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100 Years On, the Story of the Norfolk Fishermen Who Took on the Austro-Hungarian Navy
Eastern Daily Press ^ | 14 May 2017 | Steve Snelling

Posted on 05/14/2017 11:13:27 PM PDT by nickcarraway

John Turner was an unlikely hero in an improbable battle. A century after a little-known naval clash in which armed British drifters fought Austrian cruisers, Steve Snelling salutes the magnificent courage of a Norfolk fisherman turned man o’ war.

In a war of industrialised slaughter the forlorn and all-but forgotten clash between two ludicrously ill-matched naval armadas off the coast of Italy a century ago was, on the face of it, an unlikely headline-grabber.

Compared to the titanic struggles taking place on the western front, the David and Goliath encounter between Austrian battleships and a force of British fishing boats in the Straits of Otranto was a small, inconsequential even, affair without a clear-cut victor and with relatively few casualties suffered by either side.

But such were the displays of defiance and individual acts of bravery that a potentially embarrassing setback for the Allies was somehow rendered heroic and an epic feat of arms.

Blissfully ignorant of the accusations of cowardice that would surface later, the British press invoked the memory of a lost Elizabethan age and Sir Richard Grenville’s single-handed fight against a Spanish fleet more than three centuries earlier.

They spoke of a desperate resistance which, in some instances, appeared to border on the suicidal, of drifters reduced to floating ‘pepper pots’ confronting enemy cruisers with their puny guns and of ordinary fishermen performing extraordinary deeds that all but beggared belief.

And in a maritime region rich in fishing heritage there was particular reason to celebrate. For in a saga of gallantry awash with improbable heroes there were few actions to surpass the exploit of a humble seaman from Martham who was destined to be hailed as Norfolk’s own hero of the so-called Battle of the Otranto Barrage.

By all accounts, John Turner was an unprepossessing sort of man. Married with a family at the outbreak of the First World War, he was thought of as “a gentle giant”, a man who never shouted the odds but simply got on with his job as a fisherman on one of the countless herring drifters working out of the port of Great Yarmouth.

Like thousands of others in his trade, he was moved by the call of duty to answer the Royal Navy’s appeal for volunteers to join the service’s burgeoning fleet of trawlers engaged in minesweeping and anti-submarine work from the warring waters of the Atlantic to the Adriatic.

Enlisting in the Royal Naval Reserve in February 1915, he underwent training in Milford Haven before, later that summer, sailing as a deckhand aboard the drifter Serene bound for a new theatre of war far-removed from the bleak fishing grounds of the North Sea.

He was part of a hastily assembled force of converted fishing boats requisitioned by the Admiralty from the east coast ports of England and Scotland, many of them manned by their original peacetime crews, and despatched to the heel of Italy to help counter the threat posed by surface and submarine elements of the Austro-Hungarian Navy.

According to the commander of one of the drifter flotillas, they were “a magnificent lot”, though few, including no doubt John Turner, had the vaguest idea of naval etiquette. As the same naval officer observed: “The discipline was truly of a sort different from that in a battleship, but there existed a loyalty to their senior officers and a readiness for hard work which made me appreciate their values.”

That loyalty was never more seriously tested than during the early hours of May 15, 1917.

On that misty Spring morning a century ago, Turner found himself on board the drifter Garrigill, one of 45 armed fishing boats mounting a tenuous net blockade across the Straits of Otranto with the aim of preventing the passage of enemy submarines into the Mediterranean.

The ‘Otranto Barrage’, as it was known, was established during the winter of 1915-16. By early 1917 it had grown to include 120 drifters, operating in rotation, supported by an assortment of motor launches, destroyers and larger vessels.

For the drifter crews, who had swapped the ports of Yarmouth, Lowestoft, Buckie and Macduff for Brindisi, it was a role that proved largely dull and monotonous. In a little over a year, the blockade, which one historian likened to a giant “sieve”, had accounted for just two submarines, one of which had fallen victim to depth charges dropped by Turner’s new boat.

That rare excitement had earned Garrigill’s skipper, Harold Goldspink, a Distinguished Service Cross, but the fight with a solitary submarine was as nothing compared with the onslaught unleashed by an Austrian raiding force spearheaded by three heavily-armed light cruisers.

Under cover of a diversionary attack on an Italian convoy and taking full advantage of the early morning mist, the Saida, Novara and Helgoland passed unhindered through the ‘barrage’.

By the time the British commander of the drifter line realised what was happening it was already too late. The systematic destruction of the blockade was under way.

The fishermen reservists, operating in seven groups straddling the 45-mile strip of water separating Italy from Albania, scarcely knew what had hit them.

The first blow fell in the centre at around 3.15am when in the pre-dawn murk the cruiser set about the four drifters making up ‘C Division’ which included among its number John Turner’s boat, the Garrigill.

