.
 |
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This Parade was held in Poole, Oct
1944, just prior to leaving for Walcheren.
This is the Support Squadron Eastern Flank in
entirety. Unfortunately only a handful of men
survived the landing - 17 on LCH 269 and a
few others. The second officer (carrying out
the inspection) is Commander Kenneth
"Monkey" Sellars. |
It was
October 1944, the ship's company had been given a
well-earned seven days leave. I was relaxing at my
fiancee's home in Leyton, London, the fireplace
giving out a comfortable warmth. We were playing
cards. It was around eight p.m., a knock came on the
front door, Anne's Mother answered the door and
returning, a little pale, told me that a constable
wished to talk with me. I went out in the hall, the
Policeman asked me if I was Petty Officer Basil
Woolf, and when I acknowledged, he told me that I was
to return to my ship immediately. The reason for his
personal visit, was the lack of a telephone at Anne's
house!
I packed at once,
caught a bus to Waterloo station and boarded the next
train to Poole, wondering, why the recall? I arrived
back on the ship in the early morning, and the ships
crew were all asking questions about the call back.
LCH 269 now had a new
Skipper. Commander Kenneth Sellars RN, a very high
ranking officer for a landing craft! He was mostly
known as "Monkey" Sellars and had been in
pre-war days an international rugby star. He was now
taking over the command of the SSEF which comprised
twenty seven various types of landing craft and
approximately four hundred naval personnel. For this
operation he had an additional five hundred Royal
Naval Marines.
Lieutenant Commander
Holdsworth personally spoke to each crew member,
wishing us all luck. As he left the ship, he stood on
the quayside and smartly saluted us all. We were all
sorry to see him go as he was a fine officer and a
real gentleman.
2.
COMMANDER KENNETH SELLARS RN - OUR SKIPPER
Commander
Sellars was born on August 11th 1906 in England, and
when he was still a small boy his family moved to
South Africa. He did not return until he joined the
Navy in 1920, going first to the Osborne Royal Naval
College, and then to Dartmouth. His term Master at
Osborne, Captain Bob Cunliffe took one look at him
and immediately christened him "Monkey", a
name which he relished and adopted and which stayed
with him throughout his life. As a midshipman and sub
lieutenant he served in HMS Thunderer, Revenge,
Repulse, Marlborough and Walpole before going on to
the Royal Naval College at Greenwich for Sub
Lieutenant courses.
After this he was
appointed to the Royal Yacht Victoria and Albert. It
was during these appointments that he played rugby,
as full back for England. In 1929 Sellars joined HMS
Calcutta on the South Africa Station and it was here
that he met and married his wife, Molly. In 1931 he
returned to England, serving first in
"Wallflower" and then "Nelson" In
1935 he resigned and retired from the Navy. He did
this against the advice of all his friends, and the
personal opposition of his Commander in Chief, Sir
John Kelly. He joined a stock-broking firm, but came
back again at the outbreak of the Second World War
and went to Dartmouth as a term officer.
In 1941 at Lord
Mountbatten's instigation, he was taken out of
Dartmouth and sent to Lamlash in Scotland for
amphibious training in Combined Operations. He
commanded a squadron of landing craft during the
Invasion of Sicily, returning to England in time for
the Invasion of Europe in 1944.
On the sixth of June
he commanded the first flight of major landing craft
at Ouistreham on Sword Beach, the Support Squadron
Eastern Flank, and then became Senior Naval Officer
"Sword Area". He was awarded a DSC and
promoted to Commander. Later that year he led the
assault on the island of Walcheren in the Scheldt and
for this he was awarded a DSO.
Sellars returned to
stock-broking after the war, becoming a member of the
Stock Exchange in 1946. He became senior partner of
W. l. Carr in 1957, retiring in 1969. He will also be
remembered as a rugby player and cricketer. In 1927
he won three caps playing for England and three caps
again a year later. He also played for the Navy, for
the Barbarians, and for Blackheath. In 1982 after
successive hip operations he and his wife emigrated
to South Africa, his wife died in 1984 and he died at
the age of 82 in Cape Town. He was survived by one
son.
BATTLE
FOR WALCHEREN - OPERATION "INFATUATE"
(included in
Western Europe June 1944-1945 -
Campaign Summary)
3.
POOLE HARBOUR to BELGIUM in LCH.269
It was October the
28th 1944, and I had orders to have main engines
running at 0500 hours. Low clouds were moving across
a grey dark sky. It was not yet daylight, the damp
cold air foreboded the presence of the oncoming
English winter. A stiff wind was blowing. Whatever
our destination, it was to be a rough uncomfortable
journey. Our landing craft, with their flat bottomed
hulls, were made for landing on beaches in shallow
water, and certainly not for long sea journeys!
We left Poole harbour
and were soon rolling and pitching in the heavy seas.
We would soon know where we were heading. At this
point it was due east, soon to pass the Isle of Wight
off our starboard side. I couldn't believe it! We
were we returning to France! But after a short time
we changed direction and headed north in the English
Channel, our ship heaving and creaking in the heavy
swell, our decks awash, and huge seas breaking over
our bow.
During weather like
this, all crew members wore their regular oilskins
and a safety belt with an attached buckle to be
hooked to a cable that circled the ship. This saved
them from being washed overboard by large swells that
swept over the decks. To go from my cabin to the
engine room or any other destination on the ship
usually involved getting drenched. Very uncomfortable
for the seamen, whose duties confined them to the
upper decks, but the engine room crew were able to
take off their wet clothes, dry out by the heat of
the engines, and usually kept a spare pair of
overalls in a locker, down below.
I stopped at the
wheelhouse, The coxswain was steering. The steering
gear was unlike the wheel usually associated with
most ships. On this landing craft the rudder was
controlled electrically. A small handle, not unlike a
trolley or tram handle, would turn the rudder from
side to side. The coxswain sat on a high fixed stool,
with a seat belt, a necessity in high seas. In front
of him a dimly illuminated compass swung with the
movement of the craft requiring full attention to
keep the ship on course. In front and above was an
illuminated dial showing the amount of turn in
degrees to port or starboard. There were four
portholes, covered at night. It was definitely not a
place to be in if you were inclined to be
claustrophobic. In this small space, the movement of
the craft, the eerie glow from the compass, the odour
of diesel fuel from the engines, could turn the
strongest stomachs. Above the wheelhouse was the
bridge, completely open to the elements, where they
would convey orders to the coxswain through a
speaking tube, and with double telegraphs for orders
to the engine room.
The Coxswain told me
that he had received an order changing directions
from the northerly direction, and that we were now
heading northeast by east. He said "it looks
like we are heading for Belgium".
I returned to the
engine room, where in a small space we had eight
285hp Gray Marine diesel engines, four to each
propeller. Lubricating oil had to be fed to the
engines constantly, a tricky job in this weather,
using a funnel and gallon cans of lubricating oil. In
addition to the eight main engines, there were two
generators which supplied the electricity to
everything,. A rheostat on the electrical board was
constantly adjusted to keep the current at 110 volts
for the lights, heating, navigation, toilets,
bathroom, bilge pumps, and steering. The generators
were vital to us, a problem with the generators and
we would all be "dead ducks". Operating
noise from the main engines and the generators was
intense
The engine room was
below sea level, no portholes. At the engine
controls, the engine noise was so deafening, we wore
earplugs. The telephone inter-communicating system
was useless so I had devised a communication system
with the bridge, using a very loud buzzer and a red
light - a series of flashes on the red light
signified a number of orders from the bridge. For
instance, one buzz - raise speed by 25 revolutions,
two buzzes - lower speed by 25 revolutions. This
worked very efficiently. The engine operator sat at a
console with seat belts, with the telegraph system
just about at eye level, the throttles on the
console, with the red light just above the throttles.
