. Petty Officer P/JX 132085 P/jX 158898 AbleSeaman Milburn, Samuel e. PI) 71384 Able Seaman Miles. Francis B. PO/X 3074 Miles, Ronald S. Marine Miles, Vernon G. Chief Pelly Officer P/J 103886 Millard, David T. H. P/SSX 277233 Able Seaman
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
246
Millard, George K.
Able Seaman,
Miller, 'ames A.K. Miller. Thomas
R. .V.R. Stoker Ist Class Able Seaman, R. .V.R. Ordinary Seaman
Mills, CampbeU R.E Mills, Harry J. Mills, Montague D. Mills, Raymond E. Mills, Ronald W Minard, Andre Mitchell, Frank
Ordinary Seaman Marine
P/SD/X 1147 P/KX 96085 P/CD/X 2332
Orrell, Walter J. Ovenden, Jack Owen, Harold Owens. George E.M.
Marine PO/X 100578 AMI Canteen Assistant Petty Officer P/f 110958 Lieutenant-Commander
Pacy, Ronald
Engine Room
P/MX 60180
Artificer 4th Class Stoker Ist Class Able Seaman Stoker 2nd Class Stoker Ist Class R'j\\ulating Petty
P/KX 95681 P/SSX 15163 P/KX 108254 P/KX 91570
P/jX 234699 P/JX 15953 PO/X 3424 P/KX 104095 P/KX 90919
Stoker 2nd Class Stoker ISl Class Leading Signalman P/jX 225927 Electrical Artificer P/MX 69131 4th Class Mitchell, Frederick R. Able Seaman P/lX 196611 Mitchell, John Able Seaman P/SSX 22571 Mitchell, Leonard EW Able Seaman P/jX 152737 Moat, Norman Ordinary Seaman P/lX 212485 Ordinary Seaman Mochan, John C P/lX 158369 Monument, Harry Joiner 4th Class P/MX 59446 Moody, Walter Ordinary Signalman P/JX 221556 Moon, jack E. Pelly Officer P/jX 139334 Moon, \Vaher Able Seaman P/lX 97326 Moore, Brian R. Ordinary Seaman P/JX 190523 Moore, Edward A.P. Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 111301 Moore, Hugh TH. Petty Officer P/l 112084 P/jX 163187 Moore, James K. Boy Ist Class Morgan, Albert H. Marine PO/X3391 Marine PO/X 3386 Mo~an, Ronald Chief Petty Officer P/j 93170 Mor ey, Sidney V. Morrell, Ronald E Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 115247 Morten, Thomas A. P/MX 58427 Engine Room Artificer 4th Class Mortimer, Robert E.G. Able Seaman P/SSX 32212 Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 98123 Mortimer. Stanley E. Mould, GeoffTey J. W. Able Seaman P/j 156616 Moultrie, Edward H.F. Lieutenant-Commander P/SSX 32362 Mullen, John Telegraphist Mulligan, james Stoker 1st Class P/KX 95929 Ordinary Seaman P/JX 157870 Mullins, Edgar WE Munday, Harold J. Wireman P/MX62459 Murphy, Frank E. Stoker 1st Class P/KX 92905 Murray, Frederick C. Marine PO/X 3864 Murray, Hugh Able Seaman P/SSX 25207 Murray, Sidney Electrical Artificer P/MX 53190 5th Class Murrell, George P. Shipwright 4th Class P/MX 51713 Myers, Gordon W. Ordinary Seaman P/lX 159068 Myers, Sidney CS. Ordinary Seaman P/JX 234700 Myram, Maurice A. Shipwright 4th Class P/MX 57130 Nally, Joseph Leading Stoker P/K 49672 Nash, Kenneth R. Stoker 1st Class P/KX 95436 Naylor, Rodney j. Chief Petty Officer P/L 13128 Cook (0) Naylor, Ronald Able Seaman PIJX 157138 Neal, Edward R. Supply Assistant P/MX 71061 Neal, Ronald W. Able Seaman P/SR 16345 Neale, Robert S. Marine POI 22454 Neave, Peter EA. Able Seaman P/JX 158397 Nelson, William Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 116642 Nevett, Arthur L. Yeoman of Signals P/J 65737 Neville, William A. P/j 113710 Petty Officer Newell, Charles J. Able Seaman PIJX 152357 Lieutenant, R.N.V.R. Newey, Cedric B. '. Newnham, Robert P/jX 159508 Able Seaman Nicholl, Donald W. Able Seaman P/SR 8161 Nicholls, Douglas H. Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 117430 Nichols, Thomas F. Ordinary Seaman P/jX 201560 Nicholson, Alfred E PIJX 131402 Petly Officer Nicholson, Andrew Alias ofAndre Minard Nicholson, Thomas 'Ill. Cook P/MX 56829 Noble, Alexander Marine PO/X 3496 Norman, Midshipman, R.CN. Christopher J.B. Norris, Thomas F. Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 108249 Northam, \o\'i1liam A. Able Seaman P/jX 138501 Nuding, Albert V. Supply Assistant P/LX 66797 Nugent, William J. Stoker Ist Class P/KX 97427 Oborne, Reginald G.H. Petty Officer Steward P/L 14432 O'Connell, John E Petty Officer P/JX 143771 Ogden, Robert Able Seaman PIJX 127622 Oldershaw, Arthur Leading Stoker P/KX 91342 O'leary, Leslie S.D. Stoker Ist Class P/KX 96062 Olive, Ronald McC Cook (0) P/MX 62304 O'NeiJ,Owen Ordinary Seaman PIJX 162660 Stoker 2nd Class O'Reilly, Dennis P. P/KX 113104 O'Rourke, Patrick C. Leading Seaman PIJX 126715
Paddock, Stanley A. Pac, James
Page, Victor E.E Palmer, Frank Palmer, Frederick 'I\'.J. Palmer, James A. Palmer, Reginald W. Palmer, Stephen
Papworth, Robert G. Pares, Anthony Park, Raymond Parker, Gordon Parratt, Albert H. Parton, Stanley G. Passells, Keith C Passey, Aubrey R. Patton, Owen Pay, james L. Payne, Ha rry T Payne, John W Peace, Denzil S. Peacock, John E.C Peacock, WiUiam Pearce, Art.hur S. Pearce, Harry R. Pearce, Ronald J. Pearce, \Villiam F. Pearse, John EE, B.E.M.
Pearse, Sidney C Pearson, George Peck, Owen O'R. Peckham, Leonard M. Pedder, Ernest A.j. Peden, David G. Peel, Reginald K. Peirce, james P. Pemberton, Frederick S. Pennycook, WiUiam R. Percival, Stanley E.P. Pe,rkins, \Villiam G. Perman, Roland G.C Perrin, Alfred J. Perry, Aubrey j.W Perry, Leonard Perry, W'illiam H.
Pescod, Thomas C Petch, Roy V. Petty, Edmund j. Phelps, Henry E Phillips, George TE. Phillips, Horace E. Phillips, Lance10t j. Phillips, Norman Phillips, Raymond T Phillips, Ronald G. Pickering, Harry Pierce, Robert D. Pike, William A. Pink, Harold J. Pinkerton, Robert R. Piper, Fred H. Pitts, Henry G. Plant, Edwin Plimbley, Edward C Plumley, Reginald A.H. Poar, Ileginald J. Pope, Geoffrey C
Porter, Cyril L.D. Porler, Frederick A.
a
P/M 40064
eer
Marine PO/X 3487 Sergeant, R.M. PO/X 1063 Able Seaman, P/SD/X 1188 R.N.V.R. Yeoman of Signals P/JX 140176 Lieutenant·Commander (T) Able Seaman P/SSX 14704 Steward P/SR 74129 Stoker Ist Class P/K 56583 Stoker Ist Class P/KX 98117 Chief Petty Officer P/M 37564 Supply Sick Berth Attendant P/MX 63310 Able Seaman P/JX 141665 Able Seaman P/SSX 14275 Able Seaman P/SSX 32260 Leading Stoker P/K 64044 Marine PO/X 3427 Surgeon Lieut.enant (0) Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 115012 Stoker 1st Class P/KX 103732 Engine Room P/MX 49202 Artificer 3rd Class Leading Supply P/MX 58581 Assistant Petty Officer P/l 109557 Electrical Artificer P/MX 45206 1st Class AbleSeaman P/SSX 28576 Cook (0) P/MX 57366 P/jX 128272 Able Seaman Ordinary Seaman P/lX 158236 Able Seaman P/SSX 12108 Ordinary Seaman P/lX 223072 p/LX 25027 Assistant Steward Chief Petty Officer P/L 12398 Steward Engine Room C/MX 59796 Artificer 4th Class Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 116930 Stoker 2nd Class Pile 116935 Marine PO/X 3390 Iidshipman, R.I.N. Cook (5) P/MX 56031 Steward P/LX 22725 POI 21963 Marine Petty Officer P/L8118 Cook (0) P/jX 171671 Boy Ist Class Able Seaman PIJX 149888 Able Seaman P/J 73455 Blacksmith Ist Class P/M 38049 Ordinary Seaman P/JX 158820 Leading Seaman P/J 115033 Ordinary Seaman PIJX 212296 Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 103734 Ordinary Seaman P/JX 212297 Paymaster Lieutenant Petty Officer Stoker P/KX 82270 Marine PO/X4141 Musician RMB/X 738 P/SSX 21784 Able Seaman P/MX 70718 \"'ireman Ordinary ignalman, CITD/X 2012 R.N.V.R. Ordinary Seaman P/JX 235197 Marine PO/X 1788 Leading Steward P/LX 20803 ""'arrant Engineer Marine POI 215898 Chief Petty Officer P/M 32985 Supply Ordinary Signalman P/JX 224241 POI 19699 t\'larine
Porter, Reginald j. Portcr-Faussct,
Musician RJ"I BI 3040 Paymaster Lieutenant
Frederick A.P. Potts, Frank S.
Power, Alfred Powley, Herbert '!I/.
''''Titer
P/MX 67850
P/jX 132674 Chief Engine Room P/M 22541 Able Seaman
Artificer
PrangnelJ, Maurice R. Pratt, Albert WC Prescon, Marcus R. Price, Alfred CJ. Price, \OVilliam A. Pringle, Robert I-I.W. Print, Dennis CB. Proudlock, Eric Pulling, Edward Punter, jack A. Puttick, \o\'iIIiam F. Puttock, Maurice J.E. Quigley, John J. Radley, Kenneth Rae, Hector R. Ramsbotham, William L., M.M. Rance, John Randall, Cyril W. Randall, Maurice P. Randall, Stanley R. Randall, Victor J. Rannou, Joseph Rant, Leonard V. Raw, Dennis A.
Able Seaman
P/jX 172747
PO/X 1400 Petty Officer Stoker P/KX 76674 Shipwright 4th Class P/MX 59079
Marine
''''arrant Shipwright Stoker Ist Class Engine Room Artificer 4th Class Able Seaman Petty Officer Stoker Able Seaman Stoker Ist Class Signalman, R.N.\l.R. Ordinary Seaman Stoker 1st Class Plumber 3rd Clas Shipwright 4th Class
P/KX 98111 C/MX60179
P/jX 158817 P/K 21157 P/SSX 22027 P/KX 100480 P/LD/X 2274
P/jX 212487 P/KX 94133 P/MX 54109 P/MX 67742
Leading Stoker P/K 87029 Able Seaman P/JX 158237 Boy Ist Class P/lX 160430 Marine PO/X 3871 Stoker 1st Class P/KX 95034 Able Seaman P/lX 207068 Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 114842 Engine Room P/MX 60433 Artificer 4th Class Raw, Irving T. Able Seaman P/SSX 18054 Raw, Roderick M. Stoker Ist Class P/KX 97420 Rawlinson, Albert G.E. Stoker ISl Class P/KX 97425 Rawlinson, Leonard Able Seaman P/lX 157506 Raynor, Francis Signalman P/JX 155472 Read, Anthony V. Ordinary Seaman P/JX 159171 Read, Douglas Boy Ist Class P/JX 161480 Reay, William E., D.S.M. Petty Officer P/jX 130543 Reddall, Peter E.A. Signal Boy P/jX 166698 Reed, Hector L. Corporal, R.M. POI 1682 Rees, Vernon ,. Stoker ISl Class P/KX 96071 Reeve, Robert E. Leading Steward I'lL 12054 Reeves, Cyril A. Able Seaman P/SSX 27654 Reeves, Stanley E. Ordinary Seaman P/jX 160772 Rendell, Stewart R.j. Able Seaman P/SSX 27332 Reveler, Thomas S. Engine Room P/MX 60181 Artificer 4th Class Reynolds, John A. Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 116944 Steward P/LX 22404 Rhodes, John Rice, Herbert F. Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 116722 Richards, Alfred W. Stoker Ist Class P/KX 96068 Richardson, Henry ED. Ordinary Signalman PIJX 212318 Richardson, Stoker 1st Class P/KX 100452 Snowden EO. Richer, Harold E. P/jX 126514 Petty Officer Ridge, Merlin E P/MX 71883 \"'Titer Riding, \"'alter K. Ordinary Seaman P/JX 156193 Boy Ist Class P/jX 159005 Rigby, Benjamin G. Rigglesford, Arthur P. Stoker Ist Class P/KX 97'121 P/KX 97422 Riley, George I~ Stoker Ist Class Petty Officer PIJX 141524 Ritchie, James S. Telegraphist P/MX 58950 Ritchie, Thomas B. Electrical Artificer 4th Class Lieutenant (E) Roach, Bryan Cj. Robarts, Frederick ,. P/SSX 33044 Ordinary Telegraphist Robb, james G. Able Seaman PIJX 143743 Robbins, Robert S. P/lX 158965 Ordinary Seaman Roberts, Ernest G. Mechanician P/KX81214 2nd Class Roberts, Frederick C. P/j 95177 Leading Seaman Roberts, Gordon R. Able Seaman P/jX 212298 Roberts, Lewis G. Able Seaman P/JX 168613 Ordinary Seaman PIJX 190545 Roberts, R:;y;nald C Robins, Ant ony CR. Sub-Lieutenant, R.N.R. Robins, Charles V. Yeoman of Signals P/JX 142381 Robinson, Arthur E. P/j 68392 Able Seaman Robinson, Percival T. Pett y Officer Cook P/MX48045 Robinson, Peter J. Boy Ist Class PIJX 162800 Robotham, Charles Able Seaman P/SSX 15171 Rodgman, Claude B. Able Seaman P/SSX 19334
Roll of Honour
Rodley, Samuel j.
247
~Iarine
PO/X 3967 Paymaster Commander Rootham. Peter Ordinary Seaman P/jX 162033 P/jX 162437 Rorrison, Hugh F. Bo)' Ist Class SlOker Ist Class P/KX 98119 Rose, R~inald T. Rose, Wi Iiam J. Sloker 2nd Cia s P/KX 114415 Rose, \Villiam R. P/jX 153212 Leading Seaman Rosenthal, Henry C. Marine PO/X 4273 P/jX 162458 Routledge. \Valler Boy Ist Class ~Iarine Rowe, Stanley G.S. PO/X 4837 Rowlands, Daniel j. Marine POIX 3490 Rowntree, George \V. Sloker Ist Class P/KX 100456 RowseU, Graham H. Able Seaman P/jX 155191 RowseU, Leslie D. P/jX 188599 Bo)' 1st Class Roy,lanA. Bo)' Ist Class P/lX 162453 Rudd, Edwin A. Ordnance Artificer P/MX 60324 4th Class Rundle, Arthur E Marine PO/X 3358 Runnacles. Frederick E. Marine PO/X 3420 Russell, Charles A. Able Seaman P/SSX 27417 Russell, David L. Musician RMB/X 1450 Russell, john A.G. Petty Officer P/jX 138794 Russell, Leonard \V. Able Seaman P/jX 139264 Russell, Walter F. Pelty Officer P/j 108277 Ryder, Leonard Petty Officer P/j 96801 Telegraphist Sadler, Edward R. Marine PO/X 3890 Saiger, john G. Sloker Ist Class P/KX 98112 Sammars, Thomas ).B. Boy Ist Class P/jX 182136 Sanderson, Peter Able Seaman P/jX 156294 Sargeaunt, Henry E.j. Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 113377 Saul, Charles Leading Stoker P/KX 79804 Saunders, AJbert Corporal, R.M. PO/X 1501 Saunders, Arthur \~. Engine Room P/MX 51779 Artificer 4th Class P/KX 113344 Saunders, James G. toker 2nd Class Savage, Edwin J. Chief Engine Room PI I 7086 Artificer Sayers, Robert M. P/jX 162386 Ordinary Seaman Scammell, \Valter G. Leading Stoker P/K 65844 Scattergood, Frederick j. Sloker Ist Class PfKX 100484 Seaman, R. l.R. Scott, Andrew B. PIX 18159 A Ordinary Seaman PIJX 158331 Scott, 'ack Scott, james P/K 59764 Leading Stoker Scott, Robert C. Marine POfX 1245 Scott, William P. Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 116943 Scott-Kerr, john H.A. Sub-Lieutenant Senior, Reuben Stoker 2nd lass P/KX 113288 Sewell, Gilbert W. Marine POlllS68 Shadbolt, ~laurice H. Marine PO/X 3800 Shand, Robert Able Seaman PIJX 147286 Shannon, John D. Ordinary Seaman BN8 (RANVR) Sharp, john S. Steward P/LX 23538 Sharpe, Albert j. Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 103817 P/jX 153309 Shawe, Robert B. Able Seaman Shearer, George B.B. Leading Cook (5) P/MX 59307 P/jX 161876 Shepherd, Cyril H. Ordinary Seaman Shepherd, George V. Chief Engine Room PI 135646 Artificer Shepherd, Lambert C. Ordinary Seaman P/lX 123842 Able Seaman P/jX 136919 Shepherd, Percy R. P/j 98585 Sheppard, Leonard EG. Pelt)' Officer Sherval, \Villiam R. Chief Sloker P/K 64634 Shiers, William H. Pelt)' Officer Supply P/MX 50989 Shipp, Leslie E SlOker Ist Class P/KX 95940 Shorrock, Stanley H.A. Able Seaman P/l 112455 Short, Arthur E. Engine Room P/MX 60183 Artificer 4lh Class Shuck, \>\'iUiam B. Ordnance Artificer P/MX 67960 5lh Class Shuker, Archibald Leading Seaman P/jX 132388 Leading Cook (0) P/L 14362 Shute, Harry L. Siddall, john Able Seaman P/SSX 22432 Sidley, Robert B.P. Petty Officer Stoker P/K 51607 Silk, Jack e.R. P/KX 116941 Stoker 2nd Class Sim, Alexander E. Sick Berth Anendant P/MX 69436 Simmons, Ernest A. Stoker Ist Class P/KX 95915 Simpson, Peter Ordinary Seaman PI)X 159308 Sims, \VilIiam P/~1)( 60184 Engine Room Artificer 4th Class Sinnott, Frederick \V. Able Seaman P/SSX 23193 Skett, Raymond L. Ordnance Artificer P/MX 60195 4lh Class Skipper, john EIV. Able Seaman P/jX 127500 Slade, Ronald A. Able Seaman P/jX 157879 Roe, Donovan C.
