In the last part of Chapter Three of my story, "Joining The War At Sea
1939-1945", there is a sequence in both the web edition and on pages 67-71
of the paperback editions concerning the travails of Convoy ON-67. The U.S.
escorts that joined Convoy ON-67 for the last half of its voyage westward
to Halifax were commanded by Commander A. C. Murdaugh. He was assigned to
this duty because he was the senior U.S. destroyer Commanding Officer present.
He was then commanding the U.S.S. Edison, DD439. Murdaugh was Edison's first
skipper.
In the Chapter Three sequence, the story recounts the aggressive U-boat attacks
on Convoy ON-67 after the U.S. escort assignment began, and the tragic losses
the convoy then sustained. My fuller appreciation for one of the most heroic
performances of duty in ON-67 has come to me in an e-mail of 02/12/2000,
followed by a mail packet from the U.K. postdated 02/17/2000. These
communications came from Sue Peake, granddaughter of Gunner Philip Horne
who lost his life on the Rescue Ship Toward as the result of her torpedoing
on 7 February 1943. I used SS Toward in my story and Sue refers to the Rescue
Ship Toward, or R.S. Toward. Same ship.
For my own part here, I would note that ON-67s losses were sustained in the
period 21-24 February 1942, and that these words are being composed on 24
February 2000. This caps a series of February coincidences.
I would ask the readers to return to my story in Chapter Three to re-acquaint
themselves with the particulars of the converted British rescue ship the
SS Toward and the courageous effort she made to save torpedoed sailors from
Convoy ON-67. Until her own loss in February 1943, we can only infer that
a number of convoys and sailors owe a mitigation of their perils to the Toward.
Herewith then are the materials that Sue Peake supplied in her post of 16
February 2000 to me.
First , a photo of the Toward taken, according to Sue Peake's note to me
of 16 Feb. 2000, about 1936 or 1937. The Imperial War Museum could furnish
no other information. Sue reports that the Ministry of Defence hired the
Toward for the Ministry of War Transport. She was owned by the Clyde Shipping
Co. and was built in 1923 by A. Stephens & Sons, Glasgow. She displaced
1571 tons, was 270 feet long, had a beam of 37 feet and drew 17 feet of water.
In this photo she shows two masts and a single funnel with no kingposts.
Close examination of earlier generations of this photo reveal outrigging
capabilities fore and aft. While on convoy duty in the Atlantic during World
War II, U.S. sailors saw dozens of ships with counter sterns like Toward's
stern.
Here now, the three-page report Sue Peake unearthed
from Britain's Shipping Casualties Section. This report covers the interview
with Toward's Chief Officer, Mr. G.L. Campbell. This interview took place
on 23 February 1943.

The three pages
containing the report of the interview with Chief Officer Campbell obviously
came from a bound volume. In reproducing those pages to forward to Sue Peake,
the Ministry of Defence copy machine operator was not able to get a clear
reprint all the way into the binding. The copy that Sue sent to me showed
this unmistakably. In scanning the three pages to create this Appendix C
to the original story, "Joining The War At Sea 1939-1945", I left out most
of the black vertical mark from the scanning field because it contained no
information.
Who from the Celtic Star, or the Afrika or the Robert E. Hopkins are alive
today to make this story more complete? Did Toward's 2nd Engineer,
Mr. Moodie, survive? The report's Distribution names are intriguing. Campbell
reported in his interview that the Corvette HMS "K.38" (Mignonette) picked
up 26 survivors from the Toward. Very likely other survivors were interviewed.
Whether any were on the distribution list for Campbell's interview, we do
not know. But that Distribution List, even given the loss of information
in the black streak due to the binding, still contains some interesting names.
What role if any did Lt. Read, Cdr. Dillon Robinson, Cdr. R. Lister Kaye,
Cdr. Winn, Captain Boswick, and Mr. W.H. Allen of the Foreign Office play
in this fortune of war of 57 years ago? Finally, the fitting last disposition
on the Distribution is "Files." That will remind any U.S. schoolchild of
the first part of the 20th century of Files-on-Parade. Though
that Files-on-Parade is an element of a marching order I once knew but is
also long gone, Files' message in Kipling's poem "Danny Deever" certainly
evokes the finiteness of life.
" 'Is cot was right-'and cot to mine," said Files-on-Parade.
"E's sleepin' out an' far tonight," the Color Sergeant said.
"I've drunk his beer a score o' times," said Files-on-Parade.
"'E's drinkin' bitter beer alone, "the Color Sergeant said.
Perhaps Kipling viewed bitter beer as a synonym for beer. Most of us would
predict a better outcome for heaven's beer than the Color Sergeant did. Not
bitter, not sweet, but,..... beer.
Franklyn E. Dailey Jr. February 24, 2000
My Sis would have been 78 today. She left us on December 11, 1999. She is
fourth from the right in the front row (with the large corsage on her right
lapel) of the ship's party picture on page 185 of the paperback edition of
"Joining The War At Sea 1939-1945." (ISBN 0966625102) That picture can be
found in Chapter Six of this web edition. Sis would
have enjoyed this Appendix and I hope the readers do too.
We are all indebted to Sue Peake for providing the information that furnishes
the entire basis for this Appendix. These archived treasures are not treasures
at all until a granddaughter remembers and shares them with us.
Copyright 1998 Franklyn E. Dailey Jr.
- dailey@crocker.com
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