Apprentice S. Cowell
FIRST NAMES: Sylvester
UNIT: Merchant Navy
NUMBER: 106417
STATUS: Killed in Action
DATE OF DEATH: 29th March 1918
CEMETERY OR MEMORIAL: Tower Hill Memorial, London
AGE: 17 or 18
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sylvester Cowell was born in Northallerton and was educated at Northallerton Grammar School, having won a North Riding County Council Scholarship to do so. He lived with Mr & Mrs W Hunton, at Brompton, while he was at school, after which he joined the Merchant Navy. Sadly, William Hunton was also destined to die of wounds received during the Battle of the Somme and his name is recorded on the Brompton Memorial.
He was killed when his ship, the S.S. T.R. Thompson was torpedoed, without warning, on Good Friday 1918, with the loss of 33 lives including that of the Captain. The S.S. T.R. Thompson was a merchant vessel of 3538 tons, registered in Sunderland, though it did carry a gun for defensive purposes. The ship was approximately 7 miles South of Newhaven when it was attacked and sunk.
Sylvester has no known grave but the sea and he is commemorated on the Tower Hill Memorial in London, which is dedicated to all those officers and men who were killed while serving with the Merchant Navy and Fishing Fleets and who have no known grave. The memorial is situated next to the Tower Hill Underground station.
He was either 17 or 18 when he was killed, the former being his age according to the Register Of Shipping and Seamen and the latter that recorded in the register of the Tower Hill Memorial.
Monday, June 14, 2004
Thursday, June 10, 2004
T R Thompson ~ Memorials
Memorials to the casulaties of the T R Thompson include:-
The Bombay 1914-1918 Memorial
The Dover (St James's) Cemetery , Kent
The Plymoth Naval Memorial, Devon
The Portsmouth Naval Memorial, Hampshire
The Tower Hill Memorial, London
Photographs of the Memorials are now sought!
Chris-P
The Bombay 1914-1918 Memorial
The Dover (St James's) Cemetery , Kent
The Plymoth Naval Memorial, Devon
The Portsmouth Naval Memorial, Hampshire
The Tower Hill Memorial, London
Photographs of the Memorials are now sought!
Chris-P
The Rota - A Mirror Image ?
A British armed merchantman that was transporting iron ore from the Algerian port of Beni Saf to the United Kingdom. That was torpedoed and sunk by a German submarine during the First World War leaving a wreck with a stern gun lying upright in the English channel that has been dived and had it's bell recovered, is this the story of the T R Thompson - No!
It's the sory of the 'ROTA' that lies at 50 24 57N; 03 18 50W. The bell of this British, formerly Danish, 2171-ton armed merchantman built in 1915 by Dunlop, Bremmer and Company, was raised by Devon divers Ken Breeze and Dave Baker in 1981. The 310ft ship was heading from Beni Saf in Algeria with a cargo of iron ore for Middlesborough on 22nd July 1917, when she was torpedoed by UB-40, commanded by Oberleutnant Howaldt. On this mission from Zeebrugge (14th to 25th July), Howaldt had already sunk the liner Salsette in Dorset waters on 20th July and had been heavily depth-charged on several occasions. When this torpedo struck the ROTA, the captain and four men died.
Today the ship is upright and the torpedo damage can be clearly seen between bows and bridge on the starboard side. She lies almost east-west, in 28m to her deck and 44m to the sea bed. There is a 2m scour in her port side. Until recently her gun was still on the stern.
Chris-P
It's the sory of the 'ROTA' that lies at 50 24 57N; 03 18 50W. The bell of this British, formerly Danish, 2171-ton armed merchantman built in 1915 by Dunlop, Bremmer and Company, was raised by Devon divers Ken Breeze and Dave Baker in 1981. The 310ft ship was heading from Beni Saf in Algeria with a cargo of iron ore for Middlesborough on 22nd July 1917, when she was torpedoed by UB-40, commanded by Oberleutnant Howaldt. On this mission from Zeebrugge (14th to 25th July), Howaldt had already sunk the liner Salsette in Dorset waters on 20th July and had been heavily depth-charged on several occasions. When this torpedo struck the ROTA, the captain and four men died.
Today the ship is upright and the torpedo damage can be clearly seen between bows and bridge on the starboard side. She lies almost east-west, in 28m to her deck and 44m to the sea bed. There is a 2m scour in her port side. Until recently her gun was still on the stern.
