Stories from Maritime America

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Spud Campbell Spud Campbell describes the sinking of the Liberty ship SS Henry Bacon by German aircraft on February 23, 1945. Sixteen merchant mariners and twelve members of the Navy Armed Guard were killed in this attack. Clues about the mission So I traveled back to my next ship, which was in Boston, and was the SS Henry Bacon. And when I first saw the ship, I took note of the fact that it was battle-weary looking, like I was, really. It had been through a lot. It had been in dry dock, and I noticed that they had added reinforcing along the sides of the ship. And they had also added a lot of new radiators for heat. And when I went aboard and met Captain Carini Captain Alfred Carini who was to be my captain and my very good friend. He had been at sea a long time, and he knew where we were going. And he didn t tell me. He just said, when I brought up the fact that it seemed to have Arctic-type gear aboard,

he said, Well, you can just draw your own conclusions about where we were going. So I did. I knew at that time that we had to be the dreaded Murmansk run, because I knew, I d heard a lot about it. I read about it, where many, many ships, sometimes almost all of a convoy had been destroyed by the German Navy, which had been stationed along the coast of Norway after they had invaded and occupied Norway. But I did, after second thoughts, I did decide to stay aboard and to make that trip, because I was curious. Arriving in Murmansk We managed to get around Norway, and over to Murmansk, which is well up above the Arctic Circle. It s like almost to the North Pole, you might say. And it s only navigable in the winter like that, because of the Gulf Stream effect, which warms the water to some degree, so you don t have icebergs, you don t have frozen water there, although the temperature is below freezing. And we finally got to, after about ten days of travel, we arrived at the little city of Murmansk. But we did see the city, and we picked up souvenirs, and that sort of thing,

what little there was available. And we unloaded our cargo, which was mostly war materials and food-stuffs, but we had locomotives and tanks and guns and that sort of thing on deck as deck cargo. And at that point, as usual, I had no duties to speak of in port. And they were very strict about sealing the radio room because they didn t really trust us, even though we were friends, and we were helping, and we were in a joint effort. Norwegian refugees Well, later, as we were anchored out in the harbor, preparing to leave, we noticed a British destroyer came alongside, and they deposited nineteen people aboard our ship, and we learned that they were Norwegian refugees who had been picked up off the coast of Norway by the British Navy, and brought to Murmansk, along with about five hundred people who had been chased out of their homes by the Nazis

and they had lived in caves, if you can believe it, in the Arctic, in the winter. And so they were they were put aboard our ship. We had no facilities we did make room for them, gave em places to sleep, and we gave em a chance to take a bath. Because some of them, they had lice and all sorts of problems. And so we took these people aboard, as passengers, on a ship not equipped for passengers, but we had enough food for them, and what-not. Aircraft attacks And we headed back out to sea, and immediately, we were attacked. and a couple of ships were sunk right outside the harbor. And they picked up the survivors from those ships. And then we headed on out to sea around northern Norway, and we were attacked by aircraft. And, the our gunners were able to hold them off the first time. And the weather suddenly began to we came in to, we had a gale force winds,

which broke up the convoy; we couldn t stay together. Our rudder was damaged. And this lasted for two or three days. And it was so rough, that we were not able to even sleep on the ship. You couldn t even stay on bed you d roll right out of the bed if you tried to sleep. But we had our duties, also. I had to stay on duty because of the attack by the aircraft. And after three days of this, and being oscillated, our ship had strayed back behind the convoy we had no escort at that time, so the planes came in again, and someone counted twenty-three torpedo bombers heading toward our ship. Our one little ship with a cargo of humanity. And they attacked us. And our gunners, who were very, very proficient in their activities they downed five of their, of the Nazi planes before they finally hit us with a torpedo. And we realized that the ship was doomed. The captain gave me a message, I sent out

a distress message that we had been attacked, and gave our position. And I got an answer from Scotland. The convoy up ahead did not acknowledge it, but they heard it. They didn t break radio silence, which would have given away their position. Torpedo hits So, at that point, the ship was, well, fatal mortally wounded, you might say. And the captain realized that. And he started giving orders about launching lifeboats. They found two of our lifeboats of the four we had four lifeboats and two of them had been so damaged in the storm that they were not usable. And we had two left. So the captain, on the first boat, he put all the Norwegians, the nineteen Norwegians, who consisted of young babies, little children, up to old men and women. And he put them aboard one lifeboat, and he assigned me, with my little lifeboat transmitter, to go aboard with them,

along with six young seamen who would handle the lifeboat. So we were launched into that, and we pushed away from the ship safely, even though the water was still very rough. And I was able to erect two masts together and get the antenna erected, and to get my little black box to working so it could send out a signal that could be used for beaming in to pick us up. With all the work I had to do, I became sea-sick. Witnessing loss and survival And after hanging over the side for a few minutes, I was back to work again. And we saw the ship as it slid into the water, the captain still aboard. Twenty-six of our crew about half of our crew who had to go into the water were drowned and frozen. Some a few that went into the water, survived, and were picked up later by the British destroyers that came back from the convoy. It took about three hours for them to get back, and they, and they came alongside us, and we, we had to first, we had to get all the young ones onto the destroyer by,

well, with the condition that the water was, at one instant, you d be thirty feet below the deck of the destroyer, and the next instant, you re level with it. And each time we were level with it, we would hand a baby, or a woman, or some old person to the crew on the destroyer. And this was the SS Opportune HMS Opportune. And we finally got everybody aboard, and then I scrambled aboard, and passed out. I didn t remember a thing after that until the next morning. And I was woken awake, and realized that I was in about two feet of space from my bunk to the one above me, in an area of the bow of this destroyer. And I was alive. That was the best news. And after cleaning up all the stink and vomit stench of my condition, I was able to, to maybe have a shot of brandy, which is the British Navy s way of treating people. And we spent a week on that ship, and we came to Scotland. We were met by the Crown Prince Olaf of Norway, who was in England at that time. The royal family had escaped and came to England during the war.

And he met us and was very grateful to the fact that we were able to save those nineteen people. -fin