News Navy
Write for special details and advantages of placing your
.-""'
PROMOTION ORDER with
BERNARDS MEN'S SHOP COMMERCIAL ROAD. PORTSHOUHI Telephone: IAIIG 30 ROYAI PARADE. PIJHOUYH
The
-
No. 70
APRIL. 1960
Newspaper of the Royal Navy and The Royal-Naval Association Publislted firs!
'
ROYAL NAVY UNIFORMS
BERNARDS OFFICERS’ SHOP
COMMERCIAL ROAD, POlllSMOI.Illt
Talophono um 30 ROYAL PARADE, PLYHOUIH Be assured of close and personal attention to all of your Uniform and Civilian requirements
Thursday of the month
Price Fourpcncc
ROYAL NAVY LEAVES Help from the sky ‘MOST PROPER PLACE’ Three hundred years’ link severed SHEERNESS
YARD CLOSED
Royal visitor
Ill‘: Royal Navy oflieially left Sheerness at sunset on March 31, and a ceremony on that date ended the Service’.s association with the Isle of Sheppey-—a link which has existed for more than 300 years.
makes tour of Rorqual.
‘Yard huilt variety of H.t\l. closing? ships. ranging front brigztntines used
At the end of the ceremonial down Sheerness I)-vclsyartl will be
has
a
eon-
trolled by lluiltling Developments l.ld.. l to suppress‘ the slave trade to L500who have purclta-ed the estahlidtmettl ton cruisers. :md has refitted frigates. for use as ;; ll:l(llll‘_.! estate. submarines and Ittinesweepers,
made
5
‘
‘
‘
.R.ll. Princess Margaret a tour of the Porpoisc class submarine ll.M.S. Rorqual during a visit to the Third Submarine Squadron in the (San.-loch on March 29. Rurqual. L700 tons standard dis‘-. placement. is commanded by l.ieut.-‘ ('dr. J. A. (i. l’.\':uts, Royal Navy. i After an extensive tour of the ship.: the Princess returtted to l*l.M.S. 3 .~\damant. Depot Ship of the Squadron. i for lunch. and at her request ll.M.S l Rorqual submerged in view of her.
0FFI—C—‘ER’S ‘DASH T0 SICK DA UGHTER A guard frotn the Royal Naval llarraeks.('hatham. and the band frotn the Royal Marines School of Music. Deal. paraded at Sheerness while the Union Jack was lowered during the sunset ceremony. The present and last Captain-in—('harge of Sheerness Dockyard (Capt. P. M. B. Cltavasse. l).S.(‘. and liar. .-\.l).('.. R.:\'.) gave a short 1ll.ltlI'L's\ before relinquishing the contmand.
TIIRICI-I llllNl)Rl-II) Y!-ZARS This simple. short ceremony ended the Naval history of the dockyard. It was in I665 that an H.M. Dockyard was established as an adjunct to Chatham. although for many years before Sheerness had been used by the Navy for the "carccning" of ships. Samuel Pepys. the then Secretary to the Navy. wrote in his Diary in I665: “To Shecrnem. where we walkcd up and down. lying out the ground to be taken on for :1 Yard. to lay provision for cleaning and repuiring ships and it most proper place it is for the purpose." From then on th._~.men of Sheerness l)ockyard helped to play their part in Naval history. From l667. when the tirst boat was completed there.’ the
Sheerness l)ock_vard—onc of the
O
basins
Sir John Hunt at H.M.S. Ganges Hunt. K.B.E.. D.S.O.. Secretary of the Duke of Edinburgh's Award scheme, paid a visit to H.M.S. Gauges on March 17. Accompanied by Mr. P. Carpenter. the East Anglian Liaison Olliccr of the scheme, he was met by the Commanding Olliccr of Ganges. Captain H. S. Mackenzie. D.S.O.. D.S.C.. IR
John
Royal Navy. Sir John spoke
juniors in the gymnasium and then presented awards to the successful Duke of Edinburgh candidates. Before leaving the estabto
