Vice-Admiral Sir Tony Troup
Last updated: 9:44 PM BST 11/07/2008
Submariner who was given his first command at only 21 and won two
DSCs during the Second World War.
Vice-Admiral Sir Tony Troup, who died on July 8 aged 86, became the
youngest-ever submarine captain when he took command, at 21 years 10
months, of the training submarine H32 in June 1943.
Just a few months later he was given command of /Strongbow,/ based at
Trincomalee, Ceylon. Operations had been largely restricted to patrols,
air-sea rescue and the landing and recovery of agents; but Troup sank
the 800-ton coaster /Toso Maru/ off Phuket with a single torpedo on his
first eastern patrol. He then sank or drove ashore nine junks, a tug and
two lighters with gunfire and by boarding and placing demolition charges.
The next patrol, however, brought mixed results. On October 11, in the
Malacca Strait, Troup attacked a merchant ship which was being escorted
by two sub-chasers, firing five torpedoes at a range of 3,000 yards. Two
exploded prematurely and the others missed; then, before he could renew
the attack, he found himself in shallow water.
Next day Troup encountered two Japanese submarines in quick succession.
He fired four torpedoes at Ro113 from 2,500 yards; all of them missed.
Half an hour later two more were launched at Ro115 from 4,500 yards;
these too missed. Reloading his one remaining bow torpedo, Troup sank
the 1,185-ton cargo ship /Manryo Maru/ at close range.
A week later he was ordered to take up position off the Nicobar Islands
for air-sea rescue duties during a carrier-borne air attack by the
Eastern Fleet. As the raid ended, he fired his stern torpedo into the
harbour, where it was caught by torpedo nets.
In November Troup patrolled the west coast of Sumatra, sinking a tug and
a lighter by gunfire and carrying out a successful re-supply operation
to coast watchers. On the last day of the month he found and sank three
junks close inshore, claiming 33 hits with 36 rounds from his 3-in gun
while coming under shell-fire from shore batteries.
Troup made one last patrol in the same seas at the end of the year, then
sailed to the southern Malacca Strait. A couple of weeks later he sank a
junk and was depth-charged in response, though there was no damage.
Three days later he was less lucky: /Strongbow/ was trapped in shallow
water by several anti-submarine vessels and subjected to close and
effective depth charge attack.
When Troup took tea after the war with Commander Tetsunoke Moriama, his
Japanese opponent told him that after eight hours of continual
bombardment he was sure that /Strongbow/ had been sunk. Troup admitted:
"They gave me a very bad time, and I was considerably dusted up."
Many of /Strongbow/' s/ /rivets had popped and the pressure hull had
collapsed inwards; the main engines had been blown off their beds; the
air compressors had been smashed and the torpedoes jammed in the tubes.
He crept into a known minefield, where he knew he would not be pursued,
then nursed his boat for 1,000 miles across the Indian Ocean to
Trincomalee. There the base engineers pronounced the boat unfit for
further service. Troup was awarded a Bar to an earlier DSC.
John Anthony Rose Troup was born into a naval family on July 18 1921. He
was educated at HMS /Worcester/, the nautical training college on the
Thames, and entered Dartmouth in 1936. His father had been boxing
champion at Dartmouth and insisted that Tony should take up the sport
(he consented, but was regularly beaten and grew to hate it). After
service in the cruiser /Cornwall/ and the destroyer /Active/ in the Far
East and the Atlantic, Troup volunteered for submarines in 1941.
He joined the newly built /Turbulent,/ commanded by Commander "Tubby"
Linton, which was part of the Fighting 10th Submarine Flotilla. In 1942,
after 254 days in the Mediterranean, nearly half of them submerged,
/Turbulent /was estimated to have sunk a cruiser, a destroyer, a
U-boat, and 28 supply ships totalling 100,000 tons; it had been depth
charged more than 250 times.
Troup was mentioned in dispatches while in /Turbulent/, but had left to
do his "perisher" course for submarine commanders when Linton was lost
on its next patrol. His first DSC was announced on the same page of the
/London Gazette/ as Linton's posthumous VC.
After Troup had limped home in /Strongbow/, he commanded three more
submarines in the post-war years: /Tantalus/, /Trump /and /Tally Ho/. He
was second-in-command of the Royal Navy's first angled-deck aircraft
carrier, /Victorious/ , from 1956 to 1959, and then held three
influential appointments as naval assistant to the First Sea Lord,
captain of the 3rd Submarine Squadron, and Captain of the Fleet in 1964-65.
He returned to the Far East as captain of the amphibious assault ship
/Intrepid/, then became became Flag Officer Sea Training, demanding the
highest standards of efficiency in all the ships sent to him at Portland.
As Commander Far East Fleet Troup took the salute at a steam past to
mark the end of the Anglo-Malaysian defence pact and the start of the
Five-Power Defence Agreement in 1971. When he was appointed Flag Officer
Submarines, aged 50, he insisted on making an inaugural ascent in the
new underwater escape tower at Gosport. His last appointment was as Flag
Officer Scotland and Northern Ireland.
For his retirement Troup acquired a crofthouse at Portchuillin, which
enabled him to indulge his passion for golf at the Lochcarron club. He
also owned a series of boats called /Seil/, the last and smallest of
which was a Devon yawl which he sailed until his children banned him
after he fell overboard. He was elected
to the Royal Yacht Squadron in 1964.
Troup joined the board of the shipbuilder Vosper Thornycroft and, from
1979 to 1988, was defence adviser to Scicon International. He was
president of the Submarine Old Comrades' Association.
Tony Troup, who was appointed KCB in 1975, wanted no memorial service
and left no papers, but recorded an oral history for the Imperial War
Museum.
He married, in 1943, Joy Gordon-Smith. The marriage was dissolved in
1952, and the next year he married Cordelia Hope, who survives him with
two sons and a daughter of the first marriage and two sons and a
daughter of the second.
Story from Telegraph News:
Vice-Admiral Sir Tony Troup - Telegraph