Reports of the action that followed are sketchy, but what is clear is that the men of ‘C Division’ were determined to resist. Ignoring the Austrian captain’s calls to surrender, the four drifters immediately slipped their nets and scattered, their crews manning guns, which in the words of one skipper were fit only for the scrap heap, as they prepared to fight it out to the bitter end.

So far as one of the boats was concerned the end came quickly enough. The crew of the Quarry Knowe put up a brave fight but, with their wooden boat soon ablaze, they were forced to abandon ship.

Next in the line of fire was the Garrigill. As the only one of the four drifters with the means of sending a warning signal, it may have been seen as a threat to the operation. Either way, she found herself singled out for particular attention by the Saida.

But with shells bursting all around, Garrigill’s brave-hearts refused to give in. According to an official report, “all members of the crew behaved in a highly creditable manner”.

None more so than John Turner. While one deckhand answered the cruiser’s fire with shells from the boat’s six-pounder gun, the recently-promoted acting second hand from Martham volunteered to perform what seemed a nigh-on suicidal feat of daring.

Realising that the enemy were bent on destroying the drifter’s wireless mast, Turner clambered ‘aloft’ under a hail of fire in a desperate attempt to “strike the topmast”.

To those looking on, it seemed as though every nerve-jangling second would be his last. His precarious progress drew a storm of fire during which shells could be seen “passing between the mast and the funnel”.

But somehow, against all the odds, his courage was rewarded and he succeeded in clearing away the damaged main-mast before it was destroyed.

By some miracle that few could fathom, Turner and the Garrigill contrived to survive the Saida’s furious assault to limp back to base. Others among the drifter fleet, however, were less fortunate.

All told, 14 boats were sunk and another four variously damaged during an attack lasting more than two hours. The losses included Turner’s original boat, the Serene. All bar one of her crew were among more than 70 men taken prisoner.

The exception was Joe Hendry who, refusing calls to surrender, remained on board till the boat sank beneath him and was eventually picked up from the water by another drifter some hours later.

Such instances of heroic resistance were not unique. Despite the unjust criticism levelled by senior officers at those drifter crews who had capitulated without a fight, thus failing in the words of the Admiralty to uphold “the traditions of the Navy by… fighting to the last”, there were numerous instances of outstanding courage in the face of “overwhelming odds”.

They were headed by the Scottish skipper of the Gowanlea. Rather than surrender, Joe Watt had urged his crew to give “three cheers for a fight to the finish” before steaming straight towards one of the cruisers, an act of crazy defiance which he incredibly survived to receive a Victoria Cross.

Of the other heroic resistors the men of the gallant Garrigill were adjudged by some to be little less deserving of recognition. All 11 crew members, including a boy seaman, were recommended for the nation’s second highest award for bravery, the Conspicuous Gallantry Medal, but in the end a parsimonious Admiralty granted just one - to the heroic mast-climber John Turner.

His was one of just four such awards from an original list of 45 submitted by the admiral commanding British forces in the Adriatic.

The distinction proved a rare highlight in an otherwise unremarkable war. Following further service in home ports, John Turner returned to Martham in March, 1919 with little fanfare to resume his old life.

Working variously as a fisherman, boatbuilder and marshman prior to his death, aged 74, in 1966 his focus was not on past glory but on providing for his growing family.

He and his wife, Susanna, had four children and their descendants continue to live in that corner of Broadland which produced one of Norfolk’s greatest and yet least-known heroes of the First World War at sea.


TOPICS: History; Local News; Military/Veterans
KEYWORDS: navy; ww1
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1 posted on 05/14/2017 11:13:27 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

Great read, thanks!


2 posted on 05/14/2017 11:51:18 PM PDT by W. (Trump: America's Churchill!)
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To: nickcarraway

why do the English make out that their defeats are so glorious ?

is it some bizarre homo idea ?


3 posted on 05/15/2017 1:07:52 AM PDT by vooch (America First)
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To: nickcarraway

Thanks for this.


4 posted on 05/15/2017 1:38:53 AM PDT by mindburglar (When Superman and Batman fight, the only winner is crime.)
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To: vooch

What defeat?

They won that war, because of men like the ones in the article.


5 posted on 05/15/2017 1:40:29 AM PDT by mindburglar (When Superman and Batman fight, the only winner is crime.)
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To: mindburglar

the english lost this particular battle.

and they certainly didn’t ‘win’ the war. We did.


6 posted on 05/15/2017 1:46:22 AM PDT by vooch (America First)
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To: vooch

WW1? Check your history. We helped...


