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745 messages posted to the guestbook |
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DON SEYMOUR from PETERBOROUGH said... | 14/10/2000 |
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Les seymour |
My father Les seymour was an AB on the Barham from 12/04/1941 until it was sunk ,up until he died 04/11/98 he always had a special regard for this ship even though he had many others including HMS York which was also sunk.He finished his coreer in submarines .I would like to obtain a copy of his service history and I wonder if anybody could tell me how to go about this |
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jessie from south Austrailia said... | 14/10/2000 |
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My grandad was on the HMS Barham when it sank I'm 11 and in school we are learning about this which gets me upset because of the amount of men that were on the Barham my grandad died about 5 years ago and we still have the poems that he wrote and we still have pictures of the Barham and of my Grandad just before he left.I was thrilled when my parents and my nan went on this site because now I know that my grandad went to war to make sure that all of us now have a future and I just hope that every body appreciates what they sacraficed for us and that I will allways be thankfull to all those soldiers who faught.sorry gotta go love jess |
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Mrs May Jones from Adelaide. South Australia said... | 07/10/2000 |
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Ernest Jones |
My husband was Boy Telegraphist - Ernest Jones D/JX162202. He was second youngest on board Barham, and survived the sinking. He passed away in October 95 - he would have LOVED this site! I will send a photo of him taken when he first joined Barham at age 17 which can be added to this website. The whole family is very proud of Ern and Barham, and are thrilled to have found this site. |
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Cynthia Schofield from Wallsend Tyne & Wear said... | 30/09/2000 |
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Robert (Bob) Septimus Craig |
I am the daughter of Robert(Bob) Septimus Craig, A Petty Officer Stoker who perished on H.M.S. Barham when I was nine months old. I have many happy memories of Mrs Cooke (The Captains widow)and her kindnesses to my mother (Jean Craig) and myself. She and my mother formed a warm friendship which lasted until Mrs Cooke passed away. I would be interested to hear, via my daughters e-mail address(above) of anyone who knew my father. |
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Bryan James Samuels from Plymouth. England said... | 28/09/2000 |
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Bryan James Samuels |
I am a survivor from the Barham, and a contemporary of George Elliott. I was 17 and eleven months when she was sunk. My defence station was P2 in the 6" gun battery and was on watch at that station when we were hit. Situated on the port side close to where the 'fish' hit and because of the melee with men rushing up from the messdecks below, I was very fortunate to escape, which I did by going up though the galley into the starboard battery and then up through the bakery flat and out onto the upper deck. By this time the ship was listing to port at about 45 degrees and I had to crawl up the deck and down onto the starboard glasis. As I got over the guard rails and down onto the ships side, I saw the terrific explosion aft of me and the next thing I remember was trying to swim to the surface. I surfaced in inches of oil and saw many bobbing heads and several dead shipmates floating around me. I was eventually picked up by Hotspur. To this day the memory remains with me as if it was yesterday and I am sure the other survivors have the same experience. I am delighted that you have set up this homepage, Sara, and I will be a frequent visitor. It is very difficult for me to get to reunions or to the Abbey now-a-days so this will help me keep up to speed. God Bless you, Jim. |
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Ken Gibson from West Vancouver, Canada said... | 23/09/2000 |
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Ken Gibson, Peter Black |
Congratulations on creating the HMS Barham Survivors Assciation website. It is important to keep alive the memory of the 861 men who lost their lives. I am a survivor now 79, and would like to sign the guestbook in memory of a close friend, Peter Black, Electrical Artificer, who went down with the ship. We both attended H.M. Dockyard School, Malta, 1933 to 1936. As a volunteer entertainer for seniors in care facilities I met von Tiesenhausen in the West Vancouver Care Centre in March 1999. The staff of the centre knew that he was a former U-Boat Captain, but did not know the details of the sinking of the Barham. During my visit of the 20th of September 2000, after his death,I was asked to tell the full story of the loss of the Barham. The audience was shocked at the number of lives lost. Much interest was shown. They are going to get Frank Wade's book for their library. I also mentioned the Waterside Website. Please find herewith, "My escape from the sinking battleship HMS Barham." |
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Bernadette Turner from Tenterfield NSW Australia said... | 21/09/2000 |
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William, Keenan |
My fathers half brothers were supposed to be aboard the Barham name of William? & Keeenan? Hutson does anybody have any information regarding these names.Thank you. |
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Joanna Harriet Thomas nee Pitts from London, U.K said... | 15/09/2000 |
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George Stanley Pitts |
daughter of Captain George Stanley Pitts RM My father went down in the Barham when I was two years old. My mother was so shocked about his death and the violence of war she only went to the Survivors' Association service once when I was very young; I don't know if I went as well. (She came from a pacifist family). I always knew there was a Book of Remembrance at Westminster Abbey but I could not face asking to see it, though I worked as a tour guide for British Tours and visited Westminster Abbey at least once a week over a year. It is thanks to Joan Dove (the widow of Surgeon Commander Sorley and Sarah O'Donnoghue's grandfather) who lived with us in North Wales before November 1941 and remained in contact and a friend of my mother that I heard of "A Midshipman's War". She sent us a copy. On reading the chapter on the "Barham" it laid some ghosts, I ceased to think of him floating deep in the water, but more at peace. For me it seemed that the torpedoing was random and therefore more acceptable. For the past three years I have attended the Survivors' Association Service at Westminster Abbey, my mother came two years ago. At the Union Jack Club with Sarah O'Donnoghue we met Commander Grogan and George Parker who has written about the "Barham". As a child I remember visiting Connie Cook, Captain Cook's widow she lived in a Mansion flat off Baker Street. She provided me as well as many other people with amongst other things American shoes, brogue lace ups which I can still see. She, I understand, worked tirelessly helping widows and their families. It is her energy which resulted in the collection to provide the candlesticks by the altar in the nave in Westminster Abbey which were carved by Robert Thompson whose symbol was a mouse carved in most of his work. I recently learnt that my mother and a friend Mary Vincent Smith whose husband John was a Doctor in the Navy, spent the evening together with Connie Cook on the day peace was declared. My second cousin Dr Tom Pitts, my father's contemporary, recently told me that once after he retired when he was hospital visiting, a sailor who was on the Barham asked if he was related to my father. He then said that he was the last person to be let through the hatches by my father, before he closed them and the ship exploded. |
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brian e horner from 1061 utsalady,camano,wa,usa said... | 02/09/2000 |
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ERIC HORNER |
MY FATHER ERIC HORNER DIED ON THE BARHAM WHEN I WAS ELLEVEN MONTHS OLD.HE WAS A STOKER,I BEIIEVE HE SERVED ON THE SHIP FOR ABOUT THREE YEARS.ITS AMAZING TO KNOW THAT FOR THE PAST THIRTY YEARS CAPTAIN TIESENHAUSEN WAS LIVING SO CLOSE.I WISH I HAD KNOWN.THANK YOU SARA FOR THIS WEB SIGHT. |
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Mike Barham from Mississauga, Ontario, Canada said... | 31/08/2000 |
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I was looking for family tree information when i happened across this page. My immediate family originated in Coventry, and i am tracing ancestory back. I am glad to know this piece of history and will look for any links between its name and my background. Thank you. My condolences to any remaining survivors and their families. |
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