Read I Sank The Bismarck Online

Authors: John Moffat

I Sank The Bismarck (35 page)

love of flying

at Netheravon and conditions at

posted to Eastleigh for naval fighter aircraft instruction

practises dropping of mines

at St Vincent

sent to Naval Air Station Arbroath to practise carrier landings

TSR aircraft course at Abbotsinch and flying of Swordfish

weekend leave

Personal Life

courtship with and marriage to Marjorie

diagnosed with septicaemia

as hotel manager

interest in fishing

and rugby

sighting of
Ark Royal
wreckage

Moffat, Marjorie (wife)

Moffat, Mary (mother)

Moffat, Peter (father)

Mombasa

Moore, Sub-Lieutenant

Munich Agreement

Mussolini, Benito

Nagumo, Admiral

Narvik, Battle of

Naval Air Service Reserve

Netheravon

Newson RN, Captain

Norfolk,
HMS

Norfolk, Lieutenant Val

North, Percy

Norwegian campaign

observers

Oliver, Chief Petty Officer

Olivier, Laurence

Opdell, Sub-Lieutenant Peter

Operation Collar

Operation Excess

Oran (Algeria)

operation against French ships in

O'Sullivan, Lieutenant 'Spike'

Owensmith, Lieutenant Alan

Patch, Captain Ollie

Pearl Harbour

Pearson, Sub-Lieutenant

Penrose, Sub-Lieutenant

pocket battleships

Polykarp

Pound, Admiral Sir Dudley

Prince of Wales

attack on by
Bismarck
and damaging of

damage inflicted on
Bismarck

sinking of by Japanese bombers

Prinz Eugen

Provence

Queen Elizabeth,
HMS

Ramillies,
HMS

Ramsey, Admiral

remembrance ceremonies

Renown,
HMS

Repulse

sinking of

Resolution,
HMS

Revenge

Richardson, Ralph

Richelieu

Rocs

Rodney,
HMS

Rommel, Field Marshal Erwin

Rose, Sub-Lieutenant

Royal Air Force (RAF)

Royal Naval Air Service (RNAS)

Royal Naval College (Greenwich)

Royal Oak

Royal Sovereign

St Vincent barracks

Sampson, Commander Charles

San Casimiro

Sanderling, HMS (Abbotsinch)

Sardinia

Tirso dam operation

Scapa Flow

Scharnhorst

attack on
Glorious
and sinking of

impact of

search of by
Ark Royal

sinking of convoys by

wiping out of 825 Squadron in attempted attack on

Shaw, Lt Commander Terence ('Shaggy')

Sheffield,
HMS

accidental firing on by Swordfish

firing on by
Bismarck

Shepherd, Mr

Sink the Bismarck!
(film)

Skuas

SM.79s

Somerville, Rear Admiral 'Slim'

in charge of Eastern fleet

commander of
Renown

exoneration of

Italian fleet attack and inquiry

popularity and respect for

stickler for training/practice

Somerville, Mark (nephew)

Southampton,
HMS

Southern Rhodesian Mounted Police

Spanish Civil War

Spitfires

Squadron 759

Squadron 810

Squadron 818

Squadron 820

Squadron 825

wiping out of in attack on German warships

Stewart-Moore, Lt Commander

Strasbourg

Stringer, Commander Pat

Stukas (Junkers 87)

Suffolk,
HMS

Sutton, 'Lucky'

Swanton, Sub-Lieutenant

Swayne, Lieutenant

Swordfish

Taranto harbour

attack on Italian fleet at

Taylour, Lieutenant

Thompson, 'Bagshot'

Tillard, Lt Commander Arthur

Tillard, Lt Commander Rupert

Tirpitz

Tirso dam operation

Tivey, 'Tan'

Tovey, Admiral John

Traill, Commander Henry

Trento

Trincomalee

TSR aircraft course (Torpedo Spotter and Reconnaissance)

U-boat attacks

'Val'

Valiant,
HMS

Victorious

launching of Swordfish strike on
Bismarck

Wakama

Wake-Walker, Admiral

Walker, Sub-Lieutenant

warheads

Warspite

Watt, Sub-Lieutenant

Wellham, Lieutenant John

Williamson, Lt Commander

Wilmot, Chief Petty Officer

Woodward, Midshipman

Worthy Down

Wryneck

Yamamoto, Admiral

Zero fighter

Zulu,
HMS

In our final prank at Greenwich
before we went to our various
squadrons, we hoisted this field gun
onto the protective brick tower in the
dead of night.

This portrait was taken when I
was eighty-five years old while we were
filming the wreck of the
Ark Royal.

The Black Hand Gang poses for
its last picture.
From left to right
: Eric
Margetts, Robert Lawson, me, Buster
May and Glan Evans.

My Swordfish
after the crash
in Scotland. The
lower wing is
further back down
the track, and it
seems to have
taken the top off a
decent fir tree.

HMS
Argus
was one
of the ugliest carriers afloat, but she
managed to survive the war. Her
deck lifts were an odd shape and,
even with their wings folded, the
Swordfish were a tight fit.

I was happier
on the
Ark Royal,
which
still had a squadron of
Skuas on board. It was
this aircraft that had
made me think of
flying Swordfish.

This photo is of my first
deck landing, which I did a few
days after joining the
Ark.
There
were plenty of spectators wanting
to see me make a mess of it.

The flight
deck of the
Ark
could be a noisy
and dangerous
place. Here, two
squadrons of
Swordfish are
ranged up, their
engines starting
as they prepare
for take-off.

This Swordfish has an 18in
torpedo mounted underneath it.
This was an exercise – if it had
been a real mission an observer
and air gunner would have been
in the rear cockpit.

Aircraft could be catapulted
off the front of the flight deck, and
here a Skua and a Swordfish are
ready to be launched. Another
Swordfish waits in the queue.

A Fulmar, its tail hook
down, makes a hash of
landing. The unmistakable
figure of Pat Stringer is
running for safety.

The ready rooms under
the bridge were always a hive
of activity. During the hunt
for the German cruiser
Scharnhorst
we slept in
here for several days.

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