SloWlher, George Smart, Leslie E.V. Smith, Alexander G. Smith. Andrew K. Smith, Benjamin T. Smith, Charles L.S. mith, Dick
Smith, Eric T. Smith, Frederick A. mith, Frederick H.S. Smith, Geo~e E mith, Haro d G.E. mith.James Smith. James Mel. Smith, john C. Smith, john H. Smith, john H. Smith, john H. Smith, Peler We. Smith, Stanley e. Smith, Stephen R. Smith, Thomas Smith, Thomas N. Smith, Walter H. Smith, \·VilIiam G. Smith-Withers. Stephen j. Snelgrove, Colin Snell, john
Peny Officer Stoker Able Seaman Steward Able Seaman Marine Able Seaman Able Seaman Ordinary Seaman Able Seaman Pelty Officer Stoker toker 1st
lass
Lieutenant (E) Able Seaman Able Seaman Ordinary Seaman Chief Pelly Officer Supply Assistant R~ulaling Pelty o cer Supply Assistant Leading Cook Able Seaman Ordinary Seaman Stoker 1st Class Leading Seaman Able Seaman Wireman
Leading Seaman Chief Engine Room Artificer Snook, George A. Marine Snooks, William H. Ordinary Seaman Snow, David J. Bor. 1st Class Solman, Murdoch Mel. AbeSeaman Marine South~ate, Thomas E. Sower y, Curron ""'riter Sparkes. Ernest Marine Spence. Tristram F. Lieutenant (E) Spencer, Arthur Mechanician 2nd Class Spinner, George D. Stoker 1st Class Sprakes, john Chief Stoker Spreadbury, jack EW Ordinary Seaman St Clair-Tracy, Albert E. Electrical Artificer 2nd Class Stanley, Leonard Able Seaman Stannard, George \V. Sick Berth PellY Officer Startup, Ian G.E. Ordinary Seaman
Steel, Douglas M. Steele, AJexander Steele, joseph W Steptoe, john H. Sterne. Benjamin S. Steven, Arthur Stevenson, Basil P. Stevenson, 001 Stewart, Albert M. Stewart, R.j. Patrick Stewart, Thomas Stibbs, Charles T. Stocker, Norman G.L. Stoddard, George H.P. Stokes, john E. Stone, Arthur W. Stothers, Hugh Stoyles, Sydney s. Strange, Edward j. Stringer, Cecil A.B. Strong, Arthur J. Stubbings, Douglas H. Stubbs, Charles EB. Sturgess, Cyril L. Sturgess, john P. SuUey, John e. Sullivan, Albert Sullivan, Frank D. Surrey, Archibald H. Swain, James F. Swain, Ronald IV.
P/KX 79624
SwaUon, Bertram
P/jX 1595-14
Swinson, Ernest }.
P/LX 23741 P/SSX 28144
PO/X 1564 P/jX 153386 P/jX 132910 P/lX 261796 P/j 94366 P/K 67042 P/KX 100502
Tel~raphist
Switzer. Albert Sylvester, james
Symes, Reginald C. Szymalski, Kazimierz Taggart, Robert Tallett, Ronald L.W. TamareUe, Marius
P/SSX 17675 P/SSX 24257 P/JX 213991 P/j 91627 P/MX 291216 P/M 40123 P/MX 71663 P/MX 48084
P/lX 150054 P/jX 161243 P/KX 100491
PI SX 24094 P/j 59398 P/MX 68642
P/lX 144869 P/M 36124
PO/X 2073 P/jX 212489 PIJX 163207 PIJX 157519 PO/X 3799 P/MX 65921
PO/X 3911 P/KX 79004 P/KX 92570 P/K 55256
P/jX 162500 P/MX 46988
P/jX 159397 PI 1)( 46481
P~IN 19 (RA R) Instructor Commander Able Seaman P/jX 159389 Ordinary Seaman P/jX 163185 Marine POIX 4879 Able Seaman P/jX 158144 Stoker Pelt)' Officer P/K 56296 Midshipman, R.N.R. Ordnance Artificer P/MX 67962 5th Class Able Seaman P/j 11960 Chaplain Able Seaman P/jX 127556 Ordinary Seaman P/jX 224021 Boy 1st Class P/jX 166487 Marine PO/X 1276 Able Seaman P/j 90225 Pelty Officer P/jX 140159 Able Seaman P/jX 148611 Chief Stoker P/K 55384 Stoker Ist Class P/KX 107028 Able Seaman P/j 41797 Leading \~riter P/SR 8627 Marine PO/X 100028 Lieutenant, R.N.V.R. Able Seaman P/jX 132426 Boy 151 Class P/jX 181962 Commissioned Ordnance Artificer Petty Officer Sloker P/KX 80065 Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 111629 Chief Petty Officer P/MX 46363 \Vriter Leading "'Vriter P/MX 57190 Ordinary P/JX 214549
Swanborough, Rupert T. Coo· (0)
C.
P/MX 57363
TapseU, Albert E. Tawney, David R. Taylor, Arnold E. Taylor, Charles Taylor, Charles A. Taylor, Clifford Taylor, David Taylor, Frederick Taylor, Henry C. Taylor, James Taylor, Lewis J. Taylor, Michael Taylor, R~nald L. Taylor, Wi iam e.
Petty Officer Ordnance Artificer
P/jX 131805 P/MX 51029
3rd Class Ordinary Seaman P/IX 218632 Ordinary P/SSX 32417 Telegraphist Wireman (L) P/MX67729 Marynarz Podchor¥y (Midshipman), Polish Navy Assistant Cook (0) P/MX 70321 P/jX 155741 Leading Seaman Electrical Artificer P/MX 69513 4th Class
Marine PO/X 3874 !\'Iusician RMB/X S68 Ordinary Seaman P/lX 234946 Leading Seaman P/JX 137675 P/jX 156606 Te1:d1raphist Lea ing Stoker P/KX 84847 Wireman P/MX 68641 P/jX 158446 Able Seaman Stoker Ist Class P/KX 95933 Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 107094 Marine PO/X 541 Alias of Marius TamareUe Musician RMB/3087 Ordinary P/SSX 32668 Telegraphist Taylor, William O. Commissioned Telegraphist Telford, Charles Marine PO/X 3647 P/jX 162126 Terry, Gordon V. Telegraphist Able Seaman Thomas. Francis J. P/JX 155786 Thomas, Harold J. Able Seaman P/SSX 17182 P/j 98872 Thompson, Harold Able Seaman Thompson, Robert Boy Ist Class P/jX 188534 Thomson, Hugh Able Seaman P/SSX 23332 P/KX 84471 Leading Stoker Thorpe, Geor~e E. Thorpe, josep Marine PO/X 3187 P/jX 212488 Thorpe, Richard Ordinary Seaman Thurogood, john E Cook (5) c/SR8667 Till, jack C. Telegraphist C/jX 144417 Till, William E. . Shipwright 3rd Class P/MX 47867 Tipping, Alfred j.E. Able Seaman P/jX 151263 Titheridge, jack R. Canteen Assistant AAFI Tocher, Edwin Ordinary Seaman P/jX 158987 Todd, William C. Stoker Ist Class P/K64181 Leading Seaman Tomlins, George P/JX 149031 Tomlinson, \Villiam T. Boy Ist Class PIJX 163213 Toogood, Leslie B. 1arine PO/X4878 Topham, Thomas Able Seaman P/SSX 21608 Townley, William j. Stoker 2nd lass P/KX 113290 Tozer, Harry G.H. Commissioned Gunner P/j 103386 Treloar, \Valter J.B. Leading Seaman Trevarthen, \ViUiam NAAFI Canteen Manager Sloker 2nd Class P/KX 104139 Trollope, Clifton W. Troller, Ralph W PetlyOfficer P/l 34648 Telegraphist P/jX 160896 Trowbridge, \Vi~liam C. PellyOfficer Trzebiatowski-Zmuda, Marynarz Podchorqiy (Midshipman), Polish Tavy Leon P/jX 228332 Tucker, Leslie Ordinary Seaman TurnbuU, William S. Able Seaman P/jX 158662 Turner, George F. Sloker Ist Class P/KX 92984 Stoker Ist Class P/KX 90291 Turner, George H.F. Turner, John toker 1st Class P/KX 95554 Tuxworth, Frank A. Ordinary Si~nahnan P/jX 154528 Twigg, Charles j. Sloker 1st C ass P/KX 100486 Underwood, john Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 117042 Ordinary P/jX 161938 Uplon, Roy R. Telegraphist P/jX 155190 Utteridge, Raymond H. Pelty Officer Telegraphist Vacher, Geoffrey D. B. Paymaster Midshipman Varlow, Albert e. Commissioned Gunner VarndeU, Arthur G. Pelty Officer Stoker P/KX 82411 Veal, Richard E. Sloker Ist Class P/KX 100446 Vickers, Herbert G. hief Petty Officer P/M 36816 Cook Viney, Albert E. POI 21511 Marine Wagstaff, William P/jX 135391 Able Seaman PI) 107461 Walker, Albert e. Pelty Officer Walker, George T. Ordinary Si7:nalman P/lX 155127 Walker, Thomas Stoker 1st C ass P/KX 96659 Leading toker P/KX 91977 WaUace, James \V. P/KX 115271 Waller, William I. Stoker 2nd Class PO/X 4834 Wallis, Michael H. St j. Marine
248
Walsh, joh n F. Walter, William EP. Walters, Douglas T. Walton, lifford Walton, john Walton, Josiah T.
Wannerton, Henry J. Ward, Frederick W. Ward, George
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
Assistant Cook (5)
P/MX 69906
''''arrant Engineer Assistant Cook (5)
Marine Leading Seaman Chief Stoker Leading Stoker
Painter 3rd Class
P/MX 70990 POI 22215
P/SSX 18845 P/K 60980 P/K 63327 P/MX 55113 P/JX 147111
Signalman Ordinary P/SSX 31783 Telegraphist Warden, Kenneth G. Midshipman, R. .R. Warrand, . john P. Commander (N) Warren, Donald iarine PO/X 100275 Warwick, Benjamin Boy 1st Class P/lX 194732 Waterhouse, Reginald G.Able Seaman P/JX 152397 Ordinary Signalman P/lX 206860 Waterlow, Antony A. Waterman, Albert D. Able Seaman P/lX 156637 Stoker 1st Class P/KX 78562 Waters, William F. Waterson, Thomas J.B. Leading Stoker P/KX 92159 Watkins, John Petty Officer Stoker P/K 63860 Watkinson, Stanley Paymaster Suh·Lieutenant, R.N.Z. . Watson, AJexander Seaman, R. .R. PIX 19838 A Watson, Harry, B.E.M. Chief Stoker P/K 61055 Watson, John C. Able Seaman P/lX 133383 Watson, Robert Able Seaman, P/UD/X 1551 R.N.V.R. Watson, Robert G. Alill5 of Robert G. W. Howie Watt, Charles J.J. P/KX 98121 Stoker I st Class Walt, Robert A.E. Steward P/LX 23067 Walts, Edward A.H. Chief Petty Officer P/l 98316 Wearn. Arthur Marine PO/X 1941 Wearne, Harry E. Able Seaman P/lX 133821 Weaver, Henry E. Marine PO/X 3923 Webb, Albert P/l 89697 Able Seaman P/SSX 22549 Weddle, William Able Seaman Welch, Albert .W. Stoker 1st Class P/KX 100449 Welch, Regi nald A. Petty Officer P/jX 130279 Welch, Sidney C.T. Marine PO/X 350 I Weldon, Eric Able Seaman P/lX 150737 Wellman, Arthur C. Petty Officer Stoker PIKX 82049 P/KX 116550 Wells, Henry Stoker 2nd Class Wells, Herbert W Ordinary Seaman P/lX 159717 Wells, Horace W Stoker 1st Class P/KX 95396 Wells, Philip J. Corporal, R.M. PO/X 1645 Wells, Ronald D.G. Able Seaman P/jX 184100 Wells, Stlnley A. P/JX 160834 Boy I sl Class West, Alfred P. Petty Officer P/MX 39341 Cook (5) Chief Engine Room P/M 27314 West, Robert W. Artificer Wharfc, Cyril P. P/lX 131374 Petty Officer Whccler, Ernest F. Gunner(T) Wheeler, Francis '\'. Able Scaman PIJX 146724 ,",fireman White, Arthur P/MX68647 White, Edward H. Petty Officer P/j 114583 Telegraphist White, Harry Marine POIX 4215 Whitehead, Reginald C. Sergeant, R.M. PO/X 1038 Whiteman, John W. Petty Officer Stoker P/KX 79382 Whitewood, Cyril j. PIJX 153778 Able Seaman Whitfield, Victor V. Petty Officer P/jX 136657 Wicks, Hubert G. Able Seaman P/lX 152075 Wigfall, Leslie A. P/MX 49214 Engine Room Artificer 3rd Class Wiggclt, James K. Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 105480 Wigzell, Norman HI. Ordinary Coder P/JX 251241 WlIcocks, Eric C. Able Seaman P/JX 162022 Wilcockson, Harry R. Stoker 1st Class P/KX 100454 Wilkins, George H. PIJX 133261 Able Seaman WLlkinson. Boy 1st Class PIJX 181984 Frederick j.R. Wilkinson, James W. Stoker Ist Class P/KX 98114 WlIk:inson, Stanley Leading Seaman P/lX 143980 Willetts, Tom Sub-Lieutenant,
Ward, Joseph
Williams, Frederick P.
Williams, Horace A. Williams, Leonard j. Williams, Lloyd WtIliams, Roderick G. W·tIliarns, Roland M. \V"illiams, Tom G.J.
Williamson, Harry Willis, Albert T. Willis, Herbert \V"lImshurst, George H. \V"lIson, George Wilson, Gordon A.C. \V"lIson, Herbert G. Wilson, John V. \V"ilson, Walter Wmdeatt, Ralph E \V"mgfield, Charles H. Winkfield, Vidor M. Wishart, Jack E. Woelfell, Edward j.E. \\'000, \Villianl E.
Leading Stoker Stoker I st Class
P/KX 92980 P/KX 97419
Marine Leading Seaman
I'O/X 4881
Able Seaman Able Seaman
Leading Seaman Ordinary Seaman
P/JX 143187 P/J 108903 PIS X 27794
PIJ 101633
PenyOfficer
P/JX 234879 C/jX 213835 P/JX 163820 PI 1X 46195
Cook( ) Leading Stoker
P/KX 91374
Marine \Vriter
PO/X 3489 P/MX80802
Able Seaman
P/JX 161192
Signalman Boy Telegraphist
Woodward, Frederick j. \Varrant Electrician \Vootton, Desmond T. Boy 1st Class P/jX 166353 Worboys, Robert M. Stoker 1st Class P/KX 100496 WorraU, Arthur P/KX 116950 Stoker 2nd lass Worsfold, Sydney G. Band Corporal, R.M. Rl"IB/2854 Worwood, Raymond E Able Seaman P/lX 159741 Wright, Alfred W Ordinary Seaman P/JX 235450 Wright, Charles E. Petty Officer P/JX 136683 Telegraphist Wright, George Yeoman of Signals PIJX 132002 Wright, Stanley WF. P/MX 71075 Supply Assistant Wright, Thomas C. Leading Seaman P/JX 127748 Wrighting, Stoker 2nd Class P/KX 104137 Douglas H.W. Wyatt, jeffrey A.E Marine PO/X 2560 Wyldbore-Smith, Lieutenant-Commander Hugh D. Yarrow, Peter M. Ordinary Seaman P/lX 234957 Yates, Robert G. Boatswain Signalman P/JX 165457 Young, John o. Young, Perey A. PO/X 3413 Boy Bugler younger. Albert Marine PO/X 3813 Zurek, Kazimierz Marynan. Podchor~iy (Midshipman), Polish Navy
QlIis separnbit?
