Jock Moffatt - Yeovilton Wardroom Taranto Mess Dinner
Jock Moffat was the Guest of Honour at the RNAS Yeovilton Wardroom Taranto Night Mess Dinner last night.
Jock is the Fleet Air Arm pilot credited with crippling the German battleship Bismarck during Operation Rheinόbung on 26 May 1941 whilst flying a Fairey Swordfish. Approaching 90 years old and still flying, Jock gave a great after dinner speech where he swung the lamp and told some truly outstanding dits, particularly of his role in the crippling of the Bismarck. It was an honour to be in Jocks company and to hear this true hero of the Fleet Air Arm talk of his experiences. RESPECT!!! :D:D:D:D check this out: www.youtube.com/watch?v=WYpiz77JwhQ |
He's not the only one still about. I was talking in the last few days to the prime mover behind the FAAOA gliding scholarships. He started telling me of his FAA career, and as he spoke I worked out that he had to be eighty-six, at least. He was awarded wings in about 1940 or '41 aged 21, and was a squadron CO by the end of the war, by which time he can only have been 24/25.
Amazing - and we need to learn all we can from them, fast, as they won't be around in ten years or so. :D |
I had the honour of hosting John Wellham at a Yeovilton Taranto Night about 11 years ago. A fascinating man, he thought the ear plugs (for the after dinner shenanigans) were 'after dinner' sweets and he tried to eat them.
No one noticed at the time, he recounted the tale in communication after the event! He wrote a very good book, which is still available and covers Taranto as well as other adventures. With Naval Wings - John Wellham. Well worth buying, especially with Christmas round the corner :ok: He also co-authored (with Thomas P Lowry) - The Attack on Taranto: A Blueprint for Pearl Harbour |
It was an absolute pleasure to listen to the words of a hero. Jock is 90 years old and yet he stood and talked to an audience of 200-300...average age 30 ish and everyone of them were spellbound. He told the dit of his war and in particular the attack on the Bismarck where he was forced to follow his CO in line abreast through a freezing layer upto 5000' and then a steep dive back down to below the 600' cloud base.
Jock finished his tale with the words...... " I want to see a Naval Officer in every embarked Fixed wing aircraft, including JSF" Sadly, I don't think that CDS has the moral courage to listen to men like Jock Moffat. |
There's more...
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And, sadly, here is the obituary notice for Captain A W F (Alfie) Sutton CBE DSC*, the last survivor of the original Taranto Night, who died aged 96 only five days before the 68th anniversary of the action:
Captain 'Alfie' Sutton - Telegraph Jack |
The Voyage of the Bismarck
I wrote this in 1971
The Voyage of the Bismarck Carriage of the Spirits We passed from Poland, stong and bold Young midshipmen and other sailors old. We manned the guns to sirens clapping in the wind and rain ; We were a giant sleek in the sun to seek The ponderous enemy every one And blow him all to glory with our knives and sliding keel, Their small destroyers, heavy cruisers, little packs of guns And merchant ships as well. So waited, hooting eagerly, for some brave David when This time the myth would sigh in pain. We manned, remanned, well-practiced, smooth and oiled While all around our giant form the massive ocean boiled ; Wet and smooth as a seal she slipped through thirty knots of sea Her long black hull and roaring bowels below Her mainmast chapped by the breeze, like heavy winters howled Her mountain funnel pouring oily smoke like fissures out to lea. Masts. Steel plates. They slice across the sea against the wind To rhythm kin to dockyards where the hammers muse These nails, these screws, these rivets staring at the sun alone Are thousandfold to flare and fuse To crash green fountains up the sky, across a path to home. In Norway crosstrees skipped among the cliffs. On either side the fiords greenly rose like dolphins in the wet sun With wet backs and fins that glisten Slack-backed fish which listen, listen For the heavy rolling, rolling, rolling thunder of the guns. And like the lips of giants they were and rose Warmly waving to the summer sun And that smile and with those eyes is how they froze ; And how they look now, tired and sickly Now the sluggish steamers crawl and browse. Games we played on deck to clangs and clangour Shouts and bouts of argument and sweat Prinz Eugen quietly dozed in the heat Though down below she got on fuel like packs of hungry wolves For meat. Sailors singing on to home in letters Warm as sweet meadows or the grassy slopes about us Telling of the great steel ship built to enfetter leaps of ocean Swiftly pacing, racing through the choppy clutter Moaning with our motion. And sailors walking the slopes And pictures taken quietly As if serene the storm blew up in mountain huts To tell us of this last-on-land for most of us. We sailed and smiled to chapped wet shores And once more, once more again our whistling struts and wires Were sweet, sweet music Were poignant music evermore, Were music rippling through our core. Down under now the hull once more exploded with the turbine pink While sternward waves of sullen grey, caught Chopped and cut about, whirled silent out across the mist As we began to plot new courses, many-feelered And with each change, to list One side to starboard or to port Off Iceland yellow mists enclose the sun. Thats where we were when crackled hints came running Out on radio and reports flew to the Captain, to Admiral Lutjens. And from him back to Berlin. To impatient Germany over harsh snow mountains, long walls Away from home Where Our Fuehrer worked like all the myriad demons In his halls. Engage! We waited. We went to our bunks and we waited. When it grew time to come up the sky was dark And the heavy black sea finned through the wind like a shark. Battle Stations! Spray whipped at our grave, silent, fearful faces. We watched. We waited.. We stared at the slow turrets Whining their guns across the low sky. The guns went out to the night and watched. They waited. Two shapes . Two heavy shapes