Page 1 of 2 1 2 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 12

Article: Atlantic Convoys - John Auld RIP

  1. Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    Battle - East Sussex
    Posts
    1,588
    Thanks (Given)
    105
    Thanks (Received)
    2074
    Likes (Given)
    127
    Likes (Received)
    1743

    Jump to Comments

    Atlantic Convoys - John Auld RIP

    11 Comments by Brian Probetts (Site Admin) Published on 6th April 2022 01:52 PM
    John Auld
    John Auld.jpg


    These are some of my wartime experiences from 15 years of age until wars end 1945, 22 years old. The North Atlantic or Western Ocean in maritime terms which I crossed back and forth thirty times in 6 ½ years can at times be like a duck pond and at other times very rough with huge mountainous waves. Hence the survival rate among merchant seamen was nil, if you were shipwrecked by the enemy. Although I travelled to many parts of the world delivering troops and cargo, India, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, South America, Canada nine times out of ten we would leave Britain via the Western Ocean and come back via the Panama Canal. Then it was time to don the life jackets for the next 3,500 miles back to Britain. I joined the Merchant Navy in 1938 about one year before the war started. I did many trips to the West Indies, South America, Brazil, Argentina, carrying black oil and aviation spirit. They were small tankers 12 to 15,000 tons. The war began in September 1939. We were in the South Atlantic off Venezuela with a full cargo of aviation spirit. It was all hands-on deck painting all the brass port holes and white upper structures dark grey at reduced speed (in the tropics) when war was declared. We got back to Shell Haven, London, and discharged our cargo, aviation spirit, safely. Five days in port and then off again to Curacao, West Indies, for another load, this time black oil luckily. (December 1939) It was the return trip to London (Shell Haven) when things went wrong. We couldn’t get a berth in London but got orders to proceed to the port of Hull, 150 miles up the coast. As we were going through the wide entrance of the River Humber the ship suffered an almighty explosion. One I will never forget. It blew a huge hole in the stern which slowly started to sink but the cargo was still intact and this buoyancy kept the rest of the ship from disappearing under the waves. Of the thirty-six crew a few injured but all survived to be taken off by a patrol boat. I believe they salvaged the cargo and towed the vessel up to Hull and built a new stern on her.

    (At 16.00 hour on 10 December 1939 the Willowpool dispersed from convoy HG-9,
    struck a mine, laid on 21 November by U-20 3 miles east from Newarp Lightship and sank.
    The master and 35 crew members were picked up by the Gorleston lifeboat.)


    Had we been on board the same aviation fuel as two months before there would have been a huge fireball. Luck was on my side. After the tankers I decided to go for a change and in 1940 joined the Chilean Reefer, a small Danish motor ship. She was faster than others. So once into the Atlantic travelled alone to dodge the subs. She tossed around like a cork in bad weather.

    We made several trips to Canada (Montreal). It took two months the round trip, hugging the icebergs, Greenland and Newfoundland, in an effort to dodge the submarines. It was one of these trips to London that we struck the bombing which went on for about two years I believe, thousands killed. We were there for two weeks and I thought I would rather be at sea any day. The noise of the explosions on the ground, enemy bombers roaring above, ack-ack guns shooting back, search lights zooming up, fire engines screaming around, it continued day and night. We survived but it was nerve wracking. Until the time we left to sail up the coast, which is only twenty minutes’ fly time from Germany, about midnight off the Norfolk coast we struck it again. We were attacked by German dive bombers. They dropped flares to light up the ships. The same story a few hours before, Ack-ack guns from the ships; only difference the bombs were hitting water not concrete. There was an almighty explosion to the left of us which nearly roller us over. An aerial torpedo had gone over the top of us and slammed into a Dutch ship about a cable away. The whole attack lasted about an hour with two further bangs down the convoy so two more must have gone down. So we carried on to the top of Scotland ever watchful and proceeded to head out for Canada. With submarine warfare it is all stealth on a ship. You don’t know when it is coming until you are hit. Lucky again. About two years ago I was reading the current RSA review and was astounded to read that the Chilean Reefer was sunk by the German pocket battleship Scharnhorst. So much for travelling alone without convoy. It appeared that it happened the trip after I left her. Lucky again. Then I went to Liverpool and joined the big ships (troop carriers). That was when I sailed to different parts of the world.

