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Roll Of Honour

Surnames containing 'Beard'

12
Triton (N 15)
C/M 34733
Died: 8th Dec, 1940.
Aged: 40
Beard, Albert George DSM
Engine Room Artificer 1st Class
E 16 (I 96)
222602
Born: 20th Oct, 1885.
Died: 22nd Aug, 1912.
Aged: 26
Beard, Frederick James
Leading Seaman
RN DoB 20/01/1887
Untamed / Vitality (P 58)
C/SSX20048
Died: 30th May, 1943.
Aged: 25
Beard, Robert Leonard Sidney Archibald
Leading Seaman
Syrtis (P 241)
P/JX 159090
Died: 28th Mar, 1944.
Aged: 21
Beardsley, Albert
Able Seaman

Commonwealth War Graves Commission

A Tribute To Submariners

I have often looked for an opportunity of paying tribute to our submariners.

There is no branch of His Majesty's Forces which in this war has suffered the same proportion of total loss as our submarine service.

It is the most dangerous of all services.

That is perhaps the reason why the First Lord tells me that the entry into it is keenly sought by Officers and Men.

I feel sure the House would wish to testify its gratitude and admiration to our Submariners for their Skill - Courage and Devotion which has proved of inestimable value to the sustenance of our country.

Winston Churchill

We Will Remember Them
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RAF Royal Air Force
RAN Royal Autrailian Navy
RANVR Royal Autrailian Navy Volunteer Reserve
RCN Royal Canadian Navy
RCNVR Royal Canadian Navy Volunteer Reserve
RN Royal Navy
RNR Royal Navy Reserve
RNVR Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve
RNZN Royal New Zealand Navy
RNZNVR Royal New Zealand Navy Volunteer Reserve
SAN South African Navy
USN United States Navy
Key to Honours
BEM British Empire Medal
DSC Distinguished Service Cross
DSM Distinguished Service Medal
DSO Distinguished Service Order
GC George Coss
GM George Medal
MBE Member of the British Empire
MID Mentioned In Dispatches
VC Victoria Cross

This list has been made possible by the hard work of Pam Armstrong in the first instance and has lately been refined by Malcolm Blenkinsopp, Honorary Historian at Espana Levante Submariners

In some cases there are different Names and Dates of Birth mentioned in the notes, especially in the First World War, as many young men told lies in order to join early. Their be variations between birth names and the names the men chose to serve under.

The list will continue to evolve as new information comes to light. If you think you can help fill any of the gaps, please use our Contact Us page to get in touch.


Featured Badge

Sea Scout (P 253)

Class: 1935 - 1970: Improved S Class
Built By: Cammell Laird (Mersey)
Build Group: S3
Fate:
Scrapped Briton Ferry 14th December 1965.
Featured Book
Zeebrugge
The combined forces invasion of the Belgian port of Zeebrugge on 23 April 1918 remains one of Britain’s most glorious military undertakings; not quite as epic a failure as the charge of the Light Brigade, or as well publicised as the Dam Busters raid, but with many of the same basic ingredients.

A force drawn from the Royal Navy and Royal Marines set out on ships and submarines to try to block the key strategic port, in a bold attempt to stem the catastrophic losses being inflicted on British shipping by German submarines. It meant attacking a heavily fortified German naval base. The tide, calm weather and the right wind direction for a smoke screen were crucial to the plan.

Judged purely on results, it can only be considered a partial strategic success. Casualties were high and the base only partially blocked. Nonetheless, it came to represent the embodiment of the bulldog spirit, the peculiarly British fighting élan, the belief that anything was possible with enough dash and daring.

The essential story of the Zeebrugge mission has been told before, but never through the direct, first-hand accounts of its survivors, including that of Lieutenant Richard Sandford, VC, the acknowledged hero of the day, and the author’s great uncle. The fire and bloodshed of the occasion is the book’s centrepiece, but there is also room for the family and private lives of the men who volunteered in their hundreds for what they knew effectively to be a suicide mission.

Zeebrugge gives a very real sense of the existence of the ordinary British men and women of 100 years ago, made extraordinary by their role in what Winston Churchill called the 'most intrepid and heroic single armed adventure of the Great War.'
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