Sources J. Published Sources anon.,'At Sea in the "Hood"' in The avy, February 1920, p. 13 _ _, 'H.M.S. Hood and After: The Value of Speed in Capital Ships' in Naml Review, 8 (1920), pp. 176-82
Addendum to MarUlal for Power lVorked Mountings: IS-iucll Moumings, H.M.S. 'Hood' (restricted circulation, Admiralty, 1920) IPRO,ADM 186/2491 Arnold-Forster. Rear-Admiral D., Tile Wal's ofthe QlY (London: Ward, Lock, c.1932) Arthur, Max (ed), ne Navy: 1939 to the Prestlll Day (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1997) Bacon, Admiral Sir Reginald H.. (ed). Britain's Glorious Navy (London: Odham's, c.1943) Ballard, Robert D., & Rick Archbold, The Discovery of tllf Bismarck (New York: Viking Press, 1990)
Bassett. Ronald, Battle-Cruisers: A History. 1908-1948 (London: Macmillan, 1981)
Beardmore, The Rev. Harold, The \Vaters of Uncertainty: A Bookfor Naval ChaplaillS (London: A.R. Mowbray, 1944) BeU. Christopher M .• The Royal Navy. Seapower mId Strategy between the Wars (London: Macmillan, 2000) Bennett, Geoffrey. Cowan's l.var: The Story of British Naval Operatiot1S i'l the Baltic (London: Collins. 1964) Benstead, Instructor Lt c.R., RowuJ tile World with the Battle Cruisers (London: Hurst & Blackett, c.1925) Bercuson, David J.• & Holger H. Herwig. The Destruction of the Bismarck (Woodstock, NY: The Overlook Press, 2001) Bevand. Paul, & Frank AlIen. 'The Pursuit of Bismarck and the Sinking of H.M.S. Hood' on www.hmshood.com Bradford, Ernie, The Mighty Hood (London: Hodder and tough ton, 1959)
Breyer. Siegfried, 'H.M.S. "Hood'" in Marine-Arsenal. 19 (1999), pp. 1-38
Brodhurst, Robin. Cl",rchm's A'icllOr: Admiral of the Fleet Sir Dlldley POlllld (BarnsIcy: Leo Cooper, 2(00) Brooks. John. Dreadnought Gunnery: Fire Comrol and the Battle ofJwlalld (London: Frank Cass, forthcoming) Brown. David K., The Graud Fleet: Vvars/Tip Design and Devclopmelll, 1906-1922 (London: Chatham Publishing, 1999) IBrowne, Cdr I.W.V.I,'A Low Tech aval Landing Parry' in aval Review, 77 (1989), pp. 263-6 Burt, R.A., Britisl, Battlesl,ips, 1919-/939 (London: Arms and Armour Press, 1993) Cable, james, The Ro)'al Navy alld the Siege of Bilbao (Cambridge: Cambridge niversity Press, 1979) Campbell, Cdr A.B., Cllstoms alld Traditiolls ofthe Royal 'avy (A1dershot: Gale & Polden, 1956) Campbell, .j.M., Naml Weapolls of World War Iivo (London: Conway Maritime Press, 1985)
Carew, Anthony, 'The 111\'ergordon Mutiny: Long-Term Causes, Organization and Leadership' in International Review ofSocial History, 23 (1979), Part 2, pp. 157~8 ~ The Lower Deck of the Royal Navy, 1900-39: The Invergordon Mutiny in Perspective (Manchester: Manchester Univer ity Press, 1981) Chatfield, Ernie, Admiral of the Fleet Lord, The Navy alld Defelice (London: Heinemann, 1942) _ _,It Might Happw Agaill Ivol. II of The Navy mId Defellcel (London: Heinemann, 1947) Chesneau. Roger. Hood: Life and Death ofa Battlecruiser (London: Cassell, 2002)
Tire ClIOllgh I HMS Hood ship's magazine] Churchill, Sir Winston, The ecolld World War (6 vols., Boston: Houghton Mimin, 1948-53)
Coles, Alan./nvergordoll Scapegoat: The Betrayal ofAdmiral TOlllkillSOIl (Stroud, Glos.: Alan Sutton, 1993) Coles, Alan, & Ted Briggs, Flagship Hood: Tf.. Fare of Britaill's Mightiest Warship (London: Robert Hale, 1985) Connor, W., To Rio alld Back with H.M.S. Hood (London: The \Vestminsrcr Press. 1922) Copeman, Frederick. Reasor, itl Revolt (London: Blandford,
R. '.V.R. Ordinary Seaman Painter 3rd Class
P/lX 227205 P/MX 55426
Able Seaman
P/jX 159667
Electrical Artificer
P/MX 58951
To serve her all her days: two key ratings of the Engineering Department pose with an unknown stoker, probably at Malta in the late 19305. In the centre is Chief Stoker Walden Biggenden, master of the Hood's oil registers. Seated is Chief Stoker Harry Watson, 'Double
R.N.Y.R. \"'riter
P/MX 72409
after 21 years' service in the ship.
oftire Wars and Service ofAdmiral Sir \Valter Cowan
Able Seaman
P/jX 152077
HMSHood~liot'l
(Oxford: Pen·in·Hand Publishing, 1949)
41h Class Midshipman,
Bottom Chief Stoker'. Both died on 24 May 1941, Watson
1948) Cork & Orrery, Admiral of the Fleet the Earl of, My Naval Life, 188~1941 (London: Hutchinson, 1943) Coward, Cdr B.R., Battleship at War (London: Ian Allan, 1987) Cunningham of Hyndhope, Admiral of the Flcct Viscount, A Sailor's Odyssey (London: Hutchinson, 1951) Dawson, Capt. Lionel. Sound of the GUtlS: Being an Aceou",
Sources
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249
_ _, S/lips for a Nation: John Brown 6- Company Clrdeballk, /847-/97/ (Glasgow: Wes' Dunbartonshire libraries & Museums, 2000) Jurens, W.J., 'The Loss of H.M.S. Hood-A Re-examination' in \\'arship lmertlational, 24 (1987), no. 2, pp. 122--61 Jurens, William, William H. Garzke, Jr., Robert O. Dulin, Jr., John Roberts & Richard Fiske, 'A Marine Forensic Analysis of HMS Hood and DKM Bismarck' in Transactions of tire Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers, 110 (2002), pr' liS-53 Kemp, Pau J., Bismarck and Hood: Great Naval Adversaries (London: Arms and Armour Press, 1991) Kennedy, ludovic, Pursuit: The Chase and Sinking of tile Bismarck (London: Collins, 1974) _ _, all My Way 10 tire Club (London: Collins, 1989) Kent, Capt. Barrie. Signal!: A History ofSignalling in the ROJ'al Navy (Clanfield, Hants.: Hyden House, 1993) Klimczyk, Tadeusz, Hood IMonografie Morskie, vol. 61 (Gdynia: A)-Press, 1997) Lambert, Andrew, 'HMS Hood: April-May 1936' in Warslrip, 34 (April 1985), pp. 74-9 La Niece, Rear-Admiral P.G., Not a ine to Fh'e Job (Yalding, Kent: Charl'ons Publishers, 1992) Le Bailly, Vice-Admiral Sir louis, The Man Arolmd the Engine: Life Be/ow the Waterline (Emsworth, Hants.: Kenneth Mason, 1990) - ' From Fisher to tlte Falklands (London: Institute of Marine Engineers, 1991) _ _, 'Rum, Bum & the Lash: Some Thoughts on the Problems of Homosexuality in the Royal avy' in JOllnlal of tire Royal United Services blstitute, 141, no. I (February 1996), pp. 54--8 McMurtrie, Francis, Tile Cruise of tile Bismarck (London: Hutchinson,1942) Manllal of Instruction for the Royal Naval Sick Bertll Staff (London: H.M.S.O., 1930) A1anual ofSeamanship, vol. I (restricted circulation, Admiralty, 1937) Marder, Arthur J., From the Dardmlelles to Oran (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1974) Mearns, David, & Rob White, Hood and Bismarck: Ti,e Deep-Sea Discovery ofan Epic Battle (London: Pan Macmillan/Channel 4 Books, 200 I) Moran, Lord [Charles McMoran Wilsonl, Tlte Allatomy of Col/rage (London: Constable, 1945) More'z, Joseph, Tire Royal Navy m.d tire Capital Slrip ill tire Imerwar Period (London: Frank Cass, 2(02) von Miillenheim-Rechberg, Baron Burkard, Battleship Bisl1'larck: A Survivor's Story (2nd edn, Annapolis: Naval Insti'ute Press, 1990) Murfell, Malcolm H., Fool-Proof Relations: TI.e Searclr for Anglo-American Naval Cooperation dur;,tg the Chamberlaill Years, /937-1940 (Singapore: Singapore University Press, 1984) lewton, R. ., Practical CotlStruetion of\Varships (london: Longmans, Green & Co., 1941) orman, Andrew, HMS Hood: Pride ofthe Roral Navy (Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books, 200 I) orthcot!, Maurice, HMS Hood IMan O'War, vol. 6] (London: Bivouac Books, 1975) O'Connor, V.c. Scott, 11le Empire Cruise (1st edn, London: Riddle, Smith & Duffus lfor the author!, 1925; ,here is a second printing with a foreword by Leo Amery M.P.) O'Conor, Capt. Rory, Running a Big Ship on
a'
Piper, TrC\'or, 'H 15 Hood'in lVarship II'orld,4 (I 998}, no. 4, pp.20-2 Poolman, Kenneth, The British Sailor (london: Arms and Armour Press, 1989) Progress i" aval Gmmery (restricted circulation, Admiralty, 1920-39) Pursey, Cdr Harry, 'Invergordon: First Hand-Last Word?' in Nal'al Review, 64 (I 976), pp. 157-64 & 268 (erratum) Ranft, BJ'ilcL. (ed), The Beatty Papers: Selecriom from the Private ami Official Correspoudence mId Papers ofAdmiral of ,he Fleet ElIrl Beatty ( avy Records Society, vol. 128 & 132) (2 vols., Aldershot: scolar Press, 1989-93) Ransome-Wallis, P., The Royal Naval Reviews (London: Ian Allan, 1982) Ransome-Wallis, R., ova Red Stripes: A Nava/ Surgeon at lVar (London: Ian Allan, 1973) Raven, John, & John Roberts, Britislr Battleships of IVa rid War Two: Tile Development a'ld Tull"ical History of the Royal Navy's Battleships and Bartlecmisers from /9/1 to 1946 (London: Arms and Armour Press, 1976) Rea, The Rev. Edgar, A Curate's Egg (Durban: Knox Printing CO.,c.1967) Rhys- Jones, Graham, Tire Loss oftile Bismarck: All Avoidable Disaster (London: Cassell, 1999) Roberts, John, Tile Battlecruiser Hood IAnatomy of the shipi (London: Conway, 1982) _ _, Battlecrl/isers (London: Chatham Publishing, 1997) Robertson, L' R.G.,'HMs Hood: Battle-Cruiser 1916-1941' in John Wingate (ed), WMsl.ips ill Profile, vol. II (Windsor: Profile Publications, 1973), pp. 14S-72; also pubd separately as HMS Hood [Warships in Profile, no. 191 _ _, 'The Mighty Hood' in Sir ips MOII,lrl)', 10 (1975), no. 3, pp. 4-10; no. 4, pp. 22-7; no. 5, pp. 10-14, & no. 6, pp. 4-9 _ _, 'H.M.s. "Hood'" in Silips MOlltltly, 16 (1981), no. 4, pp. 26-9, & no. 5, pp. 24~ Rogers, Byron, 'H.M.s. Hood' in Saga, July 1997, pp. 38-43 and subsequent correspondence in August & September nos. Roskill, Capt. Stephen W., Tire War at Sea. /939-1945 (3 vols. in 4 tomes, London: H.M.s.O., 1954---{)1) - ' H.M.S. Warspite: The tory ofa Famous Battleship (London: Collins, 1957; repro Annapolis: avallnsti'u'e Press, 1997) - ' Naval Policy Between the \
The Battlecruiser HMS HOOD
250
_ _• Remembrance Day Semloll, St. Giles-in-the-Fields Church, LOrlda,,_ 12th November 2000 (privately, 2000) Taylor, Theodore. H.M.S. Hood vs. Bismarck: The Battleship Battle (New York: Avon Books, 1982) Thomas. Roger D., & Brian Patterson, Dreadnoughts;n Camera: Buildiflg the Dreadnoughts, 1905-1920 (Stroud, Glos.: Alan Sutlon/Royal
aval Museum, 1998) Thompson, The Rev. Kenneth, H.M.S. Rodney at Vi'tlr: Being an Accoutlt of the Part Played i" tlie War by H.M.S. Rodney [rol/l 1939 to /945 (London: Hollis and Carter, 1946) Tute, Warren, The Deadly Stroke (London: Collins, 1973) Twiss. Admiral Sir Frank, Social Change in the Royal Navy.
