Ronald Niel Stuart VC DSO RD
RNR (26 August 1886 – 8 February
1954) was a
British Merchant
Navy commodore and
Royal Navy captain who was highly commended
following extensive and distinguished service at sea over a period
of more than thirty-five years. During
World
War I he received the
Victoria
Cross, the
Distinguished
Service Order, the French
Croix de
Guerre avec Palmes and the United States'
Navy Cross for a series of daring operations he
conducted while serving in the Royal Navy during the
First Battle of the
Atlantic.
Stuart's Victoria Cross was awarded following a ballot by the men
under his command. This unusual method of selection was used after
the Admiralty board was unable to choose which members of the crew
deserved the honour after a desperate engagement between a
Q-ship and a German submarine off the Irish coast.
His later career included command of the liner
RMS Empress of
Britain and the management of the London office of a major
transatlantic shipping company. Following his retirement in 1951,
Stuart moved into his sister's cottage in Kent and died three years
later. A sometimes irascible man, he was reportedly embarrassed by
any fuss surrounding his celebrity and was known to exclaim "Mush!"
at any demonstration of strong emotion.
Early life
Ronald
Niel Stuart was born in 1886 in Liverpool
to Neil Stuart and Mary Harrison, both from
experienced seafaring families. Neil Sr. had been born
on Prince Edward
Island
in Canada
and had met
and married Mary in Montreal
. She
was the daughter of a master mariner from
Australia. In the 1880s the family moved to
Liverpool, where Stuart was born as the youngest of six children.
Neil worked in the city as a dock superintendent and owner of a
wholesale tea shop before dying suddenly whilst preparing for a
return to the Merchant Navy.
Stuart was by this time a stocky, blonde, blue-eyed man described
as "powerful" but "very bleak and penetrating".
He was initially
educated at Shaw Street
College
, but following his father's death was forced to
leave and take a job as a clerk in an office. Stuart's son
commented that "He hated it [the job]. He hated Liverpool". In
1902, Stuart decided to leave the city and find work in a different
environment. He took an apprenticeship with the shipping company
Steele & Co and was sent to learn his trade on the sailing
barque Kirkhill.
In 1905
the Kirkhill was wrecked on a rock near the Falkland
Islands
. Stuart survived the sinking and returned to
England to continue his training.
He was posted to a new ship upon his
return but she too was wrecked by a cyclone off the Florida
coast. Eventually, after several years service he achieved
his mariner's qualifications and gained a job with the
Allan Line as a junior officer. He then served in
a variety of sailing and steam ships traveling across most of the
world. In 1910, the Allan Line was taken over by the
Canadian Pacific Line and he continued working with
the company's new owners as a junior ship's officer.
First World War
At the outbreak of
World War I Stuart
was called up to service, as an officer in the
Royal Naval Reserve.
He was originally
posted as a junior officer on board the old and obsolete destroyer HMS Opossum in Plymouth
. This
ship was used for harbour patrols and intercepting neutral merchant
ships and other work Stuart considered tedious. He became
increasingly impatient with the life and repeatedly applied to his
senior officers with requests for transfer; at one point he even
requested that he be commissioned into the army. All of these were
turned down, with increasing levels of hostility from his
commanders, one of whom was reported to have told him to "Go to
hell! And shut the door behind you!"
HMS Farnborough
In the spring of 1916 he was transferred as first
lieutenant to a
Q-ship
under
Gordon Campbell. A Q-ship
was a merchant ship with hidden weaponry, commanded secretly by the
navy and manned by a Royal Navy crew. When attacked by a submarine,
the Q-ship would feign damage until the enemy was close enough to
engage and then reveal its weapons to counter-attack. Campbell, a
major proponent of Q-ship strategy, was impressed with Stuart's
stubborn refusal to accept the two years of rejection and brought
him in to replace an officer whose nerves had cracked under the
strain of Q-ship operations.
Stuart's
experience in merchant shipping proved invaluable to his work and
he soon had the crew of Q5 (also known as HMS Farnborough
) disciplined and the ship well maintained and
run. Campbell himself was very pleased with his executive
officer, declaring him "on the top line". Stuart and Campbell would
later fall out over Stuart's belief that Campbell was exaggerating
the danger of Q-ship service, Stuart comparing his own life
favourably with service in
the trenches.
