John Lumsden Davis

Sergeant John Lumsden Davis of Derry/Londonderry died on 12th September 1942 when the German U-156 sank H.M.T. Laconia off the African coast.

Sergeant

John Lumsden Davis

549689

Sergeant John Lumsden Davis of Derry/Londonderry died on 12th September 1942 as a result of what became known during the Second World War as The Laconia Incident.

Sergeant John Lumsden Davis (549689) served in the Royal Air Force during the Second World War. He was the son of Thomas Davis and Elizabeth Davis of Derry/Londonderry.

He died on 12th September 1942 aged 23 years old on H.M.T. Laconia. The Royal Navy requisitioned the former passenger liner in 1939 converting it into an Armed Merchant Cruiser. En route from Cape Town, South Africa to Freetown, Sierra Leone, Laconia came under torpedo attack from German U-Boat U-156. On board were around 460 crew members, 1,800 Italian prisoners of war, 280 British military personnel, 100 Polish military personnel, and 80 civilians.

H.M.T. Laconia Survivors

Wikipedia Creative Commons Library Photo: German submarines U-156 in the foreground and U-507 pick up survivors following the sinking of H.M.T. Laconia off the coast of West Africa by U-156. Photo taken on 13th September 1942. Copyright Leopold Schumacher.

As H.M.T. Laconia went down, U-Boat commander Korvettenkapitän Werner Hartenstein realised there were civilians and P.O.Ws on board. His crew began rescue operations. On 13th September, an United States Army Air Force B-24 Liberator bombed U-156 and others helping in the rescue effort. The crew claimed not to have received a message over the radio or seen the Red Cross flags flying. Following this incident, Admiral Karl Donitz issued the Laconia Order. This prevented U-Boat crews from assisting Allied survivors, leading to unrestricted submarine warfare by the Kriegsmarine.

There were more than 1,000 victims of the sinking of H.M.T. Laconia including Allied personnel but the majority of deaths were Italian Prisoners of War. John Lumsden Davis has no known grave. His name is on Column 261 of the Alamein Memorial, Egypt. His name is also on a family memorial in Derry City Cemetery, Derry/Londonderry.