fbpx
Wikipedia

James Joseph Magennis

James Joseph Magennis, VC (27 October 1919 – 12 February 1986) was a Belfast-born sailor and recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces. He was the only native of Northern Ireland to receive the Victoria Cross in the Second World War.[1]

James Joseph Magennis
Magennis (left) with Lieutenant Ian Fraser, 1945
Birth nameJames Joseph McGinnes
Born(1919-10-27)27 October 1919
Belfast, Ireland
Died12 February 1986(1986-02-12) (aged 66)
Halifax, West Yorkshire, England
AllegianceUnited Kingdom
Service/branchRoyal Navy
Years of service1935–1949
RankLeading Seaman
UnitHMS Kandahar
HMS XE3
Battles/warsSecond World War
AwardsVictoria Cross
Mentioned in Despatches

Magennis was part of several operations involving X-Craft midget submarines in attacks on Axis ships. In July 1945, Magennis was serving on HMS XE3 during Operation Struggle. During an attack on the Japanese cruiser Takao in Singapore, Magennis showed extraordinary valour and bravery by leaving the submarine for a second time in order to free some explosive charges that had got caught. His commanding officer, Lieutenant Ian Edward Fraser, was also awarded the Victoria Cross for his actions during the operation.

Early career edit

James Magennis was born on 27 October 1919, at Majorca Street, West Belfast, Ireland. He was from a working class Roman Catholic family and attended St Finian's Primary School on the Falls Road, Belfast. On 3 June 1935 he enlisted in the Royal Navy as a boy seaman (spelling his surname Magennis).[2]

Magennis served on several warships between 1935 and 1942, when he joined the submarine branch. Before joining the submarine branch, Magennis served on the destroyer Kandahar, which was mined off Tripoli, Libya, in December 1941, while Magennis was on board. The ship was irreparably damaged and was scuttled the following day.[3]

In December 1942, Magennis was drafted into the Royal Navy Submarine Service and, in March 1943, he volunteered for "special and Hazardous duties" – which meant midget submarines, or X-craft. He trained as a diver, and in September 1943, took part in the first major use of the X-craft during Operation Source. Two submarines, HMS X7 and HMS X6, penetrated Kåfjord, Norway, and disabled the German battleship Tirpitz.[2] For his part in the attack Magennis was Mentioned in Despatches "[f]or bravery and devotion to duty" in 1943.[4]

Operation Struggle edit

In July 1945, Magennis, as acting leading seaman, was serving as the diver on the midget submarine HMS XE3, under the command of Lieutenant Ian Edward Fraser, as part of Operation Struggle.[5] They were tasked with sinking the 10,000 ton Takao, the first of the Takao-class cruiser. She was berthed in the Straits of Johor, Singapore, acting as an anti-aircraft battery. On 30 July, XE3 was towed to the area by the submarine Stygian. She slipped her tow at 23:00 for the 40-mile (64 km) journey through hazardous wrecks, minefields and listening posts to reach the Takao. After arriving at the Takao at 13:00 on 31 July, Magennis slipped out of the wet-and-dry chamber and attached limpet mines to the Takao under particularly difficult circumstances. He had to chip away at barnacles on the bottom of the cruiser for 30 minutes, before being able to attach the limpets.

During this time, Magennis' breathing apparatus was leaking and he returned to the submarine after completion of his task very exhausted. On withdrawing, Fraser found that one of the limpet carriers which was being jettisoned would not release itself. Magennis immediately volunteered to free it, commenting: "I'll be all right as soon as I've got my wind, Sir."[6] This he did, after seven minutes of nerve-racking work with a heavy spanner. On completion, Magennis returned to XE3 for the second time, allowing the four-man midget submarine to make its escape out to open sea to meet the waiting Stygian. Fraser was also awarded the Victoria Cross for his part in the attack; whilst Lieutenant William J. L. Smith, who was at the controls of XE3 during the attack, received the Distinguished Service Order. Engineer third class Charles Alfred Reed, who was at the wheel, received the Conspicuous Gallantry Medal.

