John Johnson-Allen

They Were Just Skulls


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      They Were Just Skulls

      Published by

      Whittles Publishing Ltd.,

      Dunbeath,

      Caithness, KW6 6EG,

      Scotland, UK

       www.whittlespublishing.com

      ISBN 978-184995-404-4

      © 2018 Fred Henley & John Johnson-Allen

      All rights reserved.

      No part of this publication may be reproduced,

      stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted,

      in any form or by any means, electronic,

      mechanical, recording or otherwise

      without prior permission of the publishers.

      Contents

       Foreword

       Acknowledgements

       Introduction

       1 ‘We weren’t let off the hook’

       2 ‘We were armed with cutlasses’

       3 ‘We scarpered out into the bay’

       4 ‘There was a gunfight exploding all around us’

       5 ‘Would you like to come home and meet my mother?’

       6 ‘I managed to fight my way to the surface’

       7 ‘They were just skulls’

       8 ‘Two or three of us went down to Pompeii’

       Epilogue

       Appendix 1: Survivors of HMS Truculent

       Appendix 2: Subsmash telegram

       Bibliography

      For Fred

       Foreword

      Admiral the Rt Hon Lord West of Spithead GCB DSC PC

      This book tells an amazing story of a life served in the Royal Navy, of the sort of seaman that our country has been fortunate enough to breed for centuries. Fred Henley was born in 1924, and at the age of 94 is still going strong.

      His stalwart conduct of duty covered a period of some seventeen years afloat; on Thames barges and then in the RN from the outbreak of war. He served in cruisers, destroyers and coastal forces. Armed with a cutlass to board a German supply ship, he epitomised the transition from a mode of warfare that Drake would have understood to becoming an Asdic specialist, one of the new technologies that transformed naval warfare. In the thick of fighting for five years, he saw action in the Atlantic, the Arctic, and the western and eastern Mediterranean. He was involved in two large allied invasions, and was part of the vicious but little-known campaign in Greece and the Ionian Sea as the war drew to a close.

      In several amusing, sometimes poignant, anecdotes we see a young man who is honest about his drives. On VE Day, for example:

      There was one girl – she was dancing, she was lifting her frock up and she had red white and blue knickers on. So I said, ‘Don’t forget, at sunset the Union Jack comes down.’ She said, ‘Ooh, you might be lucky!’ But I’d had too much to drink for that!

      As part of the Allied occupation forces in Germany, he continues to give examples of his transparent view of life. He talks of fraternising with the civilian German population and refers to one young woman:

      Anyway she took me home to meet mother and we got on very friendly. She says to me, ‘I cannot let you have sex, because I have a husband.’ I asked where he was. She said, ‘I last heard of him in Stalingrad.’ I didn’t tell her I didn’t think he’d be coming back.

      Having survived, Fred Henley remained in the Navy after the war, at first in the hydrographic flotilla. Then as a married man he volunteered for submarines, for the extra pay. He was one of a handful of survivors from the loss of the submarine HMS Truculent, one of the great post-war submarine tragedies. Few people, even in the Navy, are even aware of this dreadful incident and certainly not the details of human error that led to this huge loss of life. The account is gripping, and explains the strange title of the book.

      John Johnson-Allen has put Fred Henley’s personal accounts in the context of world-changing events, and in particular provides a wonderful snapshot of the Royal Navy of that era.

      West of Spithead

       Acknowledgements

      I give my grateful thanks to:

      David Parry for his expert help with his knowledge of the Submarine Service.

      Richard Woodman and the late Peter Lewis, for their kindness in arranging a meeting with Fred Henley.

      George Malcolmson, Archivist at the Royal Naval Submarine Museum, for his enthusiastic and invaluable assistance.

      The staff at the National Archive, who helped willingly trying to find eventually unfindable documents.

      Sheena Florance, whose timely loan of a book was of great assistance.

      Keith Whittles and his team at Whittles publishing for their enthusiasm and support.

      Caroline Petherick, editor sans pareil, for her help in transforming my manuscript to what is here before you.

      And, although last definitely not least, my wife Claire for her steadfast support.

       Introduction

      I was introduced to Fred by a mutual acquaintance in April 2017. At the time he was a very sprightly 95-year-old. I had been given some clues as to the bare outlines of his naval service. The shortest time he spent on any one ship was the two and a half months he spent on Truculent, which was to end in her tragic sinking.

      He had had an early start to a seagoing life, sailing as mate at the age of only 14 on a Thames barge, skippered by his uncle.

      His wartime service was remarkably eventful. As a boy seaman on HMS London, he visited Archangel, sailed on Arctic convoys and was on a boarding party to capture a German supply ship.

      He followed this by three years in the Mediterranean on a motor launch, ML 463, where