A constant sickening smell of diesel oil, made a four
hour watch just miserable.
4.
STOPOVER AT OSTEND
Orders came to slow
speed. I climbed above to get a look out and spotted
land, we slowly made our way into Ostend Harbour. The
retreating Germans had sunk many ships in the harbour
to prevent large ships entering with supplies for the
Allies. We were able to squeeze around the wrecks and
finally tie up at a dock. Everything was now still.
We were able to walk about without being thrown from
side to side. We tied up and shut down main engines.
No one had the faintest idea what we were doing in
Ostend!
To the crews
surprise, the Skipper announced four hours shore
leave, which was very unusual as we were on active
service. We were warned that the Germans had mined
all the roads and pathways leading down to the
harbour before they left. The Sappers had cleared a
path from the docks into the main street and this was
the only safe throughway, "keep to that path or
perish" was our final warning!
Top two
pictures are LCH 269 tied up at dock in
Ostend. LCH 185 is alongside, she was sunk at
Walcheren (gs according to HMSO
"British Vessels Lost at Sea" and
Lenton's "British and Empire Warships,
LCH.185 was mined and sunk off Normandy, 25
June 1944). Interesting to note, the
headquarters ships had the radar.

Bottom
left, another view of the sterns with Ostend
in the background, the other interesting
fact, I stood on the dock taking these
pictures with a Kodak folding camera, and
nobody questioned me! I do remember I had one
roll of film, which was impossible to get
during the war. I don't remember where I got
the film!!
The swept path was
about four feet wide, marked on both sides with small
signs depicting skull and crossbones. It led into a
devastated ghostly city, that had once been a
thriving tourist resort.
On both sides of the
main street, buildings had been levelled. Small dark
shops with empty and broken windows, some boarded up,
were desolate. As I walked down the main street I
felt sad for the people that had lived and traded
here and had now lost all their possessions. The
street was deserted, it was a ghost town.
I heard sounds of
piano music and singing coming from a bar in a side
street. Men in uniform were drinking local wine, no
beer was available, the bars had been ransacked by
the retreating Germans.
There were one or two
cafe's where they were serving chips (french fries),
no other food being available, and a couple of my
shipmates were enjoying the food in the company of
two ladies, who appeared to have seen better times,
sitting on their laps.
In the center of town
I spotted a large store. I walked I in to investigate
and saw a large number of glass showcases completely
empty. However by one of the cases a young woman was
busy doing something. I could not imagine why she was
there with no merchandise to sell. I asked if she
spoke English, to which she answered "yes".
I then asked if there was anything available such as
a gift or souvenir that I could buy to take home to
my fiancée. She thought for a moment, then went over
to a large walk-in safe. Using the combination she
opened the door and I looked into a completely empty
vault except for a solitary, very small bottle which
she brought over for me to see. It was Chanel 21, I
was happy to purchase such a valuable item from the
safe. It did indeed cost me a weeks pay!
I placed the bottle in
my money belt (government issue to all sailors),
thanked the girl and left the store.
The sailors in the
bars were really getting raucous, the cheap wine they
were drinking was taking effect. I was a little
concerned as they had to walk back to the ship along
that four foot pathway. I returned to the ship and
reported my concerns to the first lieutenant, who
immediately stationed a couple of men along the swept
pathway to ensure the safety of the men. All made it
back safely, there were no casualties!
It was the 31st of
October. I sat at the table in our cabin, eating
breakfast. The radio was on the Armed Forces
programme. Vera Lynn was singing "The White
Cliffs of Dover". How nice it would be to be
back in Blighty! We still had no idea where we were
going, or what we were about to do. Most of the day
was spent in routine engine maintenance, cleaning,
etc.
5.
HEADING FOR WALCHEREN, FIRST and ONLY BRIEFING
The Skipper called for
main engines at 1900 hours. We started them at 1830
for a warm up period. I entered his order in the log.
At 1915 we received the first telegraph order, We
were on our way!
Just after midnight,
November 1st 1944, we had left Ostend harbour and a
few miles out at sea, rendezvoused with the remainder
of the Support squadron. At 2100 hours all
commissioned and non-commissioned officers, seven in
all, were instructed to report for a briefing in the
ward room. We were all invited to sit around the
table.
Around the wardroom
bulkheads were air photographic maps of an island
coastline. Commander Sellars entered the room and
told us to remain seated. He stood at the end of the
room and said "Gentlemen, this is Walcheren
island". We all looked very surprised as this
was the first time we had ever heard of the place!
Commander Sellars continued to explain. "It is
located at the mouth of the river Scheldt. Like most
Dutch islands that are lower than sea level, it is
dyked. It is preventing our ships, by its heavy
shelling, from entering the Scheldt with supplies
that could be unloaded at Antwerp. The air force has
attempted to damage the dykes and flood the island,
with the possibility that the flooding has put some
of the heavy fortified gun positions out of action.
However our sources tell us that these heavy
fortified gun positions are still operational. The
guns are in six and eight foot reinforced concrete
emplacements and are untouched by the bombing, and
they are extremely accurate. Our orders are to get
onto the beaches, and land our Royal Marine Commandos
who will systematically silence each gun position.
"Hitler has
declared this island a bastion, which means that his
men are forbidden to surrender, and will fight to the
last man. The guns on the island are various types.
There are 3in anti-aircraft guns, 5.9in (150mm) which
have a high rate of fire and are extremely accurate,
numerous 88mm and 50mm are fully operational (gs
also 8.7in (220mm) and 4.1in (105mm) guns).
The beaches are heavily mined with booby traps on
underwater stakes, barbed wire completely surrounds
the beaches, which are strewn with thousands of
mines. He pointed to a 400 foot broken area of the
dykes and said " this is where we will land our
Marines, a place called Westkapelle."
"The island also
has several pads that are being used to launch the V2
rockets on the civilians in London (gs
Walcheren does not appear to have been used for V2
launches). The island must be taken. It is imperative
that our supply ships get up the Scheldt to Antwerp.
General Patton is currently relying on supplies to
get to him by land all the way from Normandy. The
German army have retreated to the other side of the
Scheldt and are attempting to reinforce. The
overthrow of this bastion will give us victory and
considerably shorten this war.
"At the same time
as our landing takes place, a large scale attack will
take place at Breskens to our south, by British and
Canadian commando units, followed by British and
Canadian Infantry units.
The landing by the
SSEF is supposed to coincide with a thousand bomber
raid prior to our landing on the beach, but I have
been notified that the weather is getting worse in
England, and due to very foggy conditions, the Royal
Air Force will not be able to participate. It is too
late to change our plans at this point. We are going
in. It wont be a piece of cake. We will use
anything at our disposal, even if it means going in
with small arms. Be prepared for a heavy bombardment
by our monitors, which will start some time before we
hit the beaches.
I wish you all the
best of luck, gentlemen. Touchdown for operation
"INFATUATE" will be 0900 November 1st.
6.