HMS XE1 was supposed to be attacking another Japanese vessel as part of the same operation, but actually ended up also placing its explosives under the same target. XE1's commanding officer, Lieutenant John Elliott Smart, and Sub-Lieutenant Harold Edwin Harper, received the Distinguished Service Cross. Engineer fourth class Henry James Fishleigh and leading seaman Walter Henry Arthur Pomeroy received the Distinguished Service Medal. Engineer fourth class Albert Nairn, leading stoker Jack Gordan Robinson, and Able Seaman Ernest Raymond Dee were mentioned in dispatches for their part in bringing the two midget submarines from harbour to the point where the crews that took part in the attack took over.[7]

Victoria Cross edit

The citation was published in a supplement to the London Gazette of 9 November:[7]

Leading Seaman Magennis served as Diver in His Majesty's Midget Submarine XE-3 for her attack on 31 July 1945, on a Japanese cruiser of the Atago class. The diver's hatch could not be fully opened because XE-3 was tightly jammed under the target, and Magennis had to squeeze himself through the narrow space available. He experienced great difficulty in placing his limpets on the bottom of the cruiser owing both to the foul state of the bottom and to the pronounced slope upon which the limpets would not hold. Before a limpet could be placed therefore Magennis had thoroughly to scrape the area clear of barnacles, and in order to secure the limpets he had to tie them in pairs by a line passing under the cruiser keel. This was very tiring work for a diver, and he was moreover handicapped by a steady leakage of oxygen which was ascending in bubbles to the surface. A lesser man would have been content to place a few limpets and then to return to the craft. Magennis, however, persisted until he had placed his full outfit before returning to the craft in an exhausted condition. Shortly after withdrawing Lieutenant Fraser endeavoured to jettison his limpet carriers, but one of these would not release itself and fall clear of the craft. Despite his exhaustion, his oxygen leak and the fact that there was every probability of his being sighted, Magennis at once volunteered to leave the craft and free the carrier rather than allow a less experienced diver to undertake the job. After seven minutes of nerve-racking work he succeeded in releasing the carrier. Magennis displayed very great courage and devotion to duty and complete disregard for his own safety.[7]

Later life edit

 
Memorial to Leading Seaman Magennis VC

Magennis was the only Victoria Cross recipient of the Second World War to hail from Northern Ireland. As a result, Magennis obtained something of a "celebrity status"[8] in his home city. The citizens of Belfast raised more than £3,000 as part of a "Shilling Fund."[8] The City Fathers of Belfast refused to give Magennis the freedom of the City though. Sources differ as to the reasoning behind this; some claim it was due to religious divisions, others claim it was due to the City Fathers not "... believing that such an honour could not be bestowed on a working-class Catholic from the inner-city slums."[2]

In 1946 Magennis married Edna Skidmore, with whom he had four sons. The money from the Shilling Fund was spent quickly by Magennis and his wife; she remarked: "We are simple people ... forced into the limelight. We lived beyond our means because it seemed the right thing to do."[8] In 1949 he left the navy and returned to Belfast, where, at some point, he sold his Victoria Cross. In 1955, he moved to Yorkshire, where he worked as an electrician. For the last years of his life, he suffered from chronic ill health, before dying on 11 February 1986 of lung cancer hours before his heroism was honoured by the Royal Navy Philatelic Office with a first-day cover.[8]

Memorials edit

Magennis has had several memorials in his honour. Initial official recognition was only a photograph in the robing room of the Belfast city council chamber. The first memorial was erected in 1999 after a long campaign by his biographer George Fleming and Major S.H. Pollock CD (Canada). It, an elegant bronze and stone statue created by sculptor Elizabeth McLaughlin, was unveiled in Belfast on 8 October 1999. The ceremony was conducted in the grounds of Belfast City Hall in the presence of Magennis's son Paul, by the Lord Mayor of Belfast, Bob Stoker.

