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Farndales and the sea
Several Farndales were seamen, generally associated with Whitby
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1253
Scarborough gained a new charter in
1253 giving the burgesses a right to build a high and low water harbour.
Small ships of the time could penetrate well inland.
Whitby and Scarborough
fish regularly reached York.
Redcar and the salt port of Coatham
secured fairs and markets and there were boats at Skinningrove.
Farndales and the Sea
John Farndale, (FAR00136) lived in
Whitby and sailed with James Cook. He was a seaman
named in a list of 42 of the crew of The Friendship of Whitby on 10 Nov
1753 when James Cook was Mate. John would be
about 42 years old in 1753.
Giles Farndale (FAR00137) served
in the Royal Navy. It seems very likely that he was press-ganged at Whitby, probably in 1740 when he would have been 27 years
old. The Muster Book for HMS Experiment, a brig with a compliment of
130, shows Giles Farndell as No 101 Able Seaman, impressed on 29 Jun 1740. He
is present at every muster until 9 May 1741 when he is marked ‘DD’ (Discharged
Dead). No circumstances are recorded which probably means that he died of
sickness on 9 May 1741. The ‘Experiment’ was commissioned under Captain Hughes
at Deptford between Mar and Jun 1740. On 29 Jun 1740 the ‘Experiment’ was at
The Nore, where Giles Farndell (or Farndale; he is listed under both names in
different Muster Books), came on complement. From there she sailed for Port
Royal, Jamaica where she arrived on 15 September 1740. From there until June
1741 the ship was either in Port Royal, at sea, or in Cartagena. He must have
taken part on the War of Jenkins’ Ear in the Spanish Main.
HMS Experiment taking the Telemaque, 8
July 1757
William Farndale (FAR00157)
became a master mariner. He captained the collier Abigail and Martha in
1767. He died at the age of 34 in 1777 and may well have died at sea.
John Farndale (FAR00198) was born
in 1773 and was probably the son of William Farndale (FAR00157).
After he died, his widow, Dinah, sought a pension through the Royal Hospital at
Chelsea, so John probably served in some capacity with the Royal Navy.
Robert Farndale (FAR00197), the
son of William Farndale (FAR00157), was
a ship’s carpenter of Whitby, but died aged only 23.
John Farndale (FAR00244) was a
master mariner who was captain of the William and Nancy by 1826. There
are a large number of records of his voyages along the
east coast. He died aged only 35.
John
Farndale (FAR00265),
was a sailor of Whitby.
William
Farndale (FAR00289)
was a Master Mariner of Whitby who captained the
William and Nancy like his father. He traded along the east coast.
John
Christopher Farndale The Younger (FAR00308) was a
Master Mariner of Whitby. He got into some trouble as
an apprentice mariner in 1845 when he went absent and was sent to Northallerton
gaol for a month of hard labour. By 1853 he was captain of the John Stewart
and a master mariner. He captained several different ships and regularly traded
along the east coast regularly calling at Wisbech in Cambridgeshire where he
met his first and second wife. He regularly sailed to ports in the Baltic,
including St Petersburg. He was witness to an assault on the high seas. He died
at sea in a storm in the Bay of Biscay.
Thomas
Farndale (FAR00300)
was a ship’s broker’s clerk in Whitby.
Henry Farndale
(FAR000495)
was working as a sailor by the age of 22 and later worked as an Able Seaman in
the merchant navy for Mercantile Marine, Eagle Oil Transport Company in Hartlepool. He probably served in the Royal; Navy
Reserve on HMS Pembroke in 1916.
Thomas Harry
Farndale (FAR00699)
service No Z/6840 served in the Royal Navy Reserve in London in the first World
War. He was a telegraphist.
Clarence Farndale (FAR00850)
served in the Royal Canadian Navy from 1939 to 1966.
The Collier Trade
More
research to follow.
Brigs
The Mary, a
Brig of South Shields painted in 1855
The
Traditional Song, the Collier Brig: Oh, the worst old ship that ever set sail, Sailed
out of Harwich on a windy day. Chorus: Stormy weather, boys, stormy weather,
boys, When the wind blows the barge will go. She was built in Roman style, Held
together with bits of twine. Skipper’s half Dutch and he hasn’t got a clue, The
crew were fourteen hands too few. Cook spilt the dinner on the galley floor,
Skipper caught his hand in the wheelhouse door. Off Orford Ness we sprang a
leak, Hear our poor old timbers creak. We steered our way round Lowestoft next,
The wind backed round to the sou-sou-west. Through the
Cockle to Cromer Cliff, Steering like a wagon with a wheel adrift. Up The
Humber and up to town, Pump, you devils, pump or
drown. Then on a sandbank we got stuck, Skipper’s drunk in the Dog and Duck. Up
come a mermaid covered in slime, We took her down the
hold and we had a good time. We kept on course all through the night, Nearly went aground at the Apex light. Coal was shot by a
Keadby crew, Bottom was rotten and it went right
through. So when we saw the brig was sunk, We went to
the Barge and we all got drunk.