IN TO ACTION
below - Landing craft hit. LCH 269
heading in to help
We headed north, and
at 0440 hours course was altered to 056 degrees. The
seas were very heavy, under a grey miserable sky. At
0550 hours, speed was increased to 6 1/2 knots and
course altered to 041 degrees true. At 0645 hours
"action stations" was called and all hands
took their positions. At 0700 hours the coastline was
clearly visible and at 0713 hrs the tower on
Westkapelle, on Walcheren was clearly seen.
At 0808 hrs, course
was altered to 079 degrees, the ships company
continued closed-up on "action stations".
At 0809 the first fire came from the Westkapelle
batteries. They had spotted us!
The Naval bombardment
started with three large ships of the Royal Navy
battleship WARSPITE and monitors
ROBERTS and
EREBUS. The latter had one gun turret inoperable from
damage sustained at Normandy (gs believed to
be HMS Warspite as the two monitors only had one 15in
turret each), and at 0825 hours the Westkapelle
battery ceased to fire after receiving direct hits
from the large ships guns.
In our group of 27
landing craft were three LCRs. These were tank
landing craft that had been adapted as rocket ships.
The upper deck had chutes for 1200 rockets, all fired
by twelve volt batteries. The bridge was protected by
a large steel flameshield. All the crew were
positioned behind the shield. These rockets when
fired were able to clear a beach of any living person
for a quarter of a mile, as the rockets would come
down straight, like mortars. Slit trenches would be
of no use. The deck of the LCR would glow red after
ignition.
The
three LCRs were coming up behind the main group of
landing craft heading for the beach. A shell hit one
of the LCRs directly on the starboard side, the craft
listed badly and pre-ignition set off 1200 rockets
that landed amongst the support squadron. I have
never heard explosions like that in all my years of
war! They appeared to go on for several minutes, but
in reality it was probably 45 seconds. We had no ear
protection, my stomach turned over, my ears rang with
the clamour. I could do nothing but clap my hands to
my ears and put my head down. From up above I could
hear screaming. Leaving one of my hands at the
controls, I climbed the stairs from the engine room
to find out what had happened, a necessary option as
no one bothers with the engine room staff. We are
down in that hole like troglodytes.
right - Bombardment and shelling, LCH 269 on
far right of the picture.
I saw landing craft
burning and sinking all around. The sea was on fire.
Men were in the water, some motionless, some
attempting to swim. Our ship was picking men out of
the water, The welldeck was full of injured sailors.
Five of our craft were sunk by this "friendly
fire". Thirty sailors were injured.
(gs - From
"The Campaign in North-West Europe June
1944-1945", HMSO, 1994, page 49
"The Support Squadron had also opened fire
but though all its craft were being straddled or
near-missed by batteries W 11, W 15 and W 17, it
was not till 0920 that the first serious hit was
registered when L.C.F. 37 was severely damaged
forward by an enemy shell and eventually blew up.
Shortly after this the southern group also came
under heavy and accurate fire south of the
'kidney' shoal, but though severely hit pressed
home their attack with unrelenting vigour. At
0934 L.C.T.(R) 334 fired her ranging rocket
salvos which fell short. Then she was hit twice
on her starboard side forward. By a stroke of ill
fortune this caused her to swing towards the
north and accidentally let go some of her rockets
which fell close to L.C.H.269. Unhappily rockets
fired by L.C.T.(R) 457 and L.C.T.(R) 378 also
fell near three of the supporting craft and on
the port beam of the L.C.I.(S)s taking the
Commando ashore. The L.C.I.s. at once
turned away but resumed their course towards the
shore at increased speed ten minutes later.
Casualties in two of the three supporting craft
were thirty slightly wounded but the other,
though completely blotted out by the smoke of the
exploding rockets, fortunately suffered none.
L.C.T.(R) 334 quickly resumed her firing course
and with L.C.T.(R) 363 pressed on her attack with
the utmost determination although heavily
hit.")
We took the wounded
and dead personnel to the hospital ship and returned
to assault zone. Landing craft were heading into the
beaches with the sea in turmoil from the incessant
shelling. Small landing craft were running parallel
with the shoreline firing their 20mm guns directly at
the slits in the gun emplacements. The ammunition
being used was anti-personnel which shattered into
myriad's of shrapnel pieces inside the gun positions.

left - LCH 269 on left.
The
enemy fire was fierce, and was systematically hitting
the small craft approaching the beach. One LCG, hit
and on fire was abandoned on the beach, other craft
were burning, sinking and exploding. With this heavy
fire from the shore batteries, we were being
annihilated rapidly. Some craft had already reached
the gap in the dyke and were successfully landing the
Marine commandos. LCH 269 received a very close shell
off our stern, which really shook us up in the engine
room. Shrapnel caused several holes in our bulkheads,
and sea water spurted in. We used damage control
plugs, conical wood plugs, to stem the water, and got
a call from Commander Sellars asking if all engine
room hands were OK? He also asked about the engines.
I reported that all was fine. He said "for
Gods sake keep those engines running".
Then LCH 269 received
a direct hit on the starboard bow. It shook us all.
The ship heeled to port. We were thrown on to the
deck. Luckily no sailors were in the vicinity of the
bows. Nobody was hurt, other than shaken up. No water
came in, but it certainly could not stay that way.
The skipper called for damage control parties. I was
in that group. On investigating, we found that the
hole in the ships side was very jagged and a
simple patch would not work. Someone came up with the
idea of using our rolled up hammocks as a form of
gasket. We gathered all the hammocks from the ships
company. Jammed around the hole and with a large
sheet of plywood forced up against the hammocks by
two by fours hammered in to the other side of the
bows, it was a very fine emergency repair!
7. "FROM THE EPIC OF WALCHEREN"
Previous experience
had shown that German Shore batteries could rarely
resist the temptation of concentrating their fire on
any craft attacking them. It was therefore a part of
the plan that the Support Squadron, which was under
the command of Commander K. A. Sellars and consisted
of twenty seven landing craft of various types should
close the shore and deliberately draw the enemy fire
upon itself. This would inevitably result in heavy
casualties, but as it was hoped that it would enable
the assault forces to land with comparative immunity,
it was considered that so long as the enemy made the
fatal error of concentrating fire on the Support
Squadron, close action was justified and heavy losses
acceptable. In other words this was a suicide
operation. Commander Sellars, in his report on the
action said "It was early recognised that we
were up against formidable opposition, and that
losses and damage were to be expected in craft
engaging shore batteries at close range. It is
considered that this was fully justified because the
Commandos got ashore well and lightly (sic?). I
considered that, so long as the Germans made the
mistake of concentrating their fire on the Support
Squadron, close action was justified and losses
acceptable. In fact, I decided that if there was
signs of batteries selecting incoming loaded
L.C.Ts with troops as their primary target,
even closer action would be ordered so as to force
the Germans to fire on the Support Squadron." He
also added later, "There can have been few more
gallant actions in Naval history than the way in
which the Support Squadron drew the fire of the
formidable German Batteries on to itself and provided
the assault forces with a comparative safe conduct to
the shore"
8.
CAPTAIN A F PUGSLEY'S REPORT - NAVAL FORCE COMMANDER
The following is an
excerpt from the report of Captain Pugsley who headed
operation "Infatuate". It was not the
easiest of decisions. To say execute might mean
signing a death warrant for an entire brigade of
Commandos, their assault and Landing Craft and the
Support Squadron who were to escort them in".