1924-1970: The Life and Times ofAdmiral Sir Frank Twiss. KCB, KCVO, DSC (Stroud, Glos.: Alan Sutton/Royal aval Museum, 1996) Viall, Admiral of the Fleet Sir Philip. Action this Day (London: Frederick Muller, 1960) Warden, A. Ross. 'Memories of the Battle Cruiser H.M.S. "Hood'" in Tile Navy, April 1971, pp. 82-5 Weldon, D.G., 'H.M.S. Hood' in Warship hllemational, 9 (1972), no. 2, pp. 114-58 Wellings, Rear-Admiral joseph H., U.S.N., all His Majesty's ervice: Observations of the British Home Fleet from the Diary. Reports, alld Letters ofJoseph H. Wellings. Assistant U.S. Naval Attache, LOlldoll, /940-41, ed. John B. Hattendorf (Newport, RI: Naval War College Press, 1983) Wells, Capt. John, The Royal Navy: All JIll/strated Social History, 1870-1982 (Stroud, Glos.: Alan Sutton/Royal Naval Museum, 1994) William. Leonard Charles. Gone A Lollg Journey (Bedhampton, Hants.: Hillmead Publications, 2002) Wincott. Len, /llvergordol1 Mlltineer (London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson,1974) WinkJareLh, Robert J., The Bismarck Chase: New Light ml a Famous El1gagement (London: Chatham. 1998) Winton. John, Death of the Scharnhorst (Chichester: Antony Bird Publications. 1983) Wiper, SIeve, H.M.S. Hood (Warship Pictorial, no. 201 (Tucson: Classic Warships Publishing, 2003) Journals and Newspapers The Globe and Laurel The Naval mid A1ilitar)1 Review Naval Review The Navy Western Evel1ing Herald Western Morning News
LS Fred Hard (1936-9) OD WH.T. Hawkins (1940-1) CERA WL. Hudson (1923-9) Vice-Admiral Eric W Longley-Cook (1930-3) OD Ernest McConnell (1938-40) Sig. Harry Smith (1926) OD H.D. Spence (1940-1) Sloker W.E Stone (1921-5) Boy Jim Taylor (1940-1) Boy A. Thomas (c. 1926-9) AB R.E. Tilburn (1938-41) Stoker Dick Turner (1936-9) AB Fred White (1937--
Imperial War Museum, Loudon Department of Documents 96/20/1 Mid. HW. Acworth (1928) 90/38/1 Capt. G. . Blundell (1922-4, 1941) 91/7/1 Boy EB.Coombs (1935-8) 92/27/1 Boy W.M. Crawford (1939-41) 74/134-5/1 W.H.l-laslam [for OD Philip XI (1941) 92/4/1 Mid. H.G. Knowles (1939) Sound Archive 13241 All Albert Charles Band (1937-8) 10751 OSig. Albert Edward Pryke Briggs (1939-41) 13581 AB Leo Edward Brown (1920-1) 5809 Stoker icholas Smiles Carr (1930-1) 794 AB Fred Copeman (Nor[olk, 1931) 5831 Stoker Walter Roy Hargreaves (193\) 18663 Boy Tel. Ernest Kerridge (RellolVlI, c.1934-6) 12503 Mid. john Robert Lang (RellowlI, 1935-6; Hood, I 936-c. 7) 11767 Ll Charles Piercy Mills (1940-1) 22147 OA Bert Pitman (1939-41) 11951 Mid. Edmund Nicholas Poland (1935) 20817 AB Percy Thomas Price (1936-8) 18804 Noel Raymond Pugh (Royal Naval Wireless Auxiliary Reserve, 1930s) 12422 LS Joseph Frederick Rockey (1938-40) 16741 Sub-Ll (E) Brian Scon-Garren (1940-1) 749 Plumber Ernest Henry Taylor (c. 1926-8) 1\746 AB Robert Ernest Tilburn (1938-41) 13205 Tel. james Brock Webster (Prillce o[ Wales, 1941) 5818 aD orman Wesbroom (1931-2) 5807 LS Samuel George Wheat (1931) 13240 AB Frederick William White (1937-8) Stoker Charles Edward Wild (1931) 5835
Dates after l1ames indicate period ofservice in ship
Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives. King's College. London Aston 1/1 0 George Aston (journalist, 1926)
Applegartll School Archive, Nortllallertou, Yorks. School log book for 1941 and assorted uncatalogued papers and correspondence relating to HMS Hood, including letters from H. Balston (1940), AB j.T. Beale (c. 1940), the Rev.l-larold Beardmore (193~1), Rear-Admiral Irvine Glennie (1939-41), A.G. McGregor (c. 1939-<.40), Tel. Leonard Taylor (c. 1940), the Rev. James Churchill Waters (1932-4) and LS L.c. Williams (1936-41)
National Maritime Museu",. Greenwich Ship's cover, HMS Hood (3 vols.) Chatfield/4/1-3 Admiral of Ihe Fleet Lord Chatfield (First Sea Lord 1936) Cowan/5, 13/2, 14 & 20: Admiral Sir Walter Cowan (1921-3) Elkins/l, 2, \I Admiral Sir Roberl Elkins (1921-3; lIalialll, 1931) Pursey/5, 11-16,21: Cdr Harry Pursey (1931-3)
Churchill Archives Centre. Cambritlge DRYR boxes 3/1-2; 8/1-2; 11/1 Admiral Sir Frederic Dreyer LEBY boxes 1-3 & 20 (boxes 16-17 closed) Vice-Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly ROSK boxes 4/7; 4/77-77A; 7/172; 8/27; 21/3 Capt. Stephen Roskill
Naval Historical Branch. Wllitehall. London 'Pink Lists', HMS Hood (1920-39) AdmirallY War Diary, card index (1939-41)
The Fell/JUrst Society. Fenhurst. Surrey Oral history: Cdr Keith Evans (1938-9)
Public Record Office, Kew ADM 1/2219 Preparations for Empire Cruise (1923) ADM 1/8662/ III Special Service Squadron, Empire Cruise (1924) ADM 1/11726 Loss of Hood in action with German battleship Bismarck (1941) ADM 1/30817 Loss ofH.M.S. Hood (1941) ADM 53 Deck logs o[ H.M.S. Hood, March 192o-April 1941: ADM 53/78910-78966 (March 192o-December 1934) ADM 53/97652-97675 (january 1935-December 1936) ADM 53/104194-104217 (january 1937-December 1938) ADM 53/109191-109202 (january-December 1939) ADM 53/112443-112454 (january-December 1940) ADM 53/114434-1\4437 (january-April 1941) ADM 101/536 Medical Officers' Journal (1932)
II. Unpublished Sources
Glasgow University Archives Upper Iyde Shipbuilders 1/5/15-21; 1/86/33 HMS Hood Association Archives Lt-Cdr A.R.T. Batley (1941) Capt. G.c. Blundell (1922-4) OSig. Reg G. Bragg (1922-4) Marine 'Windy' Breeze (1920-2) OSig. A.E.P. Briggs (1939-41) Stoker Ken Clark (1938-40) AB Harry Cutler (1922-4) Stoker George Donnelly (1936-8) Cdr Keith Evans (1938-9) S.M. Ghani (schoolboy, 1924)
Naval War College. Providence, Rhode Isla"d Rear-Admiral Joseph I-I. Wellings, U.S.N. (1940-1)
ADM 101/565 ADM 116/2219-2220 ADM 116/2254-2257 ADM 116/4351-4352 ADM 136/13 ADM 156/107 ADM 167/83 ADM 167/89 ADM 178/79 ADM 178/110 ADM 178/114 ADM 178/129 ADM 186/797 ADM 202/422 ADM 234/317 ADM 239/261 ADM 267/64 AIR 15/415
Medical Officers' Journal (1940) Empire Cruise of the Special Service Squadron (1923-4) Special Service Squadron: Letters of Proceedings (1923-4) Loss of H.M.S. Hood: Boards of Inquiry(l941) Ship's books (II vols.) (1916-41) Col1ision between I-IM Ships Hood and Renown (1935) Admiralty Minutes and Memoranda.lnvergordon Mutiny (1931) Admiralty Minutes and Memoranda, Invergordon Mutiny (1931) Admiralty: Memoranda regarding Invergordon Mutiny (1931) I nvergordon Mutiny: Reports of Proceedings (1931) Invergordon Mutiny: Men discharged (1931) Invergordon Mutiny: Reports (1931) Operations against French Fleet at Mers-el-Kebir (1940) Operations by Royal Marines in Norway (1940) Operations against French Fleet al Mers-e1-Kebir (1940) The Fighling Instruclions (1939) Board of enquiry into loss of H.M.5. Hood (1941) Reports on loss of Hood and sinking of Bismarck (1941)
Royal Naval Museum. Portsmouth Manuscripts Collection 1981/368-74 Paymasler LI Robert Browne (1940-1) 1998/42 Mid. Philip Bucken (1940-1) 1999/19 ABAlgernon Foster(c.1939-41) 1993/54 Cdr Rory O'Conor (1933-6) 1987/106 Mid. john Parker (1935) Oral History Collectioll 68/1997 Mr Cavendish Morton (artist, 1930s) 27/1992 Sgl John Russell (1931-2) Tile Second World War Experience Centre, Horsfortlr, Leeds 2001/1376 OD B.A. Carlisle (1940-1) Author's Collection Letter: Ll (E) Tristram Spence (1940-1) Memoirs: Tel. R.R. jackman (1937-9); Cdr R.A.C. Owen (1940-1); Boy Maurice herborne (1938-40) Correspondence: Cdr I.W.V. Browne (1939-41); Stoker George Donnelly (1936-8); Cdr Keith Evans (1938-9); Ian A. Green (HM Dockyard, Rosyth, 1939-42); Tel. R.R. Jackman (1937-9); Vice-Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly (1932-3,1937-9); Cdr R.A.C. Owen (1940-1); OTel. Douglas Turner (1935-9) Interview notes: Cdr I.W.V. Browne (1939-41); Stoker Ken Clark (1938-40); AB Harry Cutler (1922-4); Ian A. Green (HM Dockyard, Rosyth, 1939-42); Tel. R.R. Jackman (1937-9); OD Horace King (1935--8); Vice-Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly (1932-3, 1937-9); OD Ernest McConnell (1938-40); Boy Jim Taylor (1939-40); OTel. Douglas Turner (1935-9); AB George Walker (1939-40); Surgeon Lt (D) W.j. Walton (1936-8) Oral history: Boy jim Taylor (1939-40) Private Collections James Gordon (Boy Seaman, Priuce of Wales. 1941): Filmed interview (c.2oo0) Cdr David Gould: (i) Papers of Admiral Sir Francis Pridham (1936-8) Memoirs (c. 1970) Lectures Oil Mutiny, Part I: Prevention (c. 1938) Notes 011 Hal/dlillg the Hood (c. 1938) Notes for Newly Joil/ed Officers (january 1938) (ii) Memoirs of Cdr james Gould (1921-3) Mrs Bee KeflCllillgtOfI: Letters of Lt John lago ( 1939-41) Mrs E.L. Roberts: Memoirs of Cdr E.W. Roberts (1933-6) Mrs Jal/e WI'igllllm: Diary of Ll (E) Geoffrey Wells (1923-4)
Glossary
251
Glossary abaft (adv.) behind aft, after (n. & adj.) general terms indicating something as being towards the stern of the ship or closer to the stern
than another object Aldis light or lamp a hand-held signalling lamp
'the And.few' traditional name for the Royal Navy athwart, athwartships across the ship, at right angles 10 the centreline banyan party or spree a picnic ashore, often in foreign
climes 'the Bloke' the Commander
bogie in Hood's case a revolving structure in the trunking of each ISin turret used 10 bring shells up to the working chamber brow ladder rigged against the ship's side giving access to and from boats lying alongside 'buffer' Bosun's Mate cable a measurement of distance, 200 yards caboose (or1cabouche') an enclosed space in a ship, usually very small, unofficially taken over by a rating for his personal use chaff banter, usually good humoured 'crusher' Regulating Petty Officer davits cranes for lowering or hoisting the ship's boats, and fTom which they are suspended when not in use deal a fir or pine wood plank about six feet long deckhead the ceiling divisions the grouping of a section of the crew, usually by trade, with resronsibility for work and maintenance in a specific part 0 the ship; also the mustering or inspection of these by a senior officer 'doggie' a messenger drifter a type of fishing boat attached to a large ship as a tender to ferry her men and keep her supplied fanny an)' of several metal receptacles for food or drink which formed the culinary outfit of a mess fathom a measurement of depth, six feet flat a dear space below decks forward (n. & adj.) general term indicating something as being towards the bows of the ship or closer to the bows than another object 'the Gaffer' the admiral 'gash' rubbish and waste, usually disposed of down the chutes positioned for this purpose on either side of the ship 'gaffers' soft drinks provided by the canteen; by extension anything worthless or inadequate 'grog' the diluted rum ration traditionally served in the Royal Navy; see p. 86 hopper in Hood, the flash-tight containers for transporting cordite charges first to the working chamber and then to the gunhouse of a 15in turret hove to (p.p. of 'heave') to bring a boat or ship to a standstill without anchoring or making fast inboard the inner part of the ship inclination exercise a gunnery exercise against another ship with a deliberate deneclion or 'throw off' on the gun sights interrupted screw the alignment of screw threads by which the hinged breech block of a gun can seal or open the firing chamber by means of a rotating movement 'Jack Dusty' Chief Petty Officer in charge of stores jankers a punishment 'the Jaunty' the Master-at-Arms 'Jimmy the One' the First Lieutenant, in Hood always a lieutenant-commander 'killick' a Leading Seaman, so-called for the anchor or 'killick' device worn on his left arm ky. kye hot cocoa made from large slabs of gritty chocolate, pounded or chipped off with a knife and melted in boiling water or under a steam main; served very thick with sugar and milk to taste libertyrnen men granted temporary shore leave Make and Mend Clothes a half-day holiday mess properly, the grouping of men to a numbered table on a messdeck where they eat and spend much of their free time; often used to describe the entire messdeck mess traps assorted utensils nautical mile 6,080 feet 'oggin (hoggin) the sea 'appa' friend; also the man in the opposite watch who performs the same duties as oneself outboard the sea side of the ship
'the Owner' the Captain 'party' girlfriend 'pierhead jump' a rapid and unexpected draft to another ship 'pilot' a navigator point a division of the circumference of the magnetic compass card, equivalent to 11° IS' 'pusser' corruption of'Purser'; general term to describe anything official or issued by the Navy, and by extension a person known for always doing things by the book rove (p.p. of 'reeve') to thread a rope or cable through something 'saltharse' a seaman officer without specialist training scuttle a porthole; also a nash proof hatch in the gun· loading mechanisms shackle a measurement of anchor cable, 75 feet (12V2 fathoms); also a V-shaped iron closed with a pin and used for joining lengths of cable, etc. 'snottie' a midshipman
'striper' a rating with some experience in the Navy, denoted by the chevrons on his left arm; usually used to refer to a three·stripe able seaman with at least thirteen years' service behind him 'tanky' a long-service able seaman charged with specific duties in the ship 'tickler' a hand-rolled cigarette; see p. 87 'tiddley' general term to describe something attractive or in first-rate condition, often with respect to uniform or other accoutrements 'tiffy' an artificer; also a general name for other rating specialists, especially Sick Berth Attendants tompion (also tampion) a brass stopper for the muzzle of a gun, usually decorated with the ship's badge trick a turn of duty in a watch, lasting between 30 minutes and two hours 'uckers (huckers) a form of ludo watch one of the four-hour periods into which the naval day is divided; also the groups of men assigned to duty during this period
North Sea
Atlantic Ocean
LONDON ~"",,,,,"--
EngfiSh:JChannet/
IsJe~'o' Scifly
& 25
50 75 100 125150 km 25 so 15 100 m
Places mentioned in the text
Guemt:/y.
.
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F ran c e
The Battlecrlliser HMS HOOD
252
Index umbers in italics refer to photos, plans and maps. Ranks and ratings of individuals are the last under which they are mentioned in the text. Keel-laying dates are given after hip names, approval dates after ship classes. and locations after shore establishments. Abbott, Reg. Chief Stoker, 42 Abyssinian Crisis (1935), 165, 168, 169,172,174 Adelaide, 71,145 Adelnide (1915), 71, 74 Admiral Gra[Spee (1932), 67, 174, 179,185,201 Admiral Hipper (1935), 214 Admiral Scheer (1931),78, 186,214 Admiralty Fire Control Table, 49, 55 Admiralty, 7, 10, 12, 13, 14,42,48, 49,58,60,61,68,70,71,79,93, 95,102,106, III, 113, 120, 123, 130, 138, 147-55, 156, 157, 159, 167,168,170,172,179,182,183, 201,215,225,226,227 Adventure (1922),91, 149, 155 Alesund, 193 Allen, AB WE.S., 85 Almirame Cervera (1922), 172-3,
172 Andalsnes, 193 Anglo-italian Agreement (1938), 177 Applegarth School, orthallerton, 198,227 Aquilania, HMT (1911), II, 178, 191 Arbuthnot, Mid. Peter, 164-5 Arbuthnot Trophy, 61, 62, 67, 79, 163 Argo Clock, 48-9, SO Arizmm (1914), 229 Ark Royal (1935), 45, 63,190,201, 202,204,229 Arnold-Forster, Rear-Admiral D., 66,87,97,98,98-9,100,108-9, 109-10,112 Arosa Bay, 75, 76, 103, 165 Arran, Isle of, 18, 19,63
ArrolV(l928),I86,21- 16 Ashcroft, Lt J.EA., 129 Ashigara (1925),174,175 Astley-Rushton, Rear-Admiral E.A., ISO Aston, George, 22, 28-38,131,134 Atlas Works, Sheffield, II Attwood, E.L., 10 Auckland, 72 Auckland (1937),193 Awdry, It-Cdr C.A., 193 Aylwin, Sub-l. C.K.S., 64 Azores, 76, 155 Backhouse, Admiral of the Fleet Sir Roger, 7,85,169,171,180 Bailey. Rear-Admiral Sidney R., 7, 68,165-8.168 Barcelona, 176-7. 177 Barham (1913). 11.38,46,63.66, 130,159.167.193.212,229 Barnes, Leading Steward, 62 Barney. AB ·Tubby'. 46 Barr & Stroud, Scotstoun. 48, 49. 76 'Bartimeus',80. 114 Batley. It-Cdr A. Roger T., 134. 188. 189,211.212.215 Batten. CPO William, 147 Battenberg Troph)'. 64 Ba.t1e Cruiser Squadron. 62. 68. 69, 76,77,91.99,147,168,175,185, 187,214.215,216; pres.ige of, II, 146; rivalry in, 63. 64, 68. 165. 166.168
banlecruiser, concept, 10, 1J; weaknesses. 10-11; sl rengths. 11 BBC, 148. 149. 154, 174. 184 Beardmore, Rev. Harold. 53-4. 79, 80,88.103,127,127-8,136,139, 142-5,196-7,197,198,199.203 Beatty. Admiral Sir David. 10. II. 14,46.60.70. 189 Beck"With. Mid. Richard. 64 Bell. OSig. Ronald T. L.. 218 Benstead, Instr. It-Cdr Charles R., 91 Bent, Mid. C.M., 129 Berthon, Rear-Admiral C. Pe.er. 52. 135.177,183 Biggenden, Chief S.oker Walden. 32,41.42.198,248 Binney. Capt. Thomas H., 7.64,156 Binnie. Stoker PO John E., 42 Bishop, PO Edward, 219, 220 Bismarck (1936), 7, 11,210,211, 2//,212,214,214,215.216, 217-18,219.220-5,226-7.229 Black SIVall (1938), 193 Blake. Vice-Admiral Sir Geoffrey. 7. 37,110.172-3.173,174,179,223 Blundell, Capt. George. 32, 36, 72, 102,108.109.130,132.226 Board, Mid. Robin. 90 Boardman, PO Stanley, 218 Boldre Church. 29-30 Bond. AB Cyril 'Ginger', 150 Bostock, Chief Mechanician Charles W. 8. 42 Bradfield. CERA. 42 Brand, Rear-Admirallhe Hon. Sir Hubert. 70 Brazil and \"e5t Indies Cruise (1922),68,69-70.79 Breeze, Gunner 'Windy', 60. 69. 116 Brest, 210. 214 Bretagne (1912), 202 Brewer, aD Arthur W. 227 Brewer, 00 George, 227 Briggs,O ig. Ted.21,31,33.35,91, 114.123,126,129,133.156,184, 190,200.202.203.204.215-22, 223.224.225,227 Brockman, Pay Vice-Admiral Sir Ronald,85 Brown, Sir John, 14 Brown, AB Leo E.• 30. 116 Brown. Artificer Robert, 46 Browne. Mid.I.W.V.. 193,200 Browne. Pay 1I Robert H.P.• 185. 196,200,212,227 Buckett, Mid. Philip, 39, 77-9, 202, 203,210 Buckley,A.H.R., R.M .• 135 Bunney. PO John. 106 Bush. AB John. 55
Cagliari, 204. 205, 207 Cambell, Cdr eville.67 Cambridge, Sub-lt (E) John. 218, 226 Cambridge, Capt. William. 226 Cape Matapan. Battle of (1941).50, 54 Cape Town. 70-1 Cape Verde. 68 Carey. Rev. Walter. 142 Caribbean ruise(1932).9O.104 Carlill. It-Cdr (G) S.H .• 53 Carlisle. aD B.A.• 57, 84,121.189. 197,212 Carn. Ch.Yeo.Sigs. George, 217, 220 Carnell, Mid. Harold. 2 I2,213 Carslake, Capt. John. 112 Cathmoir, Chief S.oker, 42, 137 Cawsand Bay, 60, 74 Gemllrioll (1911),52.53 Chamberlain, Austen, 149, 154 Chamberlain. eville. 178, 184, 193 Chandler, CPO Alfred J.• 209 Charles, Pay Mid. J., 64, 130
Chatfield. Ernie, Admiral Lord. 7, 11,19.54.68,77, 80, 159~, 168. 180, 182 Chatham, 79; Division. 7, 68, 149; HM Dockyard, 15 Chilvers. Mechanician, 42 Chollgh, The (c. 1933-<.6), 30, 124 Churcher, Pay Cdr E.D.T. 173 Churchill, Winston 5.• 191, 192,227 Clark, Stoker Ken. 41,42, 137 Clutterbuck, It-Cdr (E) B.W.G., 153 Coal and Rail Strikes (1921), 61, 146 Cobb, Mid. Gerald. 69 Collier,ABWilliam, 140 Colvin. Rear-Admiral Reginald, 153 Connor. W.• 68-9 Come di Cavollr (1910), 178 convoys. 194; SC7, 18; SC31, 226; TCI.191; S3. 191.201; WS8B. 225 Coombs, ODs Fred & Frank, 6. 8, 37.53.62.62-3.64.68,82-3,83, 88-9,95-6.103.104.105,106. 114, 115.115-16.116-17,117, 120,126,126-7.127.128.129, 135, 140.163, 16~.165, 175, 176 Copeman. AB Fred, 62. 152 Copenhagen, 60 Corfu. 103 Cork and Orrery, Admiral the Earl of,76-7.163.171 Cornwell, Boy Jack, 55, 56 Coronation Review (1937), 22.110, 173. 174, /74, 175. 178.229 Corsica. 138, 175, 177 Collrageo'IS(l915). 18,174. 185. 187.210-11
Courageous class large light cruisers (1915),38 Coventry Ordnance \"'arks. 55 Cowan, Rear·Admiral Sir ''''alter, 35.51.69.129.142.145.146-7 Cowdenbeath,61 Crabb, Sub-lt J.S.L.. 129 Crane, Mid. G.H.G .• /29 Craven. Cdr ( ) D.H.S., 136 Crawford. Boy William M., 194, 194,195,198.209.210,211.218 Crete. 53; Battle for (1941), 7, 226, 227 Cromarty Firth, 67, III, 148-54, 164.211 Cross. Cdr W.K.R., 194.199.215, 216.226 Cunningham, Admiral Viscount, 7,
23, SO. 52, 53. 64, 76, 77. 101, 109, 123.125,136,138.173-8,180 Curacoa (1916),167,174 Currey, Mid. D.C.S., 129 Cutler. CPO Harry, 83, 105 Dalglish, Capt. Robin. 159
Dallae(1916),70 Dartmouth. R.N. College, 120-1. 130.131,135 Dartnell. Surg. Cdr louis E.• 125 Dallntles' (1917). 70 Davies, It Horace, R.M., 104, 196 Davies, Constr. Cdr W.J.A., 52, 62. 136 Davis, Mid. TE., 136 Davis, Admiral Sir\o\'illiam, 7,112, 121,144.183,226 de Robeck. Admiral Sir John, 144 Delhi (1917), 22, 70.146,155 Denmark Strait, 7,188,198,214.
