Biography & True Story Books:

Hunter to Hunted - Surviving Hitler's Wolf Packs

Diaries of a Merchant Navy Radio Officer, 1939-45
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Description

Early 1939 saw a world already in turmoil and Great Britain enter deeper into a period of momentous political upheaval and decision-making around the growing threat of a second World War. That said, daily life went on, and so it was for a nineteen-year-old Perthshire lad, son of the local headmaster and one of four siblings, who had just graduated from Dundee's Wireless College and was embarking on a career as a Radio Officer in the Merchant Navy. Accompanied by his father, Alex Anderson signed-on his first voyage at the age of nineteen, at the offices of Christian Salvesen, in Leith, Scotland and became a participant in the S.S. New Sevilla Whaling Expedition to the Antarctic, 1939/40 Season. From day one, he started to experience the vagaries associated with a working life at sea, far from his comfortable home life in rural Perthshire. Hardships abound, but fascinating sights and experiences were equally plentiful which, together with a fascination for far-off places, provided the necessary counterbalance. Schoolboy heroes like 'Scott of the Antarctic' and Sir Ernest Shackleton were brought closer to home when seeing first-hand Shackleton's memorial site at Grytviken as well as being up close to icebergs, pack-ice and experiencing all manner of the Antarctic's notorious weather conditions. Together with an almost daily pre-occupation with what was being served up in the Mess (or saloon) at mealtimes, the weather was the other topic of much comment, not least that it directly impacted on their whale quota, but lives also depended on it. Dangers from the elements were a constant, whether from simply negotiating the decks to scraping ice from the aerials atop the radio room shack on one of the small whale Catchers, the workhorses of the whaling fleet. The rest of the world had moved on. As the six-month expedition, so far from the growing European theatre of conflict, came to a close, the return voyage focussed on new threats, U-Boats! Alex's first time at sea would be his last in peacetime. The North Atlantic became the next hunting-ground where merchant shipping, rather than whales would now be the 'hunted'. For the next five and a half years, until his discharge from war service as a de facto RN officer, Alex would serve on a further six vessels supplying Great Britain and the Allied effort with everything from oil to fighter planes, coal to invasion barges, often in convoys numbering over one hundred vessels. However, on occasions, weather, engine damage or even the holding of an onboard burial (at sea), meant being separated from the convoy and the all-important naval escorts. Left at the mercy of Hitler's Wolf Packs, the tables had well and truly turned.Despite the times, the hardships and solemn war-time news there was also humour, new friendships, romance and all of life's experiences still going on. This provided a wide range of anecdotes meticulously captured in diary entries, along with a plethora of photographs and souvenirs, gathered along the way. From those met on far-off shores with connections as close as the next village to a ship mate come artist recruited by Naval Intelligence for clandestine propaganda duties in Cairo. The UK's first female registered marine engineer, God-daughter of Queen Victoria, an MBE and the first ever female recipient of a Lloyd's War Medal for bravery shared the same hotel whilst sheltering after an aerial attack.With daily dangers at sea, any chance of leave when back in British ports were eagerly taken up

Author Biography:

Born, Alexander (Alex) Anderson at Spittalfield Schoolhouse, Perthshire, Scotland in 1920 to School Headmaster John Blair Anderson and his wife Janet (Plenderleith), the author was educated at Perth Academy before attending Dundee Wireless College. He graduated from in 1939 with a Postmaster General's Certificate (1st class) in Radio Telegraphy. Employed first by the Christian Salvesen shipping company, he left home aged 19 years. He was firstly exposed to the rigours of an Antarctic Whaling Expedition before encountering daily threats from Hitler's U-boats and Luftwaffe, on the North Atlantic Convoys. After signing-on for the first time at the Salvesen office in Leith, he parted company with his father who handed him three school jotters. His fatherly advice - to keep a diary of his experiences on this unique opportunity. Advice taken, he went on, in light of wartime shortages, to use opened-out envelopes and cardboard packets to record every-day events, as well as wartime experiences. From the dangerous to the exciting, the humorous to the tragic, living through the 1939-45 years truly became a rite of passage that saw this young man survive the relentless attempts to sink Britain's supply life-line. This was tragically borne out with the subsequent loss to enemy action of no less than four of the seven ships he proudly served on.Discharged from de facto RN War Service on 28th November 1945 by the Merchant Navy, he later set up home in Crieff, Perthshire. Here he ran a successful Radio & T.V. Sales and Service business and started a family. This was followed by the running of a bed & breakfast with wife Betty in Crieff, and latterly Glenalmond. Full retirement came on a move back to the village of Methven where they both grew up. Alex's penultimate goal was achieved by living into the new millennium just before his passing on Valentine's Day, 2000. His final goal, a legacy passed to his sons, was the publication of his WWII memoir. Although only representing six of his eighty years, his journey of remembrance, from hunter to hunted, became his life's work.
Release date Australia
August 28th, 2023
Author
Pages
322
Audience
  • General (US: Trade)
Dimensions
140x216x18
ISBN-13
9781805411413
Product ID
38244694

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