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For the
first time, during an interview with BBC Radio 4, the Duke of
Edinburgh has publicly revealed accounts of his personal
experiences and involvement in a number of conflicts
of the Second World War.
Throughout the interview, which was part of the Britain At
Sea series which is currently being played every afternoon on
Radio 4, Prince Philip was notably calm and enthusiastic when
discussing his experiences of the war.
Prince Philip recalled how he helped to prevent
the HMS Wallace from being attacked and sunk by a
Luftwaffe bomber. This particular example of his experience relates
to the time when the Duke was first lieutenant during the Allied
invasion of 1943 in Sicily.
The Prince commented: “We did some patrolling along the coast
of Sicily and one night for some reason or another some German
bomber decided they could see us, and so they thought they’d have a
go. I thought it was a frightfully good wheeze. I got a Carley
float, filled it with rubbish and set fire to it and launched it,
hoping that the aeroplane would think we were burning or something.
And it did! It went and had a go at it; we got away with it”.
In contrast to this account, veteran Harry Hargreaves spoke
about how the Duke saved the lives of the men on the ship that
night during a BBC project in 2003 called People’s
War. Hargreaves said: “Prince Philip saved our lives that
night. I suppose there might have been a few survivors, but
certainly the ship would have been sunk.”
During the radio interview, the Duke also spoke about his time
experiences when he was just aged 19 when he was involved in the
Battle of Cape Matapan, which occurred in 1941 just off of the
Greek coast. Philip was put in charge of seeking out enemy ships at
night when aboard HMS Valiant and his role contributed to
the destroying of Italian cruisers.
When discussing the moments before launching the attack on the
cruisers, Prince Philip said: “I could see them because Greyhound
the destroyer switched on her searchlight before we did, and so I
could actually see the outline of these ships before somebody said
“Open shutters”. Fortunately it was pointing in the right direction
at the time. The interesting thing that struck me was that it was
so close. You know those big searchlights, colossal great things,
it only lit up half one of the Italian cruisers. They said ‘Train
left'”.
The Duke continued by saying: “I found the other one and it lit up
the middle part of it, whereupon it practically disappeared
instantly under a salvo of 15 inch shells at point blank
range”.
Prince Philip was promoted to lieutenant-commander after the end of
the Second World War and was put in command of HMS Magpie,
where he was given the nickname of ‘Dukey’ by the men aboard the
ship.
This radio interview comes just days after the Duke returned
from Normandy where he
attended the 70th anniversary commemorations of the D-Day
landings with other members of the royal family.
Photo credit: Royal Navy Media
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With this wonderful article, I convey birthday wishes to Prince Philip. May he live long, hale and hearty. Amen.
Great article!!!