His first year of Q-ship service was frustrating for Stuart and the
crew.
Although, prior to his attachment to the
ship, Farnborough had succeeded in sinking an enemy
submarine (the U-68
in March 1916), there had been no successes
since. In February 1917, Campbell decided that in order to
properly invite an attack, the
Farnborough would have to
actually be torpedoed before combat and then engage the submarine
as she closed to finish the job with shellfire.
On the 17 February
this theory was proven correct off Southern Ireland
when the
lone Farnborough was struck by a torpedo fired at extreme
range. Campbell intentionally failed to evade the missile
and the ship took the blow in the hold, causing some minor injuries
to the crew but serious damage to the ship. The crew were well
rehearsed and the "panic party" took to their boats with a great
show of alarm and disorder whilst the gun crews manned positions on
their hidden weapons. When four lifeboats had been released and the
ship had settled in the water and was clearly sinking, the
submarine
U-83 pulled up just ten
yards (9m) from the wreck. A hail of shot was then unleashed by the
Farnborough's remaining crew from their six-pounder gun
and several
machine guns into the
stationary submarine. The very first shot decapitated the German
captain Bruno Hoppe and the U-boat was rapidly reduced to a
battered wreck. Eight German sailors escaped the submarine before
it sank but only two could be pulled from the water, one of whom
subsequently died from his wounds.
The
Farnborough too was sinking from her torpedo damage.
Realising this, Campbell left the men in the boats, destroyed all
confidential papers and radioed for help. His unorthodox message
read: "Q5 slowly sinking respectfully wishes you goodbye". This
message reached nearby naval shipping, and within an hour the
destroyers HMS
Narwhal and HMS
Buttercup arrived
and began to tow the stricken ship back to land. During the night a
depth charge accidentally exploded on
board
Farnborough and the tow was dropped. Campbell
ordered the twelve men remaining aboard into a lifeboat and
attempted to take a final survey of his vessel, only to be driven
back by another exploding depth charge. On returning to the rail he
discovered that Stuart had disobeyed his order and remained on
board, to make sure his captain disembarked safely. The tow was
later reattached and the battered
Farnborough beached at
Mill Cove, in no fit state to return to sea. Campbell was awarded
the Victoria Cross in recognition of his service in the action and
£1,000 of
prize money was shared among
the crew. Stuart and Engineer-Lieutenant Len Loveless were both
presented with the
Distinguished Service
Order.
HMS Pargust
Following the action Stuart remained with Campbell and Loveless as
Inspectors of Shipping, choosing those vessels they believed to be
best suited to Q-ship work for naval service. After some time
ashore all three returned to sea in a vessel they had personally
chosen, an old, battered tramp steamer named SS
Vittoria.
Renaming it HMS
Pargust, they armed their vessel with a 4"
gun, two twelve pounders, two machine guns,
torpedo tubes and depth charges. Thus armed
the
Pargust departed on her first patrol to the same
grounds where
U-83 had been sunk, in the waters south of
Ireland. For the first few days her duties consisted only of
rescuing survivors from sunken cargo ships but with increasing
German activity, an attack was expected at any moment. On the 7
June 1917,
Pargust was suddenly struck by a torpedo fired
at very close range from an unseen German submarine. Unlike the
Farnborough action, the damage done to the
Pargust was immense. The ship was holed close to the
waterline, and its cover was almost blown when one of the twelve
pounder gun ports was blasted free from its mounting; it was only
the quick thinking of sailor
William Williams, who took the full
weight of the gun port on himself, that prevented the gun being
exposed. One petty officer was killed and a number wounded.
