Chapter 1
A Shark Steals the Dinner
He should have seen the shadow of the shark as it slid menacingly through the turquoise South China Sea astern of His Majestyâs Ship Clio, driven forward under her sails. But all he saw was the sharkâs head as it closed in on the bag he had been towing. It half-rolled to the right and seized the bag in its scimitar-shaped mouth; there was a violent shake, and the rope went limp.
Ordinary Seaman Phil Gunn dejectedly reeled the bag in. It had contained his messâs dinner. It was a leg of salt pork that the shark had got; trailing it in the sea, surprisingly, reduced the salt content of the meat. As cook-of-the-mess that day (see illustration) preparation of the midday dinner had been his responsibility and now he had lost it.
âWhatâs up lad?â demanded Petty Officer Jock Bryce, who happened to be passing on the poop deck.
âA shark got the pork, PO,â explained Phil, helplessly regarding the frayed ropeâs end. As the ship had been mainly up the rivers of China he had not come across this problem before. âThe lads wonât be happy.â
âI warned you about that,â said Bryce, who had also given the young seaman the tip about reducing the salt. âYou need to keep your eyes open for âem at sea. Perhaps youâll listen next time. Get down to the galley. See if theyâve got any grub to spare.â
Meat had not been a problem when they left Hong Kong with a herd of cattle and some sheep on the upper deck. The Royal Marine butcher would kill one when required, the distressed beast being pulled unwillingly with ropes by the duty watch of seamen towards the upper deck scupper (see illustration). In the case of the cattle the animal would then be poleaxed with a sledgehammer. The carcase would be cut up, blood and offal running into the sea through the chute designed to keep the shipâs side clean.
Phil didnât like the spectacle of the animals suffering but in 1913 there was no refrigeration in this class of ship. So the fresh meat was better than the salt pork they had to draw in barrels from the dockyard for longer voyages. Chances were that the same barrels had been issued to ships in previous commissions so the pork tended to be far from fresh.
The galley had some cold beef left over from yesterday. Phil served it up to his eight fellow seamen together with the potatoes and carrots he had prepared for their midday dinner. There were grumbles but, to his relief, also some laughs.
HMS Clio, a sloop (see illustration), was one of the last of the Royal Navyâs sailing warships. As was often the custom in times of peace away from Britain, she had been painted a gleaming white enamel, with a black stripe around her sides. Her bows bore a figurehead in the form of a scantily clad lady surrounded by gold leaf scrollwork and her three tall wooden masts were immaculately scraped and varnished. Between the first and second masts a tall funnel sloped gently back at the same angle, for Clio had steam engines as well as sails.
On seeing her for the first time, Phil had thought she looked more like the magnificent steam yacht of a rich oriental gentleman but Clio also packed a punch. In and around the decks were six 4-inch calibre guns, which could hit hard and accurately, the 4-inch measurement indicating the diameter of the shells they fired. There was also some smaller armament.
She was on her way north in December 1913 to return to the waterway that led from the British port of Hong Kong up to Canton. There she would resume her normal task of patrolling the rivers of Southern China in support of a large number of British traders.
The captain had decided they would use sails for the voyage to Hong Kong. The square sails on her foremast, much like those of the ships that had won the Battle of Trafalgar, had recently been discontinued as part of the Royal Navyâs move towards steam. However, fore and aft sails, as might be seen in yachts at the Cowes Regatta, bore the 10-year-old sloop economically along. From time to time, day and night, came the shrill, haunting whistle of the bosunâs pipe and call to the duty watch of seamen to adjust the set of the sails. This would be for a change of wind direction or alteration of the shipâs course.
On eventual arrival at Canton they found vessels from other countries and both sailors and officers of Clio were glad to see their friends in a German cruiser, His Majestyâs Ship Emden. In Emdenâs case it was a different âMajestyâ from King George V in the form of his cousin, Kaiser Wilhelm II. After the normal church parade on Sundays sailors from each ship manned and rowed boats across to visit the other. On Christmas Day 1913 it was estimated that there were more of Emdenâs men in Clio than their own, and vice versa. On Boxing Day, Emdenâs shipâs company gave a concert in a theatre ashore to entertain the British sailors. They created a backdrop of the Clio and good-heartedly mimicked British naval habits and customs.
Chapter 2
The International Arms Race
Phillip Gunn (see illustration) had joined the Royal Navy as a boy seaman in 1911. He started this hard life at the bottom just as his father and grandfather had, having failed the exams that would have enabled him to start halfway up as an officer. It wasnât that he was stupid, but his fatherâs naval postings had been such that he was never at the same school long enough for a coherent education. Father had blamed Philâs failure on his love of football but Phil didnât mind and revelled in the life he now led.
Britain was enjoying a century of predominant peace, but there were murmurings of unease. Germany, Austria and Russia, all with European empires, felt threatened by large minorities who wanted greater democracy. Germany, an expanding power, also felt encircled by Russia, France and Britain in a way that hindered its trade and development as a nation. It was also ruled by a paranoid kaiser. France and Britain were in a different category. They both controlled vast overseas empires, of which their European neighbours were jealous.
Germany in particular resented its lack of colonies and was embarking on doing something about it. A race to build a fleet to rival the Royal Navyâs supremacy at sea had been running since 1900. This was matched by the British, who had developed a superior type of battleship known as dreadnoughts, and they were also involved in this arms race. âWe want eight [dreadnoughts] and we wonât wait!â was a cry from the British population that had gone up across the country. It was proud of its empire but had been made aware of potential threats from Germany in particular. On land Germany and France were rapidly expanding their armies but Britain, an island nation with a far-flung empire, relied on the power of a large navy. Nobody had argued much with this since the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805.