215,216; Battle of.he (1941), II, 51,55.57,216,217,218-22, 225-7,229 Den•• Surg. l. Christopher, 125 Delltsc1lJalld (1929), 135. 178. 179-80./79 Devonport, 60, 61,68.70,74,79.
149; Division, 7, 19.62,67,77, 146.149,192; HM Dockyard, 15, 192 d'Eyncourt. Sir Eustace Tennyson. 10. II, 18, 19,20.111 Dibley, Eng. Cdr A.K.. 156 Dogger Bank. Battle of the (1915), 10. 11,60,97,168 Domb~ 193 Don, Mid. G.R.A., /30 Donnelly, S.oker George, 41,114, 117,127 Donovan. Tel. S.• 116 Dorsetshire (1927), 152, 155.226 Dragoll (1917). 70 Drax, Admiral Sir Reginald P-E-E-. 7 Dreadllollght (1905).10
Dreyer. Admiral Sir Frederic. 49, 54, 66 du Cane, Peter. 110 Duckworth, Pay It-Cdr A.D.• 54 Dudding, Surg. Cdr John S., 109 Dllke o[York (1937), 218. 228 Dumaresq. It John, 48 Dundas. Mid. Bill. 217,218. 221-2. 223.224 Dlllledill (1917), 70, 136,212 D,mkerqlle (1932). 133. 174, 186-7. 202.203.203-4
Eagle (1913),75,229 Edgar (1849). 15 Edmiston. CERA Reginald F.. 42 Edward VIII. 93. 174, 180; as Prince of Wales, 68, 70 Edwards, CERA, 42 Edwards, aD James, 227 Electra (1933), 224 Elkins. Vice·Admiral Sir Robert,47, 69, ISO, 151 Eller, It-Cdr Ernest M., 29. 32. 54, 56.59. 189,228 Ellis, Capt. R.M., 215 Erskine, It-Cdr (E) John G.M., 211 Escapade (1933).97 Eskimo (1936), 57, 58 Est""a, Amiral Jean-Pierre, 202 Evans, Pay Cdr Keith. 85. 102, 114, 225-6 Excellent (Whale Island), 46, 48. 53. 54,159.167.170 Faeroe Is., 56. 76, 95. 184 Fairbairn, It-Cdr Douglas, 60, 60-1 FairlVeother (drifter), 213 Falkland Islands, Battle of the (1914),10,212 Feltham. R.A., 151, 152 Field. Admiral Sir Frederick. 20, 23, 70.72,73,74.91,92.118 Fielding. Surg. It James, 125 Fiji. 72 Fisgard (Gosport, Chatham), 46 Fisher, Admiral Lord, 7,10,20,38, 46.99.136 Fisher, Admiral Sir William. 7, 76-7, 87 Fleetwood (1935).193 Fogg-Elliot, It-Cdr (E) Lancelo•• 42. 136,137 Forbes. Admiral Sir Charles. 190 Force H. 201-3, 204-4. 207 Forester, C.S.• 49 Forth Bridge, 35, 90.16/.210 Foster. AB Algernon T, 193,228 Foster, Tim, 99 Fowler,'Tiny·. 105 Franco, General Francisco, 172 Fraser, Admiral Lord. 7, 223, 228 Freetown, Sierra Leone, 36, 70, 134 Fremanue, 71,145 French navy, 138, 178-9,201-2 Frobisher (1916), 130 Fuller, Rear-Admiral Cyril T.M.• 62 Furiolls(l915).18,55, 147, 191
'G3·battlecruisers.19 Gabbett, It-Cdr ).S., ISO, 151 Galnteo (1933).136,137,193 Galema (trawler), 172 GO/lges (Shotley), 21,35, 124 Gardner, Terri, 120 'Geddes Ase' (1921), 159 General Strike (1926), 79.147 Gensoul. Vice-Amiral Marcel, 186, 202 GeorgeV,6O,68. 72,133,154.167, 174 George VI. 135. 174. 180.210,210 Georgetown, Ascension Is., 56 German navy, 10, 178-9 Ghani. S.M., 31 Gibraltar. 9. 51.63,64.68.69,75-6, 76,87,95,99.101.102.102-3, 103,109.123.124.125,128,133, 135. 137, 138, 165. 166, 168. 169. 170,172.175.178.179-80.180. 20 1,203,204,205,206-7 Gieve, Messrs, 134 Gilbertson, Rev. Arthur Deane, 142 Glasgow, 11.48. 12.227,48 Glennie, Capt. Irvine G., 7, 58, 105, 113.183.190,195,199,199.200. 201.210,212 GloriollS (1915),18,124 Gllei,ellali (1935).59.210.214 Golfe-Juan. 105.177 Goodall. Sir Stanley, 10,78, 112 Goodwin. Eng. Cdr Frank R.• 109 Gordon. Boy James. 194.222 Gotlalld (1930).214 Gough. CoI.Sgt John M.• 209 Grand Flee•• 10, 11,30.43,49,61. 68,174.189 Gray, Mid. A.• 64 Green. lan, 77, 79. 209-10 Greenock, 16, 18. 104, 104-5, 147, 191,192,193.200.201 Gregson, Cdr (G) Edward H.G., 45, 54.62.217.219.222,226 Grenfell. It Gresham, 135, 136 Grimstadfjorden, 214, 215 Grogan, Cdr (E) R. Terence, 7. 183. 191,192,199,218.226 Guernsey. 79 H. Bentley & Co.• Bradford. /3 Haile Selassie, Emperor, 168 Hahi,53 Halifax, ova Scotia, 74 Hall,Capt. W.R., 142, 155, 159 Hall. Stoker John, 147 Halo (drifter), III Hamsterler,SS (c. 1924), 172 Hard, LS Fred. 53. 125 Harding, Warrant Eng. William, 169 Hargreaves, Stoker Walter, 151 Harris, AB, 193 Harris. Sheila, 227 Hartlepool,63, 156 Harvey. Lt-CdrW.B., 115 Haskell, Stoker Jim, 142. 164 Hawaii, 72. 73.103.105 Hawki", (1916), 156,225 Hawkins, aD Bill. 92. 95,121.126 Hayward, Corp. WJ., 101 Helensburgh.79. 131 Hemmings, ERA Bertie, 42. 185.218 Henderson, It (G) Nigel. 53 Henderson, Admiral Sir Reginald, 7, 37 Herbert, Capt. (E) S.)., 183 Hermes (1918), 55. 229 Hill. Mid., 132 Hill. Warrant Shp"'. N.C.. 165, 169 Hill, It Roger. 135 Hitler, Adolf, 7,135,172,178,201 Hoare-Laval Pact (1935), 168 Hodges, Admiral Sir Michael. 148, ISO, 154 Holderness, .oker Harry, 104 Holland. Capt. Cedric. 202
Index
Holiand.Vice-Admiral Lancelot E.• 11.212.215.216-17.218.219. 220. 221. 226 Hood (1889). 15 HOOD (1916) Design and Construction design 10-11.12.37. III; alteration. II. 13. 18,55. J 11 specifications. 10. 11.15.18 projected reconstruction, 19,59.
78.182 weaknesses in design. II. 19. 179. 210.211.226.229 armour. 18,92.210; belt 10. II. 15. 111.184,191; horizontal, II, 14, III. 179; magazines. 11,49; conning tower, 34; turret, 13--14,
44; barbette, 16; torpedo warheads. III. 112 bulges. II. 15. 190 keel-laying. II. 12, 15 construction, 7,11-19; delays in. 13 riveting, 13, 14 launching. 15. 16 fitting out, 13.14.16 completion. 17. 18 trials. 14. 18-19.18.19183.230 cost, 19; criticism of, 19 upkeep. 19 Structure and Fabric compartments, number of, 22, 42
tour of the ship. 20-38 hull. 12. 14, 15.15, 16.19.21,30. 31.33-4,39.94. III. 182.209; expansion joints in. 59. 94 paint. 12.31.76. 84. 209. 213; recognition stripes (1937-8),28. 172 funnels. 14.35.37.41.88.96,188. 212 bridge structure, 14. 16.21.28.30, 36.36. 188; Flag deck (or Signal platform),36. 37, 55, 71. 91, 126. 176.218; Conning tower platform, 36. 37, 58; Admiral's bridge. 34. 36, 37. 91; Fore bridge. 36, 37, 52. 58. 112; Compass platform ('the bridge'), 36. 37, 38. 40. 89. 91. 93.174.210.217,218,219,220. 221.222; spotting top. 14,21.36, 37.55,80,188.199.209.213. 221,224 conning tower, 14, 16,29,31,33. 34.36.37.38.49.93.112.194 masts. 21, 31, 35; mainmast and top. 14.35.90.93.209.219.222. 225; foremast and top. 35, 36. 37.73.209.210 rigging. 14.31.35,73.90.93.106. 209-10 forecastle. 28. 29. 43. 63. 72. 83, 94. 100,101.112.119.124.138.151.
152,162.170.181.206.209.218. 222 quarterdeck. 14,22.22.23. 71.81. 82.85.87,88,92.98.100.137. 138.165.166.176.177.182.183.
210 boat deck. 24-5.25,34. 35-6.35. 55,58.59.156.161.176.188. 212.213.218-25.220.225 forecastle deck. 24-5.28. 29, 55 upper deck. 26-7. 29-32 main deck. 26-7. 32-3 stores. 32. 33. 85. 87,116; Admiral's. 33; beef screen. 29; Boatswain's ready-use, 29;
Captain·s. 33; Central Store. 32. 85; Engineers: 57; Issue Room, 31.85; Potato. 29; Royal Marine Band·s. 33; Shipwrights', 29; Spirit Room. 33. 86 workshops, 32; Blacksmith·s. 35; Coppersmith's. 35. 36; Electrical
253
Artificers', 29; Engineers', 32, 33,
Transmitting Station, 30. 34.
112; operation of, III; fire
185; Ordnance Artificers', 32-3,
49-50,55,218,225,228
control. 112; Transmitting Room, 34; Dre)'er Table, 1J2; control tower,35, III, 112, 181; control position 37,112; lookout
46
structural and mechanical dilapidation. 9. 39. 92-4. 94, 177. 182-3,191-2 Fillings and Equipment anchors, 73, 96.101.151-2.152. 169; capstan .28.29.96.100.101, 151-2,152,177; cables, 28. 29, 73, IOO,IOI,151-2,152;hawsers.85. 97,IOO,101,152,169;cordage, 85,101 boats, 25, 35. 35-6, 106-11, 122, 126, 131,132,139,152,163,177; sailing. 25, 34, 57, 65. 88,100, 106-7,107,109.113; Sleam,25, 35,42,65,85,96.98. 100, 102,
106.107-8,108,108-9,109, 109-10.110.190.210; motor. 25. 42,101,106,109-11,125,128. 138.190.201,210; accidents. 109, 110 drifters, III, 150, lSI, 188, 189,200 floats. 110-11; carley. 25, 34. 80. 110-11.176,206; balsa, 84; biscuit. III; lifebuoys. 110, 175, 196; liferings. 62; lifejackets, 185, 224 derricks, 72; main, 25, 29, 35,100, 104,108-9, 109; 40ft, 35-6, 45; collapsible. 98 woodwork, 31; decking, 32, 83, 94; joinery, 14, 142 ventilation, 22, 23, 31, 32. 39, 45, 62. 75,92,113,114,115,117.123, 131,184.188.194.203 gangways,22,10I,1I4,163;brolVs, 100 bulkheads, 182 lVatertightdoors,87,184,185 hatches, 28. 32, 92, 93,106.184,185, 194,203,206 scuttles, 32, 92,123.125.184 searchlights, 35, 41, 51. 52, 91, 97-8, 113,212,225; control platforms, 35,36.37,174.188; ight defence control station. 34, 35, 62. 97.122; transmitting station, 33
pumps, 31, 38, 40, 41, 46 paravanes, 29. 98, 98,100,185,188 aircraft, 22,78,78, 147, 181; air arm, 78 Armament
gunnery (general), 10-11,42-3, 43-59.205; efficiency of H. in, 52, 54,54-5,57,57-8.58,59.156, 175,176,190,205,218-19; weaknesses, 55, 56. 57, 58, 59.176. 182,205 guns (general). 10, 18. 19.20,21,38. 41,55 15in turret (general). 10. 14, 16.19, 22,23.28,31.32,33.34,41,42. 43,48.63.72,78.81,87,92-4.95. 99.100,112,122,125,131,173, 176,177,181,182,201,203,205, 206.218.219.220,221,222,223, 224; Mk I gun. 16.44,47-8; Mk I mounting. 44. 46; Mk II mounting, 44, 46-8. 54; operation
of, 45-8, 53. 218; hydraulic power, 34.41.44,46,47.94,151,177. 182,205; ammunition supply. 44. 45-8; shell rooms, 11,33,34,45, 46; magazines, II, 14,30,33,34, 45,46,47.48,49.80,82.86.185,
222,223; working chamber, 44. 46-7; gunhouse, 44, 47-8, 50; firing of, 37. 47-8, 50, 50-1, 51, 51,52; effect of firing, 47. 50-1, 202; accidents, 52-3, 181 ISin fire·control system, 21.41, 47,
48-50,51,54; Dumaresq, 48; Vickers Clock, 48; Dreyer Table. 34.46,49-50,51,54,55,219;
15m directors, 28. 48. 50; armoured. 16,34,49,50,52,218,219; aloft, 16.37,49,50,52,55.213.218; gyroscopic smbilisation of. 48, 49.
50; Evershed bearing indkators, 49,210 15in shells, 45, 45, 46, 47. 52, 54; sub-calibre, 52; ammunilioning ship. 45,80. 183. 188 15in cordite, 45, 45, 46, 47, 48, 52-3 55in gun (general). 10, 13,21,23, 28,29,29,35,36,42,55-6,56,57. 59,86,99,122.139,176,181,192; design of, 55; operation of, 55, 55-6, 176; fire control, 55, 56, 80; Transmitting Room, 34, 55; Type F fire-control clock, 55; directors, 37,55.56,59,96,112; ammunition supply, 32, 33, 34, 55,57, 176, 196; shell rooms. 56; magazines, 56; shells, 55, 56; cordite, 55, 56; firing of, 53, 56, 176; battery room. 225 4in Mk V, 34, 35. 56, 57, 57, 59, 65, 73,/22,181; magazine. 57;
ammunition supply, 57 4in Mk XlV on Mk XIX mounting,
56,58,181,182,192,196,201. 207,209.212.213.215.219.220, 225; operation of. 57; fire control, 56,205; High-Angle Control System. 56. 205. 218; tachymelric tables, 56; High-Angle Control
Position, SO, 52, 56; air-defence positions, 37,89, 174,210,220;
ammunition supply, 57; magazines, 57.182,223; shellrooms, 56-7; sheUs, 56-7, 57, 205,206; ready-use lockers, 57, 59,193,196,201,213,219-20, 223; firing of. 57. 58; exercises, 57-8; AA Guard Ship, 189,205 2pdr Mk V and VI porn-porn mountings. 35, 56. 57. 58, 59, 85, 145,181,201,213,218;operation of. 58; directors, 35, 52, 58. 79; ammunition, 58. 59; magazines.
