HMS Illustrious Sailors Pay Tribute to Their Wartime Forebears

 HMS Illustrious Sailors Pay Tribute to Their Wartime Forebears

Sailors from HMS Illustrious paid tribute to their wartime forebears as they helped to tidy up Malta’s naval cemetery. Two crew from the wartime carrier are among the 1,000-plus war dead laid to rest at Capuccini graveyard just a mile from Grand Harbour.

A 15-strong team from the carrier crossed Grand Harbour and headed for Capuccini Naval Cemetery during the ship’s high-profile visit to the Mediterranean island.

The graveyard on the edge of the village of Kalkara is the last resting place of more than 1,000 Commonwealth war dead, plus 137 other nationalities and nearly 1,450 non-war dead; roughly one third of the wartime casualties date from the 1914-1918 conflagration, the remainder from the struggle with fascism.

The sailors joined staff from the Commonwealth War Graves Commission in ripping out weeds and generally tidying up the grounds.

Following the hard work, the ship’s padre, Father David Conroy, led a short commemoration service and laid wreaths at the graves of two Illustrious crew members at rest here since 1941.

The previous Illustrious was subjected to a furious attack from Italian and German dive-bombers on January 10 1941 as she escorted a series of supply convoy sent to Malta, known as Operation Excess.

During five hours of attacks – during which her cumbersome Fulmar fighters and anti-aircraft gunners fought valiantly to hold off the Axis onslaught downing seven enemy aircraft – she was hit by at least five bombs, while a near miss damaged her steering.

When Illustrious arrived in Malta that night to effect emergency repairs, there were more than 125 dead and 90 wounded aboard.

Over the next 13 days the Luftwaffe and Regia Aeronautica made repeated attempts to compound the damage to the ship – a period known by Maltese as the ‘Illustrious Blitz’ – while her crew and dockyard workers worked ceaselessly to repair her.

Illustrious eventually sailed for Alexandria on January 23 and from there was ultimately sent for repairs in the USA; she was out of action for more than 12 months.

Among the dead of the January 10 attacks was 27-year-old Leading Stoker Trevor Jones from Carmarthenshire, buried at Capuccini, while a few plots away is the grave of Lt William Barnes from Dorset who died in Malta two months later aged 24.

“This was an enjoyable yet poignant day which allowed personnel from the current HMS Illustrious a chance to reflect and remember those that have sacrificed their lives while serving in the Royal Navy in Malta,” said Lt Kieran Lewis, who led the team from the ship.

The clear-up at the naval cemetery was just one event of many crammed into the visit to Malta, including a Royal reception with guests of honour the Duke and Duchess of Wessex, and an open day allowing Maltese to look around the carrier – possibly for the last time as she’s due to pay off in 2014 and may not return depending on global events.

Illustrious has now completed her duties with the UK’s Response Force Task Group in the Mediterranean and is due home in Portsmouth on Friday.

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Naval Today Staff, November 27, 2012; Image: RN