June 27, 1918 - Canadian Hospital Ship HMHS Llandovery Castle Sunk and Survivors Massacred
Pictured - A propaganda drawing shows the German U-Boat surfacing to destroy the Llandovery Castle’s lifeboats, which was confirmed by survivors’ testimony.
While sailing from Nova Scotia to Liverpool the hospital ship HMHS Llandovery Castle was torpedoed by a submerged U-Boat on June 27, 1918. The ship carried 600 beds for wounded troops, but fortunately was returning to take more casualties onboard instead of fully loaded. Nevertheless, her destruction was one of the war’s worst atrocities.
Sinking a hospital ship was against both the laws of war and the code of the German Navy. After torpedoing Llandovery Castle, the U-boat U-86 surfaced to try and destroy the evidence of the sinking The German sailors began firing on survivors in the water, and then the U-boat itself ran down and rammed all but one of the lifeboats.
One lifeboat, carrying 14 of the 97 nursing sisters onboard, was sucked into the whirlpool creating by the sinking ship. Only one Canadian soldier onboard it survived by clinging onto wreckage. Later he vividly remembered the nurses’ last moments:
“Unflinchingly and calmly, as steady and collected as if on parade,
without a complaint or a single sign of emotion, our fourteen devoted
nursing sisters faced the terrible ordeal of certain death–only a
matter of minutes–as our lifeboat neared that mad whirlpool of waters
where all human power was helpless.
I estimate we were together in the boat about eight minutes. In that
whole time I did not hear a complaint or murmur from one of the
sisters. There was not a cry for help or any outward evidence of fear.
In the entire time I overheard only one remark when the matron, Nursing Matron Margaret Marjory Fraser, turned to me as we drifted helplessly towards the stern of the ship and asked:
"Sergeant, do you think there is any hope for us?”
“I replied, ‘No.”
Then the nurses were sucked into the whirlpool. They died along with 234 other nurses, doctors, soldiers, and seamen. Only 24 survived. The officers commanding the submarine were prosecuted for war crimes after the war, but escaped conviction by fleeing the country.