    1942 saw me on the Dominion Monarch (a 30,000-ton troop carrier). We were 400 miles off the Australian coast heading for Sydney to pick up troops when we received an urgent signal to turn around and get lost until further orders. A Japanese submarine had invaded Sydney harbour. It had shelled Bondi and put four suicide small subs into the harbour. They sank a small naval ship. But that was all the damage they did and in the process the four Japanese were drowned. For a long time the wrecks of the one man subs were on Garden Island. The rest of my time was uneventful with bigger convoys and more naval escorts, plus the Germans were getting a hiding on all fronts and long-range planes were knocking the submarines.

    However, in January 1945 we left the UK and headed for (New York) America. We loaded up with supplies and ammunition with orders to proceed to Leyte in the Philippines. Right into the war zone. As we arrived after an uneventful trip across the Pacific, going up the coast near Leyte, there were scores of wrecked planes in the scorched jungle. Japanese and American. Leyte was a shambles. We discharged into barges in the stream. I forgot to mention that I was in a cargo boat by this time. We called at a couple of islands dropping stores for the Americans then sailed south to Brisbane. However, I read a paperback a couple of years ago, written by an ex Kamikaze one-man submarine pilot who said that the mother sub with two small subs attached was on patrol near Philippines when the captain sited a ship through his periscope. This young kamikaze said launch me Captain, I will sink it. But the wise old captain said no, it is only a cargo boat, we will save you for a better target, a naval ship. The young kamikaze must have survived because he wrote the book. And the war with Japan ended seven months later.

    Discharge A.jpg
    Discharge C.jpgDischarge B.jpg
    Last edited by Brian Probetts (Site Admin); 10th April 2022 at 09:08 AM.
    Brian Probetts (site admin)
    R760142

  2. Total Comments 11

    Comments

  3. #2
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    Cheshire
    Posts
    824
    Thanks (Given)
    1153
    Thanks (Received)
    1355
    Likes (Given)
    573
    Likes (Received)
    3168

    Default Re: Atlantic Convoys - John Auld

    Thank you, John, (via Brian)
    Really good, interesting read.
    regards
    Brenda

  4. #3
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Posts
    1,343
    Thanks (Given)
    892
    Thanks (Received)
    2107
    Likes (Given)
    1884
    Likes (Received)
    4284

    Default Re: Atlantic Convoys - John Auld

    I thoroughly enjoyed perusing the contents of this real life story written by a brave seaman.
    Many thanks John.

    Best Regards from,
    Fouro.

  5. #4
    Join Date
    Aug 2014
    Location
    sussex
    Posts
    8
    Thanks (Given)
    0
    Thanks (Received)
    9
    Likes (Given)
    0
    Likes (Received)
    25

    Default Re: Atlantic Convoys - John Auld RIP

    The Merchant Navy Seamen who served during the War Years were all Heros as far as I am concerned
    There is a Monument to them at Tower Hill opposite the Tower and I try to go there to see it whenever I am in London
    I have just joined EVERADS Group as I started my SEA CAREER with them
    And I am reading One way Ticket about Bob Young who went through WW2 and the the Convoys
    And he went on various Secret Missions as Well
    Thats is an Incredible True Story also

  6. #5
    Join Date
    Mar 2013
    Location
    Sydney, Australia.
    Posts
    6
    Thanks (Given)
    0
    Thanks (Received)
    17
    Likes (Given)
    0
    Likes (Received)
    22

    Thumbs up Re: Atlantic Convoys - John Auld RIP

    Quote Originally Posted by Brian Probetts (Site Admin) View Post
    John Auld
    John Auld.jpg


    These are some of my wartime experiences from 15 years of age until wars end 1945, 22 years old. This young kamikaze said launch me Captain, I will sink it. But the wise old captain said no, it is only a cargo boat, we will save you for a better target, a naval ship. The young kamikaze must have survived because he wrote the book. And the war with Japan ended seven months later.