Magennis's former commanding officer, Ian Fraser, was reported as saying: "Jim gave me bother from time to time. He liked his tot of rum, but he was a lovely man and a fine diver. I have never met a braver man. It was a privilege to know him and it's wonderful to see Belfast honour him at last."[citation needed] A wall mural commemorating James Magennis on the 60th anniversary of VJ day was unveiled on 16 September 2005 by Peter Robinson, the Democratic Unionist Party Member of Parliament representing East Belfast, including Tullycarnet.

His portrait in oils was painted by Belfast artist Robert Taylor Carson who described Magennis as 'the perfect model - patient, attentive and completely natural.' The painting was purchased by Mr. Nevill McGeough Bond of the Argory, who then presented it to the Northern Ireland War Memorial Building Fund in 1946. The painting still hangs on display at the Northern Ireland War Memorial.

Magennis plaques edit

 
Royal Naval Association, Great Victoria Street, Belfast

In 1986 at a memorial service in Bradford Cathedral, the Submarine Old Comrade Association (West Riding Branch) erected a memorial plaque on an inner wall within the cathedral. The plaque made of Welsh slate was supplied by ex-submariner Tommy Topham MBE. Rear Admiral Place VC, CB, CVO, DSC unveiled the plaque. In attendance was Petty Officer Tommy "Nat" Gould, another submariner Victoria Cross recipient of the Second World War.

In 1998 a memorial plaque was installed by Castlereagh Borough Council on the wall of Magennis's former home at 32 Carncaver Road, Castlereagh, East Belfast. A memorial blue plaque sponsored by Belfast City Council was installed on the outer wall of the Royal Naval Association building at Great Victoria Street, Belfast by the Ulster History Circle.[9]

Ashcroft collection edit

In 1986, there was some publicity in the newspapers that his VC would be up at auction. This attracted the interest of Michael Ashcroft, Baron Ashcroft, who bought the VC for £29,000 (plus fees) amidst strong competition from dealers and private collectors. This was the first Victoria Cross bought by Lord Ashcroft, who, as of 2006, owned 142 medals.[10]

In July 2008, Lord Ashcroft announced a donation of £5 million for a permanent gallery at the Imperial War Museum, where Victoria Crosses already held by the museum will be put on display alongside his own.[11] The Lord Ashcroft Gallery opened in 2010.

In media edit

Magennis was profiled in the 2006 television docudrama Victoria Cross Heroes, which included archive footage, dramatisations of his actions and an interview with Lord Ashcroft about his VC.

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ "VC winner honoured at city hall". BBC. 19 August 2006. Retrieved 11 April 2008.
  2. ^ a b c Jeffery, Keith (2004). "Magennis (formerly McGinnes), James Joseph (1919–1986), submariner". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/62047. Retrieved 11 April 2008. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  3. ^ Ashcroft 2006, p. 287.
  4. ^ "No. 36295". The London Gazette (Supplement). 17 December 1943. p. 5545.
  5. ^ Ashcroft 2006, p. 288.
  6. ^ Ashcroft 2006, p. 289.
  7. ^ a b c "No. 37346". The London Gazette (Supplement). 9 November 1945. pp. 5529–5530.
  8. ^ a b c d Ashcroft 2006, p. 290.
  9. ^ . Ulster History Circle. Archived from the original on 9 May 2008. Retrieved 11 April 2008.
  10. ^ Ashcroft, Michael, pp.19–21
  11. ^

