Flying Officer Lloyd Allan Trigg was awarded a Victoria Cross for
destroying a German submarine in WWII. The only reason we know of his
heroic deed is because of some of those he bombed lived to tell the tale
and admired him for his bravery. So much so that they asked he be
awarded the highest medal possible.
Trigg joined the Royal New Zealand Air Force in June 1941 as a trainee pilot. On 16 January 1942, he became a Pilot Officer flying Lockheed Hudsons. He got posted to West Africa in December, and in January 1943, he became part of the 200 Squadron Royal Air Force (RAF) doing escort flights, reconnaissance patrols, and looking out for enemy submarines.
Later in March, Trigg was escorting a West African bound convoy when he spotted and attacked two U-Boats. They weren’t destroyed, but they got the message and left the convoy alone. Though he’d never know it, Trigg would later be given a Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC) award for that action.
Then
the RAF switched over to the B-24 Liberator aircraft and in May 1943,
Trigg was sent to the US to learn how to fly their maritime version, the
PB4Y-1 Liberator, which are much bigger than the Hudsons in which he
had flown 45 missions.
On August 11, Trigg was sent on his first operational flight in a Liberator. With him were four other Kiwis – Ivan Marinovich, Arthur G. Bennet, Lawrence J. Frost, and Terry J. Soper. There were also two Brits and a Canadian – J. J. Townsend, R. Bonnic, and G. N. Goodwin.
The eight men took off from their base at Bathurst, West Africa (today’s City of Banjul in The Gambia) at dawn. Their mission was to find and destroy submarines in order to keep the Allied supply lines to Africa going, part of a larger operation to secure their shipping routes from Gibraltar to the Port of Cape Town, South Africa.
Little did they know that it would be their last mission, for Trigg, it would be his 46th.
On 7 March 1943, a convoy of British tankers were passing through bad weather off Cape Farewell, New Zealand. That wouldn’t be their only problem, however. At around 6:20 PM, they were attacked by the German U-638 submarine under the command of Captain Lieutenant Hinrich Oskar Bernbeck.
The Empire Light was the rearmost ship and the only one hit, losing 45 men. Five survived and were rescued by the HMS Beverly. The Empire Light was a lost cause, however, so it was abandoned.
On March 12, Oberleutnant Klemens Schamong, commander of the U-468, finished the job and sank the Empire Light. Schamong had joined the German navy in 1938 and took his first command of a U-boat on 12 August 1942. The abandoned Empire Light would be his first and only sinking,
Several months later on July 7, Schamong was back in his U-468. He had left La Pallice, France, not realizing that his third mission would also be his last.
Taking off under escort by minesweepers, Schamong’s U-468 avoided the Bay of Biscay, following the French and Spanish coastlines, instead. In doing so, the submarine avoided detection till it arrived off the coast of West Africa, some 90 miles north of Dakar in August.
On the morning of August 11, Schamong’s submarine was supposed to be refueled by the U-462, but the latter was sunk by the Allies before the rendezvous could take place. So he ordered a return to their African base.
At around 9:45 AM, the U-468 surfaced when the crew saw Trigg’s plane flying some 6,000 yards away. Any hope that they had not been spotted was lost when the Liberator changed course and steered their way.
Instead
of submerging, the Germans responded by opening fire with their 20 mm
anti-aircraft guns. Flames broke out on the plane – a direct hit!
Seconds later, the tail was on fire.
But the plane kept coming at them.
To Schamong’s surprise, the Liberator didn’t make a forced landing in the water to douse the flames. Nor did the pilot swerve to avoid the oncoming artillery fire. As the plane flew over the submarine, its bomb doors opened as the Germans kept shooting.
They were still shooting into the plane’s underbelly when Trigg flew 50 feet directly above them and unloaded six depth charges. None hit the submarine, but two exploded within six feet of the hull.
The U-Boat jumped up because of the force of the double explosion and Schamong was thrown back. For a moment, he lost sight of the plane. Turning, he found it again… just in time to see it hit the sea and explode. There were no survors.
But the Germans didn’t celebrate because they had problems of their own. Their U-Boat had sprung several leaks. The engines, motors, and other components had been blasted off their mounts, while their battery containers had cracked and their fuel tank collapsed.
