Sunday 14 August 2016

Poem ~ Jutland Bravery - Monday, 14 August 1916 - Wednesday, 16 August 1916

Source: File: Frederick Joseph Rutland, who was to play a role in WWII, for the Japanese. See an original image at: <https://acidhistory.wordpress.com/2013/01/30/rutland-sempill/> [Accessed 14 August 2016]
Source: File: Rutland of the RNAS photographed returning to HMS Engadine, after "his valuable reconnaissance at Jutland",1916. See an original image at: <http://forum.axishistory.com/viewtopic.php?t=143000> [Accessed 14 August 2016]

Parallel to war overland, came
Equal encounters for navy’s at sea,
1916 - the Royal Navy's Grand fleet
Encountered the imperial German
Navy - by full-scale encounters
Of battleships in intensity of tactics,
From May into June.

Among the naval crew, Lieutenant
Frederick Joseph Rutland, took
Part in North Sea action at Jutland -
Close to a peninsula of Denmark.
An experienced officer, he began
His career as `Boy Seaman’ aged
15 in 1901.

By age of 28, 1914, Rutland was
A Flight Sub Lieutenant in Royal
Naval air force, becoming lieutenant
At time of Jutland, on HMS Engadine.
Then a craft carrier of hangers
And seaplanes, in reconnaissance
And bombing missions.

Taking orders to take on a search
Of North Sea, 30 May 1916 - along
With an observer, Rutland made
Flight - within 23 minutes sighting
German cruisers and destroyers -
Signalling his discovery, to continue
Until a fault forced them down.

Making repairs ready to take off,
An order came to taxi seaplane
Across to the carrier - this he did
Though the reports made failed
To reach Battle squadron flag ship,
Rutland's actions, by flying close
To enemy gained him DSC.

Being a member of the grand fleet
HMS Warrior, along with HMS
Defence, was in the midst of battle.
Closing in on SMS Wiesbaden that
Had suffered damage, becoming
Stuck between fleets; in a vulnerable
Position was then spotted.

SMS Derfflinger who, with four
Other battleships, turned attack
On Naval ships - with intense
Fire German salvos hit Defence
To rupture magazines - a fire
Spread in detonations of other
Magazines; the ship exploded.

THe crew of 900 men were lost -
HMS Defence was still a target
Of shells, until Derfflinger and
Others turned towards to HMS
Warspite - now Warrior was
Under severe damage, with fires
And flooding.

Yet Warrior held on as engines
Kept going westward - heavily
Crippled into the evening 31 May.
HMS Engadine came to assist - 
The seaplane carrier struggled
To tow Warrior, due to jammed
Rudder, to lay alongside.

From evenings light into dark,
Engadine continued to tow
The disabled ship - slowly
Across the sea the smaller
Engadine pulled Warrior
Into the early morning hours,
Until situation worsened.

Flooding of warrior increased,
Quite evident that within time
She would sink - 8 a.m. orders
Were made to abandon her -
Engadine closed the gap ready
To take crew onboard - a transfer
Of 675 succeeded.

Egadine's crew observed and
Assisted in such a tricky task.
Lieutenant Rutland provided
Assistance, as the most seriously
Wounded conveyed by stretchers,
To number 30, began.

Any transfer in rough waters was
Hazardous - a sinking unstable
Warrior could collide with Egadine.
One by one the stretchers passed
Over - then one wounded sailors
Stretcher tipped, throwing him into
Water - Rutland reacted.

Two officers under command
Of the Warrior were ordered
Not to jump after him - effectively
The man was lost - Lieutenant
Rutland had other thoughts -
As he got numbers of men
To hold a rope.

Discarding cap and coat, with
A bowline about waist, Rutland
Had no hesitation to go over
The rail - down, down between
The ships that channeled rough
Waters - into the moving gap
That threatened to crush both.

He saw the man in the water -
Lost sight of him briefly, then
He reappeared - from the ships
Forepart, Rutland hit the sea
And began to swim aft, fighting
Against swelling, resistant water,
He reached out.

He held the man as those above
Took his signal and heaved
Them both free of the thrashing
Water, to reach deck in safety.
Versions of reports of the time
Told how the sailor had been
Crushed and died.

An announcement some months
Later, from The London Gazette,
Told How King George awarded
Lieutenant Rutland for bravery
And determination, in the rescue
Against great odds - decorated
With the gold Albert medal, first
Class for lifesaving.

By Jamie Mann.

Anon.,1916. Magnificent Bravery - Hero Of The Jutland Fright. The Daily Telegraph, [online] 7 August 1916. P.8. Col.3. Available at: <http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ww1-archive/12212591/Daily-Telegraph-August-12-1916.html> [Accessed: 14 August 2016].

Source: File: Frederick Rutland From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Available at: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Rutland> [Accessed 14 August 2016

Mann, J., 2016. 100 years Ago - Poems by Jamie Mann. [letter] (Personal communication, 14 August 2016). 



#WW1 #WW1centenary #GreatWar #WW1poem #GreatWar #WW1centenary #worldwarone #worldwaroneremembered #WW1Jutland

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