58
O.5in machine-gun mountings. 58. 59,196,225,234 UP launchers, 58-9, 145, 192-3,205, 206,212,213.218.221; ready-use lockers,59,192-3.212,219-20, 223 3pdr Hotchkiss saluting guns, 36,
58.71.71,87.91 3.7in howitzer, 71. 96, 193 small arms, 98.133.188.193; magazine. 57.182 Gunnery Department, 30, 82, 85; officers. 28; 30,37,51,53-4.101. 114,175,176,177;ordnance artificers, 31-2, 44. 46. 49, 56, 81. 86. 177; Qualified Ordnancemen, 46.55 rangefinders.35.37,44,47.4,49, 52.55,89, 112,213,219 radar, 93; Type 279M air-warning, 59.209,210; Type 284 gunnery. 55,209.210.218,218-19 salvo firing, 51, 53, 55; 'bracket', 51; 'ladder: 51, 54; concentration, 36, 51.217; broadside. 218 exercises, 51-3, 54, 57-8, 58. 68, 79, 175,176,189,205,215; indination, 51-2, 53, 16s-6, 215; sub-calibre, 52; towed mrgets, 52, 52, 156, 167, 185; radiocontrolled target, 52; anti-aircraft, 57,156 torpedoes, 13, 18, 28, 30, 33. 38. 97, 111-12.112; tubes, 13, 15,29,30, 34. 56, III, 112, 169; as dangerto ship, 111,112,223; magazines,
platform, 36, 37; firing of. 112, 113; exercises, 112, 113, 189; Torpedo Division, 30, 32, 41, 81, 112-13,174; officers, 114, 169; messdeck. 115. 203 Power and Propulsion Engineering Department, 32, 38, 39. 41.42,42-3.43.61,81,84.85,86, 88,99,113,120,137,158.180. 181,183,188,189,191-2,195, 205.211.248; Engineer Commander, 28, 32, 41,114, 183; Senior Engineer, 30, 32,42, 114; Engineer OOW, 40. 152; officers. 28,42,95,135-6, 156, 183; engine room artificers, 31-2, 39, 40, 41, 42,81,86.181,205;
mechanicians, 8, 31-2, 39, 41, 42, 81,205; chief and petty officer stokers, 31-2, 40.108; Slokers, 31, 33,37,39,41,42,97,107,108, 120.127.136,153,154,158,181, 195. 196. 205; messdecks. 120; Double Bottom party, 41-2, 42, 85; Engineers' Office. 32, 41. 43. 45,95 general, 18,30,38-43.182-3,188. 189.218; flaws. 39, 41, 94.182, 191.192 boilers. 10, 16, 18.33,38,39.40,52, 94,95,99.123.182; operation of, 38,40-1,88,95,96,181,188; maintenance of. 41, 42, 182, 192; boiler rooms, 32, 33, 38, 39, 40, 42,95. 123. 196,218; f.ms, 8. 33. 38,39,40.4I,42,188;vents, 156, 188
Brown-Curtis geared turbines, 14, 16, 18,33,38,41,74,99.100,210; operation of, 38-9, 39-40. 95;
damage to, 41, 168, 209; engine rooms, 32, 33, 37, 38, 95,196,224;
control platforms, 39, 40, 40, 42, 82,218; exhaust fans, 40; vents, 25,35,40,222,224 condensers,39,95.182,19O,19I,
192; maintenance of,41, 182, 191-2,192 evaporators, 39. 42,123.182,194 propeller shafts, 12,33,38,40 Michell thrust blocks, 38 propellers, 12, 13. 18, 38, 166 rudder, 12, 91 oil fuel. 18-19,38.40,41,42.52, 183,188; tanks, 41-2 fuel consumption, 18-19.70 watersupply,39,41,I23, 134. 182, 194
electrical installations and circuitry, 12,14,34,41,46,49,50,69,84-5, 112-13,132.133.134.167.174. 182,185,197,203,205-6.206, 218; d)'namos, 33, 34. 41, 97, 113, 185, 206; turbo~generators, 33, 4 J, 113; electrical artificers, 29, 31-2.81
CO2 compressors, 41, 199 Being arrival of, 18,19,20,60 aesthetic appeal of, 20. 21-2, 79. 99, 21>-16,229
'showing the flag', 70, 79, 156 as symbol of British sea power, 60-1,68.75,156,172, 180.182, 192,208,227,228,229 as imperial symbol, 7, 20, 70, 71, 75, 227,229
as greatest ship in the avy, 54, 60, 67,68,79, 159, 171, 195.208.227. 229
as instrument of peace, 7. 21, 60, 229
admired by foreigners, 20. 74
praised by civilians. 97 favoured,67.198 chummy ships, 67. 226 rivalries, 67-8 pridein,20,21-2,6I,67,162,180 love of ship. 9. 22. 141-2,226 first impressions of, 21-2, 114,156 as community, 8-9, 85, 114, 118, 162,180.229 morale and spirit, 8-9, 85. 105. 114, 127,128-9,131,135,136,142-3, 156-7,163,164-5,168,170,171, 180,183,190,194,194-6,198. 198-9,200.208,210 drudgery and dissatisfaction. 83, 114.117-18,121,124-6,126-7, 129,194.195 mutiny, 42. 146-7,149-55,195,208 alcohol, 46, 72, 73, 74, 104, 118, 130-1,134,135.136,189,191, 209; drunkenness, 102, 104-5. 128.135.144,207 sex, 102-4, 118. 120-1; prostitutes, 75, 102-3. 104; venercal disease, 102-3.104,125; homosexuality, 120-1,122 discipline, 105-6. 126,163. 165, 170. 170-1.180; King's Regulations
and Admiralty Instructions. 101-2. lOS, 128, 159, 161; Naval Discipline Act. 105. 106, 153, 163;
Commander's Defaulters and Requestmen, 22. 82.106,163, 165, 194; Captain's ditto, 29. 85. I06,181;courtsmartial, 106. 147; punishments. 33.105.106.109. 126,131,147,163,196; ceUs, 33,
128; Master-at-Arms, 82, 86, 105-6.106.121,144,147, lSI, 160, 200; regulating petty officers, 42,82.86.105.105-6,159; Regulating Office, 93
crime, 1Os-6, 121; violence. 105; theft. 105, 121, 131, 163; sabotage, 168; gambling, lOS, 139, 1.60; leave-breaking, 105,106, 129; desertion. 71, 105,212; rape, 120;
suicide, 121, 183 religion. 142, 196-7; Chaplain, 30, 31,33,102,127-8,135,142, 142-5,203; services, 73, 79, 83, 85,138,142,149,175;chapel,32, 141.142 comradeship, 118. 118-20. 196, 198-9,200,209 on leaving, 141-2
long service in, 8, 42, 85 and memory, 8-9, 85, 114, 198,208 Ship's Company general, 9. 30, 114
complement, 9,19,60, liD, 160, 183, 231 divisional system, 61. 80. 81. 84.128. 155.157.159.165,171; 'Divisions', 81. 85-6,99, 100.106. 196-7 Admiral. 35. 37. 54, 81. 91; role of, 80; quarters. 22-3. 22. 23. 28. 30. 35,37,38; sea c,1bin, 37; staff, 29, 37,85,93; barge, 107, 109, 110. 194.197 Captain. 29. 35, 54, 81, 82, 88, 100,
143; role of, 80-1; quarters, 29-30,37; sea cabin, 37; staff, 30. 85 Commander, 22. 28. 32, 54, 64. 75, 82,88, 121, 127, 143, 144; role of, 81,126.159-60,160,161-2,164. 165,169-70 officers,62,102.107,120-I,124, 129-30,132, 13H, 143, 152,158, 159,175,178,183,194.197.198, 200, 203; branches and pecialisation.54, 130; cabins, 32, 36,37,92.95,125,132,133-4.
The Battlecrlliser HMS HOOD
254
184.188: wardroom. 38.64. 70. 77,87,127,131,133.134-5,135. 136, 165,200,209: leadership, 66, 126-7, 156,159.17(}...I:on men, 122, 127-8; relations with men, 8, 108,120,126-7, 127-JO, 143, 152, 154,156,159, 16(}...2, 17(}...I, I8(}'" I, 200, 207; dislike of, 29, 62, 126-7,129-30,2oo;pranks against, 129, 147;servants,122.
IJO, 133, 134-5.217: Marines', 122;dhobeying,23,86,123,188, 195; laundry, 29. 72. 133 food,28-9,30,J(}...I,85,115-17, 120.188,194,2oo;cooks.8I,85, 86, 116, 117, 144; galle)', 28-9, 3(}...1. 41. 83, 85.116; bakery, 28-9,29; scullery. 31; messing, JO. 85,116; gunroom, 13(}...1;
13~
bathing facilities, 123; officers, 28, 30,32, 133; warrant officers, 32,
midshipmen, 60, 64, 87, 102,104, 106,107,108,109,126-7,127, IJ(}...3, 143, 194,200,204,209; cadets.102,127,IJO;sublieutenanlS,32,106.109.114,13I, 164-5; relations with men, 102. 124, 126-7, 127, 132; stud)'. 32, 132; Sub-Lieutenants' exam. 101, 132-3.211.212;journals, 132: gunroom.29,64,124,1J(}...I,133. 136, 194,200,203.209: chest flat, 32,131; Stud)', 132 warrant officers, 86,102,124,143, 209: cabins, 32, 124; mess, 124. 200 chief and petty officers, 81, 86, 124, 124,127,149,157.191,197,209; messes,31,31-2,87,124 long-service Ans, 86,123, 127, 128, 149, 157 Roral Marines. 23. 61, 71, 82, 83, 86, 88,122,129,150,153,158; Band, 33,49,60,64,72,83,86,88,97, 99,106,122,122.135,137,149, 181, 199, 200: officers, 122, 135; Gunner, 127; sergeanlS, JO. 122, 200,209; barracks (messdeck), JO. 37,122,158; and gunnery, 56, 81, 122,176;landingpa rrr,96,122, 146,177; attendants, 23,122,134. 198,200; butchers, 29, 122; postmen, JO, 122, 198; printers, 122; sentries, 29, 32, 33, 86, 121, 122. 175; servants, 122, 1334; sports, 65, 122 artificers, 46,61,81, 158 artisans. 61. 81,86, 158; Blacksmith, 35,36,88,100, 125; Cooper, 86, 127; Coppersmith, 35, 36; joiners, 158; painters, 69; plumbers, 158;
sailmaker, 176; shipwrights. 29, 31,31-2,85,109,114,165,194, 205 boys,82,87,I04,I06,107,120, 124--<5,133; Bo)'5' Division, 81, 120,124,136;stud)', 120,126; instructors, 106, 120, 124, 126; messdeck,33. 114, 115-16, 117, 124
relations between branches., 46, 122. lJO,I36, 153, 157,157 ,18(}...1. 196,209 Life life aboard, general, 22, 30, 31.46-7. 114, 117-19,121,124,188,195; habitability, 30, 31, 32, 37-8, 114, 117,123,194 messes and messdecks, 30, 31, 37, 80,86.92,113,114-16,115, 117-18, 121, 122-3, 123, 184,209: appearance, 30, 114. 114-15, 115; atmosphere, JO, 32, 32, 88, 115-16, I 17-18,200; Cooks of the Mess, 28. 82. 83, 86, 88, 115, 115-16.124 personal items, 80, 117; cap box. I 17: ditty boxes, 114.115,117;gas masks, 57, 80: hammocks, 23, 31, SO, 86, 88. 92,114,115,117,119, 123.126,127,131,132,158,184, 194,203; kit-bags, SO, 114, 117 kit and uniform, 83, 85, 88, 10 I, 115, 123.124,127,197-8,205,215:
perry officers', 124; subordinate officers: 88, 131; officers: 88. 124,
wardroom, 134-5,200
127; subordinate officers, 32, 131. 194; ratings, 33, 42, 119, 120, 123, 190; personal hygiene, 102, 123, 125,188,195 health, 123, 125: fitness, 84, 123, 132; illness. 125.168; tuberculosis. 113, 123,125; accidenlS, 18,53,101, 125,128,175; treatment, 104, 125; ickBa)',28,31,35,53,62,I04, 113,125,125,128,218:dental urgery, 125,219; Medical Department, 125; Principal Medical Officer, 28, 53, 104, 114, 125; medical officers, 62,125,130; dental officers, 58, 123, 125, 130; Sick Berth Attendants, 81, 86, 125;
Medical Distributing Stations, 125,144,203,216; Disinfector House, 35, 125 heads (lavatories), 31, 94, 95, 113; officers: 29 trades and firms, 46-7, 88,139-40 books, 31, 37; bookstall, 31,199; Iibraries,37,134,164.199; Reading Room,36-7,137, 219 grog, 80. 85, 86, 86,118,120,124, 167, 199 tobacco, JO, 85, 87,139,140; smoking, 46, 86, 87. 126, 131, 195, 199,203,209: spitkids, 87 mail, JO,I07, 188, 196, 198; censorship of. 198; Post Office, 30 pets and mascots, 29,145, 145; Angus (dog), 145; Bill (dog), 145; Bill (goat), 35. 51, 64, 68, 129, 145; Fishcakes (catl, 145; Ginger (cat), 138,145; Joe)' (wallab)'), 71,118, 145: Jud)' (dog). 63. 145 sleep, 88, 117, 119, 133; deprivation of, 84, 188, 193, 194; 'Guard and Steerage',46, 117, 158 cabooses, 104,117,120, 121-2 schoolmaster, 114; Schoolroom, 37, 126, 137 canteen, JO, JO, 87: staff, JO, 144 Canteen Committee, JO. 37, 137, 179 societies and associations, 137-8; Buffaloes, 137-8; 'Deep Sea Scouts: 144, 199; Engine Room Artificers' Society, 138, 147; Mutual Aid Society, 137, 164; Templars, 137 welfare, 143-5; Ship's Fund, 137,139 At Work and at Sea general,80 commissioning, 18, 19,80,81-2 ship's dail)' routine, 82, 83-4, 85-7, 88,101-2,117,124--<5,132,134, 158, 161,232-4; 'make and mend', 46,86,153 watch system and watch keeping, 42, 46,80,82,834,91,99,100,114. 154,155-6,187 flags and ensigns. 22, 29. 35, 37, 73, 83.88,142,152,174,216 'Colours', 22, 83, 87, 152 'Sunset: 22, 87, 88. 228 cleaning, 44, 51, 82-3, 82, 85, 86, 89. 107 ,123,124--<5,126,133,142, 161-2,162; soap, 123; uncleanness, 123. 12~, 165, 169, 194; cockroaches. 124. 169 painting,75,84-5,84,162-3,164,
169.182.184
maintenance, 84, 85, 182 drill,95-6,I56,183;abandoning ship, 80; action stations, 95; ba)'onet, 106; boat, 86,107,169, 175; collision stations, 83, 95; fire, 83; rig awnings, 86; general drill, 95-6, 150, 177 exercises. 79, 95-7; oiling at sea, 97; night attack, 97; landing parties, 69, 7(}...I, 71, 96, 137, 156; towing, 96-7,97 Suppl)' Department, 31, 6 1.81,85; Paymaster Commander, 29, 85, 86, 116, 121; officers, 85; officers' secretaries, 85; Suppl)' ratings, 85. 86. writers, 81; General Messing, 85, I 16, 117; Central Storekeeping, 85, 116; victualling, 70,71,85, 116; Ship's Office, JO, 85: Victualling Office, 85, 197 Officer of the Watch, 22, 23, 36, 89, 100,132,160,162,173,175 pUlling to sea, 88, 169, 175, 178 cabieparrr,87,88,Ioo, 151-2,154, 175 Boatswain, 29, 100, 101, 114,169 navigation, 89-90, 91; Navigator, 36, 89-90,114; chart house, 37, 89; plotting room, 37, 90; g)'ro compasses, 29, 89, 91; chronometers. 89; radio-direction finder, 90, 93 seamanship, 89, 95, 99, 10 I, 109, 132,169, ISO shiphandling, 54,64--<5, 97, 99-101, 169,I75,ISO,I81 steering,19,33,34,9(}...I;
mechanism and companment, 32,33,91,221; helm signals, 35 asseaboat,18,20,32,37,91-5 at speed, 18.32,52,96 seasickness, 92, 118, 195 Communications Department, 61, 81,91,93; messdeck, 119 signalling,35,36,37,91,132,152, 184,186; officers, 36, 93; signalmen, 37. 91, 126; signalling lIags,91,I06,I67, 176,184,186, 217; Signal House, 37; Signal Distributing Office, 36;
emergency signalling positions, 59 wireless telegraph)', 91, 93; officers. 93; telegraphists, 93, 152; \viremen, 93; outfit,61, 73, transmissions. 51, 93; 90,93: Telegraph Office, JO; offices, 33.34,36,48,93: coding offices, 33,34,93; Intelligence Office. 34, 93; ciphers, JO; Direction-Finding Office, 93 telephone system, 34, 113 orders. passing of, 87-8: by pipe (Bosun's call), 83. 85, 86, 87-8, 88; b)' bugle, 81, 82, 83, 87-8, 99: b)' messenger, 34, 126; b)' tan no)', 83, 87-8, 139,218; broadcasting s)'stem, 87,88, 139, 164, 184 entering harbour and anchoring, 95. 98,98-10I,IOI,106;heavingthe lead, 98-9, 99; Lord Kelvin's
wrr
wrr
wrr
Sounding Machine, 99; securing, 36,100-1
Sport, Display and Entertainment sport, 61-7, 70, 88,129,199; H. as sporting ship, 22, 61, 66, 66-7, 68, 163. 165. 17 I, 180; 'George', 66. 163; organisation 0(, 61. 64, 66, 16~;criticsof,66,I64,171;
athletics. 69; ba)'onets. 63, 65; boxing, 45, 62-3, 63, 67, 69, 75, 138; cricket, 62; cross·country running, 61-2, 62, 63, 67, 75, 79; fencing, 63, 75; football, 61, 62, 63,66,67,69,75,79, 149, 179,
180,188.189,199; hocke)', 63, 75: marksmanship, 63, 66,165; polo, 62, 138; pulling (rowing), 6~, 65,66,68.69, 79,147,16~; rugb)', 62, 63,189, 199; sailing, 63, 64--<5, 178. 180; squash, 62; tennis. 46,63,75, 132, 138; tug-of-war, 63.69, 177; \Vater polo, 63, 65