Then sea water began flooding their battery compartment, releasing poisonous chlorine gas. Panic broke out, many suffocated and died. Only about 20 made it to the deck with lifebelts. Within 10 minutes, the submarine began to sink.
Desperate, the survivors jumped in the water where sharks and barracudas did the rest. Within 20 minutes of the bombing, the U-Boat was gone with 42 sailors. Fortunately, the Liberator’s rubber dinghy floated toward Schamong and two others. Inflating it and climbing in it and they were soon joined by four other sailors.
Back at Bathurst, the RAF was wondering why Trigg and his crew hadn’t returned, so they sent out a Short Sunderland flying boat to find them. The pilot spotted the dinghy and reported their position to base. The next day, the Germans were rescued by the HMS Clarkia.
Taken back to Britain as a POW, Schamong told his story. To his captors’ surprise, the Nazi officer recommended that the crew of the Liberator be given the highest award that the British Empire could possibly offer.
On 2 November 1943, King George VI did just that, awarding Trigg a Victoria Cross. Trigg also got the Distinguished Flying Cross, the 1939-1945 Star, the Atlantic Star, the Defence Medal, the War Medal 1939-1945, and the New Zealand War Service Medal.
Since Trigg and his crew have no burial place, they are commemorated on the Malta Memorial to the 2,298 Commonwealth aircrew who lost their lives around the Mediterranean during the Second World War and who have no known grave.
Triggs VC citation reads as follows:
Trigg joined the Royal New Zealand Air Force in June 1941 as a trainee pilot. On 16 January 1942, he became a Pilot Officer flying Lockheed Hudsons. He got posted to West Africa in December, and in January 1943, he became part of the 200 Squadron Royal Air Force (RAF) doing escort flights, reconnaissance patrols, and looking out for enemy submarines.
Later in March, Trigg was escorting a West African bound convoy when he spotted and attacked two U-Boats. They weren’t destroyed, but they got the message and left the convoy alone. Though he’d never know it, Trigg would later be given a Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC) award for that action.
On August 11, Trigg was sent on his first operational flight in a Liberator. With him were four other Kiwis – Ivan Marinovich, Arthur G. Bennet, Lawrence J. Frost, and Terry J. Soper. There were also two Brits and a Canadian – J. J. Townsend, R. Bonnic, and G. N. Goodwin.
The eight men took off from their base at Bathurst, West Africa (today’s City of Banjul in The Gambia) at dawn. Their mission was to find and destroy submarines in order to keep the Allied supply lines to Africa going, part of a larger operation to secure their shipping routes from Gibraltar to the Port of Cape Town, South Africa.
Little did they know that it would be their last mission, for Trigg, it would be his 46th.
On 7 March 1943, a convoy of British tankers were passing through bad weather off Cape Farewell, New Zealand. That wouldn’t be their only problem, however. At around 6:20 PM, they were attacked by the German U-638 submarine under the command of Captain Lieutenant Hinrich Oskar Bernbeck.
The Empire Light was the rearmost ship and the only one hit, losing 45 men. Five survived and were rescued by the HMS Beverly. The Empire Light was a lost cause, however, so it was abandoned.
On March 12, Oberleutnant Klemens Schamong, commander of the U-468, finished the job and sank the Empire Light. Schamong had joined the German navy in 1938 and took his first command of a U-boat on 12 August 1942. The abandoned Empire Light would be his first and only sinking,
Several months later on July 7, Schamong was back in his U-468. He had left La Pallice, France, not realizing that his third mission would also be his last.
Taking off under escort by minesweepers, Schamong’s U-468 avoided the Bay of Biscay, following the French and Spanish coastlines, instead. In doing so, the submarine avoided detection till it arrived off the coast of West Africa, some 90 miles north of Dakar in August.
On the morning of August 11, Schamong’s submarine was supposed to be refueled by the U-462, but the latter was sunk by the Allies before the rendezvous could take place. So he ordered a return to their African base.
At around 9:45 AM, the U-468 surfaced when the crew saw Trigg’s plane flying some 6,000 yards away. Any hope that they had not been spotted was lost when the Liberator changed course and steered their way.
But the plane kept coming at them.
To Schamong’s surprise, the Liberator didn’t make a forced landing in the water to douse the flames. Nor did the pilot swerve to avoid the oncoming artillery fire. As the plane flew over the submarine, its bomb doors opened as the Germans kept shooting.
