Tony Turvill’s brief wartime experience as a Merchant Navy Cadet ~ 1944 to 1946.In 1943, when I was 15 years old, I worked in the drawing office of the Union Cold Storage Co. in Smithfield, London. The Blue Star Line shipping company had an office in the same building and in my lunch hour I used to visit them and talk to the staff and at the same time studied drawings of various ships owned by Blue Star.
This got me very interested in going to sea so I applied to Blue Star for a cadetship and to my surprise was accepted; shortly after I received a letter from Blue Star containing a railway ticket to Cardiff to join the
Royal Star. After kitting myself out with the necessary uniform etc, in January 1944, at the tender age of 16, I joined the
Royal Star.
On my first trip we sailed in convoy to Freetown, West Africa and from there, unescorted, to Buenos Aires, where the ship was loaded with frozen meat, for the return journey England, via West Africa. The
Royal Star had done this trip since the beginning of the war. As we were approaching West Africa the ship was diverted to Dakar, and from there we were instructed to sail to Gibraltar, discharging meat for our troops. Our next port of call was Algiers, where we joined an American convoy bound for Malta.
On the 19th April 1944, 30 miles off Algiers, the convoy was attacked by German planes and unfortunately the
Royal Star was hit by an aerial torpedo in the engine room. She did not sink immediately, but listed 30 to 40 degrees, the frozen cargo keeping it afloat. However, in the middle of the night the cargo moved and we had to abandon ship.
As we had lost two lifeboats when the torpedo struck, the remaining two, together with some rafts, were very overcrowded. After several hours an American Destroyer picked us up, after having capsized our lifeboats and we managed to clamber up the nets and board the ship.
The
Royal Star was still afloat the next morning and a Royal Navy tug came out to try and beach the ship and save the cargo, but the tug moved very slowly at 2 knots, and at 11 am on the 20th April the
Royal Star sank. The American destroyer returned us to Algiers where we boarded a troopship which returned us to England.
After kitting myself out again, I joined a new ship in Greenock, Scotland, which was called the
Empire Talisman (later renamed the
Tacoma Star). Her maiden voyage was to Montreal, Canada, where we had the hatches insulated for frozen cargo, this being done in Canada due to the shortage of timber in England.
I did a further three trips to Canada, and then, whilst on leave in September 1945, I was taken ill with kidney trouble and spent four months in hospital, after which I was discharged physically unfit for service at sea.
© Tony Turvill 2012
See:
Royal Star 1 and Tony's model of the Tacoma Star