shipboard recreation and activities, 136-7,138-9,199; cards, 139, 160, 197; cinema, 138-9, 153, 164, 199; S.O-D.S. Opera, 88,120,137, 154,199.209 officers' entertainments, 28, 137, 139 officers' recreations, 138; bilJiards, 28,91, 139; cycling, 138: deck hockey, 114, 138, 152; fishing, 134,138; golf, 62. 79,138,188, 189; huntmg, 138; shooting. 138; squash, 138; water skiing, 138 sailors' entertainments, 139; 'The Bandits Dance Orchestra', 137; 'The Hood's Harmon)' Bo)'5', 42, 137,137 sailors' recreations. 138; angling, 138; darlS, 67, 139; swimming, 138.206: 'uckers. 139, 197 official receptions, 23, 30, 61, 69, 70, 71,72,135,177,181 civilian visitors, 71,116,162 children aboard, 70, 72, 156 spectacles, 69, 167. 174. 177; dressed overall, 167, 174; illuminating ship, 69, 167, 174 Devices and Traditions ship's badge, 15,22 chough, 15,66
motto, 15 nicknames, 20 ship's bell, 83, 83, 137,200,224 tom pions and boat badges etc., 22, 40,44,63,107,108,125 models and decorations. 29, 65, 134, 135 memorabilia, 31 fancr ropework, 83, 87, 108. 139 customs: 'Crossing the Line~ 68-9, 137; hristmas,I99-2oo,209; New Year. 200 Naval Life annual routine, 75-9 fleet exercises, 68, 75, 76-7 libertymen,67,67-8,75,87,101, 101-2,105-6,107.111,149,150, 161,177 run ashore,101-2,119,177,178, 207
banyan parties and excursions, 71, 127,136,I8(}...1 leave, 106.126,155,171,192,193. 193-4,195,196,208 refitting and docking, 77-9, 94,193, 209; (1922) 68; (1923) 70; (l929-31) 78,111,123,146,147; (1936) 174; (l937) 77, 111,180, 181,234; (1938) 180,181; (1939) 123, 182-3,213; (1940) 79, 192-3. 201,213; (l941) 145,192,209-10 pa)'ingoff,I06, 171,181 pa)'. 126, 127,140,147,154; allowances, 86, 148-9; deductions, 106, 116, 148; reductions in, 146, 147-9;
patrol duty and procedure, 185-8.208,216
18~,
reality o( life at sea in war, 88, 184, 185.187-90,194-5,200 H. overworked, 185, 190.208.209 hardship, 7, 9, 39, 94,185,188, 191-2,194-5 Hostilities-Onl)' ratings, 81,183, 195-6,197 damage control, 32, 96, 113, 185, 203.205-6,218 experience of bat~e, 190.203,204, 204-5,218,220 technical improvements, 206 degaussing, 145, 192, 192 and Home Front, 196-7,208 comforts, 197-8, 199,209 wartime recreation, 188, 189, 199, 206-7; film. 199; photograph)', 199
emotional and personal issues, 184-5,194,195,196,210 confidence and fear, 184, 184-5, 190, 203,21(}...II,211,215,216
pursuit o( Bismarck, 194.214, 215-17,225 sinking of, 7, 8, 35, 55. 57, 59, III, 182,208,211,213, 22H, 221, 229; Boards of Enquir), into, 57, 223 reaction to loss, 182,208,211-12, 213,225-7 aftermath, 208. 227-8 epitaph,228 discovery of. 7, 208, 222, 22~
Hood, Alexander, Admiral Viscount Bridport, 15 Hood, Capt. Alexander. 15 Hood, Lad)' Ellen, 15,83,145 Hood. Rear-Admiral the Hon. Sir Horace, 15, 83 Hood, Capt. Samuel, 15 Hood of Avalon, Arthur, Admiral Lord,I5 Hood ofWhi~er, Samuel, Admiral
Viscount, 15,22
Horden (coaster), 14,44 Horizol/ (drifter), 111,150 Horsey, Lt Gu)', 136 HOlI'e (1937), 42 Hurst, Surg. Cdr Henry, 218 Hutchinson, Lt-Cdr C.H., 129, 135 Hvalfjord, 214, 215 lago, Electrical Lt John, 87, 91, 11(}...ll, 113, 125, 132, 133, 134, 191,192,196,197,197,198,199, 199-200,200,202,207,218 1m Thurn, Capt. John K., 70, 118 Imperial Japanese navy, 11,69. 71
Imperial 'Var Museum, London, 6, 8,55 Impregnable (Devonport). 124 II/defatigable (1909), 223 II/dial/apolis (1930), 212 II/domirable (1906),96,97 II/flexible (1906), 10, II
lackoftraining,57.57~,ISO,19O
Ingersoll, Rear-Admiral Royal E.. 180 Ingleb)'-Mackenzie, Surg. Cdr K.A., 104,113 Im'ergordon, 79, 96,148-54,148. 155.156,184 Invergordon Mutin)' (J931), 7, 8, 29, 42,61,62,66,70,79,95,105,106, 127,128.129,137,137-8,156-7, 157,158,159,160.164,170; origins, 147-9, 159; course, 149-54, 151; aftermath, 154-5; recovery, 156-7, 171 II/"il/cible (l906), 10, 15,20,223 1rol/ Duke (1912), 134, 136 Italian navy, 176, 177-8, 178-9
outbreak of war, 7,184-5 wartime routine, 84,183-4,185, 187-90,192
J. & G. Thomson, Glasgow, II Jackman, Tel. R.R., 93. 94, 123, 127
pensions, 148 promotion, 140,212: officers, 126-7; ratings. 75,126-7, I4(}'" I, 148, 157,164,207 training, 141,164,180 drafting, 141,180, 183,212,213 War
war readiness 0(, 84-5,169-70,171, 175-6,180,182-3,190,205
Index
Jackson, Pay L.-Cdr A.R., 177,184, 210 jackson, Cdr Henry, 93 jamaica, 74, 86
James. Admiral Sir \\rilliam. 7, 8, 64. 68,76,77,96,129,137,142, 15:>-7,/56,159,165,168 Im'l?lill (I937), 190 Jeffrey, PO AW., 102, 130 Jellico<, john, Admiral of the Fleet Earl, 10, I I, 54, 72, 93,167,216 Jenson, Mid. Latham, 51, 132-3, 179-S0, 182,204,2 I2 Jervis Bay, RAN. College, 71 lervis Ba)' (c.1920), 78, 2 14 Jessel, L.-Cdr R.E, 197 John Brown & Co., Clydebank, 10, 11-19,38,44,209,227 Johns, Yeo.Sigs. Ned, 166 Johnston, lan, I 1,14,209 Jubilee Review (1935),29, 165, 167, 167, 168, 174 Jurens, W.J., 223, 224 jutland, Battle of (I916), 10, 10-1 I, I I, 15,44,46,49,51,55,56,60, 83,93,156,168,212,223
255
Longley-Cook, Vice-Admiral Eric, 101,146,151, 154, 156 Lord Haw-Haw, 190,202 Lard Hood (c. 1797), 15 Lowe,CPO Bill,I29,I41 LlIcia(c.1907),149 Lumley, Maj. Heaton, R.M., 193 Lutjens,Admiral Gunther, 210, 214, 217 Lyness, 104, 189 Macafee, L. j., R.M., 136 MacDonald, Ramsay, 146. 154 MacFarlan, Mid. T.J., 64 Macgregor,SS (c.1917), 172 Machin, Lt-Cdr john, 135, 197,218
Mackensen class baltlecruisers
KI7(c.1917),55 Kelly,Admiral Sir John, 7,64,154, ISS, 156, 159, 160 Kennedy, Capt. Edward, 79 Kennedy, Sir Ludovic, 79 Kent, Capt. (S) Barrie, 93 /(ell)'a (1938),2 I I Kerr, Capt. Ralph, 2 10, 212, 215, 217, 22 1,226 Kettle, jack, 148 Keyes, Rear-Admiral Sir Roger, 18, 23, 30, 60, 61 Keyham, 70; R. . Engineering College, 22, 130, 135 Killg George V (1937),225,227 King' Cup,61,66,79,165
(I914),1O Mackenzie, Surg. Cdr K.A.I., 125 MacKinnon, mdr Lachlan D.I., 18 Mackworth, Capt. Geoffrey, 69, 129, 146-7 McCarthy, Bugler T., 87 McCrum, Cdr .R.,7, 146, 149, ISO, 151,151-2,152,153,154,156, 159 McFarlane, Mid. B.M., 136 Mclaughlin, Willie, 209 Maille, RFA (c. 1900), 170 Mala)'a (I913), 38,149 Mallorca,75 Malta, 23, 37, 45, 67, 116, 127, 129, 137,138,168, 177,I77--il, 179, 181,192; Valletta, 102, 103, 119; Grand Harbour, 21,29,94,95,9999,/00,101,109,119,173,178, 180; Corradino, 62,105; Floriana, 102; Parlatorio, 77,181; Sliema, 102; R.N. Hospital, Bighi, 21, 53, 125,173 Manganese Bronze & Brass Co., London, 13 Marchant,Sub-L' T.J.G., 156
Kirkcaldy, Comm'd Boatswain
Marconi Company, 93
J.McK., 130 Kirkwall,I89
Marconi, Guglielmo, 93 Marlborough (1912),1 15 Marseilles, 105, 136, 177 Marsham, Lt-Cdr HAL, 135 Mary, Queen, 133 Marylalld (19 I7),63,69 May, Sir George, 146 Maycock, CERA, 42 Meadows, Cdr (S) John, 93 Melbourne, 22, 71 Merrett, E.L., 94, 96-7 Mers-eJ-Kebir, action at (1940),4 I, 54,133,144,174,186,201,209, 215 Milburn, Boy Samuel C, 126 Mill, Lt (E) Ernest, 156 Millais, Sir john, 155 Mitchell, Brigadier-General Billy, 72-4 Magador (193'1),202 Moran, Lord, 132
Knowles,~lid. H.G,
123, 131, 132 KOlligsberg (c.1903), 7 I Kuala Lumpur, 71 La Linea, 75, 103 La ieee, Rear-Admiral Peter, 131 Lake Lugallo, SS (1), 177 Lake, Cdr Sir Atwell, 159, 163 Lamlash,63 Lane-Poole, Cdr Richard, 146 Las Palmas, 145, 171 Layton, Vice-Admiral Geoffrey, 7, 136, 178, 179 Le Baill)', Vice-Admiral ir Louis, 7, 8,21,22,32,39,40,42,51,55,64, 84-5,98, 101,107,/09, 110, I I I, 114,120,120-1,124,127,129, 130,130-1,131,134,13:>-6,137, 138,141,160,173,174,177,181, 182, 182-3, 183, 183-4, 185, 188, 190,191-2,192,194,196,20:>-6, 21 I, 218, 226,228 Leach, Admiral Sir Henry, 5 1,218 Leach, c.'pt. John, 217, 220, 222-3, 225 Lindemann, Prof. Frederick A., 58, 205 Lioll (1909),1 1,46,60,63,96,97, 107,108 Lioll class battlecruisers (1909),20
Moreu. Capitan de Navio Manuel. 173 Mountbatten, Admiral Lord, 85 Mudford, Lt-Cdr J.F.W., 152 von Mullenheim-Rechberg, Kptll. Burkard, 21 7, 225 Munich Crisis (1938), 178, 179, I 181 Munn, Lt W. James, 173, 178 Mussolini, Benito, 168, 177, 178, 192,201
so.
Lisbon, 76; Vasco da Gama celebrations (1925), 20, 79 Litchfield, lid. Dick, 114 Liverpool, 104, 191; Gladstone Dock, 10, 125, 20 I Lloyd, Pay Cdr CK., 174 Loch Eriboll, 79, 96 Loch Ewe, 190-1 Lalldoll (I 926), 134, 2 I2 Longbottom, Mid. B.C, 129
NAAFI,3O, 104, 191 aiad (1937), 40,78,136,21 1,226 Natal (1904),45, 155 Navarin, 102, 178 'avy Week, 79, 79,103,146 'e1son,Admiral Lord,l 1,15,163. 173,208 'elson (1922),64,65,76, 142, J 149, ISO, 154, 159, 163, 187, 190,
193,226
Nelson dass battleships (1922),49 Nep"'"e (1931), 171, 212 Nevada (1912), 69 Neveu, Yeo.Sigs. Arthur 1.., 21 New York, 69, 192 New York (191 1),68,174 Non-Intervention Patrol (1936-7), 172 Noifolk(l927), 149, 152,155,215, 217,218,220 Normandie, (c.193O),136,167 North Cape, Battle of (1943),218 North, Admiral Sir Dudley, 202 Norwegian Campaign (1940),96, 193 Nyon Patrol (1937--il), 176,177, 178 O'Connor, V.C Scott, 20, 38, 88, 134 O'Conor, Capt. Rory, 7, 29, 34, 37, 61-2,63,63-4,66,80,81,84,85, 97,99,105,106,107,108,117, 121,126,127,129,131,132,136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 14 1,145,156, 157, 159-{i5,164, 166, 167, 168,
168-71,174,180,181; RlIIlIIinga Big Ship, 66,87, 160,169,171 Oban,79 Offord, D.E.J., I 12 Ogan, All Patsy, 203
Orr-Ewing. Cdr David, 7, 64, 104, 130,135,173,180,181 Oslo, 60; Osloijorden, 102 Ottawa, 72 Owen,Cdr Robin, 187--il, 194, 199, 209 Owen, Wilfred, SO Owens, Lt -Cdr George E.M., 203, 217 Palma, 176 Palmer Trophr' 63,163 Panama Cana ,[rolltis., 74, 75,122 Pares, Lt-Cdr (T) Anthony, 193,213, 220,226 Paterson, All Alex, 153-4, 154 Paterson,OD Ron, 142, 157--il, 164, 167 Patterson, Capt. julian EC, 149,149, ISO, 152,153, 154, 155, 156 Pavey, Boy Frank, 32 Pearson, S., 58 Pegosus(l896),71 Pertwee, OD jon, 31, SO, 67, 85, 86, 92,94,104, 117-18, 120, 145, 194-5,195,196,199,212 Phillips, Admiral Sir Tom, 2 I5 Pike, Musician William, 225 Pillinger, Temp. Lt E. W., 139 Pipon, Capt. james M., 22 Piunan,OA Albert, 46, 58, 87, 102-3,138,203,205,212 Plant, Eng. Lt-Cdr Ernest C, 74 Plymouth,6O,70, 103,104,192, 193, 194,201 Poland, Rear-Admiral Edmund, 102, 132, 165 Pollen, Arthur Hungerford, 48-9, 50 Pope, CPO Geoff, 85, 118, 196, 197 Portland, 15,51,63,75,79, 146 Portrush, 79 Portsmouth, 7, 63, 78, 79, 81, 83, 88-9,89,103,104, I I I, 114,121, 126,131,132,146,147,154,171, 173, 181, 182-3,227; blitz of, 29, 134,166,167,181; Division, 7,67, 68,77,146; HM Dockyard, 10, 15, 56,166; R.N. Hospital Haslar, 121 Potts, LS, 62 Pound, Admiral Sir Dudley, 52, 53, 64,85,109,177,178,215,223 Power, Admiral Sir Arthur J., 65 Pownall, Roy, 193 Prestage, Boy Harold, ISO Pridham, Capt. A. Francis, 7, 52, 55, 57,64,67,87--il,98,99-loo, 101,
107, 123-4, 125, 128, 128-9, 129, 157,165,168-71,168,172,173, 175,177,180,181,182,219;
'Notes for Newly Joined Officers: 129,170-1,171 Prince o[\I\1les (1937),54, 194,209, 214,216,216-23,225,226,229 Prinz Eugen (1936),214,215, 217-18,222,225 Progress i" 'avaJ Gwmery (1935), SO Protector (1935),53 Prom,ce (191 2), 202 Pursey,CdrHarry,I49,ISO, 152, 153,154,156,172 Purvis, OD Roland, 149 Queen E1izabetll, HMS (1912), 38, 167,174 Queen Elizabeth, RMS (1936), II, 192 Queen Elizabeth dass battleships (1912),10,19,20,44 Queell Mary, HMS (191 1),139,142, 15:>-6, 159,223 Queell Mary', RMS (1930), I I, 167, 191 Raeder, Grossadmiral Erich, 214
Ramsay. Admiral Sir Bertram, 7 Ransome-Wallis, Surg. Lt-Cdr R., 212 Rawalpindi (c. 1923), 79,192
Rawlings. Admiral Sir Bernard, 135 Rea, Rev. W. Edgar, 30, 32, 50-1, 92, 114,136,175,17:>-6,178,180 Redcar,21 Rees, Band Corp. Wally, 199,228 Reinold, Capt. Harold, 29, 62, 65 RetlOwlI (1915), 19,20,57,68,70, 75,76,167,207,208; in collision with H.,5I,68, 16S--il,165, 169 Reflown class banle'Cruisers (1914),
12,18
Repulse (1915), I I, 20, 48, 51, 52, 64, 68,70,71,74,76,95,96,97,99, 155,174,181,208,229 Resolutioll (1913), 38,159,202 Reykjavic, 51, 225 RJ,einiibrmg. 214, 225 Ridgeon, Mechanician, 42 Rigauld de Gellouill)' (c. 193 1),202 Rio de Janeiro, 68, 69, 229 Roberts, John, 8, 24, 5 I Robertson, Sub-L. R.G., 2 I 1,212 Robinson, Temp. Lt Albert, 110 Robinson, Lt-Cdr L.G.E., ISO Rockey, Cdr Joseph E, 105, 179,203 Rodger, Lt Cdr R.H.S., 152 Rodman, Admiral Hugh,68, 174 Rodman Cup, 63, 66, 67, 68,122, 145 Rodlle)' (1922), 23, 67--il, 68,142, 149, ISO, 151, 152,153, 187, 190, 208,225,226,228 Roskill, Capt. Stephen, 53, 54, 58 Rosyth,59,6O,90,I46,I61,I65, 194, 195,200,204; HM Dockyard, 15, 18, 19,77,145,192, 209-10,210 Roy, Boy Ian A., 195 Royal Canadian Mounted Police, 6 I Royal a"y,7,9,38,68,98, 127, 136, 170,171,197,216;asshieJdof empire, 20, 70; efficiency of, 66, 77,83,95,98; tradition and technical advance, 87, 93, 98, 100, 113,130,136,158,169,170; mentality of, 8, 143, 157, 168, 170; moralein,8,95,1S6-7, 157, 159; recruitment into, 7,42,120,147,
158; lower-deck representation in, 147,148,157,158-9; officer-sailor relations in, 129, 159,160,163,170,171,200; imponance of spon in, 61, 156,
170; debate over validity of capital hip, 19,54; air-naval debate, is; strengths of, 54, 98, 109, 132, 135, 158 Roral Oak (1914), I I 1,187,189, 190,210 RO)'tlI So''ereign class battleships (1888),15 Ruck-Keene, Lt-Cdr j.H., 156 t-Jean-de-Luz, 172 St Lucia, 103 SI Vi"wlt (Gosport), 35,106,124, 126 Salter, Sub-Lt D.C, 193 Sampson, Mid. T.S.,129 San Francisco, 21, 70, 72-4, 74 Sankey, Cdr (E) V.j.H.H., 7,174 Santos, 61 Sawbridge, Capt. H.R., 16S--il Scandinavian Cruise (1920), 6Q- I, I I I; (1923),102 Scapa Flmv, 55, 57, 61,64, 68, 79, 104, I I I, 124, 134, 135, 138, 145, 153,168,183,184,185,188,189, 189,190,/90,191,199,200,207, 208,210,212,213,214 Schamhorsl (1934),59,210,212,214 Schmid, Matrose Hans, 179 ScOll, Admiral Sir Percy, 48,155 Scott-Garrett, Sub-Lt (E) Brian, 39, 194,210 Scddon, Mid. K.A., 136 Selborne- Fisher Scheme, 46 Shaw, Sig. Geoff, 9 I Shaw-Hamilton, L.-Cdr J.D., 177
hejJield(l935),I34 Sheppard, PO I.. E, 207
SI,ikari (1918),52,53 ShotI"ey (1933), 136,212 'Taffrail~ 114 Talbot-Booth, Pay Lt-Cdr E.C, 107, 131,167 Tangier, 67, 109, 178-9,179, 180 Taylor, Edward, 224-5
