Auction Catalogue
A fine Great War D.S.C. group of eleven awarded to Captain M. C. Despard, Royal Navy, who was decorated for his gallantry as Gunnery Officer of H.M.S. Broke during her spectacular encounter with enemy destroyers on the night of 20-21 April 1917 - ramming one of her adversary’s at 27 knots, the impact hurled the German destroyer practically over on her beam-ends: but retaliatory fire eventually reduced the Broke to a ‘smoking shambles’, her decks in places ‘literally running in blood’
Distinguished Service Cross, G.V.R., hallmarks for London 1916; 1914-15 Star (Lieut. M. C. Despard, R.N.); British War and Victory Medals, M.I.D. oak leaf (Lieut. M. C. Despard, R.N.); 1939-45 Star; Africa Star; Defence and War Medals 1939-45; Belgium, Order of the Crown, Chevalier’s breast badge, silver, silver-gilt and enamel; Finland, Order of the White Rose, Commander’s neck badge, silver-gilt and enamel; Portugal, Order of the Tower and Sword, 4th Class breast badge, silver-gilt and enamel, mounted as worn where applicable, the Belgium piece with chipped enamel on obverse centre, otherwise good very fine (11) £4000-5000
This lot was sold as part of a special collection, Exceptional Naval and Polar Awards from the Collection of RC Witte.
View
Collection
D.S.C. London Gazette 10 May 1917:
‘Awards for services in the action between H.M. Ships Swift and Broke and German destroyers on the night of 20-21 April 1917 ... Lieutenant M. C. Despard, First and Gunnery Lieutenant of H.M.S. Broke. He controlled gun fire and gave the orders which resulted in an enemy destroyer being torpedoed.’
Maximilian Carden Despard was born in March 1892, the son of Captain H. J. Despard, afterwards the Chief Constable of Lanarkshire and a C.B.E., and entered the Royal Navy as a cadet in May 1905.
A Sub. Lieutenant serving in the battle cruiser H.M.S, Indefatigable on the lead up to the outbreak of hostilities in August 1914, he was present in the pursuit of the Goeben and Breslau under Admiral Sir Archibald “Arky-Barky” Milne - a wild goose chase around the Mediterranean which culminated in the German ships reaching Turkish waters, after violating neutral Italian waters. Be that as it may, young Despard was advanced to Lieutenant in the following month.
Night action - “Swift” and “Broke”
Having then briefly attended the gunnery establishment Excellent, he removed to the cruiser Penelope in November 1914 and remained similarly employed until March 1916, when he transferred to destroyers, and gained experience in the Hope and Nonsuch before finally joining the Broke as Gunnery Officer in March 1917. And of subsequent events on the night of 20-21 April, Taffrails’ Endless Story states:
‘The vessels on both sides were now a blaze of gun-flashes, which made it very difficult to see what was happening, and Peck, in the Swift, was temporarily blinded by the flame of the 6-inch gun on the forecastle. Losing sight of the enemy for several seconds, and now travelling at full speed, he passed astern of the German line, though not before firing a torpedo at the fifth ship in the opposing line, which probably took effect.
Altering course out of the wake of the Swift, Evans, in the Broke, held his fire for a moment to bring the sights of the torpedo director on the bridge on their target. Despard, the First Lieutenant, actually fired it, and after an interval it, or the Swift’s torpedo, fired at much the same time, struck the fifth ship in the enemy line full amidships, to explode in an upheaval of smoke and whitened spray which glowed redly in the blaze of gun-flashes.
Both sides were steaming fast. Things were happening in seconds, and once more the Broke’s foremost guns had opened fire. Evans had been steering to ram; but, seeing the ship he was aiming for - G. 85 - struck by the torpedo, realised it was now unnecessary, put his helm to port, and swung outwards for a few seconds to give himself room to swing back again and ram the destroyer astern of G. 85.
“If you put the helm over now, sir, you’ll get this next one all right, sir,” said Hickman, the Broke’s navigator, to his captain, who himself was conning the ship.