Bibliography edit

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • (biography, photo, VC action details)
  • Campaign for a memorial
  • "Loyalists replace UFF mural with tribute to Catholic VC Navy hero" Belfast Telegraph (18 September 2005)
  • Northern Ireland War Memorial

james, joseph, magennis, october, 1919, february, 1986, belfast, born, sailor, recipient, victoria, cross, highest, award, gallantry, face, enemy, that, awarded, british, commonwealth, forces, only, native, northern, ireland, receive, victoria, cross, second, . James Joseph Magennis VC 27 October 1919 12 February 1986 was a Belfast born sailor and recipient of the Victoria Cross the highest award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces He was the only native of Northern Ireland to receive the Victoria Cross in the Second World War 1 James Joseph MagennisMagennis left with Lieutenant Ian Fraser 1945Birth nameJames Joseph McGinnesBorn 1919 10 27 27 October 1919Belfast IrelandDied12 February 1986 1986 02 12 aged 66 Halifax West Yorkshire EnglandAllegianceUnited KingdomService wbr branchRoyal NavyYears of service1935 1949RankLeading SeamanUnitHMS KandaharHMS XE3Battles warsSecond World War Operation Source Operation StruggleAwardsVictoria CrossMentioned in Despatches Magennis was part of several operations involving X Craft midget submarines in attacks on Axis ships In July 1945 Magennis was serving on HMS XE3 during Operation Struggle During an attack on the Japanese cruiser Takao in Singapore Magennis showed extraordinary valour and bravery by leaving the submarine for a second time in order to free some explosive charges that had got caught His commanding officer Lieutenant Ian Edward Fraser was also awarded the Victoria Cross for his actions during the operation Contents 1 Early career 2 Operation Struggle 2 1 Victoria Cross 3 Later life 4 Memorials 4 1 Magennis plaques 4 2 Ashcroft collection 5 In media 6 References 6 1 Footnotes 6 2 Bibliography 6 3 Further reading 7 External linksEarly career editJames Magennis was born on 27 October 1919 at Majorca Street West Belfast Ireland He was from a working class Roman Catholic family and attended St Finian s Primary School on the Falls Road Belfast On 3 June 1935 he enlisted in the Royal Navy as a boy seaman spelling his surname Magennis 2 Magennis served on several warships between 1935 and 1942 when he joined the submarine branch Before joining the submarine branch Magennis served on the destroyer Kandahar which was mined off Tripoli Libya in December 1941 while Magennis was on board The ship was irreparably damaged and was scuttled the following day 3 In December 1942 Magennis was drafted into the Royal Navy Submarine Service and in March 1943 he volunteered for special and Hazardous duties which meant midget submarines or X craft He trained as a diver and in September 1943 took part in the first major use of the X craft during Operation Source Two submarines HMS X7 and HMS X6 penetrated Kafjord Norway and disabled the German battleship Tirpitz 2 For his part in the attack Magennis was Mentioned in Despatches f or bravery and devotion to duty in 1943 4 Operation Struggle editIn July 1945 Magennis as acting leading seaman was serving as the diver on the midget submarine HMS XE3 under the command of Lieutenant Ian Edward Fraser as part of Operation Struggle 5 They were tasked with sinking the 10 000 ton Takao the first of the Takao class cruiser She was berthed in the Straits of Johor Singapore acting as an anti aircraft battery On 30 July XE3 was towed to the area by the submarine Stygian She slipped her tow at 23 00 for the 40 mile 64 km journey through hazardous wrecks minefields and listening posts to reach the Takao After arriving at the Takao at 13 00 on 31 July Magennis slipped out of the wet and dry chamber and attached limpet mines to the Takao under particularly difficult circumstances He had to chip away at barnacles on the bottom of the cruiser for 30 minutes before being able to attach the limpets During this time Magennis breathing apparatus was leaking and he returned to the submarine after completion of his task very exhausted On withdrawing Fraser found that one of the limpet carriers which was being jettisoned would not release itself Magennis immediately volunteered to free it commenting I ll be all right as soon as I ve got my wind Sir 6 This he did after seven minutes of nerve racking work with a heavy spanner On completion Magennis returned to XE3 for the second time allowing the four man midget submarine