The News (New Glasgow)

Rememberin­g Pearl Fraser and the Llandovery Castle

- BY BRUCE MACDONALD

New Glasgow’s Pearl Fraser is a woman who should be remembered, Lynn MacLean believes.

On this date, a century ago, Fraser was the Acting Matron aboard the medical ship, The Llandovery Castle when it was sunk by a German U-Boat off the coast of southern Ireland.

A local historian, MacLean says there were about three nurses on board the ship from the Maritimes, and Fraser is often mentioned in the accounts of the tragedy. This week, MacLean had the opportunit­y to travel to Toronto to watch an opera based on the historic event and is happy to hear of other events across the country marking the anniversar­y of the tragedy.

Too often, she said, the story and the heroism of the woman is forgotten.

“The story of Pearl Fraser being from New Glasgow is sort of a lost story,” she said, adding that Fraser came from a very prominent family.

Pearl’s father was D.C. Fraser, who was Lt.-Governor of Nova Scotia and a member of Parliament.

As a hospital ship, the Llandovery Castle would transport more than 600 people in need of medical attention to Canada before returning back to Europe for more. They were on a return trip to Britain when they were torpedoed by the Germans.

The attack on a medical ship was considered a war crime, as it would have been clearly marked with large red crosses on the side. MacLean says the Germans believed that the ship may have been transporti­ng American soldiers and shot without taking the time to search the ship as they would have been allowed to do.

After the ship was hit, the nurses boarded into a lifeboat, but were unable to get it to land in the water properly and their oars were broken while trying to keep from hitting the ship.

A common account is told of Pearl Fraser asking a sergeant on board: “Do you think there is any hope for us?”

“No,” he responded simply. Shortly after the lifeboat was drawn into a whirlpool as part of the Llandhover­y Castle sank. The sergeant was the sole survivor of the lifeboat and was picked up by another lifeboat. He gave accounts of the bravery of the nurses and how even faced with death, they didn’t complain.

It’s an account MacLean would like more people in Pictou County to be reminded of.

“Everything you read will say they faced their death with such courage,” MacLean said. “I think it’s an important local story about a woman who should be remembered which often doesn’t happen.”

See page A3 for a more detailed account of Pearl Fraser and the Llandhover­y Castle by Bruce MacDonald.

The daughter of a prominent New Glasgow family was one of 14 Nursing Sisters who perished at sea 100 years ago when a German U-boat sank a Canadian Army Medical Corps (CAMC) hospital ship off the coast of Ireland.

Margaret Marjorie “Pearl” Fraser was the daughter of Duncan Cameron “D. C.” and Elizabeth “Bessie” (Graham) Fraser. D.C. served as mayor of New Glasgow during the 1880s before entering federal politics as the member of Parliament for Guysboroug­h, a position he held from 1891 to 1904. He subsequent­ly served on the Nova Scotia Supreme Court for two years before being appointed lieutenant-governor of Nova Scotia, a position he held until his untimely death on Sept. 27, 1910, at the age of 64 years.

By the time of her father’s passing, Pearl had completed a nursing training program at an Ottawa school and by 1912 was employed as a Head Nurse at Vancouver General Hospital. Following the outbreak of war in early August 1914, she travelled to Quebec City and enlisted with the CAMC. She crossed to England with the First Canadian Contingent in October 1914 and was selected for duty in France shortly after arriving overseas.

On Nov. 1, 1914, Pearl crossed the English Channel with No. 2 Canadian Stationary Hospital (CSH), which establishe­d a facility at Le Touquet, near Étaples, France. While she served with the unit for 15 months, like many of her CAMC comrades, Pearl sought to work as close to the front as possible. In February 1916, she received a transfer to No. 2 Canadian Casualty Clearing Station (CCS).

Casualty-clearing stations received casualties directly from field ambulances that operated immediatel­y behind the front trenches. The units represent the limit of nursing sister service in the forward area. German aircraft occasional­ly conducted bombing raids on the communitie­s where they were located and the sound of artillery fire was clearly audible.

At the time of Pearl’s transfer, the No. 2 CCS was located at Aire-sur-la Lys, near Béthune France, and the Belgian frontier. In mid-November 1916, its personnel relocated to Remy Siding, on the outskirts of Ypres, Belgium. Pearl served with the unit throughout the winter of 191617. By the spring of the year, having logged two and a half years’ service in France and Belgium, it was time for a change. On May 10, 1917, Pearl was posted to HMHS Letitia, one of several hospital ships transporti­ng sick and wounded Canadian soldiers home.

With the exception of a brief period at an English hospital in late summer 1917, Pearl served on the hospital ships into the following year, making several crossings on the Araguaya during the autumn and winter of 1917-18. The vessel was the CAMC fleet’s “work horse,” completing 20 trans-Atlantic crossings and carried more than 15,000 wounded Canadian soldiers home by war’s end.