His final injunction from (Admiral) Ramsey, (General)
Simmonds, and Foulkes (gs - service and rank not
known), his immediate Senior Officers, had been that
he should not proceed with the operation unless he
was facing opposition that was "not more than
weak". At 0800 Captain Pugsley said there was
certainly no evidence that there was such a state of
affairs.
The Germans found, to
their dismay that the large 88mm guns could not be
lowered enough against the craft closing in on the
beach. However the smaller guns were used and sank
and damaged many craft, causing heavy casualties.
(gs - From
"The Campaign in North-West Europe June
1944-1945", page 51 "The Support
Squadron had also suffered heavily for by 1230
only seven of its twenty-seven craft, including
three equipped for firing smoke only, remained
completely fit for action. The Squadron's state
was:
Sunk or
sinking - L.C.G (L)s 1 and 2, L.C.F.
37, L.C.G.(M)s 101 and 102,
L.C.S.(L)s 252, 256 and 258
On fire in the
magazine and abandoned - L.C.F. 38
Damaged and
out of action - L.C.G.(L)s 11 and 17,
L.C.T.(R)s 334 and 363, L.C.M. 42 and
36, L.C.S.(L) 260
Damaged but
capable of further action - L.C.G.(L) 10,
L.C.F.s 35 and 32, L.C.H. 98
Fit for action
- L.C.G.(L) 9, L.C.S.(L)s 254 and 259,
L.C.T.(R)s 457, 331 and 378 (firing
smoke only), L.C.H. 269
(Abbreviations:
LC Landing craft, G(L) gun
(large), F flak, G(M) gun
(medium), S(L) - Support (large), T(R)
tank (rockets), H
headquarters)
As was only to be
expected, casualties among the officers and men
of the Squadron were also extremely heavy, 172
killed and 200 wounded, but their sacrifice had
not been in vain for it was under cover of the
Squadron that the incoming waves of landing craft
had continued to beach so successfully all the
morning. There can be no doubt that the
Squadron's outstanding gallantry had done much to
make the seaborne landing possible and by 1230
the three Commandos were well established ashore.
Captain Pugsley now decided that all craft no
longer fit for action should return to Ostend.)
9.
B.B.C. WAR REPORT NUMBER 135
2nd November 1944
The battle continued
for several hours. On our ship a well known war
correspondent by the name of Dennis Johnston was
covering the operation for the B.B.C. I have a
transcript of his report as follows:
McLEOD: "Here in
the studio is a man from Walcheren
. our
correspondent Denis Johnston, who took part in the
Naval side of the assault on this island, the attack
on German gun positions at West Kapelle. Johnston
left the coast of the continent early this morning
and, after a rough crossing, came direct to London,
he reached Broadcasting House only two hours
ago."
JOHNSTON: "They
came down in the belly of the Landing Craft, where we
were all lying curled up in the darkness, and told us
if we came up now we could see the beginning of the
attack on Flushing. This attack on the island was a
three-pronged drive. While the Canadians fought their
way in from the causeway, a second party was
attacking across the Scheldt from Breskens against
the second of the little humps that were all that was
left of Walcheren ever since the floods broke in. Our
job - which was an all Naval show - was to attack the
western most tip - West Kapelle - where the German
batteries faced out to sea, and a few thousand of the
enemy were holding out on another of these sodden
hummocks of sand dunes
"Up on the bridge
of the Landing Craft we could see the red flashes of
the guns coming from the east over Flushing and
directly in front of us the dawn came up behind the
light house tower of West Kapelle. As it grew
lighter, this armada of little craft drew slowly in
towards the coast.
"Our ship, LCH
269, was leading. Behind us came a string of gun and
rocket carrying landing craft to cover the assault,
which was being made by the Marines. For a while
there was no sign of life at all on the shore, and we
speculated as to whether the enemy batteries had been
knocked out already by air attacks.
"But suddenly
from here and there along the beach came little
yellow flashes of light and we knew they were alive
all right although we couldn't see to begin with
where their shells were going.
"I don't think
they saw us for some time - the dawn was behind them,
and we were backed by a long line of scudding rain
clouds, but as it became fully daylight the covering
craft moved forward and closed with the batteries and
the assault craft moved up from behind and passed
through heading for a big gap in the dyke that we
could see clearly not more than a mile or so away.
"There was no
question that they saw us then. From all along the
coast the enemy batteries opened up on our fleet of
ships, the shells came whining overhead falling in
the water with great plumes of spray. But they were
getting from us far more than they were giving, and
then from behind us came hurtling the great shells of
the battleship Warspite, and from two monitor,s the
Erebus and the Roberts joining in the fight at long
range.
"It was an
incredible sight to see those landing craft heading
straight for the gap in the dyke and passing through,
while the little gunships hugged the beaches and
poured their fire into the enemy caissons. The
Marines fanned out behind the gap and leapt ashore.
"On the far side
there was more flooding, so they had to land on the
causeway itself - on the concrete slopes of the
causeway, and fight their way in both directions
along the narrow neck of dry land that was all that
was left of West Kapelle. The enemy put up a smoke
screen. Presently it was aided by smoke from a fire
in the lighthouse itself, as the battle on the shore
swept past it's base.
"The shelling of
the little ships by the batteries continued, and we
waited anxiously to see the enemy guns go out one by
one as the marines took the gun positions from the
rear. It was hard to tell what was going on but the
reports from the shore were good, although the men at
sea were having a very tough time. They seemed to
present sitting targets - most of those craft passing
to and fro across the front of the beaches, and here
and there we watched them being hit - pouring out
smoke from their sterns, and in one or two cases,
going down on the shoals with only their upper work
showing, while the little personnel craft dashed
through and picked up the crews."
MaCLOUD: "From
Breskens, on the mainland, Guy Byam watched the Army
Commando troop's battle for Flushing across the
narrow mouth of the Scheldt. We are reading Byam's
dispatch."
BYAM WRU: 8517 READER:
"When the Commandos had reached the fringes of
the town, all hell started to be let loose. Two
batteries on either side of Flushing ricocheted
shells off the water amongst the landing craft coming
in with the following waves of infantry, on beaches
just to the West of the town, and infilading machine
gun fire caught the men as they came ashore. From
where we stood we
could see these commandos had landed, right on the
Harbour front. Towering behind were the gantry's and
cranes of Flushing's shipyards and to the west, a
little way out of the town, was a large hotel right
on the beach.
"This building
was smashed and torn apart by shells and, as I
watched, the whole front of it collapsed in a cloud
of dust. Just below it was the beach where the second
unit had waded off the assault craft, to get quickly
into the area already held by the commando's.
"Most of the dock
area was already in their hands and they were pushing
on into the fringes of the town. Our guns were
engaging a battery of German guns that were firing
onto the beaches we hold.
"The whole of the
dock area of Flushing appeared to be on fire and bits
of burning paper came drifting back from over the
water. Meanwhile to the west another great fire was
burning. It was smoke from the town of West
Kappelle."
MACLEOD: "West
Kapelle in the West.... Flushing on the south coast
of the island
.. And, from the East came the
third assault, that of the Canadians, driving from
South Beveland. Over all. reports Alan Melville,
pilots of the Second Tactical Air Force flew to
attack the German gun positions.
"That part of the
TAF which supports the Canadian Army's operations
flew 240 sorties yesterday. Today, as you know the
beachheads are firmly established and our forces have
made good progress. But this has not been an easy
operation, nor has it been carried out without loss.