to make its escape out to open sea to meet the waiting Stygian Fraser was also awarded the Victoria Cross for his part in the attack whilst Lieutenant William J L Smith who was at the controls of XE3 during the attack received the Distinguished Service Order Engineer third class Charles Alfred Reed who was at the wheel received the Conspicuous Gallantry Medal HMS XE1 was supposed to be attacking another Japanese vessel as part of the same operation but actually ended up also placing its explosives under the same target XE1 s commanding officer Lieutenant John Elliott Smart and Sub Lieutenant Harold Edwin Harper received the Distinguished Service Cross Engineer fourth class Henry James Fishleigh and leading seaman Walter Henry Arthur Pomeroy received the Distinguished Service Medal Engineer fourth class Albert Nairn leading stoker Jack Gordan Robinson and Able Seaman Ernest Raymond Dee were mentioned in dispatches for their part in bringing the two midget submarines from harbour to the point where the crews that took part in the attack took over 7 Victoria Cross edit The citation was published in a supplement to the London Gazette of 9 November 7 Leading Seaman Magennis served as Diver in His Majesty s Midget Submarine XE 3 for her attack on 31 July 1945 on a Japanese cruiser of the Atago class The diver s hatch could not be fully opened because XE 3 was tightly jammed under the target and Magennis had to squeeze himself through the narrow space available He experienced great difficulty in placing his limpets on the bottom of the cruiser owing both to the foul state of the bottom and to the pronounced slope upon which the limpets would not hold Before a limpet could be placed therefore Magennis had thoroughly to scrape the area clear of barnacles and in order to secure the limpets he had to tie them in pairs by a line passing under the cruiser keel This was very tiring work for a diver and he was moreover handicapped by a steady leakage of oxygen which was ascending in bubbles to the surface A lesser man would have been content to place a few limpets and then to return to the craft Magennis however persisted until he had placed his full outfit before returning to the craft in an exhausted condition Shortly after withdrawing Lieutenant Fraser endeavoured to jettison his limpet carriers but one of these would not release itself and fall clear of the craft Despite his exhaustion his oxygen leak and the fact that there was every probability of his being sighted Magennis at once volunteered to leave the craft and free the carrier rather than allow a less experienced diver to undertake the job After seven minutes of nerve racking work he succeeded in releasing the carrier Magennis displayed very great courage and devotion to duty and complete disregard for his own safety 7 Later life edit nbsp Memorial to Leading Seaman Magennis VC Magennis was the only Victoria Cross recipient of the Second World War to hail from Northern Ireland As a result Magennis obtained something of a celebrity status 8 in his home city The citizens of Belfast raised more than 3 000 as part of a Shilling Fund 8 The City Fathers of Belfast refused to give Magennis the freedom of the City though Sources differ as to the reasoning behind this some claim it was due to religious divisions others claim it was due to the City Fathers not believing that such an honour could not be bestowed on a working class Catholic from the inner city slums 2 In 1946 Magennis married Edna Skidmore with whom he had four sons The money from the Shilling Fund was spent quickly by Magennis and his wife she remarked We are simple people forced into the limelight We lived beyond our means because it seemed the right thing to do 8 In 1949 he left the navy and returned to Belfast where at some point he sold his Victoria Cross In 1955 he moved to Yorkshire where he worked as an electrician For the last years of his life he suffered from chronic ill health before dying on 11 February 1986 of lung cancer hours before his heroism was honoured by the Royal Navy Philatelic Office with a first day cover 8 Memorials editMagennis has had several memorials in his honour Initial official recognition was only a photograph in the robing room of the Belfast city council chamber The first memorial was erected in 1999 after a long campaign by his biographer George Fleming and Major S H Pollock CD Canada It an elegant bronze and stone statue created by sculptor Elizabeth McLaughlin was unveiled in Belfast on 8 October 1999 The ceremony was conducted