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Normandy: HMMMS 44

by failsworth

Contributed by听
failsworth
People in story:听
richard cooper
Location of story:听
normandy
Background to story:听
Royal Navy
Article ID:听
A2593019
Contributed on:听
03 May 2004

TO ANYONE WHO MIGHT BE EVEN SLIGHTLY INTERESTED.

Very soon the victorious armed forces of WW11 will be celebrating the landings at Normandy on the 6th June.
It was of course one of the events of the last century and one of the many who did there bit were the Patrol Service whose base was at Lowestoft and supplied some of the minesweepers that swept the approaches to the three beachheads Sword, Juno and Gold. Who seem to have been forgotten or worse, never known.
I was on HMMMS 44, we left Weymouth June 4th, we reckoned that was when D Day started, those who came after us were late. We arrived with sweeps out on the 5th. For the next few weeks it was a bit noisy, I believe several minesweepers were lost but Mickey Mouse minesweepers were very dispensable and little if anything was heard of any of these losses. To be there when a Mickey Mouse explodes a mine, when the sweeper explodes the mine, not the sweeping gear, is something to behold. One second there鈥檚 a boat with a crew of 20, some of whom you know reasonably well and then there鈥檚 nothing, except a big pall of very black smoke and a tiny bit of debris floating on the sea. LL sweeps were carried out by three sweepers working line abreast. What happens next is the coffin ship, who has been trailing two miles astern comes up and takes the place of the departed and you carry on as if nothing had happened. As I say Mickey Mouse sweepers were very dispensable.
Some time after D Day, about the 29th July, four of us were sent to sweep a channel as far as the mouth of the River Seine. It was a beautiful day, the sun shone, the sea was as flat as a mill pond, the sort of day rich people would pay one hundred pounds a week for what we were being paid two to three pounds a week, we told ourselves.
We were the sweeper nearest to the shore. I was on the forecastle cleaning the 12 pounder when I heard a splash and looking up saw what was left of the splash some few hundred yards further to sea than the outside sweeper. Apparently the skipper of the middle sweeper, who was in charge, radioed our bosses back at our base, that we were being shelled by a 4.7 shore battery. The base was on a battleship belting 16 inch shells in to Normandy,. The message came back, 鈥淭here is a war on you wimps carry on !!鈥 or words to that effect. It didn鈥檛 take long before the shore battery found the correct range and quickly demolished the outside sweepers superstructure. The battery was some seven miles away and our main armament was the 12 pounder, maximum effective range 800 yards, some use. It was reported to the powers that be that several of the crew had been killed We were then allowed to return, don鈥檛 think we rated too highly.
A couple of memories you may find interesting, there was at our beachheads a 10,000 ton merchantman anchored fore and aft, just to supply those that wanted it with water. (We were rationed to 20 gallons per day for the 20 of us. The cook took what he wanted first and when the 20 gallons had been emptied from the tank that was it.)
I often wondered why that ship was never attacked it seemed fairly easy for an e-boat to have nipped in with a torpedo. On watch one night, looking out over Caen, the whole of the sky seemed to be on fire. What I could obviously see were tracer shells but only one in ten of those that were being fired, so there were quite a few at all times At one point in time I saw four aircraft shot down all at the same time. Three of them came down in the traditional way, straight to the ground but the fourth cart-wheeled ever so slowly. I remember thinking or perhaps saying softly to that pilot 鈥業 hope you have either parachuted out or you are dead鈥 It was about this time I saw my first V 1 rocket, the Doodlebug. I also remember seeing a dead English army sergeant go floating by. We ignored him, but a very large wheel complete with tyre and tube we stopped for that.
Very shortly after this the tube around the propeller shaft came loose giving us a maximum speed of 3 knots and as 7 knots was needed to mine sweep we were sent back to our base at Sheerness for a refit. We had got as far as about four miles off the coast of Hastings when a V1 went overhead chased by a Spitfire. By this time RAF pilots had stopped shooting them down and had learned to tip the wing which turned the rocket around and send it back the way it had come, if they caught it quickly enough it could blast those that sent it. The pilot did just that and immediately the fuel cut out and down it came. It blew up just astern. The explosion blew us through the water some yards and broke every cup , plate, saucer and even destroyed our little radio we listened to the Forces network with Bing and the Andrews Sisters,Vera Lynn, Anne Shelton ete etc However, the one week鈥檚 leave we would have got because of the extra damage became two weeks.
Our next skirmish was sweeping the River Scheldt and that was were the war really started, at least for HMMMS 44.It made the D Day landings seem like a Sunday School picnic by comparison. Walcheren Isle had been heavily fortified by the Germans and before the sweepers went in it had to be cleared. Apparently the RAF bombed it and then the Marines went in, cleared it, leaving nothing higher than 6 inches so that, if the Germans came back there would be no protection. Then it was the minesweepers turn.
I think those mines must have been laid end to end. They went up like rip-raps, or Chinese crackers So did a few minesweepers. (we were told later that the quayside at the town of Schilling was covered with bodies with broken bones) In no time at all the air was a black fog. The Scheldt at the mouth is 5 miles wide and you could have walked across it on dead and stunned fish. That night we were first up on the 大象传媒鈥檚 6 o鈥檆lock news. The only time the minesweepers ever got a mention The operation only took a couple of days but the 44 led a charmed life. As I have said minesweepers were very dispensable. There is more if anyone is interested.

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These messages were added to this story by site members between June 2003 and January 2006. It is no longer possible to leave messages here. Find out more about the site contributors.

Message 1 - Hi

Posted on: 03 May 2004 by Andy1971

Hello failsworth, thankyou for posting this, I found it very interesting. Its great to read another view on D-day, one that we dont often get to hear about. Believe it or not there are many of us out here who are very interested in what you veterans have to say. I belong to a WW2 forum that has over 1400 members from all over the world, and that span all different ages. We even have a couple of veterans posting on the boards about thier experiences.
A Sapper who landed on Sword beach has been telling us all his experiences of D-day through to his final blighty that let him 100% war disabled. He had a friend who was a crew member on a troop ship that was used in D-day. This chap had his story posted on the site, which was well recieved. So were out here and were interested.

Thankyou for your service

best regards

Andy

Message 2 - Hi

Posted on: 03 May 2004 by George Dangerfield

Hello to Andy and to failswoth.

As a kid I worked at Richards Ship Yard , Lowestoft.

We built Magnetic Mine Sweepers then. I wonder if failsworth ever sailed in one that I helped to build. I remember they had a great big Asdec fitting on the bow. Built of wood, I understand they were not the most comfortable ships to serve on because they rolled like a drunken cow

Regards
George Dangerfield Ex RN

Message 3 - Hi

Posted on: 06 May 2004 by Andy1971

Hello Mr Dangerfield, as they say its a small old world, would be interesting to know if failsworth did as you say sail in one of your ships.

Can I ask what a Asdec fitting is?

Andy

Message 1 - Looking for Hopper 44

Posted on: 02 November 2005 by scully3915

I wrote my fathers story on this site, 'a young stokers story' and the minesweeper mentioned was Hopper 44. later to become HMS Hopskill.
I cannot find it anywhere, and wondered if this story was something close to it. He called it a 'mickey mouse ship' too.

Message 1 - D-Day & Scheldt

Posted on: 31 January 2006 by Doug Brearey

Hello there, My Father Reg Brearey served on MMS 256 and others. Like you he was involved in D.Day and the Scheldt Estuary.
He was aware like you that they were considered expendable.
His story is on this site under Memories of a Hostilities Only RNPS Wireman.
Doug Brearey

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