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In Command at St Nazaire (A Reluctant Hero) - The Life of Captain Robert Ryder VC (Paperback)
Loot Price: R372
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In Command at St Nazaire (A Reluctant Hero) - The Life of Captain Robert Ryder VC (Paperback)
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List price R455
Loot Price R372
Discovery Miles 3 720
You Save R83 (18%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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This is the first biography of Captain Robert Ryder V.C., Royal
Navy (1908-1986), one of the greatest naval heroes of the Second
World War. Ryder led the audacious raid on St Nazaire in March 1942
which completely destroyed the ports dry dock, depriving the
Germans mighty pocket battleships of its use for the remainder of
the war. The raid was one of the most brilliantly-executed combined
operations of the war, much of the credit for which must go to
Ryders outstanding planning and courageous leadership. He received
one of five Victoria Crosses awarded for the operation. Although
Ryders name will be forever linked with the raid on St Nazaire, the
rest of his war service was no less distinguished. Torpedoed in a Q
ship in 1940 he was rescued after clinging to a piece of wreckage
for four days. After St Nazaire, he was heavily involved in the
planning of combined operations and took part in the ill-fated raid
on Dieppe. On D Day he lead a naval assault party in the first wave
of the invasion. For the rest of the war Ryder commanded a
destroyer on the Arctic convoys. Ryders naval career before the war
was, as The Times put it on his death, unorthodox. In 1933-34 he,
as captain, and four other young naval officers sailed the
Tal-Mo-Shan, a 54 food ketch, from Hong Kong to England via the
Panama Canal in a voyage lasting exactly a year, an outstanding
achievement. Recently there has been press speculation that the
voyage was a cover for naval espionage in Japanese waters. The
Tal-Mo-Shan herself has now acquired international celebrity as a
result of her sail-on part in the Abba film Mamma Mia. Between 1934
and 1937 Ryder served in the Antarctic as captain of the Penola,
the base ship of the British Graham Lane Expedition. His formidable
navigation and seamanship was largely responsible for the Penola,
which was ill-adapted to polar conditions, surviving her ordeal
intact. Ryder also took part in some of the earliest ocean yacht
races, including the second Fastnet race in 1926.
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