British Boats in the Russian Civil War

I am looking forward to giving my talk at the Southampton International Boat Show about some of the British vessels in the Russian Civil War.

At the beginning of the British campaign in 1918, HMS Suffolk was on station in Vladivostok. Her guns were transported almost 5,000 miles by train to Perm where they were fitted to a barge and a tug and operated by Royal Navy personnel on the River Kama. In providing fire support against the Red Army, they set an unbroken record for operating furthest away from their ship. These crews were commanded by a young Royal Marine captain, who was awarded the DSO for his leadership and can be seen in the photograph below with the White Russian Navy’s commanders. During the talk, I will describe their close shave when they were almost captured and explain why they were treated scandalously by the British Consul.

Many other British merchant vessels and passenger ships were involved in the campaign and I will describe the intriguing journeys of three favourite workhorses that sailed the “Seven Seas”, concluding with the celebrated return of the Hampshire Regiment to Southampton aboard the HMT Tunisian in December 1919.

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