On the extremities of Europe, Germany had forged good relations with Turkey. The former saw this as a way of gaining access to the Middle East and eventually threatening Britainâs dominance of the Persian Gulf and India.
But such matters did not affect relations between the shipsâ companies of Clio and Emden and were unlikely to be of interest to a teenage seaman. Philâs daily concerns were more likely to be scrubbing the decks, pushing the capstan bars round to raise the anchor, manning the sails or being lowered and hoisted in a seaboat.
After a few months of cruising the China rivers, having passed the necessary exams, Phil had been advanced to ordinary seaman. âYou can smoke now,â Petty Officer Bryce had told him. âGo to the canteen and get yourself a pipe.â Phil did as he was told, buying himself a clay pipe for a penny. Jock Bryce handed him his tobacco pouch, from which the boy filled the pipe, lit up and began to puff in a rather uncertain way. After five uncomfortable minutes he had turned green, rushed to the heads1 and was sick. The brutal navy leaf tobacco had been too much for him.
Phil took gradually to smoking a pipe, as did many of his fellow seamen. It was a badge of experience and he began to find it strangely soothing, especially when keeping watch in cold weather on deck or as a lookout.
He liked his fellow seamen. Most were from far rougher backgrounds than his and he was sometimes referred to as âa bit of a toffâ. This was because he spoke in a more precise manner than most, but it was said jovially and without malice. Being forced to work up masts (see illustration), in seaboats and around the capstan and to live together naturally moulded most into good messmates. There was inevitably the odd bully but Phil was large and confident enough and did not suffer from this.
As soon as he was eligible Phil took the examinations for able seaman. He would not be ârated upâ to an AB until the requisite time had elapsed but at least he was now qualified for it.
Up the rivers Clio steamed continuously, often in the intense heat of the South China summer. Even the trained stokers were collapsing as they shovelled coal into the boilers. Seamen from the upper deck were called upon to give relief and for a week Phil found himself down in the stokehold of the ship with a shovel in his hand. He and his fellow seamen gasped for breath as the furnace doors were opened and an intense red heat sprang out at them as they shovelled their coal into the fiery inferno (see illustration). He gained considerable respect for a stokerâs work in a coal-burning ship.
Chapter 3
A Seamanâs Work â Early 1914
Following a few days back in Hong Kong Clio sailed for a new task. Charts of the coast of Borneo urgently needed improvement but the specially fitted-out surveying ship was undergoing repairs. The sloop, little more than a sailing ship with modern guns and no specialist equipment, took her place.
Clio anchored in a bay for the night and the following morning surveying parties were detailed off. Phil was in one led by the shipâs second-in-ommand, Lieutenant Commander Edgar Cookson.
âCome on. Chop chop!â urged Cookson as his team of seamen lowered the cutter from its davits into the water and passed down the surveying equipment. They clambered down ropes and started to row inshore but the water was too shallow to get right in. Phil volunteered to hop over the side and was laden with the theodolite, balls of spun yarn, axes and other equipment they would need. He began to wade ashore, initially part supported by the water but as it got shallower his feet started to sink into the seabed. He found it increasingly difficult to drag one foot in front of the other. Eventually he could not lift his feet at all and was slowly sinking down into the mud.
Suddenly frightened, he shouted across the 40 yards that separated him from Cookson, who was now ashore.
âI canât move Sir!â
The officer turned to take in the situation. Back came a crisp order to Phil to let himself fall forward onto the mud and wriggle ashore. He did so and, gently encouraged by Cookson, to his profound relief found his legs and feet slowly pulling up out of the enveloping quagmire as he eased himself forward to the beach. It didnât cross his mind to discard the heavy equipment that was dragging him down, which surprised him when he thought about it later.
Cookson took him by the arm, still covered in the slime of the bay, to rest against the trunk of a tree. In its welcome shade he sat down and talked to Phil, asking the young man about his life at home, his interests and gently reviving his shaken spirits. Phil was normally used to barked orders from the Clioâs second-in-command, who worked the shipâs company hard. But he was aware that this tough officer was also prepared to make one with the sailors in the football team although, like most officers, his game was really rugby. Phil discovered a degree of sympathy and understanding of which he had not previously been aware.
Over the next few weeks they checked and amended the charts of the area, erected leading marks on the shore and measured the depths â work that was too complex for Phil as an ordinary seaman to fully understand. At the end of each day they rowed back to the ship, sometimes as much as 5 miles, tired and sunburned.
Lack of specialist equipment meant that surveying in the old sloop was some of the toughest physical work Clioâs shipâs company had undertaken. Apart from landing to survey and carry out sounding, it was necessary to anchor the ship as many as eight times a day. As she had no power appliances when it came to weighing anchor, sixteen seamen were needed each time, pushing with their chests on the wooden bars round the capstan (see illustration).
The business of surveying involved the constant lowering and hoisting of boats, which were suspended on ropes at both bow and stern. On one occasion when his surveying party returned to the ship, Phil was required to remain at one end of the boat and steady the block through which the hoisting rope was passing. He made the error of holding onto the rope itself only to see his fingers drawn into the iron wheel of the block through which it passed and on which the 2-ton boat was hanging.
The officer in charge on board saw his plight and immediately shouted, âAvast1 hauling!â
Shocked and bewildered, Phil could only utter, âYessir! âvast hauling.â The boat was lowered a little. His fingers, to his horror, apparently mangled flesh and blood,...