By this stage in the war, the German submarine authorities had
become aware of the existence of Q-ships and Captain Ernst Rosenow
of the
UC-29 was taking no risks with his
target, remaining at 400 yards (366m) distance watching the staged
panicked evacuation of the ship. While the hidden gun crews watched
the enemy approach the lifeboats, the officer in charge of the
boats, Lieutenant Francis Hereford, realised that the submarine
would follow his movements, as its commander assumed him to be the
captain. Hereford therefore ordered his men to row back towards the
ship, thus luring the enemy into range. This made the submarine
commander believe that the ship’s crew were planning to regain
their vessel and he immediately closed to just 50 yards (46m),
surfaced and began angrily
semaphoring to
the "survivors" in the boats. This was exactly what the gun crews
had been waiting for and a volley of fire was directed at the
U-boat. Numerous holes were blown in the
conning tower and the submarine desperately
attempted to flee on the surface before slowing down and heeling
over, trailing oil. The gun crews then stopped firing only for the
submarine to suddenly restart its engines and attempt to escape. In
a final barrage of fire the submarine was hit fatally, a large
explosion blowing the vessel in two. Rosenow and 22 of his crew
were killed, whilst two survivors were rescued by the panic
party.
The
wrecked Pargust was taken in tow by HMS Crocus,
USS Cushing and HMS
Zinnia and reached Queenstown
barely afloat nearly two days later. The
port's admiral congratulated the crew personally on their arrival.
As before, the crew were awarded £1,000 prize money and several
awards were promised. Unusually, the
Admiralty were unable to decide who amongst the
ship's crew should receive the
Victoria
Cross as all were deemed to have participated in the action
with equal valour. It was thus decided for the first time, under
article 13 of the Victoria Cross's royal warrant, that one officer
and one enlisted man would be granted the award following a ballot
by the ship's company. After the vote, from which Campbell
abstained, the Victoria Crosses were awarded to Stuart and William
Williams. Fourteen other crew members were awarded medals,
including DSOs for Campbell and Hereford. In addition, every sailor
had his participation in the action and subsequent ballot noted on
his service records.
Due to the official secrecy surrounding the activities of the
Q-ships, Stuart's and Williams's Victoria Crosses were announced
without fanfare or explanation of their actions; even the
Pargust's name was omitted from the citation. The full
account of the action was not published until after the
armistice in
November 1918. Stuart was noted as the first Anglo-Canadian to
receive the Victoria Cross and his obituary later stated that in
the action, "his gallantry stood out".
The medal was
presented to him in a ceremony at Buckingham Palace
by King
George V on the 23 July 1917.
Victoria Cross citations
Admiralty, 20th July, 1917
HONOURS FOR SERVICES IN ACTION WITH ENEMY SUBMARINES
The KING has been graciously pleased to approve of the
award of the following honours, decorations and medals to officer
and men for services in action with enemy submarines:
To receive the Victoria Cross.
Lieut. Ronald Neil Stuart, D.S.O., R.N.R.
Sea. William Williams, R.N.R., O.N., 6224A
Lieutenant Stuart and Seaman Williams were selected by the officers
and ship's company respectively of one of H.M. Ships to receive the
Victoria Cross under Rule 13 of the Royal Warrant dated
29th January, 1856.
The London Gazette, 20 July,
1917
Action of H.M.S "Pargust" on the 7th June,
1917.
On the 7th June, 1917, while disguised as a
British merchant vessel with a dummy gun mounted aft, H.M.S.
"Pargust" was torpedoed at very close range. Her boiler-room,
engine-room, and No. 5 hold were immediately flooded, and the
starboard lifeboat was blown to pieces. The weather was misty at
the time, fresh breeze and a choppy sea. The "Panic Party", under
the command of Lieutenant F. R. Hereford, D.S.C., R.N.R., abandoned
ship, and as the last boat was shoving off, the periscope of the
submarine was observed close before the port beam about 400 yards
distant. The enemy then submerged, and periscope reappeared
directly astern, passing to the starboard quarter, and then round
to the port beam, when it turned again towards the ship, breaking
surface about 50 yards away. The lifeboat, acting as a lure,
commenced to pull round the stern; submarine followed closely and
Lieutenant Hereford, with complete disregard of the danger incurred
from the fire of either ship or submarine (who had trained a maxim
on the lifeboat), continued to decoy her to within 50 yards of the
ship. The "Pargust" then opened fire with all guns, and the
submarine, with oil squirting from her side and the crew pouring
out of the conning tower, steamed slowly across the bows with a
heavy list. The enemy crew held up their hands in token of
surrender, whereupon fire immediately ceased. The submarine then
began to move away at a gradually increasing speed, apparently
endeavouring to escape in the mist. Fire was reopened until she
sank, one man clinging to the bow as she went down. The boats,
after a severe pull to the windward, succeeded in saving one
officer and one man. American Destroyers and a British sloop
arrived shortly afterwards, and the "Pargust" was towed back to
port. As on the previous occasions, officers and men displayed the
utmost courage and confidence in their captain, and the action
serves as an example of what perfect discipline, when coupled with
such confidence, can achieve.
