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HMCS
ALBERNI
Will be remembered on Sunday
4 May 2003 at HMCS CHIPPAWA, Winnipeg, MB
On
Sunday 4 May 2003, at HMCS CHIPPAWA, Winnipeg, Manitoba, the
annual service that commemorates the Battle of the Atlantic
will be held in the honour of HMCS ALBERNI and the ten Manitobans
that perished on 21 August 1944.
Currently,
representatives from the Naval Museum of Manitoba and HMCS CHIPPAWA
are organizing this future event. We are currently seeking out
living relatives of the ten Manitobans who will be honoured.
If you can help us with this project please contact Mark
Nelson.
The
ALBERNI
The
Alberni was a Flower Class Corvette named after the Canadian
city of Port Alberni on Vancouver Island. Built at the Yarrows
Ltd. shipyard in Esquimalt, British Columbia, and commissioned
on February 4, 1941, she was one of the first Corvettes built
by Canadian shipyards during WWII.
Ship
Type:
Corvette |
Class:
FLOWER
Class 1939-1940 |
Displacement:
950 Tonnes |
Length:
205.1 Feet |
Breadth:
33.1 Feet |
Draught:
11.5 Feet |
Top
Speed:
16 Knots |
Pendant
Number:
K103 |
#
of Officers:
6 |
#
of Crew:
79 |
Armament:
1-4" Gun, 1-2 pdr, 2-20mm, Hedgehog |
Builder:
Yarrows Ltd.. Esquimalt, B.C. |
Laid
Down:
19-Apr-40 |
Launched:
22-Aug-40 |
Commissioned:
4-Feb-41 |
Lost:
21-Aug-44 |
The
Story
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HMCS
ALBERNI, May 1941.
(Click photo
for larger image)
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HMCS
ALBERNI was commissioned at Esquimalt on February 4, 1941 and
she arrived at Halifax on April 13 in company with HMCS AGASSIZ.
On 23 May 41, the two ships departed for St. Johns to
join the recently formed Newfoundland Escort Force. ALBERNI
left the following month with a convoy for Iceland, and served
as a mid-ocean escort until May 42, when she was taken out of
service to have a new boiler installed. In September, 1942,
she had taken part in the defence of convoy SC.42, which lost
18 ships to as many U-boats. Assigned to duties in connection
with the invasion of North Africa, she sailed for the U.K. in
October with convoy HX.212, and until February, 1943, escorted
Convoys between the U.K. and the Mediterranean. She returned
to Halifax in March, 1943 and served briefly with WEEF before
transferring to Quebec Force in May. For the next five months
she escorted Quebec-Labrador convoys, leaving Gaspe on November
6 to undergo repairs at Liverpool, N.S. With repairs completed
early in February, she proceeded to Bermuda to work up, and
on her return to Halifax joined EG W-4. On April 24 she sailed
for the U.K. for duties connected with the coming invasion,
and was still engaged in these when, on August 21, 1944, she
was torpedoed and sunk by U480, southeast of the Isle of Wight.
Fifty-nine of her ships company lost their lives.
HMCS
ALBERNI SINKS IN THIRTY SECONDS
-- From THE
CANADIAN NAVY CHRONICLE Chapter 50 -
"Hath
made
an invisible eel to swim the haven at Dunkirk, and
sink all the shipping there. But how is't done? I'll show
you sir. It is automata, runs under water
and sinks
it straight. " - Ben Jonson, Staple of News
Named
after a town on Vancouver Island (and thus after Captain Don
Pedro Alberni who commanded the Spanish Soldiers sent to occupy
Nootka in 1790) HMCS ALBERNI was one of the earlier RCN corvettes
to see service, with a minimum of time allowed for work-ups
upon arrival at Halifax in April 1941.
She
escorted convoys to Iceland, participating in the desperate
fight around Convoy SC-42 in September, when fifteen merchantmen
were sunk and U-501 was destroyed by CHAMBLY and MOOSE JAW.
ALBERNI was then based on Londonderry, and made a name for herself
during 1942 by rescuing over 145 torpedoed merchant seamen on
two occasions. She was assigned to escorting convoys in support
of North African landings between Britain, Gibraltar and North
African Ports. She was present with the Mediterranean convoys
when VILLE DE QUEBEC and REGINA obtained their submarine kills
but, as with U 501, did not have the chance for direct participation
and credit. Reports did give ALBERNI a " Probably damaged"
verdict after an attack in 1941. Returning to Canada in March
1943, she served in the Western Local and in the Gulf Escort
Force in the St. Lawrence. Time was taken for a modest and partial
refit. In April 1844 she was one of seventeen RCN corvettes
sent to the UK in support of Operation Neptune, the landings
at Normandy. In June and July she escorted a miscellaneous collection
of landing craft and ships, barges, tugs and floating piers
for Mulberry and merchant ships between Southampton Water and
the Beaches.
