Birmingham Post

Veteran, 97, takes to water for first time since ship torpedoed

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A 97-YEAR-OLD Royal Navy veteran has gone swimming for the first time since surviving his ship being sunk by German torpedoes during the Second World War.

Care home bosses arranged for Roger Roberts to go for his first dip in 80 years after HMS Charybdis came under attack in the English Channel in 1943.

Mr Roberts was aged just 17 when his vessel was bombarded and sunk during a German torpedo attack which left him stranded in the middle of the sea.

He was fortunate to be one of the 107 men on board to be rescued but has not set foot back in the water since the traumatic event, which claimed 464 lives.

The war hero – who is one of only two survivors from HMS Charybdis still alive – has now taken the plunge to go swimming for the first time in eight decades.

He had always been reluctant to return to the water but made it part of his bucket list when he moved into Foley Grange in Kiddermins­ter, last January.

After care home staff heard Mr Roberts’ survival story they wanted to help him achieve his dream and got in touch with a local leisure centre.

Wyre Forest Leisure Centre then invited Mr Roberts down for a 20-minute swimming lesson last week, which he said was ‘a lot warmer than the English Channel’. Mr Roberts, previously of Harborne, Birmingham, said: “I enjoyed the swimming lesson, but it was a lot at effort for someone of my age.

“I have to say though, the water was a lot warmer than it was all those years ago in the English Channel. There was ice in the water,

and it was freezing. I was lucky. I was a good swimmer. We went into the water and had about two hours in the water trying to find planks of wood. We managed to scramble onto the planks and there were 60 men holding onto it.

“It was very hard. I managed to come out in one piece from the incident, but a lot didn’t.

“You had to look after yourself as well as your friends and we all put our arms around each other and eventually we were rescued.” Mr Roberts first learnt to swim at primary school and went on to represent

Birmingham in district competitio­ns. He was married to his beloved wife Adeline for over 70 years before she died five years ago. From the marriage he has one daughter, two grandchild­ren and five great-grandchild­ren.

Mr Roberts added: “It was love at first sight with my wife and I have a photo of her on my wall in my room at the care home.”

Mr Roberts was born on April 12, 1925 and signed up to the British Army aged 16 while still underage. He was given a shilling and sent home on a train after his sisters

contacted the army recruitmen­t team to inform them of his age. A year later, aged 17, he enrolled with the Royal Navy in 1943 as a Stoker and boarded the HMS Charybdis – a Dido-class cruiser launched in 1940.

Whilst on board, the HMS Charybdis was hit by German torpedo boats in the English Channel in October 1943 and started to sink. Working in the engine room at the time of the strike, he was told to abandon the quickly sinking ship. Mr Roberts along with 568 men were left stranded in the middle of

the English Channel. Fortunatel­y, he was able to find a raft and was rescued by a British ship and taken to Davenport with 104 other survivors.

Mr Roberts was one of the lucky men who survived as sadly 464 men from the HMS Charybdis died that day in the English Channel.

When Mr Roberts returned from the war, he worked in various jobs, serving in the military police out in Egypt and Palestine. He later settled in the motor industry working for 30 years as a supervisor for Austin Morris Motor Company.

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 ?? ?? Veteran Roger Roberts and care assistant Holli Whitehouse. Right: HMS Charybdis came under attack in the English Channel in 1943 and was sunk
Veteran Roger Roberts and care assistant Holli Whitehouse. Right: HMS Charybdis came under attack in the English Channel in 1943 and was sunk
 ?? ?? Roger Roberts, aged 17, in 1942
Roger Roberts, aged 17, in 1942

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