"Here is Denis
Johnston again, (on LCH 269) to complete his story of
the Naval side of the landings with a description of
the return from Walcheren.
."
JOHNSTON LIVE:
"We were now on our way back with a hole in our
side as big as a window - a hole just above the
water-line, patched up with wood in some sort of way.
And the Port side of the bridge was peppered like a
cannister.
"There were
little heaps of splintered wood and sodden mattresses
in the forward well, and down below - made as
comfortable as they could be in the circumstances -
we were carrying the casualties of three or four
other craft - men collected just as darkness fell,
and the little ships rolled and pitched alongside
each other in the heavy ground swell.
"Outside in the
wardroom lobby, I noticed a cutting stuck up on the
board which read "Stop purring. The war isn't
won yet"
"I think we knew
that very well. While the news from the beaches had
steadily improved all day, this had been, I think, to
some extent at the expense of the craft at sea. All
day long they had been under heavy and accurate
shell-fire from those batteries.
"A young naval
lieutenant who was sitting beside me dropped off to
sleep on one of the bunks - quite exhausted. He had
commanded one of the small motor craft known as
L.C.P.(L)s (gs - landing craft, personnel
(large)) and for fifteen hours or more he and his
crew had been marking shoals, laying smoke screens
and picking up survivors. In the end he had lost his
own craft and had come aboard ours. Before closing
his eyes, he dropped a casual remark that he had
enjoyed Dunkirk a great deal better.
"There were a lot
of men in that fleet who must have the same story to
tell - the men who took the Commandos in - the men
who ran their gunboats flat on to the beaches and
engaged the shore batteries at point blank range -
the men of the Flak ships who had turned their guns
onto the enemy strong point and literally plastered
them with shells.
I shall never forget
the incredible sight of those salvoes of rockets as
they swept over the sea, and plunging down raised a
long drawn out inferno of smoke and dust, and spray,
the like of which I have never seen before on any
battlefront."
Denis
Johnston.
10.
REPORT OF PROCEDURE, OPERATION "INFATUATE"
In my research (Basil
Woolfs) I was able to obtain a Report of
Procedure for Operation "Infatuate" the
official name of the Walcheren operation, from LCH
269. It is as follows:
(Enclosure No 3 to the
Commander, Support Squadron, Eastern Flank, letter No
1 162/94/1dated 14th November, 1944
FROM; THE
COMMANDING OFFICER, H.M L.C.H. 269.
DATE: 12th November, 1944.
TO: THE COMMANDER, SUPPORT SQUADRON, EASTERN
FLANK, H.M.S "SQUID"
REPORT
OF PROCEDURE- OPERATION "INFATUATE 11"'
(1) The ship weighed
and proceeded promptly at the time ordered namely,
0330, November 1st, 1944, taking the lead of the
convoy composed of the craft of the Support Squadron,
course was 320 degrees true, Speed 6 knots.
(2) Course was altered
at 0440 to 056 degrees true, and at 0445 the heavy
bombardment squadron was sighted to the Northward. At
0550 speed was increased to 6 1/2 knots, and at 0559
course was again altered to 041 degrees true. The
ship's company closed up to dawn action stations at
0645 and secured for breakfast at 0718. At 0718
course was again altered to 056 degrees true and at
0728 to 093 degrees.
(3) The Coast line had
been clearly visible from about 0700, and at 0713
Westkapelle was clearly seen. At 0710 Domburg Battery
was observed to be active but no fall of shot was
observed, and only a few shots were fired. At 0750,
Domburg Battery again opened fire, and fall of shot
was observed some distance away. At 0750 the L.C.G of
the Support Squadron began to deploy.
(4) At 0808 course was
altered to 079 degrees and the ship's company again
closed up to Action Stations. At 0809 Westkapelle
Battery opened fire, and at 0815 the heavy
bombardment Squadron consisting of H.M.S.
"WARSPITE", "ROBERTS" and
"EREBUS" opened fire. L.C.G opened fire at
0829. At 0825 Westkapelle Battery was observed to
cease fire after some direct hits, and shortly after
the Hun attempted to lay a smoke screen to close the
gap.
(5) At 0845 L.C.H. 269
was in position B.B. and remained in that vicinity to
mark the position for the first wave of Landing
Craft, as the M.L. originally in that position had to
leave some time before because of accurate shell
fire. At 0909 small calibre shells were observed to
be dropping around us, but none very close.
(6) At approximately
0915 we proceeded slowly to the southwestward and
thereafter patrolled on orders of S.S.E.F who was on
board, from two or three miles off the coast, closing
and investigating damaged craft. Injured were brought
alongside by L.C.P.(L)s several times, and at
approximately 1220 L.C.H. 98 came alongside and
casualties that had been placed aboard, were taken
aboard.
Shortly afterwards
through a break in the smoke screen the Hun turned
his attention to us and after a ranging shot that
fell three cables ahead and short, put one very close
to our stern. No casualties were obtained but
splinters hit the ship in many places. Full ahead was
immediately passed and after another couple of
attempts, no further shells were received.
(7) The ship then
proceeded out to the "KINGSMILL" (gs
Captain-class frigate) 5 miles due West passing LCI
(S) 532 burning and abandoned at 1242. Shortly
afterwards LCT 461, Hospital carrier, was closed, but
found to have been mined and was already full. One
Officer that had died on board was disembarked, and
after closing the "KINGSMILL", LCH 269
proceeded alongside another Hospital carrier and
disembarked the remaining wounded,
"KINGSMILL" was once again closed while
there was a consultation between S.S.E.F and NC Force
T.
ENCLOSURE
NO THREE TO THE COMMANDER SUPPORT SQUADRON
EASTERN FLANK, LETTER NO 162/94/1 DATED 14TH
NOVEMBER 1944.
(8) At 1800
"KINGSMILL" anchored 1 mile further to the
westward, and at 1830 LCH 269 anchored 10 cables due
north from her. At 0320 reports were received of
E.Boats and human torpedoes some distance away, so
Action Stations were sounded, and as nothing
developed they were later secured, at 0630 dawn
action stations were exercised.
(9) The ship remained
at anchor until 1345 November 2nd, when anchor was
weighed and a course for Ostend* was set with what
was left of the Support Squadron in company arriving
there at 1800.
(*Notes by Basil
Woolf: This was not so. We left Walcheren with
the hospital ship which hit a mine off the
English coast and sank with all hands. LCH 269
returned directly to Poole, the only remnant of
the S.S.E.F. Several damaged craft went to
Ostend, as they were not seaworthy enough to make
the trip to England)
(10) During the course
of the action, the ships company were at Action
Stations and conducted themselves accordingly and
seemed to stand the strain very well. The cook*
however, let the ship down badly in that he is liable
to seasickness and had also worked himself into a
state of jitters, so as to be useless when most
needed, action is being taken to try and have him
relieved. Although not needed, the damage control and
first aid parties were on top line and I believe them
to be efficient.
(*Note: With
regard to the cook, he came to our ship just
prior to our Walcheren operation. He had
transferred from the Army, and was very excited
with his galley, having had to cook on field
stoves before. As to his mental condition. I
cannot verify that, as we the engine room crew
were on duty for almost two days, and were down
in the Engine room, keeping the engines running
and banging in the wood plugs in the holes in the
bulkheads, whenever they came loose and allowed
water to seep in!)