formed off from the spars. Sighting! . Range fifty thousand yards .. closing. We come to maximum range in seven minutes. This is the Captain speaking. Attention crew! .. Attention! Enemy sighted. Believed force of two Battleships or one Battleship And one Battlecruiser. Have this moment received a telegram from the Fuehrer Himself. Orders are to engage with the spirit of the German people Behind us. Good luck! Range-reader .. Captain here. Call out your numbers. Forty-five thousand forty thousand yards thirty-five Battlecruiser Hood, pomp dictating every action, Sees the contest, charges in, spins, drifting round and round ; Thus experience took a stance and watched appalled The swing of Bismarcks guns. Her rocklike calm. quick movement The elusive youth who, her freedom won, with flawless guile Will in a second improvise and win a style. Twenty-five thousand yards .. Shoot! All at once our ears and scalps were torn from our heads. The sea shuddered thickly careened around the sky. The ocean in shreds jjumped ffrom gun to gun And rolled out on the miles in zigzag momentum. Up and down up and down the great giant guns flew along our side Ripping into the night. One by one and back Up and down again. Up and down and silent. Silent Up and down across the ship they came White-hot then slack. Then up and back again. Short! Short! All short! Whitehot water sprouted at our staring eyes. Thump and crash and lifting to the heavens near our sides. Thump and crash the ordered salvos came to us .. up and up Till down and down and onto decks they crashed. Short! Straddle! Short! Vessels jockey round As archers fit each arrow, carefully. Heavy charges follow yet the bowman at his stake Seems bent on middle-distance, lifts and pulls . The scream of arrows dies, One more arrow takes. The cling of bells of panel lights a sudden wink A pause before the thunderous crash resounds Throughout the ship. On and on and on again Until a general madness hammers in our brain, No time to feel no time to think. ( They say that to await four fifteen inch shells from across twenty-five thousand yards of water is a matter of thirty-five seconds) Twining throughout head and brain well placed To straddle us again Hooting playfully but nearer whining, moaning Tearing the sky till fit to burst, again, again, again Sudden on our decks wild orange flame. Extinguishers ! And so it was : the Hood and the Bismarck together entangled. Two navies champions in their little war waged at the Worlds Heart .. in the Middle, In the vast wide Centre-Stage at sea .. Countless times from both the heavy thunder rolled along the waves To nestle in the sea.. Titannic silver runnels, higher than both funnels, House-high heaved and fanned against the wind To spread across the acrid brine Muzzles heavynodding, blasting the sprayswept crowing seawinds spine, Prodding roaring crosstrees, finding the sea full thousand yards behind. Hit! .. Over! Hit! Good God above! And then the cap, the lid, the top of the world roared skyward. Flash after flash from Hood but not from her guns, Reared starkly blazing thundering to the clouds To rocket out of sight. Pitifully the flame played along her superstructure Settled low in the water and sighed and hissed in agony. A babble spreads ; shouts roars and cheers And men begin to sway and show delight Or boo and hiss. But thousands who have rocked the stands May instantly be silent ; All players turn, dismayed. The audience watch The players watch Each at his callous fear appalled and deeply shocked. The fight had disengaged, heart lost, We travelled slower, damaged, flaked our gloss. Hunted, silent, set for southern gales With thousand chanting shades clinging fiercely to our tail. With her gone and cap-in-hand for extra cigarettes, our crew, Wide-eyed and open-mouthed like boyish Indian braves As when they stood and watched the myriad foe alight and Journey to their grave : As when she settled in the sea, blew the sailors from her decks, Abruptly shook and rolled and then was gone with all her crew Save three .. So Hood is gone. Tribute to her soul my Germany That though she sank like tin she fired repeatedly. How like the singer to embark on hymns so strong To lift out mystery of how hes ever master of his song. For now we limp amidst the gloom Now, oh now, how little, very little room We find to shadow our activity To save us from a similar doom. These swordfish plague us Throw tin fishes at our hull and more enrage us. We throw stores of shells up to their sky And wonder why they shower in front of them and die ! Then we realised speed of shellburst, timed in port To shock a faster plane than this who dives uncaught, Is missynchronised, mistimes .. ironic thought ! Crippled further with our rudder gone, Caught at ten degrees consistently to port, We wallow feeling whalelike in some shallows And gathered up for sport. Ship unmanouevrable. Shall fight to the last shell Long live the Fuhrer ! Once more the wait. We await our death this time. All the huge guns freeze like quivering mice. Like bull elephants the roar will roll across the ship like dice Just as before ; before this stain of lady-luck Arrives to shiver in our beards and shake out devil-angry tears of pain They know the roll of thunder gone Is merely heralding the onset of a final deafening dawn. Dawn comes on The bite of a soft music reins inside the sea. We bucked steadily, rolled in the troughs in endless agony While those guns, those our great silent guns Played like gods to give us sight beyond this sea We settled softly to a widening spin ; one drunken mast with flashing cord The whole frame trembled turning with the wind. Ah, Prinz Eugen, friend, dear friend, where are you in this waste .? Silence clings to the lapping stars. Alone and friendless we, Far from home, hear the clear strain of a thousand Woodwind in the pipes and bends within the ship. We knew, that just as we piped aboard our hopes at home And whistled carelessly Now as death comes on in minute hands Now chants in crosstrees where our sailor-singing skipped So now we stand with heads bowed low Quite soon in death to dip. |
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