On
26 July she shot down a German Junkers 88 that had attacked
her at almost sea level. ALBERNI opened fire with her starboard
Oerlikons and he after pom-pom as the plane tore toward her.
The Junkers climbed and banked to clear ALBERNI and her port
Oerlikons scored direct hits at close range. The enemy burst
into flames and exploded in the sea 100 yards off ALBERNI'S
port bow with no survivors. On 28 July she narrowly missed an
aircraft-laid mine, then a depth charge laid over an asdic contact
set off another mine 200 yards off ALBERNI'S starboard beam
without significant damage. It was an exciting time.
After
brief maintenance at Southampton, ALBERNI was ordered to relieve
HMCS DRUMHELLER on patrol for U-boats to the eastward of the
swept channel leading to the Normandy beaches. At 11:45 on 21
August she was streaming south at fourteen knots in fair weather
with a NNE wind of five knots but State Four seas for the rendezvous,
sweeping by asdic eighty-degrees on either bow, radar operating.
"Hands to Dinner" had just been piped. Four minutes
later, with no asdic warning whatsoever, she was hit by a torpedo
on her port side just aft of the engine room. In less than 10
seconds she was awash from the funnel aft, listing to port and
sinking fast. In another twenty seconds she was gone, sinking
stern first. Most of the off-watch hands were trapped in their
mess decks, and only one stoker escaped from the engine and
boiler rooms.
Her
CO, A/LCDr Ian H. Bell, RCNVR, a twenty-six-year-old former
lawyer, leaped out of his cabin at the explosion, planning to
dash to the bridge. He was washed over the side as the ship
foundered rapidly by the stern, with no time for orders or damage
control. There was not even time to release Carley floats, and
men, many without time to put on life belts as the ship foundered,
had to cling to odd pieces of debris. Fortunately the depth
charges did not explode, although there was a muffled boiler
explosion which did not seem to cause much harm. One seaman
credited the new-style RCN life jackets, with protective crotch
sections buckled to the upper jacket, with preventing groin
injuries. One rating in boots and trousers, struggling in the
sea, cast off his boots and then pushed down his trousers to
be able to swim more easily. He suddenly recalled that his dentures
were in the trouser pockets, so pulled them back up again. As
an intelligence officer commented later after questioning the
survivors, " He seemed to have all his teeth when I spoke
to him"
A/Lt
Frank Williams, a former football player and strong swimmer,
was credited with saving several lives including those of Donald
Wood, the ship's writer, and Ian Bell who was dazed by the suddenness
of his ship's destruction. Williams was later, in January 1945,
awarded the Royal Humane Society's bronze medal for saving life
at sea for his efforts on this day.
For
Forty-five minutes the dazed survivors struggled to keep from
drowning or giving up in heavy seas. Providentially HM motor
Torpedo boats 469 and 470, returning from duties off Normandy
and having seen an explosion and the startling disappearance
of the corvette on their horizon, altered course to investigate.
They came across the survivors and rescued three officers and
twenty-eight men of the ship's company of ninety. They were
taken to Portsmouth, where two moderately injured were admitted
to hospital.
TO:
CATP COASTAL FORCES
FROM: HMCS ALBERNI
ON BEHALF OF THE SURVIVING OFFICERS AND RATINGS IT IS REQUESTED
THAT OUR GRATITUDE & THANKS MAY BE TRANSMITTED TO THE
OFFICERS & SHIPS COMPANIES OF MTBS 470 & 469 FOR THEIR
SPLENDID SEAMANSHIP & RESUCE WORK IN CONNECTION WITH THE
RECENT LOSS OF HMCS ALBERNI.
TOO: 29/1605B
The
U-boat that had destroyed ALBERNI with an acoustic torpedo was
not identified at the time. In fact it was suspected that ALBERNI
might have been mined, as seven anti-submarine craft hunted
through the area the next day and found nothing. Post-war review
of German records indicate she was the first victim, of several
ships in the area of U-480 (OL Hans Jachim Forster) of the IX
U-Flottille, operating out of Brest, France. Less than twenty-eight
hours later Forster sank the RN Algerine's minesweeper LOYALTY
in almost exactly the same location with nineteen killed. She
and her flotilla had been sweeping the area for suspected mines,
partly as a result of ALBERNI 'S still unverified sinking. LOYALTY
had fouled her sweep with another Algernine's, dropped back
to recover her gear in hazy weather and was catching up with
Forster hit her in the stern with a GNAT. Fortunately that day
the minesweeper took twenty minutes to sink, although her CO
was lost. The lack of detection of the U-Boat may have been,
at least in part, due to its all-over Alberich rubber coating,
designed to absorb asdic sound waves.
Over
the next two days U-480 sank two more merchantmen in the area.
