| "It was in the early hours
of the morning when we were hit, and I must have been completely
asleep inasmuch I never heard the explosion. The first thing
I remember were people rushing about shouting, and my sleeping
quarters being in complete darkness - eventually the alarm
bell sounded and the emergency lights came on. It was then
that my sleep sodden mind grasped the fact that there was
something up, so grabbing my socks and gym shoes (we went
to bed nearly fully clothed at such times) I rushed up three
flights of deck and upon reaching the top, proceeded to my
allotted boat station. However, blocking the way were 30 or
40 nurses who were lining up to their boat station, but they
moved back when requested. so I could move through - those
girls were marvellous Having reached my boat station I found
the lifeboat had already been launched; by now it was daylight
and an announcement from the bridge told us the ship was in
no immediate danger of sinking, even though it was listing
quite bit to the port side.
Two small incidents still stick in my mind. There were two
American reporters, one saying to the other "Boy! is
this some scoop." The other was of a paratrooper writh’ing
on the deck in agony, two of his mates were trying to help
him, one of whom told me he was suffering from chronic arthritis.
Soon after this, I realised I had left my pistol on my bunk
bed (a pistol was the personal arms for all tank crews, irrespective
of rank) so I immediately went down the three flights of deck
to recover it. Arriving back on the top deck, I heard that
breakfast was being served and could be collected from the
ship’s galley; this involved getting into a queue which
wandered backwards and forwards through four decks, and when
I did eventually arrive at the serving point I was given one
pickled herring and a chunk of ships bread which, needless
to say, was more than welcome.
At about mid-day, we were numbered into batches, mine being
number two, and ordered to go to the stern where a destroyer,
H.M.S. Pathfinder, was moored alongside. Ropes had been secured
to our ship’s railings in order we could slide down
on to the destroyer’s deck, and as I went down I felt
a blast of hot air; upon looking up I saw the Strathallan’s
funnel acting like a gigantic blow-torch, and it was only
then I realised she was on fire. After landing safely on the
destroyer I was ordered to her stern, and found one of our
paratroopers sitting on a depth charge, smoking. He was soon
ordered off by a naval rating, whose action station this happened
to be, as apparently the "Asdic" had recorded a
"ping".
This proved to be a false alarm and the destroyer patrolled
backwards and forwards a few hundred yards from the Strathallan
which now seemed ablaze from stem to stern. Added to this
conflagration were explosions of small arms ammunition and
the occasional soaring into the air, of what I thought to
be signal rockets. Eventually our ship ceased patrolling and
we were told she was taking us to the nearest port, Oran,
then we were ordered below deck, but just before going below
I looked astern and saw, on the horizon, a pall of smoke -
my last sight, and obviously the end of the Strathallan."
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