Under heavy fire, and in a coruscation of gun-flashes and the sparkle and smoke of exploding shells, Evans put his helm over and drove straight for his enemy at 27 knots. There was hardly time to breathe, let alone to think coherently.
The German, G. 42, increased speed, smoke and showers of sparks pouring from her funnels as she strove to escape. But it was too late. With a grinding thud, and the screech of tearing steel, the Broke’s bow crashed into her opponent’s port side abreast the after funnel. The terrific impact hurled the German practically over on her beam-ends as the Broke’s ram pushed her bodily through the water.
It is impossible to describe the sensations of those on board both these ships as the collision occurred - the Broke’s grimly triumphant; the Germans filled with terror-stricken amazement and horror. It was a dreadful moment; but worse was yet to come.
Man were screaming and shouting for help as the Broke’s guns, at their maximum depression, pumped shell after shell at a few yards’ range into the mass of men huddled on the deck of her stricken enemy. One of the German’s torpedo-tubes had stuck into the Broke’s side and was torn off its mounting. The anti-aircraft 2-pounders added to the din with their stuttering uproar, while the British seamen that remained alive in the forepart of the ship, with rifles and fixed bayonets, and revolvers and naked cutlasses, headed by Mr. Midshipman Donald Gyles, R.N.R., already wounded by a shell splinter in the eye, swarmed forward on to the Broke’s forecastle to repel boarders. They were taking no chances. No quarter was given. Every German who clambered over the bows was shot or bayoneted. A deadly small-arm fire was poured from the forecastle into the terrified men on G. 42’s deck. Even the officers on the Broke’s bridge used their automatic pistols. Few of their enemies survived the storm of lead and nickel.
But the Broke did not escape unpunished. When things were happening every second, it is impossible to describe events in their strict chronological sequence; but early in the action, which cannot have lasted more than a few minutes, a shell explosion on the forecastle had hurled a box of 4-inch cartridges into the air to scatter them round about the bridge, where they burnt with the fierce red glow and leaping flames of consuming cordite. She was also blazing amidships. Illuminated like a beacon, she made a conspicuous target. A hostile destroyer slammed in salvo after salvo until she disappeared into the night. It was nearly impossible to miss at so short a range.
In the space of a few moments the Broke was converted into a smoking shambles. In places, her decks were literally running in blood. She sustained 57 casualties, of whom 21 were killed outright, and no part of the ship was immune. Two shells had hit the bridge structure, to kill a signalman, and seriously to wound the helmsman and a man at the engine-room telegraphs. But the former, Able Seaman William George Rawles, who afterwards received the Conspicuous Gallantry Medal for his bravery, continued to steer the ship until G. 42 had been rammed. Then he collapsed from loss of blood.
Many casualties had occurred among the guns’ crews of the forecastle through two enemy shells, one of which had detonated projectiles in a ready rack. All the electric cables and voice-pipes from the bridge had been shot away, while the after compass, after wireless-room, and searchlight were demolished. The foremost funnel was pierced through and through by splinters until it resembled a huge nutmeg-grater. A shell passing in through the side above the waterline had penetrated a coal-bunker, to explode in the boiler-room beyond, killing or wounding every man in the compartment and severing the main steam-pipe, from which the steam escaped with a deafening roar. And, besides the damage from enemy shell, the British flotilla-leader had a badly bent and crumpled bow, and two huge gashes forward above the waterline. Dead and wounded lay everywhere.
With her bows locked in G. 42, she still steamed ahead, her speed gradually diminishing. Every man in sight on the German’s deck had been killed or wounded. Her stern portion was gradually sinking. Finally it disappeared altogether as the Broke ground her way clear.
For a time Evans and his officers thought their ship was about to sink; but, once clear of G. 42, they set about trying to inflict further damage upon the flying enemy. Two were still in sight, one ahead and one to starboard, with the Swift in chase, long flames pouring from the funnels of all three as they steamed at full speed.