The Royal Navy in 1740
More
research to follow.
The Royal Navy in the Napoleonic era
During the Napoleonic
Wars, the Royal; Navy became a unique navy of 600 ships and 135,000 men. Between
1793 and 1815 it lost a single ship of the line, but
captured or destroyed 139 enemy ships.
This rise to supremacy of the seas was a
complex and expensive project.
·
There
were vast naval dockyards at Portsmouth, Plymouth and
Chatham.
·
HMS
Victory cost £400,000 over her lifetime, the annual budget of a small state.
·
A
medium sized battleship would require timber the equivalent of 3,00 to 4,000
mature trees. Baltic and Canadian pine was imported and capturing or destroying
enemy timber supplies became an important strategy.
·
There
were enormous workshops for the manufacturer of rope and rigging.
·
A
small naval squadron had more artillery firepower than used at Austerlitz.
·
There
were brewers, butchers, bakers, salters and coopers.
Blockades
of French ports were tightened and naval personnel
learned to spend long periods at sea. Admiral
Collingwood, from Northumberland, died in the Mediterranean in 1810, having
not set foot ashore for 8 years.
The Royal Navy
grew a culture of aggression. The French navy became fearsome of the Royal
Navy. Equipped with large calibre short range guns from the 1780s, its firepower
inflicted heavy casualties. The prospect of being boarded was no less
intimidating and the Royal Navy had a formidable reputation as hand to hand fighters.
Warships
needed large crews – 1,000 strong for a battleship of the line. A pool of
sailors was provided by the merchant navy. However the
Royal Navy rarely achieved numerical supremacy.
The Impress Service
or the Press Gangs operated widely, particularly in Liverpool.
British
sailors were toughened by lengthy spells at sea and were led by a meritocratic and
experienced officer class. Discipline was tough, but there was fairness and
equality of treatment between officers and ratings. Warships were generally
safer and cleaner than merchant ships. Food and drink was
fresh and plentiful, about 5,000 calories a day.
The British
secured bases around the globe – Gibraltar, Malta, Halifax, Bermuda, Jamaica, Antigua,
St Helena, Cape Town, Mauritius, Bombay, Calcutta, Sydney.
(Robert Tombs, The English and their History, 2023,
404 to ).
The Master Mariner
A master mariner is a licensed mariner who
holds the highest grade of seafarer qualification; namely, an unlimited
master's license. Such a license is referred to as unlimited because it
has no limits on the tonnage, power, or geographic location of the vessel that
the holder of the license is allowed to serve upon. A master mariner would
therefore be allowed to serve as the master of a merchant ship of
any size, of any type, operating anywhere in the world, and it reflects
the highest level of professional qualification amongst mariners and deck
officers.
The term master mariner has
been in use at least since the thirteenth century. In guild or livery company
terms, a master mariner was a master craftsman in
this specific profession just as a master carpenter of master butcher.
There are also various other levels of
master's certificates, which may be restricted or limited to home trade/near
coastal voyages and/or by gross tonnage.
The holder of a restricted master's certificate is not referred to as a
"master mariner".
In the British Merchant Navy a master mariner who has sailed in command of an ocean-going merchant ship will be titled captain. A professional seafarer who holds a restricted or limited master's certificate who has sailed in command of a ship (i.e. appropriate to the size, power or geographic limits of their certificate) can also be titled captain.
Where the movements of ships were
recorded in the shipping news and other media, the name of the ship was
followed by the name of the Captain.
HMS Farndale
HMS Farndale was a Type II,
Hunt-class Escort Destroyer. It was involved in convoy escort missions. She served on the Malta Convoys
1841, and in the Mediterranean 1941, Libya 1942, the Atlantic 1942, North
Africa 1942 to 1943, Siciliy 1943, Salerno 1943, the
Aegean 1943, South France 1944, and the North Sea in 1945.
She was scrapped in 1962.
She was the only British
Warship so far to bear this name.
HMS Farndale was ordered on 4
September 1939 under the 1939 War Emergency Build Programme. She was
completed in April 1941. She was adopted by the civil community of Southgate,
then in Middlesex, as part of Warship Week in
1942.
She earned eleven battle
honours for extensive service during the Second World War. This included
service in the Mediterranean where she was severely damaged in February 1942,
and resulted in extensive repairs in the UK that year. She then saw service with
Russian convoys, followed by work to support the allied landings in Italy.
Towards the end of the war she was nominated for service in the Far East in
support of Operation Zipper for landings in Malaya,
which was cancelled with the end of the War.
