Friday 23 February 2007
“Bob” McDonald Tells Of Blasting U-Boats
(This is an undated news clipping – probably from Ottawa Citizen or Ottawa Journal. It contains information on what various members of the McDonald family were doing during the war years.)
Petty Officer Cook Robert McDonald, 23-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred E. McDonald of 78 Fulton avenue, who has seen action in mamy forms while serving with the Canadian navy, says the Germans whom his ship captured when the Nazi U-boat was scuttled by her crew in the Atlantic were mighty arrogant and declared firmly that the Germans would win the war, but he wonders what they are thinking now that Nazi U-boats are being swept from the sea. He is enjoying 28 days’ leave here, the first in a year and a half.
While on his first trip with a destroyer he was returning from Britain in convoy when a plane from a U.S. carrier sighted a German U-boat and dropped depth charges on her, blowing the tail off her. The plane then swooped low over the sub, machine gunning her decks, and signalled for the destroyer to finish her off.
“True to Nazi style, however, the Germans scuttled their sub,” stated McDonald. “We got 21 survivors of the 65 of her crew, including her commander and the first lieutenant.”
“The first lieutenant of our ship went overboard after the first lietenant of the German U-boat.” Petty Officer McDonald continued. “I saw he was having trouble so I jumped in too. It was mighty cold and I was in bed for a few days after with a cold and so was he. What made me mad was the German’s arrogance. He was so sure the Germans would win the war. I wonder what he thinks now!”
When the young seaman enlisted for active service June 19, 1940, he was soon assigned to the destroyer, St. Croix. On his first trip to England, severe storm were encountered and the crew was at “abandon ship stations” for two days before the sea calmed and they made port safely. This gave him a seven days’ leave which he spent with his family. His next action came when his ship got a German sub three days off Newfoundland in the winter of 1941.
“It wasn’t much really,” he said. “We picked up her positiooon and went after her. After dropping depth charges twice, she was done for. Oil and wood splinters came to the surface. There was a lot of handshaking on board, extra rum rations were issued and we had quite a time.”
Soon afterward young McDonald got a promotion to leading cook and was drafted to barracks in Halifax for six months, after which he went to sea in a corvette on convoy duty on this side of the Atlantic, but saw no action.
Later, Petty Officer McDonald was acting as assistant dietitian in a hospital in St. John’s, Newfoundland, when the tragic fire broke out in the Knights of Columbus Hut. Then the warning came over the radio, he said, and he went with the ambulance from the hospital.
“I worked all night,” he stated, “and it was the most terrible thing I have ever seen in my life. I had a friend who was burned to death. A 21-year-old lad who was on the hospital staff. He had just started to board at the hut two days before.”
“When did you get the urge to ‘go active’ in the navy?” he was asked.
“Well,” he replied, “I think it was when I was serving as a merchant seaman. I saw a Canadian freighter sink in the Great Lakes in a storm. We picked up the survivors and I decided I wanted to get into action.
Life in the navy has its happiness too. While in St. John’s, Petty Officer McDonald met Miss Doris Stevenson, a pretty brunette, and she has come home with him. They expect to be married before his leave is ended. Although he’s been nearly all around the world, the young seaman thinks Ottawa is the prettiest place in the world.
Mr. and Mrs. McDonald have seven sons and three daughters. In addition to Robert, two others served in the merchant navy before the war and are on active service now in the regular navy. First Class Stoker James McDonald, 25, enlisted at the same time Robert did, at Kingstone, after serving three years in the merchant navy. He has been to sea and is at present stationed at St. John’s, Nfld., since he received an injury to his arm a year ago when he had a bad fall on board ship. He is married to a St. John’s girl.
Petty Officer Lionel McDonald, 21, who also sailed the seas with the merchant navy before the war, in his vacation period, ran away from home in Iroquois to enlist on October 18, 1941. He was trained at Halifax and after a service at seas, he is now serving with the engineers of the navy. He is married to a girl from Sonora, N.S.
Mr. McDonald doesn’t know where the boys get their love of the sea. He was never a seaman. Instead, he was a professional hockey player. Known as “Cap” McDonald, he used to play for the Smiths Falls hockey team, and later became coach and manager of the “Sydney Millionaires.” He was also with the Western Ontario League, the old International League, and for three years was with the “Lyceums” in Pittsburgh.
Mt. and Mrs. McDonald’s four sons at home are Donald, assistant price specialist with the Munitions and Supply. George, who is an employee of the Dependents’ Allowance and Assigned Pay, and Billy and Bert. Three daughters, Elinor, and employee of the Metals Controller’s office, and Mary and Marian, are also at home.