7 posted on 05/15/2017 1:49:20 AM PDT by mindburglar (When Superman and Batman fight, the only winner is crime.)
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To: mindburglar

This article omits the rather large presence of French and Italian battlefleets in the Austrian breakup of the anti sub barrage. They outnumbered the Austrians in cannon weight by far.

Yes - WWI was won by Doughboys.

The English were responsible for such wonderous achievements like the multiple attempts at national suicide at the Somme, the drunkerds failure at Gallipoli, more insanity at Ypres, Paschedaele, failure after bloody failure.

Sorry but standing doggedly while one gets slaughtered like sheep isn’t heroic it’s stupid. And this English seem particularly predisposed to celebrating their defeats as some glorious event.

It’s a odd way of thinking.


8 posted on 05/15/2017 2:21:37 AM PDT by vooch (America First)
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To: vooch
You seem to have a thing about the Brits. Their horrific loses in the Somme and Paschendaele and Gallipoli and others were sustained because of flawed tactics and poor leadership - not because of any lack of courage. They rightly remember and celebrate the salutary bravery of their men, as they should.

We "won" because they and the French held the line all by themselves on the Western Front against the Germans, while we waited for three and half years before we decided to weigh in.

No need to get snotty about the contributions of the English.

9 posted on 05/15/2017 3:47:18 AM PDT by Chainmail (A simple rule of life: if you can be blamed, you're responsible.)
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To: vooch

It makes them feel good......


10 posted on 05/15/2017 4:07:46 AM PDT by rrrod (just an old guy with a gun in his pocket.l)
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To: Chainmail

***No need to get snotty about the contributions of the English.****

Thank you;)

Hatred for the English correlates to incompetence with the language; grammar, spelling, factual errors, bias and jealousy. If Anglophobes are so smart, perhaps they should use a language other than English. It might help;)


11 posted on 05/15/2017 4:22:07 AM PDT by sodpoodle (Life is prickly - carry tweezers)
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To: nickcarraway

The forces seem a bit more evenly matched than the story makes out.

British:

2 light cruisers
10 destroyers
47 drifters

Austro/German:

1 armored cruiser
3 light cruisers
4 destroyers
3 submarines

The “by three heavily-armed light cruisers” also seems a bit of a stretch. The Novara, Helgoland, and Saida had 3.9 inch guns, the trawlers had a 2.2 inch gun (although the support force easily outgunned the Austrian force.)


12 posted on 05/15/2017 4:54:13 AM PDT by PAR35
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To: Chainmail
not because of any lack of courage

It could have been that they were more afraid of their officers than the enemy. At least the French troops had the courage to mutiny in 1917 (units of 49 divisions participated) forcing a change in tactics.

13 posted on 05/15/2017 5:00:47 AM PDT by PAR35
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To: vooch

“We” didn’t win the war. By joining the Triple Entente we simply made it impossible for the Central Powers to win. Once they figured that out they pretty much collapsed.


14 posted on 05/15/2017 5:43:56 AM PDT by Afterguard (Deplorable me!)
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To: Chainmail

senseless slaughter is not to be honored


15 posted on 05/15/2017 6:12:26 AM PDT by vooch (America First)
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To: PAR35
"It could have been that they were more afraid of their officers than the enemy"

Wow. Not exactly a historian OR a combat veteran, are you? Not huge on logic, either: the officers were "armed" with riding crop or swagger sticks and a whistle, while their enemies covered No-Man's-Land with sheets of continuous machine gun fire and artillery. No contest.

16 posted on 05/19/2017 5:31:13 AM PDT by Chainmail (A simple rule of life: if you can be blamed, you're responsible.)
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To: vooch
"senseless slaughter is not to be honored"

Pathetic. You clearly have no experience in situations requiring courage, or you would have more respect for it.

17 posted on 05/19/2017 5:33:41 AM PDT by Chainmail (A simple rule of life: if you can be blamed, you're responsible.)
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To: Chainmail

You are the one who appears to be quite ignorant of history. Maybe a Western Civ survey course as a freshman in college to supplement your high school course taught by a coach?

Maybe if you study the British class structure which didn’t really begin to break down until after World War I, you’d be able to comprehend my comment.


18 posted on 05/19/2017 1:55:08 PM PDT by PAR35
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To: Chainmail; vooch

Marching into massed machine gun fire doesn’t show courage. It shows stupidity and programming. You’d make a good private or a dead second lieutenant in combat.


19 posted on 05/19/2017 1:58:50 PM PDT by PAR35
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To: PAR35

Wow - such effective and impressive retorts!

Nah, not really. My first instincts are correct: you’ve never graced us with your presence in a uniform much less faced fire. You have no idea at all what you’re talking about.

Too bad - you’ve wasted our time.


20 posted on 05/19/2017 3:17:40 PM PDT by Chainmail (A simple rule of life: if you can be blamed, you're responsible.)
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