She returned to Sheerness
from the Far East in November 1945 and was transferred to the Reserve Fleet.
From 1946 until 1951 she was
part of the Nore Local Flotilla and was then placed in reserve again at
Hartlepool. She remained there until 1962 when she was sold to Bisco for scrapping
by Hughes Bolckow. She
arrived at their breakers yard in Blythe on 29 November 1962.
The Crawley and District Observer, 10 May 1941: SAILORS AND SCHOLARS. A
plaque has been received by the school billeted in the village. It bears the
inscription: “presented to Oldridge Road JM School, May 1940, by officers and
men of the SS Farndale (Captain Wright), in token of friendship between the
ship and the school.” The plaque is engraved with a picture of the SS Farndale.
Scholars of that school are now collecting illustrated magazines for sailors at
their newly adopted ship.
The Sheerness Times Guardian, 11 July 1941: SERVING
TGHEIOR KING AND COUNTRY. … MINTER, Stoker (2nd), J K, HMS
Farndale, Golden Dawn, New Road, Sheerness.
The Yorkshire Evening Post, 17 December 1941: A
FLIGHT FROM BARDA. An Admiralty communique says: The Italian U-boat Ammiraglio
Caracciolo has been sunk in the Central Mediterranean by the destroyer Farndale
(Commander S H Carrill RN). Fifty three survivors have been taken prisoners of
war. The u-boat left Bardia in an attempt to give passage to 20 Italian
military officers, amongst whom was General Guido Lami. The General is not
among those rescued. General Lami was the chief executive engineer of the engineering
headquarters of the Italian army in Rome. The destroyer Farndale was built at
Wallsend on Tyne in the yard of Messrs Swan Hunter and Wigham Richardson. The
Ammiraglio Caracciolo, of the Saint Bon class was one of the latest types of
ocean going under underwater craft. She was part of the 1938 programme and was
of 1,400 tons displacement. She was 288 ½ feet long, beam 25 ½ feet, and had a
speed of 18 knots. She carried 14 eight inch torpedo tubes. Her armament also
included two 3.9 inch guns and four machine guns. Before war broke out,
commander Carlill, of the Farndale, was squadron gunnery officer of the
mediterranean flotillas.
The Liverpool Echo, 17 December 1941. A GENERAL
ESCAPING FROM LIBYA ON BOARD. “The Italian U-boat Ammiraglio Caracciolo has
been sunk in the Central Mediterranean by the destroyer Farndale (Commander S H
Carrill RN)” said the Admiralty today. Fifty three survivors have been taken
prisoners of war. The u-boat left Bardia in an attempt to give passage to 20
Italian military officers, amongst whom was General Guido Lami. The General is
not among those rescued. General Lami was the chief executive engineer of the
engineering headquarters of the Italian army in Rome. The destroyer Farndale
was built at Wallsend on Tyne in the yard of Messrs Swan Hunter and Wigham
Richardson Limited. Before war broke out, commander Carlill, of the Farndale,
was squadron gunnery officer of the mediterranean flotillas.
The Hull Daily Mail, 3 January 1942: DESTROYERS SINK 3
AXIS SUBMARINES. News that three enemy submarines had been sunk in the
Mediterranean by British naval forces during the land advance through Libya was
given in an interview with an Associated Press correspondent by Admiral Sir
Andrew Cunningham, commander in chief in the Mediterranean. Admiral Cunningham
also said there were “indications that Nazi submarines are operating in the
eastern Mediterranean in considerable number.” Sir Andrew said: “during the
advance of our army in Libya the enemy appeared to have been making special
efforts to interfere with our supplies by sea. In this they have had little
success while our counter attacking forces have sunk one Italian and two German
submarines and brought in prisoners. The forces carrying out these successful
operations included the destroyers Farndale, Kipling, Hasty, and Hotspur. The
submarines attempted to sink British supply ships and merchant men bound for to
Tobruk and Benghazi. 130 prisoners were taken when the crews escaped from the
submarines as they broke surface after being depth charged.
The Northern Whig 03 January 1942: THREE U BOATS
DESTROYED. British naval units operating in cooperation with our land forces
in Libya, sunk one Italian and two German submarines which were trying to
dislocate our sea supplies. 130 prisoners were taken from the three ‘victims’.
All the submarines were destroyed by depth charges from the destroyers
Farndale, Kipling, Hasty and Hotspur. Admiral Sir Andrew Cunningham, chief
commander in chief of the Mediterranean fleet, in a special communique
announcing this latest naval success says...
The Long Eaton Advertiser, 24 January 1942: We have
received a copy of the January issue of the “Gasbag” which states “A week or
two ago the Admiralty announced that HMS Farndale had destroyed an Axis
submarine in the Mediterranean. One of our lads, Jack Everill, X314, is aboard
the Farndale, so I think we can offer our congratulations and basket a little
of the reflected glory...
