Accounts and images of Hartlepool people serving in the Merchant Navy during the Second World War.
Hartlepool Northern Daily Mail, Monday, March 10th, 1941:
BOMBS AND BULLETS DEFIED.
Local Boy Who Took Over Ships Gun.
When a British steamer was attacked by a German aircraft, a 17-year-old West Hartlepool boy, who was on his first trip, continued to fire the ships antiaircraft gun until the order to take to the boats was given. The story of his bravery was told when survivors were landed at a West coast port recently. He is John Verrall, messroom boy on the steamer, and elder son of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Verrall, of West Hartlepool.
When the attack developed Verrall volunteered to help the third officer at the A.A. gun. The raider began to sweep the decks with machine-gun bullets. Verrall saw the third officer fall at his side, mortally wounded. John immediately took over the gun and kept up a constant fire on the raider every time it swooped over the decks.
It was the rear gun which killed the third officer, and Verrall avenged his death. The rear gun of the plane became suddenly silent, the explanation being that the ships gun had killed or wounded the Nazi gunner. Four other members of the ship’s crew were killed by the German bombs and bullets before the order to abandon ship was given. The lifeboats were irreparably damaged, and the crew had to use small boats and rafts.
“QUITE THRILLING”
The survivors were adrift for many hours before being picked up by a British warship. The rest of the crew praised highly the conduct of Verrall and of Tom Lowe, a 16-year-old Middlesbrough boy, who, after the boats had been launched, went back for his wounded Malayan friend and carried him back to the boat station and safety.
When seen by a “Northern Daily Mail” reporter, John Verrall hadn’t much to say about his experience, except that he acted in the obvious way after the third officer was killed. “It was quite thrilling while it lasted.” He said, “but we hadn’t a chance once the ship was hit. I didn’t know much about the gun, but I knew enough to keep it firing, and when the third officer went down I simply took his place. I meant to get the rear gunner if I could, and apparently I succeeded, for when the plane came back for another attack the rear gun was silent and never fired again”
An old boy of Lister Street School, Verrall was formally employed by a local timber firm, but when work became slack last autumn he decided he would be more use at sea. And he is by no means discouraged by his first experience. Already he has fixed up to join another ship.
More detail »Hartlepool Northern Daily Mail, Monday, December 11th, 1939:
West Hartlepool Steamer Sunk. CREW’S DASH FOR THE BOATS. “Miracle” All Saved. Men taken aboard a Lightship. One minute playing cards ... the next moment racing for the boats for their lives. This was the dramatic experience of the crew of 36 of the 4,815-ton West Hartlepool steamer Willowpool, who were landed by lifeboat at an East Coast port today, having been picked up by a lightship after the Willowpool had been mined.
A few of the men were slightly injured, but there was no serious casualty. For three hours the men rowed about before they were able to reach the lightship, where they waited until the lifeboat took them off.
Members of the crew told a Press Association reporter that the ship was set afire, and while they struggled to get to the boats, masts and stays collapsed around them. The wireless operator of the Willowpool had barely time to send out an S.O.S. “Somehow he managed to get out his message," said one the crew, “and then the apparatus 'conked' out”. “We were all of us playing cards one moment and racing to the boats the next. It was a miracle that we all got away." Another member of the crew said “we can thank our lucky stars that not one of us was killed. Water poured in. We abandoned ship and rowed away to the lightship. The Willowpool was then still afloat, but taking water at a great rate. She was heavily laden and it would have been hopeless to have stayed." He added that it was tight fit on the lifeboat later.
In the early days of the war the Willowpool rescued the crew of a Fleetwood trawler which had been shelled by a submarine in the Irish Sea.
The Willowpool is owned by the Pool Shipping Co. Ltd., of West Hartlepool. She was built at Stockton in 1925. The master of the Willowpool is Capt. N.G. Oliver, of 219 Park Road, West Hartlepool, and the chief officer is Mr. R. Elliott, of 6 Portinscale Terrace.