They were still shooting into the plane’s underbelly when Trigg flew 50 feet directly above them and unloaded six depth charges. None hit the submarine, but two exploded within six feet of the hull.
The U-Boat jumped up because of the force of the double explosion and Schamong was thrown back. For a moment, he lost sight of the plane. Turning, he found it again… just in time to see it hit the sea and explode. There were no survors.
But the Germans didn’t celebrate because they had problems of their own. Their U-Boat had sprung several leaks. The engines, motors, and other components had been blasted off their mounts, while their battery containers had cracked and their fuel tank collapsed.
Then sea water began flooding their battery compartment, releasing poisonous chlorine gas. Panic broke out, many suffocated and died. Only about 20 made it to the deck with lifebelts. Within 10 minutes, the submarine began to sink.
Desperate, the survivors jumped in the water where sharks and barracudas did the rest. Within 20 minutes of the bombing, the U-Boat was gone with 42 sailors. Fortunately, the Liberator’s rubber dinghy floated toward Schamong and two others. Inflating it and climbing in it and they were soon joined by four other sailors.
Back at Bathurst, the RAF was wondering why Trigg and his crew hadn’t returned, so they sent out a Short Sunderland flying boat to find them. The pilot spotted the dinghy and reported their position to base. The next day, the Germans were rescued by the HMS Clarkia.
Taken back to Britain as a POW, Schamong told his story. To his captors’ surprise, the Nazi officer recommended that the crew of the Liberator be given the highest award that the British Empire could possibly offer.
On 2 November 1943, King George VI did just that, awarding Trigg a Victoria Cross. Trigg also got the Distinguished Flying Cross, the 1939-1945 Star, the Atlantic Star, the Defence Medal, the War Medal 1939-1945, and the New Zealand War Service Medal.
Since Trigg and his crew have no burial place, they are commemorated on the Malta Memorial to the 2,298 Commonwealth aircrew who lost their lives around the Mediterranean during the Second World War and who have no known grave.
Triggs VC citation reads as follows:
Air Ministry, 2nd November, 1943.
The
KING has been graciously pleased to confer the VICTORIA CROSS on the
undermentioned officer in recognition of most conspicuous bravery: —
Flying Officer Lloyd Allan TRIGG, D.F.C. (N.Z.413515), Royal New Zealand Air Force (missing, believed killed), No. 200 Squadron.
Flying
Officer Trigg had rendered outstanding service on convoy escort and
antisubmarine duties. He had completed 46 operational sorties and had
invariably displayed skill and courage of a very high order. One day in
August 1943, Flying Officer Trigg undertook, as captain and pilot, a
patrol in a Liberator although he had not previously made any
operational sorties in that type of aircraft. After searching for 8
hours a surfaced U-boat was sighted. Flying Officer Trigg immediately
prepared to attack. During the approach, the aircraft received many hits
from the submarine’s anti-aircraft guns and burst into flames, which
quickly enveloped the tail. The moment was critical. Flying Officer
Trigg could have broken off the engagement and made a forced landing in
the sea. But if he continued the attack, the aircraft would present a
“no deflection” target to deadly accurate anti-aircraft fire, and every
second spent in the air would increase the extent and intensity of the
flames and diminish his chances of survival. There could have been no
hesitation or doubt in his mind. He maintained his course in spite of
the already precarious condition of his aircraft and executed a masterly
attack. Skimming over the U-boat at less than 50 feet with
anti-aircraft fire entering his opened bomb doors, Flying Officer Trigg
dropped his bombs on and around the U-boat where they exploded with
davastating [sic] effect. A short distance further on the Liberator
dived into the sea with her gallant captain and crew. The U-boat sank
within 20 minutes and some of her crew were picked up later in a rubber
dinghy that had broken loose from the Liberator. The Battle of the
Atlantic has yielded many fine stories of air attacks on underwater
craft, but Flying Officer Trigg’s exploit stands out as an epic of grim
determination and high courage. His was the path of duty that leads to
glory.
— Supplement to London Gazette, 29 October 1943, (dated 2 November 1943)
— Supplement to London Gazette, 29 October 1943, (dated 2 November 1943)
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