(The award of the Victoria Cross to Lieut. Ronald Neil Stuart,
D.S.O., R.N.R., and Sea. William Williams, R.N.R., O.N., 6224A.,
was announced in London Gazette no. 30194, dated 20 July,
1917.)
The London Gazette, 20 November, 1918
HMS Tamarisk
In addition to receiving the Victoria Cross, Stuart was promoted to
lieutenant commander and given
his own command, HMS
Tamarisk.
Tamarisk was a
small
sloop built in 1916 which was capable of
being disguised as a merchant vessel and used as a Q-ship,
designated Q11.
A few months after assuming command, on 15 October 1917, Stuart was
on hand to rescue the
United States
Navy destroyer
USS
Cassin after she was torpedoed by
U-61 in heavy weather. Along with one
crewmember killed and nine wounded, the
Cassin had lost
her entire stern including the rudder and was in danger of sinking.
The dead crew member was
Osmond
Ingram, who had died throwing burning munitions overboard and
was later posthumously awarded the
Medal
of Honor. Twenty miles from the Irish coast and in total
darkness, the
Tamarisk not only found the crippled ship
but was able to come alongside in high seas and a strong
gale and pass across a tow line. Twice during the night
the tow broke and twice it was reconnected as the battle to save
the ship continued. The next morning several trawlers came to the
aid of the Q-ship and together they enabled the
Cassin to
make port, saving the ship and her crew. Ten years after the
Cassin's rescue the US Navy awarded Stuart the
Navy Cross in recognition of his part in the
operation; it was a rare presentation to a sailor of a foreign navy
and the only occasion in which the recipient also possessed the
Victoria Cross.
The remainder of the war was quiet for Stuart, achieving no further
successes against submarines. Upon the armistice the full details
of his Victoria Cross action were revealed and, in 1919, he was
mentioned in despatches in
recognition of the service he had performed during the Q-ship
operations. As further recognition of his overall efforts against
the German submarine campaign, the French government presented him
with the Croix de Guerre.
In 1919, Stuart returned to Canadian Pacific, his maritime
reputation on both sides of the Atlantic greatly enhanced by his
war record. In the same year he met and married his wife Evelyn,
with whom he would have three sons and two daughters.
Return to the Merchant Navy
After post-war service on a succession of merchant ships, Stuart
was provided with his first merchant command, the steam freighter
SS
Brandon, in 1927. After a short period in charge he was
again promoted and transferred, taking up the role of Staff Captain
on the liner
RMS
Empress of Australia.
Ships' Captain

Blue Ensign flown by merchant vessels
under the command of officers in the Royal Naval Reserve.
Just a year later he again moved, becoming full captain on the
15,000 ton liner
SS Minnedosa
– an older ship which transported immigrants to Canada. Stuart was
one of a number of Royal Naval Reserve officers employed by
Canadian Pacific, part of a deliberate recruitment policy by the
company. In 1929, he was given his biggest command yet as he took
over the newly completed 20,000 ton ocean liner
SS Duchess of York.
He commanded her for
five years along her route from Liverpool to Saint John,
New Brunswick
stopping at Belfast
and Greenock
. He also briefly commanded her on the
New
York
to Bermuda
route. It was during this period, in 1929,
that he was awarded the
Decoration
for Officers of the Royal Naval Reserve (RD) in honour of his
long service and in 1935 he was made a full
Naval Reserve Captain. He maintained
his connection with the RNR throughout his life, becoming Honorary
President of the RNR Officer's Club and a part-time naval
aide-de-camp to
King George VI in 1941 – a
position he held part-time throughout
World
War II. A special warrant was written in 1927 which allowed him
to fly the
Blue Ensign from any ship,
mercantile or military, which he commanded.
In 1931,
whilst he was in command of the Duchess of York, his wife
suddenly died in Toxteth
. This event is said to have changed Stuart's
demeanour and plunged him into a depression. He never again took
time off work and left his children to the sole care and
maintenance of his four maiden sisters in England. In 1934 he took
over his last and most important sea-going role as
Commodore of the CPS fleet and was placed
in command of the 42,000 ton liner
RMS Empress of
Britain on her transatlantic route.
After
three years in command of this giant ship on her England to
Quebec
route,
Stuart was given a desk job managing the company's assets in
Montreal
. In 1937, he was promoted to company
superintendent, a role followed by the job of general manager at
Canadian Pacific's London office. He retained this job for 13
years, including through the difficult experiences of
World War II when London's dockyards were badly
damaged by the
London Blitz. Two of his
sons served in the war; one in the Royal Navy and the other in the
Royal Canadian Navy. Both were
decorated for bravery whilst fighting in the
Second Battle of the Atlantic
against the resurgent German submarine fleet. One was presented
with the
Distinguished
Service Cross, whilst the other was
Mentioned in Despatches.
Retirement
Retiring
in 1951, Stuart retreated to his sisters' cottage in Charing
, Kent
, and spent
his days reading, walking, observing nature and visiting the
cinema, where he was reportedly notorious for "jeering
embarrassingly loudly at falsely heroic, sentimental or emotional
passages" and shouting "Mush!" at parts of movies he did not
approve. He died aged 67 at the cottage on 8 February
1954 and was buried in local Charing Cemetery. For many years his
gravestone was in a poor state of repair, but successful attempts
have been made by memorial organisations to replace it with a
standard white
Commonwealth War
Grave headstone.
Following his death, 'Stuart Close' in
Lee-on-Solent
was named for him and his medals were collected and
donated on permanent loan to the National
Maritime Museum
, where they are on display.
Notes
- There is some discrepancy in the spelling of Ronald Stuart's
middle name. The London Gazette and his Times obituary prefer Neil,
whilst Stephen Snelling and the family genealogy website prefer the
more unorthodox Niel. Given the range of sources the latter
features in, and its preference by his own family, Niel appears to
be correct.
- Shaw Street College later became Liverpool
College.
- P.140, The Naval VCs, Stephen Snelling
- P.141, The Naval VCs, Stephen Snelling
- P.122, The Naval VCs, Stephen Snelling
- P.123, The Naval VCs, Stephen Snelling
- P.124, The Naval VCs, Stephen Snelling
- P.125, The Naval VCs, Stephen Snelling
- P.126, The Naval VCs, Stephen Snelling
- P.304, Symbol of Courage, Max Arthur
- P.127, The Naval VCs, Stephen Snelling
- P.128, The Naval VCs, Stephen Snelling
- P.129, The Naval VCs, Stephen Snelling
- HMS Tamarisk 1916-6-2, Clyde Warships,
Retrieved 23 May 2007
- USS Cassin, Dictionary of
American Naval Fighting Ships, Retrieved 23 May 2007
- USS Osmund Ingram, Dictionary of
American Naval Fighting Ships, Retrieved 8 September
2007
- P.142, The Naval VCs, Stephen Snelling
- Pictures of the Minnedosa [1] & [2] from the Cosmopolitan Postcard Club, Retrieved 23
May 2007
- Tate, E. Mowbray. (1986). Transpacific Steam: The Story of Steam
Navigation from the Pacific Coast of North America to the Far East
and the Antipodes, 1867-1941, p. 238.
- Pictures of the SS Duchess of York,
www.simplonpc.co.uk, Retrieved 24 May 2007
- Obituary for Captain Ronald Neil Stuart,
The Times
Retrieved 23 May 2007
- P.143, The Naval VCs, Stephen Snelling
- Sub-Lieutenant Ronald Neil Stuart, RNR:
- Grave location for holders of the Victoria Cross in
the county of Kent, www.victoriacross.org.uk, Retrieved on the
23 May 2007.
- Charing War Memorial, Kent,
www.roll-of-honour.com, Retrieved 23 May 2007.
- The collection of Victoria Crosses in the National
Maritime Museum, National Maritime Museum,
Retrieved 23 May 2007.
References
External links
- Charing War Memorial, Kent, transcribed by David Hughes and
Neil Clark