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Robert William Kelsall | |||
Rank: | Sergeant | Number: | 1239992 |
Ship/Rgn/Sqn No: | Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve | ||
Name of Rgt or Ship: | Command Unknown | ||
Died: | 12/09/1942 | Age: | 32 |
How Died: | Lost at Sea | ||
Country of burial: | Egypt | ||
Cemetery or Memorial: | Alamein Memorial | ||
Town Memorial: | Not Listed | ||
Extra Information: | |||
Born during the June quarter 1910 in the Congleton R.D. - ref: 8a/297, the son of James Alan & Mary Elizabeth Kelsall (nee Cook). A police Constable, he first joined the Bedfordshire Police around 1932. Robert later joined the Cheshire Constabulary around 1938. He married Fredricka Muriel Green during the September quarter 1933 in the Derby R.D. - ref: 7b/1664. Presumably he had been injured whilst serving in the RAF in the North Africa Campaign ? On the 12th August 1942, Robert boarded the HMS Laconia that had just disembarked over three thousand troops, their equipment and supplies at Port Tewfik. The ship was overloaded with approximately three thousand people that included seriously wounded men, Italian prisoners of war, women & children from various service and official backgrounds and last but not least an alleged two hundred fifth columnists and low grade spies bound for internment camps in South Africa. The ships lifeboat and raft capacity in no way could accommodate all those onboard having just thirty two lifeboats, forty big rafts and various other smaller ones. She arrived in Durban on the 28th where she was to stay for three days; further hospital cases were landed and more service and civilian personnel embarked including one hundred and three Polish guards for the POW's, although heavily armed the Poles were issued no ammunition. Laconia's last port of call was Cape Town where even more service personnel boarded bringing her final compliment to 463 Officers and crew, 286 passengers from all three services, 1,793 Italian POW's, 103 Polish guards, and eighty civilians - mostly women and children. She left Cape Town on the 1st September and by the 11th September she was out in the Atlantic, 550 miles south of Cape Palma heading straight towards U-Boat U-156. As the U-Boat neared the Laconia at 1800 hrs the Captain was able to determine that she was sailing a zigzag course on a heading of 310°, their position was fixed at 5.0° south, 11.08° west. As night fell at 1955 hrs U-156 edged closer and the Captain could clearly see that some of those onboard were clearly in breach of standing orders with regards the blackout, light was emitting from more than one porthole. At 2007 with tubes one and three ready the Captain ordered first number one away and then twenty seconds later number three. 1,621 died while 1,104 survived the incident Robert Kelsall was one of the many who went down with the ship. I can find no trace of him in the Middle East Bomber Command Losses - perhaps he served in Fighter Command ? Commemorated on the Cheshire Constabulary War Memorial and in their War Memorial Book. |
Memorials found on: | |||
Cheshire Police | |||