- SS River Clyde
The SS "River Clyde" was a 4,000 ton collier built in
Glasgow in 1905 and named after theRiver Clyde inScotland . OnApril 25 ,1915 , the "River Clyde" was used as aTrojan horse for thelanding at Cape Helles during theBattle of Gallipoli . The ship, carrying 2,000soldier s, mainly from the 1st Battalion of theRoyal Munster Fusiliers , 29th Division, was beached beneath theSedd el Bahr castle at V Beach, Cape Helles, on the tip of theGallipoli peninsula. However, the plan failed and the "River Clyde", lying under the guns of the Turkish defenders, became a death trap.For the landing, the "River Clyde" was commanded by Commander
Edward Unwin , a former merchant seaman andRoyal Navy officer who had returned from retirement at the start of the war to command thetorpedo gunboat , HMS "Hussar", in theMediterranean . The "River Clyde" had a battery of elevenmachine gun s from theRoyal Naval Air Service under the command of Josiah Wedgwood mounted on the bow behind boiler plate and sandbags. Holes had been cut in the steel hull to provide sally ports from which the troops would emerge onto gangways and then to a bridge of smaller boats linking the ship to the beach. The hull was to be painted a sandyyellow ascamouflage but the work was incomplete by the time of the landing.Three attempts were made to get ashore by companies of the Munsters and
The Hampshire Regiment but all ended in costly failure. Further attempts to land were abandoned and the surviving soldiers waited until nightfall before trying again. The efforts of sailors to maintain the bridge from the ship to the beach, and to recover the wounded, were rewarded by sixVictoria Cross es. The recipients were Commander Unwin (aged 51), Midshipmen George Drewry (20) and Wilfred Malleson (18), Able Seaman William Williams (34), SeamanGeorge Samson (26) and Sub-LieutenantArthur Tisdall (24) from theRoyal Naval Division (RND). Of these men, only Williams died during the landing. Samson was severely wounded the following day. On his return toScotland he was handed awhite feather while wearing civilian clothes. Tisdall was killed onMay 6 when the 6th (Hood) Battalion of the RND, made its advance along Kanli Dere during theSecond Battle of Krithia . Drewry, Samson and Williams had come from the "Hussar" along with Unwin. Malleson, who died in 1975, served on thebattleship HMS "Cornwallis".After the Helles beachhead was established, V Beach became the base for the French contingent and the "River Clyde" remained beached as a dock and breakwater. Her condensers were used to provide fresh
water and a field dressing station was established in the hull. She remained a constant target for Turkish gunners on theAsia n shore.In 1919, after the war had ended, the "River Clyde" was refloated and taken to
Malta for repairs. As atramp steamer , she was operated by Spanish shipping companies for another 50 years in theMediterranean under various names, the last being "Maruja y Aurora". In 1965 there was an attempt to purchase the "River Clyde" for preservation but in 1966 she was sold for scrap instead and broken up atAvilés , Spain.
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