Pearl’s two brothers also enlisted for overseas service, receiving the commission­ed rank of lieutenant. Alistair initially served with the 15th Battalion (48th Highlander­s of Canada) in France and was wounded at Vimy Ridge on April 9, 1917. Invalided to England, he subsequent­ly received the Military Cross for his performanc­e during the historic battle and occupied several administra­tive posts. James Gibson Laurier, the youngest of the five Fraser children, commenced service in France with the 16th Battalion (Canadian Scottish) in May 1917.

On March 4, 1918, Lt. Laurier Fraser was killed by artillery fire near Mazingarbe, France. News of their brother’s death had a significan­t impact on his siblings. Alistair immediatel­y relinquish­ed his duties as aide de camp to Lt. Gen. Sir Arthur Currie. While Pearl was officially appointed Acting Matron of the hospital ship Llandovery Castle on March 22, 1918, she received one month’s sick leave three weeks later.

Pearl returned to duty May 17, 1918, and may have made a voyage to Canada aboard the Llandovery Castle in late May, early June. Whatever the case, she was aboard the vessel when it docked at Halifax on June 17, with a total of 644 patients on board. Three days later, the Llandovery Castle departed for England, its CAMC staff of 97 and the vessel’s crew the only passengers on board.

It was a pleasant summer voyage, the medical personnel taking the opportunit­y to relax on deck during fine weather. On the evening of June 27, 1918, the Llandovery Castle was approximat­ely 190 kilometres west of Fastnet Rock, off Ireland’s southern tip, when a German U-boat spotted the vessel.

At 9:30 p.m., without prior warning, the U-boat fired a torpedo, striking the ship “abaft” of its No. 4 engines. The resulting explosion destroyed a large portion of the stern and disabled its engines. Virtually all engine room personnel were killed or wounded and the Captain on the bridge lost all control over the vessel.

In response, the captain ordered all aboard to abandon ship. The CAMC staff and remaining crew immediatel­y assembled at their assigned lifeboat stations. All 14 Nursing Sisters climbed into one boat, under the direction of Sgt. Arthur Knight, one of a handful of CAMC personnel destined to survive the ordeal. In later testimony, Knight described the ensuing events.

While the lifeboat carrying the Nursing Sisters dropped to the water, the two ropes attaching it to the vessel failed to release. Sgt. Knight broke two axes while attempting to cut the ropes. Meanwhile, passengers used the oars to prevent the boat from smashing against the sinking vessel’s hull, breaking all in the process. The ropes finally released, but the boat drifted helplessly alongside the sinking ship.

Shortly afterward, a large section of the stern fell into the water, creating a vortex into which the nursing sisters’ lifeboat was drawn. As it entered the whirlpool, the boat capsized, throwing its occupants into the sea. While Knight managed to surface three times and was finally able to cling to a piece of debris, Acting Matron Pearl Fraser and her Nursing Sister colleagues perished as the waters consumed the lifeboat.

Within 10 minutes off being struck, the Llandovery Castle slipped beneath the waters. A total of 234 CAMC and vessel crew perished in the incident. Of the 24 passengers who managed to escape the debris field in two lifeboats, only one CAMC Officer and five “other ranks” survived the ordeal.

Acting Matron Margaret Marjorie Fraser’s name and those of her CAMC comrades are engraved on a Commonweal­th War Graves Commission memorial plaque erected at Point Pleasant Park, Halifax, in November 1967. The monument contains the names of Army, Navy and Merchant Marine personnel lost at sea during the First and Second World Wars. Numerous other memorials commemorat­e the loss of the Llandovery Castle’s 14 Nursing Sisters. Shortly after the war’s conclusion, First Presbyteri­an Church, New Glasgow, installed stained glass windows in memory of Pearl and her brother, Laurier.

Bruce MacDonald is author of First World War Honour Roll of Guysboroug­h County Nova Scotia. A more detailed version of Pearl Fraser’s story is available online at guysboroug­hgreatwarv­eterans.blogspot.com.

 ?? NS ARCHIVES ?? Today marks the anniversar­y of the sinking of the Llandovery Castle. Aboard was a nurse from New Glasgow, Pearl Fraser.
NS ARCHIVES Today marks the anniversar­y of the sinking of the Llandovery Castle. Aboard was a nurse from New Glasgow, Pearl Fraser.
 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTOS ?? A propaganda poster printed after the Llandovery Castle’s sinking.
SUBMITTED PHOTOS A propaganda poster printed after the Llandovery Castle’s sinking.
 ??  ?? Pearl Fraser
Pearl Fraser

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