    Wow - Thank you so much for this article. My father Ken Walker joined the MN in Liverpool, when he was 14 years and 5 months - just 6 months before WW2. He crossed the Atlantic 15 times during WW2 and went on 2 missions to Arkangel and Murmaski, Russia.
    Last edited by Doc Vernon; 20th April 2022 at 02:13 PM.

  7. #6
    Join Date
    Nov 2014
    Location
    Patagual....just inland from Coronel, Chile.
    Posts
    81
    Thanks (Given)
    17
    Thanks (Received)
    70
    Likes (Given)
    252
    Likes (Received)
    263

    Default Re: Atlantic Convoys - John Auld RIP

    Hi Graham,
    There is a nice monument to the Merchant Navy Personnel who perished in WWII in Portsmouth too...well worth a visit.

    Is the book you mentioned... "One-way-Ticket" about Bob Young, is it available as an online read? Be most grateful for a link.
    Thanks, Steve.

  8. Thanks Doc Vernon thanked for this post
  9. #7
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    Blue Mountains NSW
    Posts
    24,237
    Thanks (Given)
    45055
    Thanks (Received)
    13135
    Likes (Given)
    52440
    Likes (Received)
    39422

    Default Re: Atlantic Convoys - John Auld RIP

    Would this be the same Person at all? I am a wee bit confused ?? Sorry

    Able Seaman William Patrick Young: The War never ended inside his soul – WW2Wrecks.com

    This following is avaiable at the Kindle Library at a Nominal cost!

    A One Way Ticket (4 book series) Kindle edition (amazon.co.uk)
    Last edited by Doc Vernon; 20th April 2022 at 09:49 PM.
    Senior Site Moderator-Member and Friend of this Website

    R697530

  10. #8
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    Cooma NSW
    Posts
    9,051
    Thanks (Given)
    10290
    Thanks (Received)
    5262
    Likes (Given)
    44491
    Likes (Received)
    27089

    Default Re: Atlantic Convoys - John Auld RIP

    Thanks for posting this Brian the more stories from these Hero's the more people who look into the site may remember them.
    Des

    MN Flag243.jpg

    Lest We Forget
    R510868
    Lest We Forget

  11. #9
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    Sunbury Victoria Australia
    Posts
    25,081
    Thanks (Given)
    8345
    Thanks (Received)
    10153
    Likes (Given)
    106950
    Likes (Received)
    45821

    Default Re: Atlantic Convoys - John Auld RIP

    The site near Tower Hill is one of the most comprehensive there is.
    Have visited it a couple of times and it makes you think about what those seamen went through, often unknown by the public, for the benefit of the nation.
    Without them the story may well have had a different ending.
    Happy daze John in Oz.

    Life is too short to blend in.

    John Strange R737787
    World Traveller

  12. #10
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Posts
    1,343
    Thanks (Given)
    892
    Thanks (Received)
    2107
    Likes (Given)
    1884
    Likes (Received)
    4284

    Default Re: Atlantic Convoys - John Auld RIP

    Quote Originally Posted by happy daze john in oz View Post
    The site near Tower Hill is one of the most comprehensive there is.
    Have visited it a couple of times and it makes you think about what those seamen went through, often unknown by the public, for the benefit of the nation.
    Without them the story may well have had a different ending.
    It makes me very angry when I think of its wartime contributions and the thousands of brave Merchant Navy seamen who lost their lives that the MN were not allowed to take part in the annual Remembrance Day march past the Cenotaph until the year 2000, yet the MN Red Ensign has been flown on the monument in Whitehall since 1919.

    Fouro.

Page 1 of 2 1 2 LastLast

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •