The Single Time in British history a Victoria Cross was Recommended by the Enemy
Via Ol' Remus
Time for a sea story from World War II, an account of a
remarkable event told by CDR—Commander, for you army pukes,
O5—Salamander. A couple of excerpts ...
As the destroyer HMS Glowworm
emerged from the squall she came face-to-face with the 14,000 ton
German Heavy Cruiser, Admiral Von Hipper armed with eight 8 inch and
twelve 4 inch guns ...
After a brief description of the unequal battle in which the
Glowworm goes down in a final all-out lunge while heavily damaged and on
fire:
You want class? Need 'professionalism' defined? I present to you two men, LCDR Roope and CAPT Heye.
Out of a crew of 149, only 31 survived, the only officer
being Lt Robert Ramsey. The prisoners were treated well by the Germans
who congratulated them on a good fight, and Captain Heye told the men
that their Captain was a brave man.
Later, Heye sent a message through the International Red
Cross recommending Lt Cdr Roope for the Victoria Cross, the only time in
British history that a VC has been recommended by the enemy.
The action took place in heavy seas off the coast of Norway
in early 1941. Hipper was damaged and Glowworm lost. Glowworm was an
old-school 'greyhound' destroyer, small, fast, lightly armed with four
120 mm main guns, reliant on speed and her torpedoes to engage capital
ships, but as part of a set-piece battle, not a one-on-one.
During the
battle the Hipper's gunnery was what you'd expect from the
Kriegsmarine, all but unerring. The first shells fired hit Glowworm
decisively, yet she fought on.
Several photographs were taken by Hipper during the
engagement, so astounding was the ferocity and courage of Glowworm. And
yes, LCDR Roope was posthumously awarded the VC. What better
recommendation could a man have than his counterpart in battle?
Captain
Heye survived the war, Hipper did not.
A more complete account by
U.S. Army
Colonel Robert Smith is posted at Warfare History Network, here , short and well written, with photos.
Not that I have ANY sympathy for Nazis, but... they had decorum, and a respect for the enemy (i.e., us).
ReplyDelete