But the Broke’s speed was dropping fast, and presently an engineer-officer arrived on the bridge with the sad news that the loss of feed-water was so great that she could not steam more than half-speed. He also pointed out that the ship must eventually come to a standstill. Evans accordingly turned and steamed slowly back towards the two sinking destroyers.
About a mile from the spot, they passed through a number of German seamen in the water, who cried “Save! Save!” But at any moment the enemy might return to continue the fight. The Broke could not afford to stop to lower her boats.
A little later they saw the phosphorescent wake of an approaching destroyer, which flashed the usual challenge. The Broke, hit in thirty-two places on the bridge by shell, splinters, and bullets, had had all her electric circuits shot away and could not reply. For a moment it seemed as thought the stranger might open fire, until the yeoman of signals produced an electric torch and spelt out the name of the ship. The other vessel was the Swift, which had pursued the flying Germans until, badly damaged by shell fire, she could pursue no more. Hit many times, her wireless was out of action, and she had four feet of water on the lower mess-deck. The two British ships cheered each other in the darkness.
The Broke then closed one of the sinking Germans, G. 85, which was badly holed forward and was ablaze amidships. Men on her battered forecastle shouted “Kamerad! Kamerad!” and Evans replied through a megaphone, “All right. We will pick you up!”
But other Germans in the stern of G. 85 thought otherwise, and opened fire with the after 4.1-inch gun, a shell from which passed through the Broke’s bridge. She instantly retaliated with four rounds of 4-inch shell, while Acting-Sub-Lieutenant L. W. Peppe fired a torpedo from aft at a range of 200 yards. Set to run at six feet, it struck G. 85 near the stern.
The Broke was then compelled to stop through the damage to her boilers. She was gradually drifting nearer G. 85, which was still blazing. It was a matter of uncertainty whether the German would sink before the flames reached her magazine. If she blew up with the Broke close alongside, the latter might also be sunk by the explosion. By the efforts of those in the engine-room, however, she was able to go astern sufficiently to prevent collision. It was 1. 20 a.m., thirty-five minutes from the time when the enemy had first been sighted, and a few moments later the destroyer Mentor, Lieutenant-Commander A. J. Landon, came alongside, and managed by good seamanship to take her in tow.’
Awarded the D.S.C., Despard removed to the flotilla leader Spenser in November 1917 and thence, in April 1918, to the staff of the S.N.O. Ostend, in which capacity he gained a brace of honours from our Allies, namely his appointment to the Portuguese Order of the Tower and Sword, 4th Class (London Gazette 15 February 1919 refers), and Chevalier of the Belgian Order of Crown (London Gazette 14 May 1920 refers).
Between the wars and beyond
Between the Wars, he served as a representative of the International Danube Commission and was advanced to Lieutenant-Commander in September 1922, but in June 1928, on account of a gunnery accident which resulted in a compound fracture of his left thigh, Despard was placed on the Retired List.
However, he was quickly re-employed as a Naval Adviser to the Finnish Government, in which capacity he was granted the acting rank of Captain and appointed a Commander of the Finnish Order of the White Rose in November 1934. And, according to his service record, also served on the staff of the S.B.N.O. Suez Canal Area in the mid-1930s.
Mobilised in March 1938, and having attended the Naval Intelligence Department, he was appointed a Captain and Naval Attache to H.M. Legations at Bucharest, Belgrade and Budapest, with his headquarters in the latter city, in early 1940, though his services in that respect must have ended in November of the same year, when the Hungarian Prime Minister, under pressure from Germany, was compelled to sign the Tripartite Pact.
Among subsequent wartime appointments, Despard served as Chief of Staff to Admiral Sir Rudolf Burmester, K.B.E., C.B., C.M.G., the Flag Officer in Charge, Cardiff, and it was in this same capacity, in connection with “Operation Neptune”, that he was the recipient of an Admiralty Letter of Praise.
Share This Page