The first draft of “Defying Gravity: The Parallel Universe of T. Townsend Brown” contains a chapter (‘The Golden Galleon’) which is primarily concerned with Townsend Brown’s 1938 voyage to Europe aboard the USS Nashville.
This chapter is centred on the account of events in Europe described in “A Short Autobiography” by T. Townsend Brown, as follows:
U.S. Navy - Trip to Europe on U.S. [sic] Nashville (Maiden Voyage):
Chamberlain was trying to stop Hitler - visited Stockholm, Sweden, Goteberg, [sic] Germany on U.S. [sic] Nashville on her maiden voyage. We listened to gun-fire of Germans at practice, getting ready for World War II. We were exposed to the German Navy while we were in the Baltic sea [sic], but no incidents occurred. We then went to Portsmouth, England. Of course, it was while we were there that the pending war became so hot we were told to leave for safety's sake, in dead of night - which we did. Before we left they loaded 50 million dollars worth of gold aboard. It was gold brought from London (Bank of England) and it arrived at ship side in 3 garbage trucks - no escort, motorcycles or convoy. We had it carried aboard and placed in the magazines of the ship. It was in ingots encased in wooden boxes. Each gold nugget [sic] in wooden box with numbers boldly stamped on each box. Each box worth 1/4 million and weighed so much it was all one man could do to carry it. One man was at the foot of gangway making entries in large ledger as it was unloaded from the trucks - a check-off-list - and another man with a similar ledger at the head of the elevator/conveyor which lowered the gold into the magazines. These two ledgers had to check. This gold was consigned to the Chase Manhattan Bank in New York.
We had barely returned from leave in London when we were on full alert and ordered to set sail immediately. Out in the Atlantic, South of Iceland, we ran into the tail of a hurricane up from the West Indies - with mountainous seas. The forward deck of the ship was 10 ft. underwater between waves!! The officers amused themselves by saying that this might be the "Golden Gallion" [sic] never to be discovered in water so deep, let alone salvaged.
The Nashville’s Maiden voyage to Europe:
I understand from the accounts that I have been able to piece together that on her Maiden voyage to Europe the USS Nashville visited the following ports in the order:
Cherbourg, France; [1]
Stockholm, Sweden; [2]
Gothenburg, Sweden (written Göteborg in Swedish); [3]
Portland, England;
Gravesend, England;
Portsmouth, England.
The Nashville’s visits to English ports were reported in various American provincial newspapers at the time.
Page 1 of the Oelwein Daily Register, 12th September 1938, has this:
United States cruiser Nashville steamed into Portland harbor today as Europe faced a climactic day in the Czechoslovak problem. The Nashville fired a 21-gun salute and the British battleship Royal Oak responded. It was a scheduled arrival for the Nashville and the cruiser Honolulu is due at Gravesend down the Thames from London Sept 22, also on a scheduled visit. But the movements of the crack American cruisers at this time lent emphasis to the persistent belief, despite deprecatory statements in the United States, that America is taking a strong and friendly role in support of Great Britain and France in their efforts to save Europe from war.
On the same day, Monday, 12th September, the English newspaper The Times reported [snips]:
Within a few hours of the arrival of the American cruiser Nashville at Portland today hundreds of American sailors were mingling with holidaymakers at Weymouth….
….Tonight the American naval officers were the guests of the officers of H.M.S. Osprey, the anti-submarine establishment at Portland, …..
…..Captain Wilson will spend Wednesday in London and the Nashville sails on Friday.
However, on Wednesday, 14th September, the Charleston Daily Mail reported [snips]:
Officers of the United States light cruiser Nashville rounded up their crew today and the vessel sailed from Portland to Gravesend, which is only 26 miles from London on the Thames….
…. it was believed here that the United States government wanted the Nashville near London in event Americans, of whom there are 12,447 in Great Britain, must be evacuated if war comes.
In his book, Fool-Proof Relations: The Search for Anglo-American Naval Cooperation during the Chamberlain Years, 1937-1940, Malcolm H. Murfett writes:
He [President Roosevelt] had agreed, for instance, to the sending of the U.S.S. Nashville and U.S.S. Honolulu to England to collect a substantial amount of gold from the Bank of England and return with it to New York. In the case of the Honolulu, its main purpose was to provide a means of evacuating American citizens if the Czech crisis turned to war. Whatever the primary function may have been, the visit of these two American ships was the source of some satisfaction to the British Government which regarded them as underlining Presidential support for the democracies at a critical time.
Portland to Gravesend is about 260 nautical miles, so the Nashville would almost certainly have arrived at Gravesend by Thursday, 15th September.
On Friday, 16th September, the Lowell Sun reported:
Three Lowell bluejackets are attached to the U S cruiser Nashville which has arrived at Gravesend, England to standby to evacuate Americans from Europe should war break out there.
The ‘Critical Past’ web site has four cine clips of Nashville’s visit to Gravesend, including one of Nashville’s sailors and marines arriving at Gravesend Pier to begin their shore leave. [4]
On the 17th September the Reno Evening Gazette reported white-capped American sailors from the cruiser Nashville snapping photos of No.10 Downing Street, London.
On Wednesday, 21st September, the Beatrice Daily Sun, reported:
United States light cruisers Nashville and Honolulu arrived unexpectedly today at Portsmouth. The officers did not disclose how long the cruisers would stay here nor what their future movements would be. The Nashville previously was at Gravesend while the Honolulu came from the United States.
On Thursday, 22nd September, the Corsicana Daily Sun, reported:
United States cruiser Nashville sailed for home tonight after a visit to English waters on a shakedown cruise. Her sister ship, the cruiser Honolulu, remained awaiting further orders.
Notes:
In an effort to avoid war in Europe, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain flew to Germany for meetings with Hitler on three occasions in the latter half of September 1938. [5]
Brown was wrong in placing “Goteberg” [sic], in Germany.
Gothenburg (written Göteborg in Swedish) is a major port and the second largest city in Sweden.
Brown was wrong in saying that after leaving the Baltic Sea “We then went to Portsmouth, England.”
As already noted, the contemporaneous newspaper reports show that after leaving the Baltic the Nashville’s next port of call was Portland, in Dorset, England, arriving on the 12th September. From there Nashville sailed to Gravesend.
Brown makes no mention of Nashville’s visit to Gravesend – where as already noted, the crew were granted shore leave during their six-day stay, with some visiting London, 26 miles away.
Nashville arrived in Portsmouth on the 21st September. There is documentary evidence that shows the gold was received the following day, the 22nd September.
John Carmichael who was in charge of the loading party has stated that the gold shipment had still not arrived by noon. [1]
The gold must therefore have been loaded that afternoon/early evening, for the Corsicana Daily Sun reported that the Nashville sailed for America that night.
As the crow flies, London is 65 miles away from Portsmouth.
Geoff
(To be continued)
[1] Book: Humble Heroes: How the USS Nashville CL43 Fought WWII by Steven Bustin.
ISBN-10: 1419658840
[2] Navy Cover USS Nashville, Stockholm, 3rd September 1938:
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/4434803/USS%20N ... ckholm.jpg
[3] Navy Cover USS Nashville, Göteborg / Gothenburg, 9th September 1938:
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/4434803/USS%20N ... teborg.jpg
[4] Critical Past web site:
http://www.criticalpast.com/video/65675 ... rs-talking
[5] Neville Chamberlain:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neville_Chamberlain