After sinking another, also in the Channel the following February,
Forster and U-480 were in their turn sunk by the RN frigates
DUCKWORTH and ROWLEY on 24 February 1945.
In
the mid-1980s there were diver's reports that the remains of
ALBERNI had been located just off the Isle of Wight. But these
are discounted by others who note the location is far too close
to the island near where she was sunk, and the description of
the vessel located does not appear to that of a corvette.
Ten
Manitobans
Ten
Manitobans, who were crew in HMCS ALBERNI, perished on 21 August
1944. They were:
JOHN
MULHOLLAND ALLAN, Able Seaman, V/24900, 24, Son of David
Miller Allan and Mary M. Allan, of St. Vital, Manitoba.
HENRY
JOHN MARIA COX, Petty Officer Stoker, V/67950, 30, Son
of Gerard and Cornelia Helen Cox, of Norwood, Manitoba; husband
of Flora Cox, of St. Vital, Manitoba.
INGVI SWAIN ERICKSON, Telegraphist, V/51886, 21, Son
of Ingvi S. and Herdis Erickson, of Arborg, Manitoba.
WALLACE WADDELL LAING, Ordinary Seaman, V/66845, 20,
Son of John A. and Mary M. Laing, of Winnipeg, Manitoba.
JAMES DONALD MCGRATH, Leading Seaman, V/652, 20, Son
of John and Isabella McGrath, of Winnipeg, Manitoba. McGrath
Lake in northern Manitoba has been named for him.
CYRIL BAILLIE MOFFAT, Able Seaman, V/24489, 26, Son of
David and Emmilene Elson Moffat, of Winnipeg, Manitoba; husband
of Erica Hagen Moffat, of Winnipeg.
THOMAS ALFRED SMITH, Leading Cook, V/24481, 29, Son of
Thomas Alfred and Louise Smith, of Norwood, Manitoba; husband
of Letitia J. Smith, of Gaspe, Province of Quebec.
DONALD
STEPHEN, Leading Telegraphist, V/24255, 27, Son of Peter
Stephen, and of Emily E. Stephen, of Fort Garry, Manitoba.
ALAN THOMAS TURNER, Able Seaman, V/50180, 20, Son of
Kathleen Turner, of Winnipeg, Manitoba.
JOHN
WILLIAM WHYTE, Able Seaman, V/50134, 31, Son of John
William and Jessie Ann Whyte, of Roblin, Manitoba; husband of
Marguerite Lillian Whyte, of Fort Frances, Ontario.
Complete
list of those lost on the ALBERNI
on 21 August 1944
Allan,
John M., AB
Angell, Bruce, AB
Barss, Walter C., ERA
Bosworth, Robt. C., Coder
Bouchard, J.J., ERA
Brock, George M., OS
Buchanan, G.W., AB
Campbell, Donald W., Sto
Carder, Wilfred W., OS
Clinton, Elmer J., L.Sto
Cosgrove, C.T., AB
Cox, Henry J.M., Sto P0
Culpepper, J.A., Sto P0
Cume, Wm. P., Sto P0
Dittloff, William, Sto
Drew, Robert F., Tel
Erickson, Ingvi S., Tel
Evans, Albert K., L.SA
Fulton, Hugh C., Lt
Gallagher, G.J., LS
Garvey, Donald N., Sto
Graham, Alvin J., Sig
Grais, Donald B., ERA
Grant, Malcolm S., Lt
Griffiths, Ed. S., Sto
Hamilton, John P., Lt
Hammond, John A., Sto
Hatcher, Arthur M., LS
Henderson, Hugh M., Surg Lt
Horley, Wallace C., Sto
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Irving,
James C., L.Coder
Jenks, Keith W., 0.Tel
Jones, Donald 0., AB
Karns, Robert J., Sto
Kirkpatrick, S.M., Tel
Koster, John B., ERA
Kowbell, Morris, AB
Laing, Wallace W., OS
Lang, Robert A., ERA
Lee, Donald, F., P0
Lighthall, A.E., CPO
McDermott, Joseph G., Sto P0
McGrath, James D., LS
Mclnnes, Wm. S., AB
Merk, George A., Stwd
Moffat, Cyril B., A13
Page, Ivan E., OS
Paquet, J.A.R., L.Stwd
Pilon, Joseph G., Sto
Plott, John, L.Sto
Rogers, Nicholl, Cook
Smith, Thomas A., L.Cook
Stephen, Donald, L.Tel
Stuart, George A., AB
Turner, Alan T., AB
Walker, James, AB
Whyte, John W., AB
Wilkinson, H.E., L.Sto
Wright, Thomas, Sto. |
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Reference:
THE CANADIAN NAVY CHRONICLE, Fraser McKee, Robert
Darlington, Chapter 50
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©1996-2004
- The Naval Museum of Manitoba - 1 Navy Way - Winnipeg Manitoba
- R3C 4J7
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