(11) During the run
in, while not reported, it was subsequently found
that Radar, type 970 was being jammed by star
jamming, but that the coastline showed through
plainly. It was roughly one mile out although
calibrated shortly before leaving Southampton*.
(Note: The
Lieutenant states he set the compass when we left
from Southampton. We left from POOLE, he could
have possibly verified the compass setting from
Southampton when we passed it during the night.
(12) It is suggested
that a proper gyro compass is most necessary in a
headquarters ship. Although carefully swung prior to
leaving, I considered my compasses almost unreliable
on sailing from OSTEND.
(13) It is also
suggested that if, in future, headquarters ships are
to be a sort of casualty clearing station, carrying a
doctor, some definite space be fitted with a more
convenient entrance than the Troop Space at present
used with an almost vertical ladder leading down.
(Signed) T.F.Owen*
Lieutenant, R.C.N.V.R. Commanding Officer.
(*Note: I have
been unable to get any information about
Lieutenant T. F.Owen R.C.N.V.R. (Royal Canadian
Navy Volunteer Reserve) other than he came on
board LCH. 269 for this operation and he was
(Jimmy the One) naval slang for second in
command.)
11.
"LITTLE SHIPS TACKLED THE SHORE GUNS"
London Daily Mirror
Nov 2 1944
Running unflinchingly
and directly into the fire of the mighty German shore
batteries on Walcheren island, small thin hulled
British amphibious support vessels fought a battle
the like of which sailors who were at Dieppe or
Normandy had never seen before.
There were heavy
losses. The little ships kept their guns hot until
they went down or were forced to retire with holes in
their sides and bleeding men on their decks.
Men on the ships,
gunboats, rocket ships, and other small craft had
been told to engage at point blank range, and knock
out if possible, the fixed German gun emplacements
lining the dykes and high ground near West Kapelle on
the Western side of the island.
They went in with all
their guns firing, troop laden craft went up behind
them to discharge their loads
With our ships some
thousand yards from shore the German guns opened up.
Suddenly fire belched aboard one, she swung around in
the water, another got a direct hit, another raced
into the shore with all her guns firing, and turned
out again with a single officer left on her bridge
and holes in her sides.
One gunboat went into
the shore, was hit, floundered, and made a last burst
to the shore.
The Headquartership
LCH 269 was nearly blown out of the water three
times, it was a fight lasting nearly five hours.
During the fight,
shells bounced off many of the five and six foot
thick German gun emplacements without effect, until
the Commandos were landed, and cut open the gun
emplacements with flame throwers and grenades.
12.
FROM THE LONDON DAILY MAIL
November 2nd 1944
At Walcheren, bad
weather made air support impossible and the only
"softening up" was by Naval bombardment.
After this inadequate
preparation the little craft of the Close Support
Squadron, outranged and outgunned, forced their way
inshore in face of raking fire from enemy coastal
guns, many of six and eight inch calibre.
Those craft which
survived long enough to get within range, shot it out
with the coastal batteries and succeeded in silencing
many of them. Of the twenty five gun and support
landing craft taking part In the operation, nine were
sunk and eight badly damaged*. The Close Support
Squadron suffered heavy casualties. 172 killed and
200 wounded**.
(Notes by Basil
Woolf: * By the end of the operation, our ship,
the only left, limped into Poole harbour. Actual
loss to the S.S.E.F. were 28 ships. ** 280 men of
the Royal Navy lost their lives. Our ship
returned with a crew of 18, and many wounded men
in our troop quarters.)
In his official
report, Captain Pugsley stated: "This success
would not have been achieved without the outstanding
gallantry and determination displayed by all the
Officers and men of the Support Squadron, under the
command of Commander K.A.Sellars, who led the attack
and engaged the extremely active enemy batteries,
from 9am till 12.30 pm. The Support squadron
continuously engaged the enemy batteries, firstly in
support of the landings and later supporting the
Commandos advance to the southward.
Their losses were
heavy, but they stuck to their job of engaging the
enemy, thereby drawing the enemies fire and enabling
the landings to proceed." (from "Operation
Neptune" by Commander Kenneth Edwards R.N.)
Basil Woolf's Account - continued
13.
AFTER THE LANDINGS
left - Pictures by the "Sphere"
At dusk the shelling
had subsided, we were off the island wallowing in
real heavy seas. We did not know if the reason for
the lack of shelling was due to the marines or the
dark or the fact that there were no longer any more
targets left. The sudden quiet was eerie until the
radar operators notified the Skipper that five
targets were spotted on the screen, coming in from
the north and heading in our general direction. They
were unable to fix the type of craft but judging by
their speed, they had to be torpedo boats, or E.
Boats. All hands were ordered on deck with rifles.
Our gunners manned the three Oerlikon 20 mm, the
fourth on the bow was out of action due to the shell
that hit the craft under the bow. We would not stand
a chance against the fast heavily armed boats but we
were going to go down fighting. The Radar operator
reported another object that was intercepting the
five E. Boats, It was a British destroyer which
completely mutilated the fast craft, with its heavier
guns. Several were hit. They then turned tail and
raced back to where they had come from. The destroyer
signalled us "Good Luck LCH 269, signed Lieut
Commander Holdsworth" - our old skipper had
saved our lives!
Our Skipper received a
signal that underwater one man submarines, and scuba
units were headed our way. Their purpose to attach
magnetic charges to our hulls. The orders were to set
up watch teams around the clock to throw charges into
the water every three minutes to kill or destroy the
underwater menace by compression explosion. We were
up all night.
The underwater attack
was partially successful for when dawn broke we were
all aghast at the fact that only two ships from the
SSEF had survived, the hospital ship and us, seven
others were badly damaged and limped back to Ostend.
14.
DEPARTURE FROM WALCHEREN
We left Walcheren
island. I hoped never in my lifetime to see that
island again. We were two very sorry looking ships,
making slow headway in the still heavy seas, due to
the large hole in our bow. Damage control was still
holding, but the sea could change that in an instant.
Weather reports were being received that we were
entering a strong weather condition, with gales off
the East coast of England. Our slow forward movement
could not compensate for the strong winds. We were
being forced off course, and consequently into the
English minefields. We had no charts for these as
they were top secret. We had charts of all the German
minefields, but these did not help our situation at
all.
The Commander called
for slow ahead both engines, then signalled on the
buzzer in the engine room to drop the engine
revolutions by 50 revolutions per minute. He sent a
further message to drop the engine revolutions to the
minimum possible. We were unable to record engine
temperatures, as our gauges were shattered by one of
the near misses.
The Commander then
made a very unusual request - "bring your
phonograph up to the bridge", and a record I had
which was a very popular song at that time,
"Tiptoe through the Tulips". He had it set
up and one of the seamen was given the job of winding
and replaying that record with the aid of a
"Loud Hailer" usually used when speaking to
another ship nearby. We were all in a state of
trepidation. We could hit a mine at any time. All the
crew had removed their shoes and were walking the
decks with bare feet for fear a sonic mine could be
set off by heavy footsteps, and the Skipper was up on
the bridge playing music!
Just before dusk the
hospital ship hit the mine, I was on the upper deck
at the time having a break and a smoke, I was talking
to another crew member, the hospital ship was about a
half mile off our starboard side.