Tile BattJecruiser HMS HOOD
256
Taylor, Plumber Ernest, 158 Taylor, Rev. Gordon, 186, 215- I6 Taylor, Boy Jim, 35, 37, 104, 107, 12~,198
Terry, Lt-Cdr A.H., 222 Thomas, Ch. Yeo.Sigs. George, 184 Thompson, Rev. Kennelh, 226 TIlOrpehall, SS (1), 172 Thurstan, Mid. R.P., 64 Tibbits, Capt. Sir David, 195-6 Tiger (1912), I 1,60 Tilburn,AB Bob, 57,67, 117, 118, 129,213,215,216,218,220-2, 223,224 Tirpitz (1936), 21 1,214 Tomkinson, Vice-Admiral Wilfred, 19,57,60,146-55,149,156,157 Topsail Bay, ewfoundland, 74, 118 Torbay, 146, 147 Torquay,68 Toulon, 202, 204 Tovey, Admiral Sir john, 214, 2 I5, 225 Tower, Capt. F. Thomas B., 7,63,81, 156,164,165,165-8,169,170 Trafalgar, Battle of (1805), 176,216 Treloar, I.T.R., 136 Trincomalee, 71,145
Trinidad, 103, 154 Tudor, Rear-Admiral Frederick, 10
Vigo,98
Turner, Comm'd Electrician, 197
Wainwright, Mid. R.CP., 64
Turner, Rev. Archer, 149
\Vake-Walker. Rear-Admiral \V.F.,
Turner, toker Dick, 118
215,216,220,225 Walker, AB George, 193 Walker, Rear-Admiral Harold T.C, 7,62,179,180,181,223 Warden, Mid. A. Ross, 62, 90, 124, 132,203,213 Warrand,Cdr S. john P.,188, 189, 217,222,227 \~llrrior (I 859), 15,21 Warspite (1912), 38, 53,142,149, 150,152,177,/78 Washington Treaty (1922), 19,68 Waterlow,Mid.O.S.V.,I36 Waters, Rev. james C, 64 \\'atson, Stoker PO,42 Watson, Ll-Cdr Dymock, 176 Watson, Chief Stoker Harry, 42, 248 Watson, Capt. j.B., 154 WatlS, LS Percy, 178 Webb, Pay Sub-Lt A.B., /29 Webster, Tel. james, 194 Wellings, Lt-Cdr Joseph H., 29, SO, 57,58,78,86,94,109,133,134, 186-7,188-90,195,199,200,227,
Tuxworth, OSig. Frank A., 218
Twiss. Admiral Sir Frank, 75-6, 83, 88 -boats, 183-4, 185, 187,210; V-3O, 185; V-56, 187; V-124, 56,136; V557,136 US avy,54,68,69,133,134 Unwin, Cdr E.O., 136 Valencia, 176, 177 Va/in/II (1913), SO, 137, 149, ISO, 151,152,155,167,202,204 Vancouver, B. ., 61 Vaughn, Ft Lt R.j., 220 Vavasour, Cadet G.W,/3O Vernon, Admiral Sir Edward, 86
Vian, Admiral Sir Philip, 225 Vickers. Barrow in Furness, 14,44 Vidoria alld A/herr (c. 1897), 159, 167,174 Vidoria, B.C, 72, 74, 88 Viclory (1759),8,166,208
228 Wellington, 72, 72, 74 Wells, Vice-Admiral D.C, 136 Wells, Lt (E) Geoffrey, 53, 54, 70, 71, 72,74,78,95, 110 Wen necker, Kpt.z.See Paul, 179 Wesbroom, 00 Norman, 116 West Indies Cruise (1932),78 ''''estern Samoa, 72 Wevell, Lt-Cdr M.E., 129 Weymouth, 20, 21, 62, 78, 95 Wheal, LS Sam, 146, 149, ISO, 152, 155 White, AB Fred, 20, 5 I, 179
White, ir William, 15 Whilehead, Robert, I I I Whitworth, Vice-Admiral William J.,7, 107, 199,200,207,209,210, 211,212,215,216 Wigfall, ERA Leslie, 191 Wild, Stoker Charles, lSI, 153 Wilkin, Gladys, 226 Wilkinson, Mid. H.W., 129 William Beardmore, Parkhead, 12 W·U1iams, LS john R.,46, 101 Williams, LS Leonard C, 8, 29, 53, 67,84,95,104, I 13, I 18-20, 14 I, 141-2,174,178,179,184,184-5,
185,187,190,191,192,193,194, 198,203,204,206,21 1,212,224, 229 Williams, Mid. Roderick, 2 I3 Wincon,AB Lcn,81-2,82, 118,123, 128,129,147,149, ISO, 152, 156, 157 Wolton,Cdr (D) William j., 58,123, 125 Wood roffe, L.-Cdr Tom, 174 World Cruise of the pecial Service Squadron (1923-4),8,23,30,54, 68,69-75,79,91,92, lOS, 108, 118-19,145 Wright, Yeo.Sigs. George, 2 I7 Wyldbore-Smith, Lt-Cdr HD., 21 7
X, 00 Philip, 195, 197, 199,200,218 Yexley, Lionel, 147 Young, ChiefOA 'Brigham', 102 Young, Slella, 198 Zanzibar, 7 I; Sultan of, 7 I Zeebrugge Raid (1918),60,179 2o"m.., SS (c. 1929), 226
Acknowledgements To have studied a ship like the Hood is to have enjoyed the greatest of privileges. at least of these has been the company. generosity and goodwi1l of a large number of people throughout the world. My first debl is to Frank Allen and Paul Bevand of the HMS Hood Association who have unstintingly supported the project from the first and generously shared not only their time and knowledge but also the resources of their web ite hmshood.com. A very significant part of the documentary and illustrati\'c material on which this book is based rests in the collections of the Hood Association and it is thanks to the efforts of Ken Clark and now Messrs Allen and Bevand thai it has been gathered and made available to an increasingly wide community of researchers. Latterly Paul and Frank have helped in the immense task of gathering the photographs which illustrate this book and in providing ready answers to those questions and problems which vex every author as his book comes full term. The debt is greater than I can pos ibly repay and my only hope is that they find the result an adequate tribute to their ship and their dedication to her. ext I must thank the large number of Hood veterans who have taken the time and trouble to speak or correspond with me, to answer barrages of questions via phone, mail, e-mail and in person. and even to reading and commenting on lengthy chapters: Cdr Ian Browne, Ken Clark, lhe late Harry CUller, George Donnelly, Cdr Keilh Evans, WiUiam Hawkins, Dick Jackman, Horace King, the late Ernest McConnell, Cdr Robin Owen, Roy Pownall, Maurice Sherborne, jim Taylor, Dick Turner, Douglas Turner, George Walker and the late Surgeon Cdr Bill Wolton; also to Ted Briggs, President of the HMS Hood Association, for making a vital introduction at the start of my research, and to James Gordon of Pri"ce of\Vales for sharing his remarkable memory of the loss o( the Hood with me. Ian Green has provided many invaluable insights into the refit carried out in the Hood in the spring of 1941 and the world of the Royal Dockyards generally. George Squires recalled a visit to the ship at Hvalfjord in the spring o( 1941; Mrs Mary Phillirs and Mrs E.G. Wilkin generously shared their memories 0 the Admiralty on the morning of 24 May 1941,and Mrs Sheila Harris of life in Portsmouth after the sinking. But my greatest debt is to Vice-Admiral Sir Louis Le Bailly who has not only honoured me by writing the Foreword to this book, but has painstakingly read and commemed on successive drafts of every chapter. Much of the detail of life aboard in the 1930s is owed 10 hi phenomenal memory and it is thanks to him that I ha\'e been able to give the Hooefs engineering systems and personnel something approaching their due. It is not going too far to say that this book could never have assumed its present dimension without his active assistance and the debt lowe him is one for which no expression of gratitude could ever be adequate.
Then there are those who have been kind enough to give me the benefit of their knowledge, memories, contacts and information, as well as access to private documents, photographs and material; in some cases this has extended to outright donation. For this, too, I am endebted to the editors of Sllips Monthly and Saga who generously published the appeals for information which led 10 many of lhe contaos listed here: Charles Arnold, Mrs Daphne Barton, Roger Batten. Sid Becken,)ill Berelson, Mrs Margaret Berry, William M. Berry, Len Brattan, Leonard Broomfield, Adrian Burdett. Ian Bussey, Peter ambridge, William Carrivick, Stephen Chumbley, Mrs Dinah Couchman, John Crabb. Cdr Jeff Crawford. Brian Dawson, Mrs RUlh Dawson, john England, Hugh Fulton, Mrs Brenda Glass, George Green, Eric Hall, John Haynes, Richard Hayter, Mrs Jean Jackson, Chris judd, Mrs June Kelley, Mrs Bee Kenchington, Fred Kendall, Mrs Doris Knapman, Alistair Lorimer, Miss Nora Loxham, Mrs Jenny Mclntyreweet, Ted Mallett, Selwyn Maund, Mrs Doreen Miller, Mrs Thelma Miller, Trevor Moffet, Mrs Diane Morris, Phillip Morris-Jones, Ted Oldfield, Mrs Sarah Padwick, Arthur Pearsall, Langmead Pillar, orman Pooley. Mrs Julia Roxan, Ted Senior, GeoffSmilh, Mrs Sheila Smith, Mrs Mary Spence, Mrs Marjorie Sutton, Miss B. Talbot. Miss Joanna \"'arrand, David \Veldon, Mrs Jean Winter and Jeremy Woods. The papers of Admiral Sir Francis Pridham and the reminiscences of Cdr James Gould have been made available to me through the kindness of Cdr David Gould, and those of Cdr Rory O'Conor by Mrs me Taverner. Mrs E.D. RoberlS has kindly supplied those of her late husband Cdr E.W. Roberts. Jeremy "Vhitehorn generously set aside his own research in the Public Record Office to chase up some rather voluminous references for me. A special word of thanks is in order for Mrs Pat Astbury, Alan Procter, Gerald Granger, D.E. Cromarty, Mrs Stella Young, staff and former pupils of Applegarth School, orthallerton. Yorkshire. Mrs Astbury and Mr Procter tirelessly combed through the schoolarch;,'es to supply me with details of Applegarth's special wartime auachment with HMS Hood. Messrs Granger and Cromarty and Mrs Young kindlr made available their correspondence and memories 0 this affiliation. My sincere gratitude to them all. Apart from those mentioned above, chapters have been read and commented on and/or technical advice proffered by Frank Allen, Paul Bevand, Dr John Brooks, Tony Carew, Alan Dowling, Ian Johnston, Dr. Bill Jurens. igel Ling, Daniel Morgan, Tom O'Leary and John Roberts. A great deal of the material upon which Chapter I is based was provided through the kindness of Ian Johnston. Admiral of the Fleet Sir Henry Leach went to enormous trouble to find details on the Hood's gunnery systems for me, while the
Rev. Gordon Taylor provided much useful information on her chaplains.To them all my sincere thanks. though it need hardly be added thaI, despite their best efforts, all remaining errors arc mine and mine alone. Technical assistance has been provided with saintly patience and unflagging humour by Phil Condit, Jim Feldmeier, ""ojciech Gil, Patrycja Hawrylci6w and Anita Maya. My thanks, too. to the following librarians and archivists for granting me access to their collections: Thomas Weis of the Bibliothek fOr Zeitgeschichle, Stungart; John Slopford-Pickering and R.W. Suddaby of the Imperial War Museum, Londoni Daphne Knott, Jeremy Michell and Kiri Ross-Jones of the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich; Kate Tildesley of the aval Historical Branch, Whitehall; Evelyn Cherpak of the a"al War College, ewport, Rhode Island; John Ambler of lhe Royal Marines Museum, Eastney; Stephen Courtney and Matthew Sheldon of the Royal aval Museum, Portsmouth; Patrick Osborn of the U.S. alional Archives, Washington, D.C.. and Paul Stillwell of the U.S. Naval Institute, Annapolis, Maryland. UCLA's Young Research Library has proved an indispensable resource for a British naval historian far from the centres of British naval history. It is a plea ure to record here the assistance of friends old and new. Daniel Morgan has been as stalwart as ever in his support of this project, even while his co·author negleded their own. Richard and Sarah Morgan have again favoured me with their wonderful hospitality, as have Lawrence and Bee Kenchington, Guy Blanchard and Harry and Caroline Oulton, though the author's naval monologues must often have tried their palience rather. James Harris has on my account made morc than one foray from the history of philosophy into that of transport. Peter Russell still gives me the great privilege of his mind and friendship. Thomas Schmid, whose plans and illustrations for this book speak for themselves, has become a trusted friend who has greatly enhanced my appreciation of the field and its possibilities. Only he and I know how frequenlly he has saved my bacon in technical and photographic maners. A special word also for AI Smith and Alan Dowling, 'despertadores de almas durmientes', who in their different ways have ne\'er failed to remind me of what really matlers in naval history. M)' parents, meanwhile, have again proved the soul of patience, devotion and self-abnegation. Les paierai-je? But my greatest debt is to ynthia, Emma and Alex, not only for the love and support they give me each day but for their patience and sacrifice during the long night of work which it has taken to complete this book. I hope. glancing through its pages. they find that it's all been worth while. B.T. Los Angeles, April 2004
e-
HMS This is the ultimate book on the ultimate ship of the pre-war era and includes: • Over 200 photographs plus colour stills from a rediscovered film • Colour plans and cutaways by Thomas Schmid, including a spectacular fold-out • Detailed deck plans • Complete operational analysis of the Hood's gunnery and propulsion systems • Inside the Invergordon Mutiny and its aftermath • Intimate coverage of life afloat in peace and war from original sources • Day-by-day chronology • Corrected roll of honour
CHATHA_ 1 PUBLISH I. 'G
Naval Institute Press
I
ISBN 1·86176·216·X
9 781861 762160
90000
II
Behind the scenes in one of the world's greatest warships. Unmatched for elegance and unequalled for size, for twenty years the battlecruiser Hood was the glory of the Royal Navy, flying the flag across the world in the twilight years of the British Empire. . Here - in words, photographs and colour illustrations - is the story of her life and her people, from keel-laying on the Clyde in 1916 to her terrible destruction atthe hands of the Bismarck in 1941. Drawing on official documents as well as letters, diaries, memoirs and reminiscences of over 150 crewmen, The Battlecruiser HMS Hood is the most comprehensive study of a modern warship ever undertaken and a seminal work in the field of twentieth-century naval history. Among many rare and eye-catching photos are unique stills from a recently discovered colour film of the Hood in 1939-40. These, together with a spectacular set of computer-generated images of both the exterior and interior of the ship from one of the leading exponents of the art, provide an unprecedented range and depth of visual treatment Along with a wealth of new .morrn' h at:ld Ice the