Chris-P
Tuesday, June 08, 2004
T R Thompson ~ Casualty Names
Listed below are the names of the T R Thompson casualties, I have more information on each of the named persons, those with european names have a greater deal of information recorded :-
ABDUL HAMID
ABDULLAH
HASAN MUHAMMAD
IBRAHIM ALI
MUHAMMAD
UMAR MUHAMMAD
ALI
REES, HANANIAH
CRAIG, CHARLES GOWANS
SIMPSON, GEORGE
AGG , A
BAKER, HENRY
COWELL, SYLVESTER
DAVIES, JOSHUA SIMEON
DREW, ALBERT EDWARD THOMAS
EVELEIGH, ALEXANDER DAVID
GODFREY, MARSHALL
HARGEST, THOMAS LEWIS
HENDERSON, T
HOWELLS, FREDERICK
JACK, LESLIE FRANCIS
KRIPAH, C
NICHOLAS, EVAN
REMNANT, HARRY
SHEWAN, WILLIAM
SLATER, W,
SPAIN, STANLEY
TOWLER, THOMAS
WINBERG, R
WOODALL, THOMAS STANLEY
YAMARE,J
There are 31 names (RIP) whereas the information we have indicates that there was a crew of 36 of which only three were saved. The DIVER Magazine article of Sept 1990 suggests the Master's name was EGGLESTONE where as this research indicates that William SHEWAN was the master at the time of the ship's loss.
As ever more research is needed!
Chris-P
ABDUL HAMID
ABDULLAH
HASAN MUHAMMAD
IBRAHIM ALI
MUHAMMAD
UMAR MUHAMMAD
ALI
REES, HANANIAH
CRAIG, CHARLES GOWANS
SIMPSON, GEORGE
AGG , A
BAKER, HENRY
COWELL, SYLVESTER
DAVIES, JOSHUA SIMEON
DREW, ALBERT EDWARD THOMAS
EVELEIGH, ALEXANDER DAVID
GODFREY, MARSHALL
HARGEST, THOMAS LEWIS
HENDERSON, T
HOWELLS, FREDERICK
JACK, LESLIE FRANCIS
KRIPAH, C
NICHOLAS, EVAN
REMNANT, HARRY
SHEWAN, WILLIAM
SLATER, W,
SPAIN, STANLEY
TOWLER, THOMAS
WINBERG, R
WOODALL, THOMAS STANLEY
YAMARE,J
There are 31 names (RIP) whereas the information we have indicates that there was a crew of 36 of which only three were saved. The DIVER Magazine article of Sept 1990 suggests the Master's name was EGGLESTONE where as this research indicates that William SHEWAN was the master at the time of the ship's loss.
As ever more research is needed!
Chris-P
Friday, June 04, 2004
Ships Owners ~ Westoll Line
Been doing some more research to while away the hours and annoy the wife... seems we might possibly be woofing up some incorrect timber with our old mate Mr Thompson.
I found a copy of "Lloyds Shipwreck Index Of The British Isles Vol 2 - Hampshire, IOW, Sussex & Kent" sitting in Newhaven library... now it's Lloyds list-based so it ought to be legit and at £54 a copy I'd trust it!
T'book says she was owned by Westoll Line (not Thompsons) and that the Captain was one Thomas Knill.
Further to this it says that the gun was a 12 pdr 12 cwt (info here:
http://www.warships1.com/Weapons/WNBR_3-40_mk1.htm )
Plus, and this is the bit that really gave me some hope that we might get some cracking information... A lot of J Westoll's information and Short books and plans seem to be stored on Tyneside...
http://www.thenortheast.com/archives/guides.html
And it seems we need Guides 5 and 6 to really get cracking on... 'cos there's crew lists and all sorts of stuff!
Who's been a Busy Hector then?
I found a copy of "Lloyds Shipwreck Index Of The British Isles Vol 2 - Hampshire, IOW, Sussex & Kent" sitting in Newhaven library... now it's Lloyds list-based so it ought to be legit and at £54 a copy I'd trust it!
T'book says she was owned by Westoll Line (not Thompsons) and that the Captain was one Thomas Knill.
Further to this it says that the gun was a 12 pdr 12 cwt (info here:
http://www.warships1.com/Weapons/WNBR_3-40_mk1.htm )
Plus, and this is the bit that really gave me some hope that we might get some cracking information... A lot of J Westoll's information and Short books and plans seem to be stored on Tyneside...
http://www.thenortheast.com/archives/guides.html
And it seems we need Guides 5 and 6 to really get cracking on... 'cos there's crew lists and all sorts of stuff!
Who's been a Busy Hector then?
Wednesday, June 02, 2004
Beni Saf - Algerian Port
Beni Saf - Algerian Port from which TR Thompson sailed on her last voyage a port, town, northwestern Algeria. It lies midway between Cape Falcon and Cape l'Eau. With the discovery of iron deposits in the surrounding hills, an artificial harbour enclosing 45 acres (18 hectares) of water was built (1876–81) by the Companie de Mines de Soumah et Toufna (later absorbed by the Companie de Mokta el-Hadid).
"Beni Saf." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2004. Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service.
2 June 2004.
Matt's note:
1. "Hadid" is the Arabic word for 'iron', which makes the company's name spot on.
"Beni Saf." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2004. Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service.
2 June 2004
Matt's note:
1. "Hadid" is the Arabic word for 'iron', which makes the company's name spot on.
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