Yorkshire Post

Honouring forgotten story of ‘the quiet disaster’

Christmas Day explosion which killed ten men on board supertrawl­er remembered 50 years on in book

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

IT WAS dubbed the quiet disaster, a tragedy which unfolded at sea as the world woke up to Christmas Day in 1966.

When a fireball explosion ripped through the supertrawl­er

SS Finbarr, killing ten men, it took two days for the full story to filter back to the desperate waiting families at home.

SS Finbarr “was the most modern trawler ever purchased by the Hull fleet” – £12m in today’s money – says author Brian Lavery. But it was also dogged by electrical problems and it came to grief, on its 13th trip in a gale on the Grand Banks, the same fishing grounds immortalis­ed in the biographic­al disaster film The Perfect Storm.

The fire broke out in the early morning in an empty cabin in the crew’s accommodat­ion, melting cables and letting off a powerful inflammabl­e gas. The skipper Tommy Sawyers was sending a Mayday when he was blown out through the wheelhouse windows – a melted telephone receiver still in his hand. Halfdresse­d men scrambled onto a freezing – and burning – deck.

While the captain, engineers and chief officer stayed with the ship, the men were ordered

to abandon ship, getting into a life raft, which was pulled to another stern trawler in an amazing feat of seamanship. But two of the oldest men in the raft, Tommy Gray and Harry Smith (inset), died when they fell into the freezing sea, as they tried to get up a dangling rope ladder to safety. The Luckiest 13 by Dr Lavery follows his bestseller The

Headscarf Revolution­aries, which charts the struggles of women from Hull for better safety at sea following the Triple Trawler Tragedy of 1968, in which three ships sank in weeks, with a loss of 58 lives. Just one man survived. Had the disaster on board the SS Finbarr happened earlier, says Dr Lavery, it would have been the “Quadruple Trawler Tragedy”.

As it was, a Christmas news blackout meant 25 families did not know if their loved one was alive or dead for two days and the Triple Trawler Tragedy “wiped it out of public consciousn­ess”. The ship had been delayed leaving port three times and one of the crew, Brian Williams, backed out.

Dr Lavery said: “Bad things happen in threes. Fishermen are superstiti­ous – it is easy for us to laugh but being constantly in the shadow of death it becomes more understand­able.”

Mr Williams and his two brothers were all later to die tragically at sea. Gavin Gray’s father, Tommy Gray, was the radio operator on board. Hugely respected, he was “one of the best”, having qualified aged just 17, and going on to serve with distinctio­n in the Second World War.

Mr Gray said: “We found out from the TV. They said there was a fire and people said: ‘Don’t worry, it’s not your Dad.’

“It was about 30 hours before we knew he was dead. It was tough for my poor mum.

“There was a commemorat­ion service afterwards, the whole of Hessle Road came out, people were showing great respect. I was just numb.” He added: “I appreciate the sympatheti­c way Brian has told the story and I am pleased it is coming to notice after so many years.”

Patrick ‘Paddy’ Tognola, the last surviving member of crew, now lives in Withernsea. He recalls waking up to smoke, and getting out with two shipmates via the engine room, and being in the liferaft, which was full of water. Despite being promised he would get full pay when he got home, he got nothing.

He carried on fishing afterwards and later went into oil rigs, which was “a lot better”.

Fishing, he says, was “dangerous, hard work”.

 ?? MAIN PICTURE: BRUCE ROLLINSON. ?? TRAGEDY: Dr Brian Lavery’s new book The Luckiest 13 commemorat­es the loss of 10 men in an explosion on board the supertrawl­er SS Finbarr on Christmas Day 1966; some of the men who did not come home, including Tony Harrison, left, pictured on a night out.
MAIN PICTURE: BRUCE ROLLINSON. TRAGEDY: Dr Brian Lavery’s new book The Luckiest 13 commemorat­es the loss of 10 men in an explosion on board the supertrawl­er SS Finbarr on Christmas Day 1966; some of the men who did not come home, including Tony Harrison, left, pictured on a night out.
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