I saw the ship
suddenly stop her forward movement, shudder, then
lift completely out of the water amidships. She came
down in two parts and sank in a matter of seconds.
All perished from that terrible explosion. We moved
over to where she had been, to pick up any survivors.
All were dead. They had not been in too good a shape
to start with. They didn't stand a chance. We were
the only ship left in that original flotilla of
thirty ships, I just could not believe that, how
could this happen? Would we now be next?
15.
RETURN TO POOLE HARBOUR
Sometime later, the
Commander informed us that we were out of the
minefield. The weather was horrible, our ship
lurching and swaying drunkenly. Everyone was feeling
very miserable, I tried to sleep. I woke up suddenly,
everything was motionless. Was I in heaven? I went up
on deck. Our ship was limping into Poole Harbour. We
were in England and safe. I checked the money belt
around my waist. Believe it or not the small bottle
of Chanel 21 was still intact!
The Skipper decided to
make a collection on our ship for a remembrance of
some sort dedicated to the men that lost their lives
on the Walcheren landings. As there was only sixteen
men left in our the ships company, the amount
collected was not very great. The Skipper then made a
very generous donation, and after a discussion a
temporary sign was decided on until at a later date a
Lychgate could be erected at a local church. The sign
would read as follows. '"WALCHEREN MEMORIAL - a
Lychgate will be erected on this site to commemorate
the men of the Royal Navy who fell at
Walcheren".
The operation was well
described by General Eisenhower as one of the most
gallant of the war. It was in the true "little
ship" tradition.
All officers then went
for a de-briefing, and as the ship had gone in for
repairs, we were all given a well deserved leave. I
immediately removed the Chanel 21 from my money belt,
gave it to Anne, who, in all the excitement,
accidentally dropped it on the tiled hearth in her
home. The house had a wonderful scent of perfume for
weeksI
16.
IN SEARCH OF A LYCHGATE BY EMAIL
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|
 |
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LCH 269 made a
collection for a memorial to the men who lost
their lives. Commander Sellars made a large
donation, and a temporary painted board was
placed by the church entrance. Later the Navy
and Marine Corps paid for a permanent Lychgate.
|
Many
years later, my son, lan, asked me to write my
biography. I realized that I never knew if the
Walcheren memorial Lychgate was ever fulfilled and if
so, where?
It would not be
difficult to find out. With the help of the Internet,
I contacted the City of Poole by email, and shortly
after received a reply from Mr C. Barham the
Churchwarden of St Michaels Church in Hamworthy, a
small village near Poole.
He wrote:
"One
day in May 2000, the Borough of Poole enquiry email
address received a request from a gentleman now
residing in Florida, USA. So the enquiry desk emailed
Dai Watkins, the local Studies Centre Manager at the
Waterfront Museum, who then emailed me.
"The request for
information by Basil Woolf (who was intending to
visit the UK this summer) was to discover where the
Lychgate was that was erected as a memorial to those
who had lost their lives on the assault on Walcheren
island in November 1944. In that assault, many ships
were lost and hundreds of sailors died. Basil's ship
LCH 269 was the only survivor and had limped back to
Poole to be repaired and refitted.
"Within two days
of Basil's enquiry, I was able, with help from one of
my daughters, to reply by email and also send an
attachment of a photograph of the Lychgate.
"Basil and his
shipmates had made a collection on their return to
Poole, and had donated the money for a memorial to
those men in the form of a Lychgate at a local
church,
"In his next
emailing to me, Basil included a photo print of a
notice stating the intention to erect a Lychgate
signed by the then Rector of Hamworthy, the Reverend
J.A.Kingham. It would appear that St Michaels Church
was chosen because of it's proximity to HMS Turtle,
now the Royal Marine Camp.
"This now gave me
the opportunity to do some detective work.
"By all accounts,
one day early in 1952, our former Rector, Canon Brian
Aldis, received a call from the Admiralty, informing
him that the survivors of the Walcheren operation
wished to erect a Lychgate. Later, Commander
"Monkey" Sellars, who had commanded the
assault, visited Hamworthy with plans for the design.
"Unfortunately,
due to rising costs, the sum raised by the survivors
was insufficient to pay for all the work involved. So
the Parish agreed to provide the concrete base, the
brick pillars and the curved approach wall, whilst
the Royal Navy would supply the oak woodwork and the
two large stone memorial tablets which local
stonemasons would prepare.
"The original
intention was to place the Lychgate at the entrance
to the old church, but it seemed silly to do that if
the new church was to be built next door and so the
gate was to become the main entrance to the new
church. Despite delays in getting hold of suitable
oak, the work proceeded rapidly and by the summer of
1952 the Lychgate was complete.
"Then on a
glorious sunny day, on July 5th, the great unveiling
and dedication took place in front of a great crowd
of local people, naval personnel, with relatives and
friends of the fallen.
"First of all,
the Bishop of Salisbury dedicated the whole field as
an extension of the churchyard, and then with split
second timing, the Royal Marine Band marched up
Blandford Road.
"The Admiral of
the Fleet Sir Phillp Vian, (Vian of HMS Cossack) came
across from the Rectory, accompanied by Commander
Sellars and a representative of the Dutch Embassy.
Afterwards, over two hundred or so relatives and
friends crossed to the Rectory Garden, where tea was
laid on for them and many old friendships were
renewed and sorrows remembered as they saw a fitting
memorial to those they had lost. It was a great day
in the history of Hamworthy.
"Back to Basil
Woolf. As luck would have it, his nephew Michael who
lives in Bournemouth with his wife Susan, was able to
bring Basil and his wife Anne, to see the Lychgate
for the first time when they visited in July 2000.
Harold Hudson of the local branch of the Landing
Craft Gunnery and Flak Association was able to be
present when Basil visited.
"I was pleased to
meet Basil in person, although we had emailed each
other since his first enquiry."
17.
FINAL WORDS
Most contemporary
books on the History of World War Two, do not even
mention Walcheren in their index!
Today my wife and I
live in Dunedin, Florida. We have a daughter Louise
who is a computer specialist, and lives nearby with
her husband and daughter Gabrielle. Our other
daughter, Helen also lives in Dunedin. Her daughter
Hilary is in her second year of college in Troy,
Alabama. Our son lan, lives in Los Angeles, and is a
first assistant director, he and his wife have two
sons, one who is in his second year of college.
Petty Officer Basil
Woolf CMX 116402. May 2006.
POSTSCRIPT
Basil
didn't tell me he was Mentioned in Despatches for his
part in the Normandy landings. This only came out
later in an email. I am sure he won't mind if I
mention it! - Gordon Smith

The Continuing
Story of LCH.269 into the 21st century
(1) An email from Jim
Mason (jhm5th@hotmail.com)
to Basil Woolf, 12 June 2007
Dear Mr. Woolf
It was with great interest that I read your
stirring account of "THE SUPPORT SQUADRON EASTERN FLANK (S.S.E.F)
and THE BATTLE FOR WALCHEREN ISLAND, 1st November 1944" at
http://www.naval-history.net/WW2Memoir-Walcheren.htm
. I had fortuitously "hit" it online when searching for
information on LCI(L)-269/LCH.269. I have two questions for
you: were you a member of the commissioning crew of the
LCIL-269, and did it also take part in the Malta, Crete,
Sicily and Italy activities you mention in your memoir?
