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The jail that went to sea : an untold story of the Battle of the Atlantic, 1941-42

Part of the World War II Stories series
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In 1941, the British people had their backs to the wall in their lone fight against the might of Hitler's Germany.

America was neutral, at least until the bombing of Pearl Harbor.

Glasgow became the starting point for one of the most amazing and, until now, untold episodes of the War.

Government officials, desperate for men to sail merchant ships across the Atlantic to collect vital equipment and supplies from North America, devised a plan to enlist convicts from Barlinnie Prison and use them as crew for a 25,000-ton merchantman, the George Washington.

This unprecedented and dangerous operation was probably the nearest thing to press gang tactics since the days of the sailing navy.

Quite simply a choice of death or glory, this book relates the extraordinary story of those men through the accounts of two survivors, plus the log and memories of Captain David Bone and Glasgow police records and documents.

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Product Details
Conway
1844860507 / 9781844860500
Paperback
29/06/2007
United Kingdom
English
192 p., [8] p. of plates : ill.
20 cm
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Reprint. Originally published: London: Robson, 2003.