..\l.S. Dainty was one of 30 ships on a N.A.T.0. exercise in Vt-‘.R 100 miles south of Crete the three-mststcd sailing schooner Georltmdo the Bay of Biscay when news was refrom Naples was drifting hclplc.-oily with her steering gear gone when she ccivcd that the daughter of the Nearly I00 miles away the aircraft carrier ll.M.S. navigating oflicer. Licut.-Cdr. C. put out her distressincall.t\'A'l'() exercise. sent ofl’ Venom and Sltyraidcr jets to Howe. R.N.. was seriously ill and the Albion. taking part a tind her. the As jets were circling the schooner. the carrier steamed at full presence of her father at home was l speed towards them. Closing to helicopter range the carrier sent all‘ two enginnecessary. the damage. As the schooner toscd uneasily on eering mechanics to When the signal from Admiralty :1 swell. I-2.Ms. J. M. inspect Binstcad. of Swindon. and 15. Ferguson. of Belfast. were was received in the ship. her 0 put down on her deck front the winch. While Binstcad stayed with the Italian manding oflicer. Captain J. G. Wells. crew. his tlcw back to Albion to make a new part in the carrier‘: D.S.C.. R.N.. asked the N.A.T.O. workshop.shipmatc He flew back with the new steering gear. repaired the damage on commander. Rear-Admiral C. E. E. board and the two men left the schooner to continue voyage. With the Touraillc. in the French cruiser good luck signals which ended the Navy's help to a shipher in distres went four (iuichcn. for permission to leave the days’ rations to a grateful Italian crew who had, among their other troubles, force and make for Plymouth at run out of food. speed. Permission was readily granted. Bad weather prevented a helicopter from icking up Licut.-Cdr. Howe from t c ship and Dainty made for Pcnmncc. where it was impossible to get ashore and eventually the ollicer was transferred to a launch in Plymouth Sound and an Admiralty car Sales of Senior Service then made for Portsmouth. The Dainty had left the N..-\.T.O. have in just ten years. force on Tuesday. March 29. and Lieut.-Cdr. Howe saw his 21-year-old These figures can mean only one thing— the Sumnne on following daughter afternoon. that ten times as many people now know It is understood that the little girl K that Senior Service give the same is responding to treatment.
all
lishntent he made an extensive tour around the many clubs to see the various activities in progress. Portsmouth Command beat Home Air (‘ommand 8»-l in the lnter-Command l-'ootb:ill Cup Final in Portsmouth on March 30.
///—~. S
//
i
“ft.M.s. GAMI AT MAURITIUS Helps Repair -1 .........
.....-~
Work tn British cruiser. ll.M.S. Gambia (Capt. W. .l. Munn. D.S.O.. 0.8.!-2.. has been helping in the
h
increased'ten-fold
’l‘llE
\\.\
B
' '
!
rehabilitation work following the two disastrous cyclones which struck the British island of Maurititts in the .—T. Indian Ocean recently. There were over L700 casualties and over l00.(Kl(l buildings were reported 2." Has...» to have been destroyed or seriously d:una_eetl. Approximately 70.000 of the island's population of 600.000 were now in refugee centres and it was csllnlttlctl that 60 per cent. of the year's sugar crop might have been lost in the disaster. Men front H.M.S. Gambia have been employed in erecting telegraph V‘lR6lNlA poles and repairing cables, making emergency repairs to houses with TOBACCO AT ITS material taken from disused buildings eesr and carrying out repairs to the Mare ‘
~.
(Ii-auibia inoculating
A medical olliccr front ILM.S. a child against in an ctm-rgeltcy ambulance station set up in a waiting room at the station. Port Louis. capital of Mauritius.
I
typhoid railway
'20
Sevmce
WELL MADE
I
\=.:u\otL
\
Longue Reservoir.
r
I’
0
WELL PACKED