Yorkshire Post

Named at last... wartime sailor lost for 78 years

Islanders tended Grimsby seaman’s grave

- ALEXANDRA WOOD NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: alex.wood@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

ON A wind-swept July day in 1942, villagers turned out to bid farewell to the unknown seaman whose body had washed ashore two days previously.

British soldiers stationed on the Faroe Islands joined a solemn procession for the tattooed sailor, whose body was found with English money and one good clue to his identity – a wedding ring with the initials JHN.

For decades the grave was lovingly tended by residents from Vágur, a small town on the island of Suðuroy.

Researcher Arnfinnur Thomassen became intrigued when he found out that the grave, which his cousin Tina Tausen, 90, had looked after for decades, was the only unidentifi­ed burial in the cemetery.

The original police record revealed “he was not a military person, he was a seaman and had some English pounds in his pockets, his arms were tattooed and he had been in the sea for two weeks.” Mr Thomassen added: “Then I saw the ring. I thought N had to be the last name, so then I started searching.”

He started trawling records online, before finding a single match

Jackie Pearce, a granddaugh­ter of John Henry Nicholls on ancestry.com – John Henry Nicholls, left, a crew member of the ill-fated Bromelia, a trawler from Grimsby, which sank in 1942, with the loss of 13 lives.

Mr Thomassen decided to contact Lincs Inspire Libraries and Jennie Cartwright from the local history department set to work, uncovering more valuable informatio­n. An appeal on local radio raised half a dozen grandchild­ren, including Jackie Pearce from Grimsby.

Mrs Pearce, said her father Ron – just 14 when Bromelia was lost – always “spoke very highly” of his father and would have been “over the moon”.

She added: “If there is a sadness it is that my Dad didn’t live long enough to hear this news. It was the never knowing.

“How amazing it was that they found the ring with those initials – otherwise we would have never known.”

Another granddaugh­ter Christine Paris, from Wokingham, Berkshire, whose father Charles was a skipper, said the story was “testimony to the kindness of

FAMILY: people”. She said: “All we knew was that his fishing vessel had gone missing in 1942 and his name is on the memorial on Tower Hill in London.”

Researcher Ms Cartwright said it showed how “after 78 years you can reconnect people”.

No one can still say with certainty what the vessel was being used for at the time it was lost. But the probabilit­y was that she was fishing.

She added: “It also shows the power of joint efforts in research working with Arnfinnur with the pieces of the puzzle he had and those I could find.”

By pure coincinden­ce when speaking to Mr Thomassen, with whom she has previously collaborat­ed on research projects, she mentioned that her great-grandfathe­r came from the very same town, Vágur.

She said: “He told me he could see our family home from where he lives.”

How amazing it was that they found the ring with those initials.

 ?? PICTURE: GARY LONGBOTTOM ?? Jackie Pearce (front right) holding Ruben Richard, John Henry Nicholls’s great-great-grandson, aged seven months. Also pictured, from left back, great-grandsons Oliver Pearce and Craig Pearce (holding Sienna, eight months) and, front left, great-ganddaught­er Rachel Richard.
PICTURE: GARY LONGBOTTOM Jackie Pearce (front right) holding Ruben Richard, John Henry Nicholls’s great-great-grandson, aged seven months. Also pictured, from left back, great-grandsons Oliver Pearce and Craig Pearce (holding Sienna, eight months) and, front left, great-ganddaught­er Rachel Richard.
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