Royal Navy veteran and banker dies at age of 96
Edward Franklin was a ‘staunch Arundel man’
Royal Navy veteran Edward Franklin, who had a life-long love of Arundel and played a role in the build-up to D-Day, has died aged 96.
Edward, known as Eddie, was born in Westhampnett, near Chichester, on November 19, 1924, before his family moved to Arundel. His father Lawrence was four times mayor of Arundel.
Eddie’s daughter Julia said: “My father was a very staunch Arundel man, who valued the town and contributed to the Museum in his life.”
Eddie joined the Westminster Bank, which became NatWest, in 1941, working at branches at Midhurst, Arundel and Worthing.
In 1942, approaching his 18th birthday, he volunteered for the Royal Navy and saw service in escort ships in the Atlantic taking the first large convoy to North Africa and Sicily. At one point his ship sank an enemy submarine.
He was commissioned a Midshipman and joined Coastal Forces – MTB’s and Gun Boats – in which he was to mostly serve for the rest of the war eventually taking command of his own vessel in 1945/46.
Eddie served on a ship operating in the Channel, for some months immediately prior to D-Day.
He was involved in some of the most up-to-date tactics, experimenting with submarine snorkels and radar decoy balloons, not yet then in general use. From there he went to Canada and the USA, to be later based in Trinidad.
His last active service appointment was in Naval Control safe routing any shipping going East of Ceylon.
Before joining the Navy Eddie was a founder cadet member of the Arundel and Littlehampton Unit of the Sea Cadet Corps.
Returning to banking after the war, he married his high school sweetheart, Joy, in March 1951 and worked at the Worthing bank from 1952 1962, while living in Arundel.
He continued to serve with the Royal Naval Reserve as a mines counter measure officer, firstly in minesweepers, followed by exercises in Malta and Lisbon as well as at the NATO HQ in Northwood and the UK generally.
He was awarded the Reserve Decoration and a Bar. In 1977, in recognition of his service with the RNR and Sea Cadet Corps, he was appointed a Member of The Order of the British Empire.
A lover of nature and a keen gardener, Eddie also enjoyed caravanning through Europe with his family and was a member of the Caravan Club for 50 years.
Eddie also gave service as a Police Authority lay visitor and also a Home Office appointed layobserverforthoseentrusted to the escort services.
Eddie passed away on January 5, following the death of his wife in May 2020.
Hays Travel is set to close two of its branches in West Sussex.
The UK’s largest travel agent, which has a branch in Littlehampton, announced last week that it will not renew the leases on 89 of its shops as part of a planned consolidation of its UK retail estate.
The decision will affect 388 staff members.
A spokesman for Hays Travel has confirmed that leases on stores in Worthing and Burgess Hill would not be renewed. Others, including in Bognor Regis and Midhurst, would remain open.