in the grounds of Belfast City Hall in the presence of Magennis s son Paul by the Lord Mayor of Belfast Bob Stoker Magennis s former commanding officer Ian Fraser was reported as saying Jim gave me bother from time to time He liked his tot of rum but he was a lovely man and a fine diver I have never met a braver man It was a privilege to know him and it s wonderful to see Belfast honour him at last citation needed A wall mural commemorating James Magennis on the 60th anniversary of VJ day was unveiled on 16 September 2005 by Peter Robinson the Democratic Unionist Party Member of Parliament representing East Belfast including Tullycarnet His portrait in oils was painted by Belfast artist Robert Taylor Carson who described Magennis as the perfect model patient attentive and completely natural The painting was purchased by Mr Nevill McGeough Bond of the Argory who then presented it to the Northern Ireland War Memorial Building Fund in 1946 The painting still hangs on display at the Northern Ireland War Memorial Magennis plaques edit nbsp Royal Naval Association Great Victoria Street Belfast In 1986 at a memorial service in Bradford Cathedral the Submarine Old Comrade Association West Riding Branch erected a memorial plaque on an inner wall within the cathedral The plaque made of Welsh slate was supplied by ex submariner Tommy Topham MBE Rear Admiral Place VC CB CVO DSC unveiled the plaque In attendance was Petty Officer Tommy Nat Gould another submariner Victoria Cross recipient of the Second World War In 1998 a memorial plaque was installed by Castlereagh Borough Council on the wall of Magennis s former home at 32 Carncaver Road Castlereagh East Belfast A memorial blue plaque sponsored by Belfast City Council was installed on the outer wall of the Royal Naval Association building at Great Victoria Street Belfast by the Ulster History Circle 9 Ashcroft collection edit In 1986 there was some publicity in the newspapers that his VC would be up at auction This attracted the interest of Michael Ashcroft Baron Ashcroft who bought the VC for 29 000 plus fees amidst strong competition from dealers and private collectors This was the first Victoria Cross bought by Lord Ashcroft who as of 2006 owned 142 medals 10 In July 2008 Lord Ashcroft announced a donation of 5 million for a permanent gallery at the Imperial War Museum where Victoria Crosses already held by the museum will be put on display alongside his own 11 The Lord Ashcroft Gallery opened in 2010 In media editMagennis was profiled in the 2006 television docudrama Victoria Cross Heroes which included archive footage dramatisations of his actions and an interview with Lord Ashcroft about his VC References editFootnotes edit VC winner honoured at city hall BBC 19 August 2006 Retrieved 11 April 2008 a b c Jeffery Keith 2004 Magennis formerly McGinnes James Joseph 1919 1986 submariner Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 62047 Retrieved 11 April 2008 Subscription or UK public library membership required Ashcroft 2006 p 287 No 36295 The London Gazette Supplement 17 December 1943 p 5545 Ashcroft 2006 p 288 Ashcroft 2006 p 289 a b c No 37346 The London Gazette Supplement 9 November 1945 pp 5529 5530 a b c d Ashcroft 2006 p 290 James Joseph Magennis VC Ulster History Circle Archived from the original on 9 May 2008 Retrieved 11 April 2008 Ashcroft Michael pp 19 21 Never forget the winners of the Victoria Cross Bibliography edit The Register of the Victoria Cross This England 1997 ISBN 0 906324 03 3 Ashcroft Michael 2006 Victoria Cross Heroes Headline Book Publishing ISBN 0 7553 1632 0 Doherty Richard Truesdale David July 2000 Irish Winners of the Victoria Cross Four Courts Pr Ltd ISBN 978 1 85182 442 7 Harvey David 2000 Monuments to Courage Naval amp Military Press Ltd ISBN 1 84342 356 1 Further reading edit George Fleming Magennis VC The story of Northern Ireland s only WW2 winner of the Victoria Cross ISBN 0 9533018 0 X Paperback ISBN 0 9533018 1 8 Hardback External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to James Joseph Magennis HMS Ganges Association biography photo VC action details Northern Ireland Submariners Association Unveiling memorial on 8 October 1999 Maritime Institute of Ireland Campaign for a memorial Loyalists replace UFF mural with tribute to Catholic VC Navy hero Belfast Telegraph 18 September 2005 Northern Ireland War Memorial Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title James Joseph Magennis amp oldid 1194289828, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.