Anthony Greville Fox 'Tony' Ditcham (1922-) joined the Royal Navy in 1940 serving until the end of the campaign against Japan, Tony Ditcham was in the front line of the naval war. After brief service in the battlecruiser Renown off Norway and against the Italians, he went into destroyers and saw action in most European theatres against S-boats and aircraft in bomb alley off Britain's East Coast, on Arctic convoys to Russia, and eventually in a flotilla screening the Home Fleet.
During the dramatic Battle of the North Cape in December 1943 he was probably the first man to actually see the Scharnhorst and from his position in the gun director of HMS Scorpion enjoyed a grandstand view of the sinking of the great German battleship (his account was so vivid that it formed the basis of the description in the official history). Later his ship operated off the American beaches during D-Day, where two of her sister ships were sunk with heavy loss of life, and he ended the war en route for the British Pacific Fleet and the invasion of Japan.
Modern Era Naval Non-Fiction |
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Year | Book | Comment |
WWII | A Home on the Rolling Main | Tony Ditcham was in the front line of the naval war |