Honours Announcement. Whitehall, 17 March 1942. The
KING has been graciously pleased to give orders for the following Appointments
to the Distinguished Service Order, and to approve the following awards:1 For
skill and enterprise in action against Enemy Submarines, while serving on HMS
Farndale: To be a Companion of the Distinguished Service Order: Commander
Stephen Hope Carlill, Royal Navy; The Distinguished Service Cross, Lieutenant
Roger Curteis Norwood, Royal Navy; The Distinguished Service Medal, Leading
Seaman Alexander McDonald C/SSX.14555; For bravery and coolness when HMS
Farndale was attacked by enemy aircraft: The Distinguished Service Cross, Mr
Richard Dunstan Goodier, Commissioned Engineer, Royal Navy; Mention in
Dispatches (posthumous), Shipwright Third Class Leonard Loman Cooper,
C/MX.48324; Mention in Dispatches, Lieutenant Roger Curteis Norwood DSC, Royal
Navy …
The Hampshire
Telegraph, 15 May 1942: … For bravery and coolness when HMS Farndale was
attacked by enemy aircraft: - DSC – Mr R D Goodier, cd, Eng, RN
The Portsmouth
Evening News, 21 April 1943: DESTROYER’S LINK WITH DOOMESDAY BOOK. HMS
Farndale, a hunt class destroyer, has an unusual plaque commemorating her
adoption by the borough of Southgate. The plaque was cut from Minchenden oak, which is mentioned in the Doomsday Book,
and is still growing in Southgate. It was presented to the ship by the mayor of
Southgate when he visited her and inspected the ship's company. On this
occasion, also, the commanding officer accepted a cheque for £50 from the mayor
and burgesses of Southgate to start the Farndale Benevolent Fund to provide
immediate and urgent assistant for the dependants of men serving in the ship
who may be injured or killed in action.
The Falkirk
Herald, 19 January 1944: HANDS TO BATHE. An hour after the landings
in Sicily, his majesty’s destroyers, Haydon, Calpe,
Farndale and Puckeridge, stood off the islands coast, having “unbuttoned” their
convoys and the first two piped “hands to bathe”. While crews splashed over the
sides, the Farndale and the Puckeridge circled out to make an anti submarine patrol around the area. When the Haydon and
Calpe had had their fun, they took over the patrol, and the Farndale and the
Puckeridge closed in and came to rest with their “hands to bathe” pipe.
The Birmingham
Mail, 27 October 1945: FOUR DESTROYERS COMING HOME. For veteran
destroyers, which between them have seen service in every theatre of sea war,
have sailed from Colombo for Britain. They are hunt class destroyers of the
18th flotilla, HM ships Farndale, Calpe, Chiddingfold,
and Bleasdale.
The Hampshire
Telegraph, 2 November 1945: VETERAN ‘HUNTS’. Four veteran destroyers
which among them have seen service in every theatre of sea war, have sailed
from Colombo for Britain, and are expected in homeports about the middle of
November. They are hunt class destroyers of the 18th flotilla, Farndale, Calpe,
Chiddingfold, and Bleasdale. Commander EH Roper of
the Farndale, said: “We finished our first Commission in the Mediterranean with
a 2,000 lb bomb in the wardrobe wine cellar. It broke every bottle we had, but didn't hurt a soul.”
The Dover
Express, 2 August 1946: a guard of honour of the Royal Navy will be
drawn up outside the town hall, with the band of the Royal Navy (Chatham). Two
Hunt class destroyers, HMS Bleasdale, and HMS Farndale will be at Dover for the
occasion.
The Dundee
Evening Telegraph, 3 January 1947: SHIP SINKS – NO SIGN OF SURVIVORS. The
Norwegian steamer Magnhild, reported sinking near Gjedser light vessel by the British warship Farndale this
morning, was later reported sunk according to a Lloyds message. There were no
signs of survivors.
The Shields
Daily News, 3 January 1947: NO SURVIVORS SEEN AFTER SHIP SINKS. The
Norwegian steamer Magnhild, 929 tonnes, first
reported sinking near Gjedser light vessel, off South
Denmark, by the British warship Farndale, was later reported sunk according to
a Lloyds message today. There were no signs of survivors. The Lloyds message
stated that a message received from the Farndale said: “Norwegian steamer
Magnhild sinking in position three miles northwest of Gjedser
light vessel. No sign of survivors.” Later the ship was reported sunk. The
Magnhild left Boulogne bound for a Baltic port on December 28, and was reported
to have passed Cuxhaven on December 30.
The Belfast News-Letter, 4 January 1947: The British
destroyer, Farndale, arrived in Copenhagen last night with the crew of the
Norwegian steamer Magnhild, which sank yesterday north of Gjedser,
in the Baltic.