The reason for my interest is that I believe your gallant
little ship today rests rusting on a mudflat in Atlantic
City, NJ. If you copy and paste the following coordinates
into the "fly to" function of Google Earth, the software
will take you directly to the location: 39 22’ 34.64" N 74
27’ 32.07" W . Some recent photos are also attached.
I recall climbing aboard this vessel back in the '60's as
a teenager. I believe it came to rest here during the Great
Northeast Storm of March 1962. It had been moored across
Beach Thoroghfare at the end of Ohio Avenue previous to
that. There was a name board across the front of the pilot
house that read "QUAKER CITY". I later looked this name up
in the 1963 edition of "List of Merchant Vessels of the
United States", and found it listed as a freight vessel
registered in Philadelphia. It was built in Barber, NJ, by
the New Jersey Shipbuilding Corp. in 1942 as the U.S.S.
LCI(L) [landing craft, infantry (large)]-269, and and leased
to the United Kingdom, 22 January 1943. It was apparently
repatriated to the US Navy on 20 March 1946, transferred to
the Maritime Commission for disposal, and sold on 28 January
1948.
I hope this information is of interest to you. Thank you
for recording your memories for posterity.
Sincerely,
Jim Mason
and the photos, courtesy, respectively, of
Pictometry International Corp, Google Earth, Pictometry
International Corp, Chris Jahn (posted on the Google Earth
Transportation community forum)
(click on first three for larger images)
-269%20south%20viewS.JPG)
-269%20ortho%20viewS.JPG)
-269%20north%20viewS.JPG)

(2) Basil's reply, the
same day
Dear Jim:
Thanks for your e-mail - this is quite a puzzlement since my
records show that LCH 269 was taken to the shipyard and scrapped
somewhere around 1947. It is quite possible that it was purchased
as a merchant vessel. You say it had "Quaker City" on the front of
the pilot house. LCH 269 had the words "Sicily, Italy, Walcheren"
on the front of the Pilot house and three aircraft that we shot
down. If a private purchaser bought the craft they could, of
course, have painted that out and replaced it with "Quaker City".
I did not commission this craft - I went to the USA early in 1942
and commissioned LCI 175, if I remember correctly - however, it all
happened 65 years ago - anyway, we sailed 175 across the Atlantic in
January and reached Gibralter 30 days later. Then we went on to
Dhidjelli, a small port in Algeria, to set up a factory for
repairing small craft in an old railway workshop.
I later commissioned another craft, LCI 269 and we did go to Malta
to take food to the Island when the Italian Navy surrendered. We
took part in the Sicily and Italy invasions, but did not land in
those two places. We finally returned to the U.K. and became the
headquarters ship of the Support Squadron Eastern Flank. The rest
of the story you know from my Web site.
Do you recollect if the craft you saw in Atlantic City had a tripod
mast behind the pilot house? 269 had this for our radar
installation but could have been removed by a private owner.
Thanks for your interest and information. I will forward this to a
gentleman in Colorado who is at present rebuilding an LCI. He may
be interested and possibly be able to get parts he needs, providing
they are salvageable.
Sincerely, Basil Woolf
(3) Basil Woolf's
email to Naval-History.Net, 13 June 2007
Dear Gordon,
What a surprise. 269 was sitting at the end of Ohio
Avenue in Atlantic city, until the great storm of march 1962, when
it apparently broke free and ended up on the mud flat, the owner
obviously walked away from the scene as it wasn't financially valid
for him to invest the money to salvage her, or something like that!
I had
traced 269 to the year 1947 when it was supposed to have been towed
to the salvage yards and scrapped, but it appears that a private
owner or a company may have purchased it at the junkyard, what do
you know about "Quaker City" I cannot find anything relevant, as you
know from my pictures, the front of the Pilot house had "Sicily,
Italy, Walcheren" and two aircraft that we had shot down, however a
private buyer could have painted over this and placed "Quaker City"
there.
Jim Mason
asks if I was part of the commissioning crew, I was not, his
investigation shows that 269 was built in New Jersey, I actually
commissioned a craft in Norfolk Virginia, and sailed it across the
Atlantic in January, I believe, 1943, I was assigned to 269 in
Djidjelli North Africa, and took part in delivering food to the
starving people of Malta, who were in dire need as the Italian navy
had surrendered there, and they barely had enough food for their own
people, we also assisted in the invasions of Sicily, then Italy, and
shortly after we were summoned to the UK, where work was done to
transfer us to a headquarters-ship, and after a short time took part
in the Normandy landings, when we became the head quarter ship of
the Support Squadron Eastern Flank.
You have my
permission to use this new information, however I would like to
check the following.
Was Lch 269
berthed at the end of 1962 at Ohio Avenue,? (someone in Atlantic
City would have that information)
In the storm
of 1962, do the newspapers of Atlantic City have a story of the
craft breaking clear and finishing up on the mud-flat?
Who owned
269 at that time, and were they held responsible for the salvage
operation?
I will try
to get this info.
Basil
(4) and Jim's reply to Basil, 13
June 2007
Dear Basil,
I would
guess that the only way for us to positively
establish the identity of the derelict vessel in
question as LCI(L)-269 / LCH-269 would be to delve
into the records of the Maritime Commission and/or
the Philadelphia Customs House, stored in the
National Archives. I personally am not prepared to
take on that daunting task!
However,
I would point out to you that the case for this
vessel being the former LCI(L)-269 would seem fairly
strong, circumstantially. Firstly, by its
configuration, it most definitely had been built as
an LCI(L). Secondly, at the time I recall visiting
it and observing the name board "QUAKER CITY" on its
pilot house, there was only one vessel registered in
the U.S. bearing that name. The official listing of
that vessel in the 1963 list of registered vessels
published by the Department of the Treasury, Bureau
of Customs, shows its former name to have been "LCI(L)-269",
with its port of registry being Philadelphia.
[Philadelphia would have been the port of registry
for any registered vessel owned in Southern New
Jersey.] Given the penalties likely in effect for
providing false information to the Bureau of Customs
when registering a vessel, let alone the probable
requirement for providing a chain of ownership, one
would be led to assume that the published
information is accurate.
I don’t
recall the vessel having any type of mast at the
time that I first became aware of it. I don’t
believe it had a square inch of paint on any
exterior surface, either, other than the mounted
name board. Her hard-won emblazoned battle honors
would have long ago vanished -- "Sic transit gloria
mundi." She was most likely in the process of being
stripped of usable parts and materials when she was
torn from her moorings by the 1962 storm and
deposited in her present location. I don’t believe
there is much of anything left salvageable on her at
this late date. Her 1/4" steel plates are slowly
disintegrating in the salt water environment, and
soon she will have completely collapsed in on
herself.
Switching
gears, you mentioned that the LCH-269 was credited
with downing 3 enemy aircraft. I assume this was in
the Med? What were the circumstances? Did you return
to the States to commission the LCI(L)-269?
Someone
is rebuilding an LCI in Colorado? How’d he get it
there?!
Finally,
if, after all those hours spent in LCI engine rooms,
you didn’t get enough of the sound of eight running
GM 6-71 diesels, you can hear them again at the
following site, run by an engineer for the Circle
Line of Manhattan, which operates 3 former LCI’s,
one of which retains its original double-quad power
plant!
Http://members.aol.com/lci191/LCI-191.htm
The links to the engine sound files are near the
bottom of the page--enjoy!
Sincerely,
Jim Mason
and I'm sure the story
isn't finished yet .....