Post by KG on May 22, 2011 2:33:32 GMT
Gordon Love Bastion
March 30, 1902 – November 1987 (age 85)
Place of birth: Barry, South Glamorgan
Allegiance: United Kingdom
Service/branch: Merchant Navy
Rank: Second Engineer Officer
Unit: SS Empire Bowman
Battles/wars:
Second World War
Battle of the Atlantic
Convoy SL 126
Awards:
George Cross (originally Albert Medal)
Member of the Order of the British Empire
Gordon Love Bastian GC MBE (30 March 1902 – November 1987) was an engineering officer in the British Merchant Navy who was awarded the Albert Medal for risking his own life to save other members of the crew of SS Empire Bowman after it was torpedoed on 31 March 1943.
Bastian was born at Barry, Glamorgan in south Wales on 30 March 1902. In 1927, he first travelled to Canada.[1] He joined the merchant navy and became an engineering officer. With the outbreak of the Second World War most British merchant shipping was organised into convoys, but German u-boats and surface raiders still inflicted considerable losses during the Battle of the Atlantic. Bastian was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire for his convoy service on 1 January 1942.[2][3] By 12 March 1942, Bastian was second engineer officer on SS Empire Bowman, which was departing Freetown, Sierra Leone as part of Convoy SL 126, due to arrive in Liverpool at the beginning of April.[3] On 30 March 1942 (coincidentally Bastian's 41st birthday), she was torpedoed by U-404 the Atlantic Ocean some 425 nautical miles (787 km) north west of Cape Finisterre. At great personal risk, Bastian rescued two stokers from the sinking ship, for which he was awarded the Albert Medal on 17 August 1943
March 30, 1902 – November 1987 (age 85)
Place of birth: Barry, South Glamorgan
Allegiance: United Kingdom
Service/branch: Merchant Navy
Rank: Second Engineer Officer
Unit: SS Empire Bowman
Battles/wars:
Second World War
Battle of the Atlantic
Convoy SL 126
Awards:
George Cross (originally Albert Medal)
Member of the Order of the British Empire
Gordon Love Bastian GC MBE (30 March 1902 – November 1987) was an engineering officer in the British Merchant Navy who was awarded the Albert Medal for risking his own life to save other members of the crew of SS Empire Bowman after it was torpedoed on 31 March 1943.
Bastian was born at Barry, Glamorgan in south Wales on 30 March 1902. In 1927, he first travelled to Canada.[1] He joined the merchant navy and became an engineering officer. With the outbreak of the Second World War most British merchant shipping was organised into convoys, but German u-boats and surface raiders still inflicted considerable losses during the Battle of the Atlantic. Bastian was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire for his convoy service on 1 January 1942.[2][3] By 12 March 1942, Bastian was second engineer officer on SS Empire Bowman, which was departing Freetown, Sierra Leone as part of Convoy SL 126, due to arrive in Liverpool at the beginning of April.[3] On 30 March 1942 (coincidentally Bastian's 41st birthday), she was torpedoed by U-404 the Atlantic Ocean some 425 nautical miles (787 km) north west of Cape Finisterre. At great personal risk, Bastian rescued two stokers from the sinking ship, for which he was awarded the Albert Medal on 17 August 1943